To care and care not.
Will the Supreme Court knowingly throw the country into chaos? Remains to be seen.
Will the Supreme Court knowingly throw the country into chaos? Remains to be seen.
Congressional Republicans’ political allies in statehouses across the country have done everything they can to ensure that the ACA is a failure.
The overwhelmingly Democratic 111th Congress would never have even contemplated some of the provisions in the current Reconciliation bill.
I don’t claim to be an expert on debates (or whatever that thing on Tuesday night was), but Joe left a whole lot on the table in that exchange.
Trump has expressed interest in the mineral wealth of Afghanistan, raising the specter of an even further resource-fueled extension of our pointless war in that unfortunate country.
The facts don’t matter in Trumpville. This is an attitudinal presidency, running on gall and braggadocio, tossing steaks out to the base pretty much every week.
Like her colleagues in the House, Claudia Tenney does not want to answer directly to constituents for the policies she has supported or plans to support.
The end of the ACA will of course mean an enormous tax break for top earners, particularly the top tenth of one percent.
Whatever your misgivings about Hillary Clinton (and I have plenty), voting for her and down-ballot Democrats is the best way to shut Paul Ryan’s agenda down.
These people make more noise about four lives lost in Benghazi than they ever did about the more than 4,000 Americans that died in their Iraq war. How about we hold someone (Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, etc.) accountable for that first?