Brown on Campaign Attack Ads
An attack ad says: “Scott Brown's gone to Washington, and something's gone horribly wrong...”
An attack ad says: “Scott Brown's gone to Washington, and something's gone horribly wrong...”
Sometimes, but not very often, politicians say something that reveals what they really think.
Rick Perry's tax plan is called "Cut, Balance, and Grow," and that could be his campaign slogan, too, since he needs to cut his losses, balance his uneven performance, and grow his support.
This time the bulls-eye was on Herman Cain, who's climbed to within a single point of Mitt Romney in the national polls.
The applause for Herman Cain keeps getting louder...
This was the bring-down-Mitt Romney debate.
"I apologize to those whom are disappointed in this decision," Sarah Palin said.
This wasn't a debate as much as it was a debut--the political coming out of Elizabeth Warren who has never run for office before, but is already the front-runner in the Democratic race to take on Republican Senator Scott Brown.
If you're Ron Paul, there's a lot to like right now. After years of being ignored, suddenly you count.
The third time was the charm for Mitt Romney, who dominated the third GOP debate in as many weeks.
“Thank you, we’ll get there!” Mitt Romney said to supporters on a parade route in New Hampshire.
Yes, the state senate still has to vote on the bill, and yes, the governor still has to sign it, but, no, there's no stopping casinos here now.
If timing is everything, then, so far, everything's going wrong for the president before his significant speech to both Houses of Congress.
To put it in football terms, the president's speech wasn't a touchdown, or a fumble.
You’ve heard it before, and this time it’s true: Wednesday’s debate is big.
There were eight candidates on the stage, but the spotlight was brightest on one: Texas Governor Rick Perry, who got in last, and is first in the polls:
"The time for action is now...no more manufactured crises. No more games," President Obama said.
If you didn't know it, you might not believe it: Republicans in Iowa are about to vote for a president. There's a straw poll Saturday, a traditional kick-off to the campaign. So for some of the candidates, tonight's debate meant survival. For everyone else, it was a chance to move up or down.
If money could buy happiness, then he'd have 3.5 million reasons to celebrate today, because that's how much he raised at birthday fundraisers in Chicago.
After weeks of painful debate, the Federal government finally figured out a way to pay its bills. Not its future bills...the bills it already owes, which really isn't much to cheer about.