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Republican Party

35-46
28
18
19
17-19
23-24
23
12
31-42
43-53
6-9
26-28
18
14-15
37-48
26
48-57
21-23
44
53-58
44-49
41-48
11
66-70
22-24
60-68
41-130
33-39
21-26
107-118
55-62
98-107
37-45
56-63
41-47
94-100
74-79
86-94
76-87
86-91
16-24
86-89
94-99
96-101
44-49
39-45
25-31
74-77
73-78
29-35
29-35
28
29-34
58-60
23-29
19
23-28
34-41
52-55
65-68
27-32
34-39
21-26
48-51
74-80
31-35
25-33
80
592-598
Personal and otherwise/Article


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Sep 2006Percentage of Republicans and Democrats, respectively, in October 1994 who said they were excited to vote that year: 45, 30



Percentage who said this in June about the 2006 midterm election: 30, 46
Source:

Pew Research Center for the People and the Press (Washington)

Jul 2006Percentage of Republicans who viewed “Hillary Clinton” favorably in an April poll: 16
Source:

CNN (Washington)

Mar 2006Percentage of Democrats and Republicans, respectively, who say the Iraq war was “worth fighting”: 4, 84
Source:

M.I.T. Public Opinion Research Training Lab (Cambridge, Mass.)

Jan 2006Margin by which total votes for Democrats in the last three Senate elections exceeded those for Republicans: 2,900,000



Number of seats won by Democrats and Republicans, respectively: 46, 56
Source:

Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives

Nov 2004Chance that a Republican president has not won the popular vote : 1 in 6
Source:

Jimmy Carter Library & Museum (Atlanta)

Mar 2004Number of the 420 demonstrators arrested at Philadelphia's 2000 Republican National Convention who were convicted : 23
Source:

The R2K Legal Collective (Philadelphia)

Oct 2003Year in which House Republicans thrice rejected an amendment to upgrade the U.S. electrical grid : 2001
Source:

Office of Congressman Sam Farr

Oct 2003Number of Virginia Republican Party officials fined this year for eavesdropping on Democratic Party conference calls : 3
Source:

The Republican Party of Virginia (Richmond)

Apr 2003Chances that a Democrat believes that "most" Republicans are prejudiced against African Americans: 2 in 5
Source:

The Gallup Organization (Princeton, N.J.)

Oct 2001Number of people arrested at last year's Republican National Convention: 390
Source:

Philadelphia Police Department

Oct 2001Amount of campaign contributions that Sen. James Jeffords has returned since leaving the Republican Party in May: $17,470
Source:

Office of Sen. James Jeffords (Washington)

Jul 2001Number of the sixteen previous Republican presidents who experienced a recession during their first term in office: 15
Source:

National Bureau of Economic Research (Cambridge, Mass.)/ Harper's research

Feb 2001Rank of the Republican Party among sixty brand names tested for customer loyalty in 1999: 60
Source:

FCB Worldwide (N.Y.C.)

Oct 2000Number of G.O.P. presidential conventions since 1911 with a larger percentage of black delegates than last summer's: 5
Source:

Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies (Washington)

Oct 2000Percentage of G.O.P. delegates at the 1912 and 2000 conventions, respectively, who identified themselves as black: 6, 4.1
Source:

Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies (Washington)

Sep 2000Number of incumbent Republican governors who have won the presidency since 1898: 0
Source:

Harper's research

Aug 2000Amount New Jersey's Camden police spent on riot gear in preparation for Philadelphia's GOP convention: $47,775
Source:

Camden City Clerk's Office (Camden, N.J.)

Feb 2000Number of the two memoirs published by GOP presidential candidates last year that use the phrase “toga party”: 2
Source:

George W. Bush, A Charge to Keep, William Morrow &Company (N.Y.C.)/John McCain, Faith of My Fathers, Random House (N.Y.C.);

Nov 1999Amount by which the President's ten-year defense budget exceeds that of House Republicans: $206,000,000
Source:

Economic Policy Institute (Washington)

Oct 1999Billions of gallons of water that the GOP reported released into a New Hampshire river in July for an Al Gore visit: 4
Source:

Republican National Committee (Washington)

Oct 1999Number of days last August that Iowa hosted both the GOP presidential straw poll and the National Hobo Convention: 1
Source:

Britt City Chamber of Commerce (Britt, Iowa)/Iowa State Republican Party (Des Moines)

Aug 1999Age at which Elizabeth Dole became a Republican: 39
Source:

Elizabeth Dole for President Exploratory Committee (Arlington, Va.)

Jun 1999Last year in which neither a Dole nor a Bush has appeared on the Republican presidential ticket: 1972
Source:

Harper's research

Jan 1999Percentage change since then in the number of Republican candidates endorsed by a union: +125
Source:

AFL-CIO (Washington)

Sep 1998Percentage change since 1991 in total Microsoft contributions to the Democratic and Republican parties: +460
Source:

Center for Responsive Politics (Washington)

Jun 1998Number of the 524 subpoenas issued in Rep. Dan Burton's campaign-finance investigation that have gone to Republicans: 9
Source:

Democratic Office for the House Committee on Government Reform and Oversight

August 11, 2:00 AM , 2020 Democrats were outvoting Republicans in all nine states that track the party affiliations of early voters, indicating a likely election victory for Barack Obama.
Source:

George Mason University

August 11, 2:00 AM , 2020Appearing on “Saturday Night Live,” the Arizona Senator said, “I'm a true maverick, a Republican without money.”
Source:

New York Times

August 10, 18:00 PM , 2020 Republicans claimed that Democrats were coercing dementia patients to cast absentee ballots.
Source:

Des Moines Register

August 10, 18:00 PM , 2020Kay Hagan, a Democratic candidate for Senate in North Carolina, filed an application to sue her opponent, the incumbent Republican Elizabeth Dole, for an ad associating Hagan with the Godless Americans Political Action Committee. “Godless Americans and Kay Hagan,” says the ad. “She hid from cameras. Took ‘Godless' money. What did Kay Hagan promise in return?” The spot, which lawyers for Dole called “100 percent factually accurate and truthful,” concludes with an image of Hagan and a female voiceover that states, “There is no God.”
Source:

CNN

February 12, 2013The House and Senate reached agreement on a $789 billion economic-stimulus plan, which President Barack Obama is expected to sign into law despite a lack of support from Republicans.
Source:

New York Times

November 13, 2009The Republican National Committee said that its health-insurance plan would no longer pay for abortions.
Source:

Politico

November 5, 2009The House of Representatives passed, by a vote of 220 to 215, a $1.1 trillion health-care bill that requires employers to provide insurance coverage or face a tax penalty, expands Medicaid coverage, establishes a government-run insurance plan, and blocks the use of federal insurance subsidies for abortions. “A lot of Blue Dogs in this country,” said Republican National Committee Chair Michael Steele, “are going to have a lot of 'splaining to do.” Protesters outside the Capitol chanted “Kill the bill,” and fat activists voiced concerns about the bill's “weight-loss agenda.”
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

CNN

Source 3:

New York Times

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Fox News

November 5, 2009 Republicans were voted in as governors in Virginia and New Jersey but lost one House seat in New York. “The Republican renaissance has begun!” said Steele. “If you don't think last night was sweet, you need to go see a doctor!”
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

Washington Post

October 20, 2009Twitter closed the accounts of 33 Connecticut Republicans who had registered under the names of Democratic state representatives and posted tweets that state Republican chairman Chris Healy described as “satire.” “I'm not quite sure what the issue is,” said Healy of Twitter's decision, “other than that the Democrats were successful in stopping free speech.”
Source:

Hartford Advocate

September 19, 2009After months of negotiation by the bipartisan “gang of six” in the Senate, Senator Max Baucus unveiled his $776-billion health-care reform bill, which is supported by none of the gang's three Republican members and received a lukewarm response from Democrats. Baucus's plan, which includes member-run insurance co-operatives but no public option, would mandate that all Americans buy insurance and would provide subsidies for those who can't afford it. The subsidies would be paid for in part by an excise tax on so-called “Cadillac” insurance plans, including those provided to firefighters, coal miners, and many other union workers. “That's not really a smart idea,” said Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller. The bill will now be taken up by the Senate Finance Committee, whose members have already drafted at least 564 amendments.
Source 1:

Washington Post

Source 2:

Minnesota Star Tribune

Source 3:

The Note

Source 4:

Newser

September 10, 2009 California state legislator Mike Duvall, a Republican, resigned after he unwittingly bragged about having sex with much younger women--including one who wore “little eye-patch underwear”--into a hot microphone before a hearing.
Source:

LA Times

September 4, 2009Polls showed that the level of public support for health-care reform was plummeting, a result of both Democratic capitulation--as when Senate Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus (D., Mont.), after a year of preparation, released a proposal that lacked a public option--and a Republican campaign of lies regarding “death panels,” the cost of medical care, cuts in Medicare benefits, and “rationing.” President Barack Obama indicated that the White House may give up on Congress and draft its own bill; he also telephoned representatives who support the public option, including Raul Grijalva (D., Ariz.), to talk about the bill. “I didn't come away from this discussion feeling that we were dead,” said Grijalva. The president scheduled a health-care speech before a joint session of Congress, and FOX News announced that it would not air it. A fight at a pro-health-care rally near Los Angeles ended when a pro-reform protester bit off the finger of an anti-reform protester.
Source 1:

Who Runs Gov.

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Politico

Source 3:

Washington Post

Source 4:

New York Times

Source 5:

KTLA

Source 6:

Black Star News

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CNN

August 6, 2009Screenwriter Budd Schulberg, whose 1957 film A Face in the Crowd depicted the rise to power of a fascist hillbilly drug-company spokesman, died, as did film director and Republican John Hughes. In a eulogy, actor and economist Ben Stein said that Hughes was “to the postwar middle class white kid what John Keats was to the age of upheaval during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic wars,” and that his film Home Alone had captured “the mindset of the rich pre-teen child: total paranoia combined with almost Hitlerian fantasies of power and sadism.”
Source 1:

AP via Fox

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YouTube

Source 3:

NYT

Source 4:

The American Spectator

Source 5:

LAT

Source 6:

Variety

August 1, 2009 Congress defied President Barack Obama and adjourned for the summer without passing a health-care-reform bill. The House Energy and Commerce Committee approved its own version of the bill 31-28 (with five Democrats and all 23 Republicans voting against it); its bill is one of five already produced or soon to be produced by the House and Senate. President Obama and congressional Democrats planned to tour the country to talk about the issue, while Republicans planned to identify the health-care plan as a failure akin to the $787 billion stimulus package, which after six months has yet to reverse unemployment. Health-insurance companies, described by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as “immoral” and “the villains in this,” were spending $1 million a day to lobby lawmakers. A poll found that 60 percent of Americans disapprove of Congress. Thirty-nine million Americans were on food stamps.
Source 1:

FOXNews.com

Source 2:

CNN

Source 3:

CNN

Source 4:

The New York Times

Source 5:

CQ Politics

Source 6:

Politico

Source 7:

Fox News

Source 8:

Politico

Source 9:

USA Today

July 24, 2009The Congressional Budget Office announced that a proposed plan to control health-care spending would save only $2 billion over ten years, compared to a proposed $1 trillion in spending, although the agency also pointed out that the legislation could increase the proportion of people receiving insurance through their employers, despite Republican claims to the contrary. Democrats, with control of both the House and Senate, fought among themselves. House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman threatened to move the bill to the floor without a committee vote if the Blue Dogs, seven conservative Democrats, refused to cooperate; Nancy Pelosi vowed that the bill would pass without them. In the Senate, Majority Leader Harry Reid simply caved to Republican pressure and announced that there would be no vote on a new health-care bill until after the August recess.
Source 1:

Politico

Source 2:

The New York Times

Source 3:

Talking Points Memo

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CBS News

July 21, 2009 G.O.P. Chairman Michael Steele gave a speech at the National Press Club, reciting a Republican memo verbatim. “Slow down, Mr. President,” said the memo and Steele, even though health-care reform has been a national issue since 1912. “We can't afford to get health care wrong.”
Source 1:

Bnet

Source 2:

Washington Post

July 13, 2009Sonia Sotomayor, who is expected to be confirmed to the Supreme Court in August, was interrogated for four days by Democratic and Republican senators of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Republicans grilled Sotomayor on her legal positions. Democrats lauded her; Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D., R.I.) said that her life story gave him “piel de gallina,” or goose bumps. Sotomayor was, however, not able to answer when Senator Al Franken (D., Minn.) asked her to name the one case that Perry Mason lost. “Didn't the White House prepare you for that?” he said. Reporters noted that Sotomayor was “a big toucher” who responded to Republican senators' proffered handshakes with a warm smile and a squeeze of their shoulders, and they also pointed out that on the second day of the hearings, when the judge was asked by Senator Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.) to explain her “wise Latina woman” comment, she blinked at least 247 times while answering, averaging 90 blinks per minute in the morning; that rate decreased to 50 blinks per minute in the afternoon. At least four anti-abortion protesters were arrested at the hearings, including 61-year-old Norma McCorvey, better known as Jane Roe, the plaintiff in the Supreme Court case that made abortion legal.
Source 1:

Washington Post

Source 2:

Washington Post

Source 3:

Washington Post

Source 4:

Washington Post

May 29, 2009 President Barack Obama nominated Sonia Sotomayor, a Bronx-born, divorced, childless, diabetic, Hispanic federal judge on the U.S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, to replace Justice David Souter on the Supreme Court. Analysts studying Sotomayor's decisions were unable to determine whether she would uphold Roe v. Wade, or whether she was distinctly pro- or anti-business, but much was made of a 2001 speech at the University of California at Berkeley in which she expressed hopes that a “wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life.” During the speech she also expressed fondness for “platos de arroz, gandoles y pernil,” a dish made with rice, beans, and pork. “Her word choice in 2001 was poor,” offered White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, but many Republicans were unconvinced. “The comments she made about the quality of her decisions being better than those of a white male—I mean, we need to go further into her record to see whether this is a trend,” said Senator John Cornyn (R., Tex.), one of 98 non-Hispanic senators, who was considered for the Supreme Court in 2005 but not appointed. Newt Gingrich, who in 2007 spoke out against bilingual education by suggesting that students should “learn the language of prosperity, not the language of living in a ghetto,” criticized Sotomayor via Twitter. “White man racist nominee would be forced to withdraw,” tweeted Gingrich. “Latina woman racist should also withdraw.”
Source 1:

The New York Times

Source 2:

The New York Times

Source 3:

The New York Times

Source 4:

The Guardian

Source 5:

The Washington Post

Source 6:

The Los Angeles Times

Source 7:

Fox News

Source 8:

The White House

Source 9:

The New York Times

Source 10:

FJC.gov

Source 11:

Wikipedia.org

Source 12:

Leading the news

May 23, 2009The Republican National Committee released an ad comparing Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi with Pussy Galore from the James Bond film Goldfinger.
Source 1:

CBS News

Source 2:

Politico

May 19, 2009After a Republican-written energy bill failed in the House Energy and Commerce Committee, committee chairman Henry Waxman (D., Calif.) and Edward Markey (D., Mass.) drafted 946 pages of compromise legislation that proposes to reduce CO2 emissions to 17 percent of their 2005 level by 2050; House Democrats hired a speed reader in case Republicans force the bill to be read aloud.
Source 1:

Wall Street Journal

Source 2:

Houston Chronicle

Source 3:

Wall Street Journal

May 16, 2009U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi accused the CIA of lying to her during briefings on interrogation techniques in 2002, and claimed that her briefers expressly denied the use of waterboarding and that she first learned of its use several months later from a congressional aide. Pelosi's deputy, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said he had “no idea” whether Pelosi's charges were accurate. “It's outrageous that a member of Congress should call a terror-fighter a liar,” said Republican Senator Kit Bond, the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. “It seems the playbook is 'blame terror-fighters.'”
Source:

ABC News

May 14, 2009Arkansas state Senator Kim Hendron apologized for calling New York Senator Chuck Schumer “that Jew” at a county Republican meeting. “I was attempting to explain that, unlike Senator Schumer, I believe in traditional values, like we used to see on The Andy Griffith Show,” explained Hendron. “I made the mistake of referring to Senator Schumer as 'that Jew' and I should not have put it that way, as this took away from what I was trying to say.”
Source:

Talking Points Memo

March 20, 2009Transcripts emerged from a March 6 radio appearance by Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele in which he discussed climate change. “We are cooling,” explained Steele. “We are not warming. The warming you see out there, the supposed warming, and I am using my finger quotation marks here, is part of the cooling process. Greenland, which is now covered in ice, it was once called Greenland for a reason, right? Iceland, which is now green. Oh I love this. Like we know what this planet is all about.”
Source:

New York Times

March 16, 2009The House of Representatives, reacting to a plan by AIG to pay its executives as much as $218 million in bonuses, voted 328 to 93 in favor of a 90-percent tax on executive bonuses at firms that receive $5 billion or more in federal funds. Eighty-five Republicans voted for the bill despite their party's traditional opposition to tax increases. “The American people,” explained Mark Kirk (R., Ill.), “are all watching here.” “The first thing that would make me feel a little bit better towards them,” said Senator Charles Grassley (R., Iowa) of the AIG executives, “if they’d follow the Japanese model and come before the American people and take that deep bow, and say I’m sorry, and then either do one of two things--resign, or go commit suicide.”
Source 1:

Politico

Source 2:

CBCNews.ca

Source 3:

Politico

March 16, 2009Mauricio Funes, a member of the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, was elected president of El Salvador, ending twenty years of rule by the right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance, with whom the FMNL fought a 12-year guerrilla war.
Source 1:

ESPN

Source 2:

New York Times

March 6, 2009When asked about the state of the Republican party, Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty said, “It's kind of like asking whether the stock market has bottomed out.”
Source:

Politico

March 3, 2009After Republican senators prevented the passage of a spending bill, Congress was forced to enact an emergency five-day stopgap to keep the government from shutting down. Senator John McCain criticized a $951,500 earmark for a “sustainable Las Vegas.” “So much for the promise of change,” he said.
Source 1:

New York Times

Source 2:

Washington Post

February 26, 2009The White House released a $3.6 trillion budget for fiscal year 2010, calling for a $630 billion health-care fund. “This budget,” said House Republican Leader John Boehner (R., Ohio), “makes clear that the era of big government is back.”
Source:

MarketWatch

February 21, 2009President Obama signed the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and unveiled a $275 billion plan to help some of the 6 million homeowners facing foreclosure in the next three years. Some Republican governors said they would refuse stimulus aid that required their states to expand unemployment insurance. “If Republican governors do not want this money,” said Nathan Daschle, executive director of the Democratic Governors Association, “Democratic governors will put it to good use.”
Source 1:

LAT

Source 2:

CNN

Source 3:

CNN

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Bloomberg

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CBS via CQ

Source 6:

Economist

Source 7:

Chicago Tribune

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The Washington Post

Source 9:

The New York Times

Source 10:

The New York Times

Source 11:

The New York Times

February 19, 2009 Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele announced an “off the hook” Republican publicity campaign, targeting “urban-suburban hip-hop settings.” “We need to uptick our image with everyone,” he said, “including one-armed midgets.”
Source:

Washington Times

February 9, 2009The Senate passed an $827 billion stimulus package with the help of three Republicans who forced Democrats to cut billions of dollars that would have provided aid to states and education programs. Economists said the cuts were “outrageous” and “disastrous.” “The point is to keep lots of extra Americans from being unemployed for the next two years and have them, instead, do useful things for the country,” said Berkeley economist J. Bradford DeLong. “[Senators Ben] Nelson and [Susan] Collins, well, it's not clear what their objective is.” The House and the Senate were negotiating differences in their packages in the hopes of presenting President Barack Obama with a final bill by Friday. “If this is a harbinger of the future, God save us,” said Robert Reischauer, president of the Urban Institute and former director of the Congressional Budget Office. “Here we are shoveling out the goodies and we can't agree on that. What happens when you have to shift the car in reverse, or deal with something like health reform or energy policy?”
Source 1:

MSNBC

Source 2:

Alternet

January 31, 2009The Republican National Committee elected its first black chairman, Maryland Lieutenant Governor Michael Steele, after six rounds of voting. “Obviously the winds of change are blowing,” said a rival candidate. “For those who wish to obstruct,” said Steele, “get ready to get knocked over.”
Source:

Associated Press

January 6, 2009Six candidates for the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee debated at the National Press Club, where they discussed ways to appeal to younger voters. “We have to do it in the Facebook,” said incumbent Chairman Mike Duncan, “with the Twittering.”
Source:

Washington Post

January 4, 2009 Minnesota election officials announced that Al Franken had won a recount of ballots cast for one of the state's Senate seats, narrowly defeating Republican incumbent Norm Coleman.
Source:

CNN

December 26, 2008Chip Saltsman, a Tennessee Republican seeking the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee, defended his decision to include the song “Barack the Magic Negro” on a holiday mix CD he sent to Committee members. “I think most people recognize political satire when they see it,” Saltsman said. “I think RNC members understand that.”
Source:

CNN

December 25, 2008 President Bush signed, then withdrew, a pardon for a real estate developer whose family donated more than $40,000 to the Republican Party.
Source:

Washington Post

December 12, 2008 Republican senators killed a plan to loan $14 billion to American automakers, and the White House said it would consider other options to save the industry and as many as three million auto-related jobs, such as diverting some of the $700 billion reserved for bailing out the finance industry.
Source 1:

WSJ

Source 2:

NYT

Source 3:

AP via Yahoo

Source 4:

NPR

Source 5:

Kalamazoo Gazette

Source 6:

AP via Yahoo

October 23, 2008Financial records revealed that the Republican National Committee has spent more than $150,000, or $2,500 per day, to clothe and accessorize vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin. “She needed some clothes,” explained McCain.
Source 1:

Huffington Post

Source 2:

Politico

October 15, 2008The Republican Party in Sacramento, California, removed the words “Waterboard Barack Obama” from their official website. “Some people find it offensive,” said county chairman Craig MacGlashan. “Others do not. I cannot comment on how people interpret things.”
Source:

Sacramento Bee

October 3, 2008Vice-presidential candidates Senator Joe Biden and Governor Sarah Palin debated in St. Louis. Commentators noted that during the debate Palin was successful in repeating Republican talking points, despite having appeared incoherent and ignorant of the basic principles of American government during interviews earlier in the week. “Oh, man,” said Palin, “it's so obvious I'm a Washington outsider, and someone just not used to the way you guys operate.”
Source:

New York Times

September 25, 2008Senator John McCain announced that fixing the economy was more important than politicking, suspended his campaign, and attempted without success to postpone his first debate with Senator Barack Obama, although he continued to run campaign advertisements, including one that declared him the winner of the debate, and appeared on CBS with Katie Couric. McCain then joined congressional leaders, including Obama, at the White House to discuss the stimulus package. “I didn't see any sign,” said Representative Barney Frank, “of our Republican colleagues paying any attention to him whatsoever.” “All he has done,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of McCain, “is stand in front of the cameras.”
Source 1:

Washington Post

Source 2:

Washington Post

Source 3:

The New York Times

Source 4:

Politico

Source 5:

The Los Angeles Times

September 23, 2008Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, the Republican candidate for vice president, visited New York City and met with world leaders from Afghanistan, Iraq, and Colombia, as well as Henry Kissinger and Bono, and agreed to speak to the press. “It was great,” she said.
Source 1:

CNN

Source 2:

MSNBC

September 4, 2008Senator John McCain accepted the Republican Party's nomination for the presidency.
Source:

KTLA.com

August 31, 2008One million people fled New Orleans to avoid Hurricane Gustav, which landed in Louisiana as a weakened category-2 hurricane and caused relatively little damage. Mississippi officials ordered people still living in the FEMA trailers erected after Hurricane Katrina to evacuate, and John McCain canceled opening-day ceremonies for the Republican National Convention at the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, Minnesota. “This is a time when we have to do away with our party politics and we have to act as Americans,” said McCain. “Not as Republicans.”
Source 1:

Guardian

Source 2:

IOL.co.za

Source 3:

New York Times

Source 4:

USA Today

Source 5:

Yahoo!

July 29, 2008Senator “Uncle” Ted Stevens, the longest-serving Republican in the Senate and “Alaskan of the Century,” was indicted for seven felonies related to unreported gifts worth $250,000 from an oil-services company. The alleged gifts included a Land Rover, a Viking gas grill, and construction that doubled the size of his home. “There is a lot of comity on our committee,” said an unnamed Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee. “I don't think any of this is going to have an impact on his earmarks.”
Source 1:

Anchorage Daily News

Source 2:

Politico

Source 3:

Anchorage Daily News

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WP

July 28, 2008 Congress voted to adjourn for summer vacation, blocking a vote on a bill to lift the ban on offshore oil drilling. Several dozen Republicans refused to leave, speaking to tourists and a troop of visiting Boy Scouts even after the microphones and lights were turned off. “This is the people's house,” cried Rep. Thaddeus McCotter. “This is not Pelosi's politburo.”
Source 1:

The Hill

Source 2:

WP

Source 3:

USA Today

Source 4:

The Hill

Source 5:

Politico

Source 6:

Politico

Source 7:

Politico

July 20, 2008Lieberman also said that, if asked, he would speak for McCain at the Republican National Convention.
Source:

Politico

July 17, 2008 Republican Senator Orrin Hatch announced that his ballad “Headed Home,” written in tribute to his longtime friend Senator Edward Kennedy, who has a malignant tumor in his brain, will be performed at the Democratic National Convention. “The words 'headed home,'” said Hatch, “mean he is headed home to the Senate.”
Source:

Washington Post

July 10, 2008 Republican strategist Karl Rove ignored a subpoena to testify before the House Judiciary Committee, citing “executive privilege.”
Source:

CNN

June 14, 2008 Obama, who admitted to smoking cigarettes in recent months, told supporters that he anticipated a “brawl” with McCain and the Republican National Committee: “If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun.”
Source 1:

ABC

Source 2:

Politico

May 21, 2008The FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force, concerned about the risk of terrorist activity at the upcoming Twin Cities Republican National Convention, was recruiting spies to infiltrate vegan potluck dinners.
Source:

City Pages

May 16, 2008A 19-year-old college freshman was elected mayor of Muskogee, Oklahoma. “Right now I'm between girlfriends,” said John Tyler Hammons, who is president of both the Young Republicans and the Young Democrats at his university. “I'm looking to fill that position.”
Source:

MSNBC.com

May 16, 2008The California Supreme Court struck down a state ban on same-sex marriage, surprising legal experts because six of the seven judges are Republican,.
Source:

CNN.com

May 14, 2008House Republicans began using a new slogan, “the change you deserve,” which turned out to be the slogan of the antidepressant Effexor.
Source:

FoxNews.com

May 9, 2008John Goodyear, whom Senator John McCain had chosen to manage this year's Republican convention and who once managed public relations for the Myanmar junta, stepped down, and one in four Republicans voted against McCain in primaries in North Carolina and Indiana.
Source 1:

Newsweek

Source 2:

Politico

May 8, 2008One hundred seventy-eight House Republicans voted against a resolution “celebrating the role of mothers in the United States,.”
Source:

The Washington Post

May 1, 2008At a town-hall meeting in Iowa, Baptist minister Marty Parrish asked Republican presidential nominee John McCain whether it was true that he had called his wife, Cindy, a “cunt” in 1992. “You know,” McCain replied, “that's the great thing about town-hall meetings, sir, but we really don't, there's people here who don't respect that kind of language. So I'll move on.” Parrish was then escorted from the meeting by the Secret Service and local police.
Source:

The Huffington Post

March 14, 2008Vice President Dick Cheney visited Baghdad, as did a U.S. congressional delegation that included presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain, who, earlier in the week, admitted to fears that Al Qaeda or another extremist group might increase their attacks in Iraq in an attempt to hurt his chances in the U.S. election.
Source 1:

CNN

Source 2:

TPM

March 8, 2008After John McCain swept Republican contests in Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas, and Vermont and secured by some counts the delegates required for his party's nomination, his rivals Mike Huckabee and Ron Paul withdrew from the presidential race. McCain visited the White House to eat a lunch of hot dogs with George W. Bush and accept the President's endorsement. “If my showing up and endorsing him helps him, or if I'm against him and it helps him, either way, I want him to win,” said Bush.
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New York Times

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Washington Post

February 7, 2008In the G.O.P. primaries on Super Tuesday, John McCain emerged as the likely Republican presidential nominee after winning California, New York, New Jersey, and other “blue states”; Mike Huckabee won states in the South, and Mitt Romney won states in which he has owned a home. Romney later announced the end of his presidential campaign to an audience that moaned and cried “No, no!” “Size,” explained Romney, referring to the number of delegates pledged to McCain, “does matter.”
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Talking Points Memo

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National Post

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Breitbart

February 3, 2008 California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger endorsed Republican candidate John McCain, while Schwarzenegger's wife, Maria Shriver, the niece of John F. Kennedy, endorsed Barack Obama.
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McCain Wins Schwarzenegger Nod

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Maria Shriver endorses Obama

January 20, 2008John McCain won the South Carolina Republican primary, Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton won in the Nevada caucuses.
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CNN.com

January 6, 2008Defeated Republican Senator Norm Coleman filed a lawsuit contesting Al Franken's recount victory in Minnesota.
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The Star Tribune

January 4, 2008 Obama and Mike Huckabee were the surprise winners of the Iowa caucuses. “None of this worries me,” said Rudy Giuliani, who came in sixth place in the Republican caucus. “September 11, there were times I was worried.”
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NYDailyNews.com

December 8, 2007A new National Intelligence Estimate by all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies concluded that Iran ended its secret nuclear weapons program in 2003, in contrast to a 2005 report that claimed with “high confidence” that such a program was still active. Former CIA officials explained that at the time the earlier report was written the agency's Iran Task Force had been reduced from nearly a hundred analysts and officers to fewer than a dozen, and National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley, attempting to explain why the earlier report was not “so wrong,” reminded reporters that Iran is “very good at this business of keeping secrets.” “It is all right,” responded Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. “It is enough that you are confessing to your mistakes.” In Iowa, Democratic candidates debated the Iranian nuclear threat as well as the safety of toys made in China. “My toys,” said Senator Christopher Dodd (D., Conn.), “are coming from Iowa.” At a dinner in Des Moines, a reporter summarized the Iranian nuclear report for Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, who hadn't heard the news. Huckabee, a Southern Baptist preacher, also recalled that he was still learning about the AIDS virus in 1992, when he proposed putting AIDS patients in quarantine.
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WP

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White House

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LAT

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NYT

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WP

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LAT

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Politico

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AP via Yahoo

November 7, 2007 Congress cheered a speech by French President Nicolas Sarkozy. “You just heard a Ronald Reagan speech from a president of France,” said a Republican senator from Kentucky.
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NY Times

November 7, 2007Ted Klaudt, a former Republican South Dakota state legislator, was convicted of raping his teenage foster daughters. Klaudt convinced the girls that he was a licensed gynecologist and massaged their breasts (“to get the fibroids out”) and vaginas regularly to ascertain their capability for egg donation.
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Yahoonews

November 2, 2007Late President Gerald Ford was reported to have ascribed “unlimited ambition” to Hillary Clinton in a 2002 interview. “The Republicans will make a mistake if they think she is gonna be a pushover,” said Ford, although he didn't think the country was “ready for a lady president.” Clinton told reporters that the other Democratic candidates for the presidential nomination were not targeting her because she was a woman, but because she was winning, and Mitt Romney launched an ad impugning her leadership experience. “The idea that she could learn to be president as an internship,” says Romney, “just doesn't make any sense.”
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Reuters via Yahoo! News

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Reuters via Yahoo! News

October 9, 2007The Republican candidates for president gathered in Dearborn, Michigan, for a debate on the economy. Mitt Romney, who was born in Detroit, bemoaned the “one-state recession“ gripping Michigan; Duncan Hunter repeatedly blamed the loss of American manufacturing jobs on free-trade policies with “communist China”; Ron Paul attributed the large profits of hedge-fund managers to a conspiracy among politicians, banks, Wall Street, the Federal Reserve, and the military-industrial complex to inflate or destroy currencies and swindle the middle class; and John McCain advised Paul to read ”The Wealth of Nations." The candidates generally agreed that taxes are too high. “We’re taxed to the max,” said Sam Brownback. Mike Huckabee touted his Fair Tax proposal to abolish the IRS and to tax consumption as a way to shift the tax burden onto drug dealers, pimps, prostitutes, and illegal immigrants. Paul and Tom Tancredo refused to pledge to support the Republican nominee in the general election.
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New York Times

October 7, 2007 Republican Senator Larry Craig was selected for induction into the Idaho Hall of Fame and announced that he would not resign from the Senate, despite being denied his request to withdraw his guilty plea of disorderly conduct resulting from a sex sting at an airport men's room.
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CNN

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AP

October 1, 2007In Iowa, Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson continued to attest to the existence of WMDs in Iraq. “We can't forget the fact that although at a particular point in time we never found any WMD down there, [Saddam Hussein] clearly had had WMD,” he said; Thompson ended his speech by asking for applause.
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MSNBC

September 16, 2007 Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson, an outspoken advocate of Cuban sanctions, defended his large collection of Cuban cigars. “You know,” he said, “if it's good, I smoke it.”
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St. Petersberg Times

September 1, 2007 Republican presidential candidate Tom Tancredo marked the second anniversary of the Hurricane Katrina disaster by suggesting that the “gravy train” of “so-called 'recovery'” should leave “the New Orleans station.”
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The Hill via Drudgereport.com

August 12, 2007A straw poll of Iowa Republicans lent an aura of viability to the presidential candidacies of Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee but caused Tommy Thompson to drop out of the race.
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New York Times

August 3, 2007Colorado Republican Congressman Tom Tancredo said that, if elected president, he would respond to terrorism on U.S. soil by bombing the Muslim holy cities of Mecca and Medina.
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Slate

July 18, 2007Former congressman Tom DeLay gave a speech about abortion to a gathering of college Republicans in Washington, D.C. “If we had those 40 million children that were killed over the last 30 years,” said DeLay, “we wouldn't need the illegal immigrants to fill the jobs that they are doing today.”
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Raw Story

July 12, 2007 John McCain, whose campaign was collapsing, was suspected of violating both Senate ethics rules and criminal law by making a fundraising call from the Republican cloakroom in the Senate.
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Washington Post

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NYT

June 12, 2007Senate Democrats pushed for a “vote of no confidence” in Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, but were blocked by Republicans who reminded them that the U.S. government does not engage in no-confidence votes. “To paraphrase Shakespeare,” Senator Orrin Hatch said, “whether this debate amounts to sound and fury, it signifies nothing.”
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Washington Post

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Washington Post

June 8, 2007Violence erupted in the Alabama state senate when a Democrat called Republican Charles Bishop a son of a bitch. “I responded to his comment with my right hand,” said Bishop.
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CNN

June 6, 2007The Republican presidential candidates met in New Hampshire to engage in “verbal combat” over immigration.
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New York Times

May 3, 2007The Republican candidates for the presidency debated at the Ronald Reagan Library in California. Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas said that the day Roe v. Wade was repealed would be “a glorious day of human liberty and freedom” and that the current tax system “ought to be taken behind a barn and killed with a dull ax”; Senator John McCain of Arizona claimed that he would “follow [Osama bin Laden] to the gates of hell”; Texas Congressman Ron Paul said that not going to war in Iraq would have been “conservative,“ because ”it’s a Republican, it’s a pro-American, it follows the Founding Fathers. And besides, it follows the Constitution.” California Congressman Duncan Hunter took responsibility for the border fence in San Diego. “It’s a double fence,” he said. “It’s not that little straggly fence you see on CNN with everybody getting over it.” “No one on this stage,” said former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, ”probably knows Hillary Clinton better than I do,” to which former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani replied: ”Oh my!” Collectively, the candidates invoked Reagan's name nearly 20 times.
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NY Times

April 20, 2007Attorney General Alberto Gonzales testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding the firing of federal prosecutors; Senator Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.) told Gonzales his ability to lead was in question, and Senator Tom Coburn (R., Okla.) asked Gonzales to resign. One prominent Republican said the hearing was like “clubbing a baby seal.”
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New York Times

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Raw Story

April 17, 2007 Republican presidential candidate Tommy Thompson gave a speech at the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism. “I'm earning money,” he said, referring to his life in the private sector. “You know that's sort of part of the Jewish tradition, and I do not find anything wrong with that.”
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Haaretz

April 13, 2007It was reported that almost a year before seven U.S. attorneys were fired, an email from D. Kyle Sampson, former chief of staff to Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, proposed replacement candidates for them. Four years' worth of email from Karl Rove, sought by Democrats investigating Rove's role in the firings, was missing from the Republican National Committee server.
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NYT

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WaPo

March 24, 2007The U.S. House of Representatives passed a timetable for ending the Iraq war by a six-vote margin. The bill mandates American withdrawal in September 2008 if the Bush Administration meets certain benchmarks, earlier if it does not. Several Democrats voted against the timetable because it was not sufficiently antiwar, and Republicans derided the inclusion of domestic provisions benefiting spinach growers, citrus farmers, salmon fishermen, and peanut storers. “What does throwing money at Bubba Gump, Popeye the sailor man, and Mr. Peanut have to do with winning a war?” asked Representative Sam Johnson of Texas. “I will veto it,” said President George W. Bush, "if it comes to my desk.”
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New Tork Times

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New York Times

March 21, 2007 Al Gore returned to Capitol Hill to testify that global warming is a planetary emergency. Rep. Ed Markey of Massachusetts called Gore a prophet, and Rep. John Dingell of Michigan addressed him as “Mr. President.” Joe Barton of Texas, the leading Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, told Gore he was “totally wrong” and that, if need be, Republican lawmakers would stay late for an “all-out cat fight” with Democrats. Ralph Hall, also of Texas, speculated that Gore's attack on the energy industry could result in war “when and if OPEC nations abandon the U.S.A.,” and Roscoe Bartlett (R., Md.) said that he thought it was “probably possible to be a conservative without appearing to be an idiot.
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AP vie Breitbart

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Huffington Post

March 19, 2007Two Democratic Congressmen were calling for renewed inquiry into why Frank Black, the former U.S. attorney in Guam, was removed from his position after he began investigating Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff in 2002.
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Guam Pacific Daily News

March 14, 2007Dozens of Republican Congressmen were turning against the Bush Administration's No Child Left Behind Act,
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WP

March 14, 2007A Zogby poll found that 97 percent of Republicans believe that the media has a liberal bias, while two-thirds of Democrats believe there is a conservative bias.
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Zogby

March 11, 2007The scandal surrounding the firing of eight federal prosecutors continued to unfold as it became clearer from congressional testimony that the attorneys had resisted political pressure from the White House to subordinate law enforcement priorities to partisan politics. Karl Rove admitted that he had passed along complaints from the New Mexico Republican Party chairman about U.S. Attorney David Iglesias to Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez, who had referred to the scandal as an “overblown personnel matter.” One day there will be a new attorney general,“ said Senator Arlen Specter. “Maybe sooner rather than later.”
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Baltimore Sun

February 21, 2007It was discovered that Abdul Tawala Ibn Alishtari, an indicted terrorist financier, gave more than $15,000 to the National Republican Congressional Committee. “We need to be careful,” said the NRCC in a statement, “not to rush to judgment.”
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Talking Points Memo

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ABC News

February 8, 2007Just 13 percent of Republican congressmen believed humans caused global warming.
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National Journal via Drudge Report

January 31, 2007 New York Governor Eliot Spitzer told Republican Assemblyman James Tedisco, “I am a fucking steamroller and I'll roll over you or anybody else.”
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Reuters

January 26, 2007 Army Lt. Gen. David Petraeus, an expert on counterinsurgency, replaced Army Gen. George Casey as U.S. commander of troops in Iraq, and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee passed a non-binding resolution opposing President Bush's plan to increase the number of troops. Republican Senator John Warner of Virginia expressed hope that “wherever possible, the Iraqis should bear the brunt of the sectarian violence.”
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USA Today

January 23, 2007 Republican legislators in Georgia introduced a bill to allow a white suburb of Atlanta to secede from the city.
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AP via Yahoo

December 7, 2006 Democrats in Congress announced that beginning in January members of the House would work five days a week. “Keeping us up here eats away at families,” said Rep. Jack Kingston (R., Georgia), who spends more than half his week at home. “Marriages suffer. The Democrats could care less about families--that's what this says.” The Democrats were also trying to stop smoking on the Hill, and attempting to block a $3,300 congressional raise.
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Washington Post

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Washington Post

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Washington Post

December 7, 2006Harry Reid, the new Senate majority leader, gave outgoing Republican leader Bill Frist a big bear hug.
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Washington Post

December 5, 2006The Iraq Study Group report was released. “Truth of the matter is a lot of reports in Washington are never read by anybody,” said President Bush. “To show you how important this one is, I read it.” When asked how Bush responded to the report's suggestions that the United States drastically alter its strategy in Iraq, panelist Lawrence Eagleburger said, “His reaction was, 'Where's my drink?'” Former Republican senator and Iraq Study Group member Alan Simpson said about Bush, “A 100-percenter is a person you don't want to be around. They have gas, ulcers, heartburn, and B.O.”
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Washington Post

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White House

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Washington Post

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Washington Post

December 1, 2006 Republican congressmen were attempting to define a twenty-week-old fetus as a “pain-capable unborn child.”
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CNN

November 21, 2006Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich announced that he would lead an effort to revitalize the Republican Party. “I am not 'running' for president,” said Gingrich. “I am seeking to create a movement to win the future by offering a series of solutions so compelling that if the American people say I have to be president, it will happen.”
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NewsMax.com

November 19, 2006 Senator Trent Lott was elected Minority Whip.
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The Washington Post

November 16, 2006 Economist Milton Friedman died.
Source:

The New York Times

November 9, 2006Midterm elections were held in the United States; the Republican Party lost its majority in the House of Representatives and the Senate. Six incumbent Republican senators, including Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, were defeated, and Santorum's daughter cried. Nancy Pelosi of California, who is expected to become the first female Speaker of the House, had lunch with President George W. Bush.
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Reuters via Yahoo!

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MSNBC

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Boston.com

November 9, 2006 Republican Party Chairman Ken Mehlman resigned.
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CNN

November 4, 2006 Republicans were “glum” as the party prepared to lose at least fifteen seats in the House of Representatives.
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New York Times

October 20, 2006A Catholic priest acknowledged having had an intimate, two-year relationship with Mark Foley when the now-disgraced Republican congressman was a twelve-year-old altar boy.
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Washington Post

October 5, 2006Further allegations emerged regarding the behavior of recently-resigned Congressman Mark Foley (R., Fla.) with underage pages. “He didn't want to talk about politics,” said one former page. “He wanted to talk about sex or my penis.” Congressman Jim Kolbe (R., Ariz.) said that he had confronted Foley over inappropriate contact with pages as early as 2000, and House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert vowed not to resign over the scandal.
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ABC News

September 21, 2006In Maryland, the National Black Republican Association ran radio ads claiming that Martin Luther King was a Republican and that Democrats founded the Ku Klux Klan.
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nbc4.com via google news

August 19, 2006 Republicans were, in general, neglecting their party's candidate in favor of Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, who said that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld should resign.
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The New York Times

June 25, 2006Hillary Clinton described Republicans as negligent, irresponsible, and similar to monkeys.
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The New York Times

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Washington Post

June 21, 2006House Republicans declined to renew the 1965 Voting Rights Act because it was unfair to Southerners.
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The New York Times

June 9, 2006Tom DeLay, the former Republican majority leader who was forced to resign because he is corrupt, said farewell to the House of Representatives. Dozens of Democrats walked out during his speech. “I did a good job,” DeLay said. “I helped build the largest political coalition in the last 50 years.”
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UPI

May 18, 2006It was revealed that in 2004 a group of Republican lawmakers wrote letters to the IRS calling for a probe of the NAACP.
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Guardian Unlimited

April 3, 2006Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R., Tex.) announced that he would not run for reelection to Congress. "I've never done anything in my political career," said DeLay, "for my own personal gain."
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Time

March 26, 2006Both Democrat and Republican strategists agreed that if midterm elections were held now, the Democrats would gain control of the House of Representatives.
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Time

March 8, 2006 Tom DeLay (R., Tex.) won the Republican primary for his congressional seat.
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Capitol Hill Blue

February 8, 2006 Karl Rove was threatening to cut off White House support for Republican Senate Judiciary members who criticize the Bush Administration's warrantless-wiretapping program. "It's hardball," said a Republican aide, "all the way."
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Democracy Now!

February 2, 2006Representative John Boehner (R., Ohio), who belongs to a male-only golf club, whose political-action committee took money from Jack Abramoff but did not return it after Abramoff was indicted, and who in 1995 handed out checks from tobacco-company lobbyists on the House floor, was elected via instant runoff voting to replace Tom DeLay as House Majority Leader. The Republican Party, said Boehner, "must act swiftly to restore the trust between Congress and the American people." Boehner also said that he had "a very open relationship with lobbyists in town." "We are," said Representative Michael Oxley (R., Ohio), "somewhat tilting at windmills."
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The New York Times

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Bloomberg.com

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The Nation via Yahoo! News

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Sign On San Diego

January 29, 2006The White House refused to release photographs of President Bush with lobbyist Jack Abramoff, despite requests from Senate and House Republicans.
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Reuters

January 24, 2006A Senate committee investigating the government response to Hurricane Katrina criticized the Bush Administration for ignoring the findings of a hurricane-preparedness exercise called "Hurricane Pam," which had warned that New Orleans would be flooded. "It is apparent that a more appropriate name for Pam should have been 'Cassandra,'" said Senator Susan Collins (R., Maine).
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USA Today

January 17, 2006 New York Senator Hillary Clinton said that Republicans were running the House of Representatives "like a plantation." Republicans disagreed with Clinton, and Al Sharpton complained that she was stealing his material.
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The Duluth News Tribune

November 28, 2005 Representative Randy “Duke” Cunningham (R., Calif.) confessed to taking $2.4 million in bribes and resigned from office.
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CNN.com

November 25, 2005A Vermont teacher was in trouble for testing students with liberal vocabulary questions. “I wish Bush,” read one question, “would be (coherent, eschewed) for once during a speech, but there are theories that his everyday diction charms the below-average mind, hence insuring him Republican votes.”
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Boston.com

November 25, 2005It was revealed that the investigation into illegal payoffs made by lobbyist Jack Abramoff involves not only Representative Tom DeLay (R., Texas), but Representative Bob Ney (R., Ohio), Representative John Doolittle (R., Calif.), Senator Conrad Burns (R., Mont.), 17 current and former Congressional aides, and two former Bush Administration officials.
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Reuters

November 5, 2005Vice President Dick Cheney was pressuring Republican senators to grant the CIA an exemption from a proposed ban on torturing terrorism suspects. Lawrence Wilkerson, who served as chief of staff for former Secretary of State Colin Powell, suggested that Cheney was ultimately responsible for the abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison and elsewhere. “There was a visible audit trail,” he said, “from the vice president's office through the secretary of defense down to the commanders in the field.”
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The Seattle Times

October 20, 2005 Republican groups were calling on the federal government to halt all funds to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which currently receives $400 million each year in federal funding. "That is enough money," said Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, "to build 40 elementary schools."
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CBC.ca

October 10, 2005Both Democratic and Republican senators were questioning the qualifications of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers, who has never argued a case before the Supreme Court but has been often referred to as President Bush's “work wife.”
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The Seattle Times

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Slate.com

September 28, 2005 Tom DeLay stepped down from his post as House Majority Leader after being indicted for criminal conspiracy related to campaign fundraising. "This is not going to detract from the Republican agenda," said DeLay's spokesman. DeLay was soon after indicted on a separate charge of money laundering.
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CNN.com

September 8, 2005 Republicans promised to probe themselves over the federal response to Hurrican Katrina.
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Washington Post

July 28, 2005The U.S. House of Representatives voted down CAFTA, the Central American Free Trade Agreement, even though it was already approved by the Senate. House leaders then held the vote open for forty-seven minutes until they had changed enough Republican votes to approve the agreement.
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Democracy Now

June 8, 2005 Porn star and former California gubernatorial candidate Mary Carey attended a Republican fundraiser where George W. Bush was speaking. “I was told that they had people ready to tackle me if I tried to get up close to him,” she said. “I was getting propositioned to have threesomes with wives or mistresses. I was offered money from oil tycoons.” Carey also said that she would one day like to become president. “I'm very friendly,” she offered.
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Jossip.com

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WorldNetDaily

April 22, 2005Ken Ferree, the new president of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, said that he wanted to make PBS appealing to conservatives.
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Editor & Publisher

April 10, 2005Many conservative American pharmacists were refusing to dispense birth control.
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BBC News

April 8, 2005 Republicans held a conference to discuss ways to reform the federal judiciary, which they say has “run amok.” Senator Tom Coburn's chief of staff said that “mass impeachment” of judges might be necessary, and Tom DeLay, who is under investigation for illegal fundraising, gave a pre-recorded speech entitled “Confronting the Judicial War on Faith.”
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New York Times

March 25, 2005Ken Mehlman, chair of the Republican National Committee, once again avoided saying that he is gay.
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Gay People's Chronicle

February 13, 2005 Alan Keyes disowned his daughter and threw her out of his house because she is a lesbian.
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Washington Post

February 9, 2005Conservatives began considering Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty for the 2008 presidency.
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ABC News

January 31, 2005Howard Dean admitted that he hates Republicans.
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The Rush Limbaugh Show

November 20, 2004 Congress passed a $388 billion spending bill. The bill had $15.8 billion worth of “extras,” including $25,000 for the study of mariachi music and $2 million to buy back the presidential yacht, sold by Jimmy Carter in 1977. The yacht, the U.S.S. Sequoia, currently rents for $2,500 an hour. The bill also allows hospitals and HMOs to refuse to provide abortions, and gave two committee chairmen and their assistants access to income tax returns, without regard to privacy laws. Republicans acknowledged the mistake of the latter provision, and vowed to repeal it.
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USA Today

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USA Today

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sequoiayacht.com

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LA Times

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AP

November 17, 2004The House Republican Conference changed its rules to allow majority leader Tom DeLay to maintain his leadership role if he is indicted.
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Bloomberg

October 8, 2004 Republicans in Michigan were calling on authorities to prosecute Michael Moore for offering to give clean underwear to college students if they would promise to vote.
Source:

Associated Press

October 7, 2004 Republicans in Oklahoma were running television ads showing dark-skinned hands accepting welfare checks.
Source:

Associated Press

September 3, 2004About half a million people protested the Republican National Convention in New York City; the protests were said to be the largest ever at a U.S. political convention.
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USA Today

July 21, 2004 Republicans were trying to blame it all on Bill Clinton.
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New York Times

March 15, 2004Congressional Republicans were beginning to show signs of resistance to President Bush's spendthrift policies. "We have been out of control for the last three years," said Senator Trent Lott. "We kind of got a little carried away."
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New York Times

February 28, 2004Powerful Republicans were said to be urging President Bush to get rid of Dick Cheney, who continued to insist, contrary to all evidence, that stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction will be found in Iraq, and that Saddam Hussein was allied with Al Qaeda. "Am I the evil genius in the corner that nobody ever sees come out of his hole?" Cheney asked an interviewer. "It's a nice way to operate, actually."
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Asia Times

February 22, 2004Attorney General Bill Lockyer dismissed Governor Schwarzenegger's demand as "a statement designed for consumption at the Republican convention" and said that it was "preposterous," the kind of exaggerated rhetoric that inspires hate crimes.
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San Francisco Chronicle

February 13, 2004 Republican operatives were looking high and low for anyone who could remember serving in the National Guard with President George W. Bush between May 1972 and May 1973; one group of Vietnam veterans was offering a $1,000 reward for proof that the president met his military obligations.
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New York Times

January 25, 2004Conservatives denounced the USA Patriot Act and complained that "big-government Republicans," who seem to think government is the solution rather than the problem, have been too busy "baby-sitting the nanny state."
Source:

New York Times

January 11, 2004 President George W. Bush nominated Michael Chertoff, a former aide to John Ashcroft and former Senate Republican counsel for the Whitewater investigation, to head the Department of Homeland Security.
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PBS

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New York Timesimes

February 5, 2002 The World Economic Forum was held in New York instead of Davos, Switzerland, and many celebrities were feeling left out when they weren't invited to swanky parties populated with economists, businessmen, and sundry apologists of globalization. Panelists included Bono, the pop star, who told the press that “the great thing about hanging out with Republicans is that it's very unhip for both of us. There's a parity of pain here.” About 1,000 people demonstrated in front of a Gap store in Manhattan to protest the company's use of overseas sweatshops. Media hopes for Seattle-style violence were disappointed. “Starbucks can rest easy for another day,” one policeman told a reporter.
November 20, 2001House Republicans insisted that some airports be given the option to hire private security companies after three years.
November 6, 2001 Congress continued to debate whether to nationalize airport security; antigovernment Republicans, including President Bush, oppose the plan as an unwarranted expansion of federal power.
November 6, 2001 Democrats and Republican moderates said they were more concerned about preventing terrorist attacks.
October 16, 2001House Republicans were opposing legislation that would federalize national airport security because they didn't want to see an increase in the federal payroll.
October 2, 2001 Republicans were arguing that drilling for oil in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was now a matter of national security.
July 17, 2001Conservative Republicans are three times more likely than liberal Democrats to have nightmares, a new study found.
June 12, 2001 Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, perhaps seeking to demonstrate the true grit of his party, promised that Democrats would not block President Bush's judicial nominees—unlike the Republicans, who blocked almost half the judges appointed by Bill Clinton. “I don't believe in it,” Daschle said. “We have to break the cycle.”
June 12, 2001 Trent Lott, the outgoing Senate majority leader, wrote a memo to his Republican colleagues declaring war on the Democrats.
June 5, 2001Senator John McCain, a Republican, spent the weekend with Senator Tom Daschle, a Democrat; rumors of McCain's imminent defection were denied.
May 29, 2001Senator James M. Jeffords of Vermont defected from the Republican Party, handing control of the Senate to the Democrats, who promptly voted to confirm Theodore B. Olson as solicitor general, suggesting that the White House cabal had little to fear after all.
May 8, 2001Ralph Reed, formerly of the Christian Coalition, was selected as chairman of the Georgia Republican Party.
May 8, 2001 Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld ordered that all routine contact with the Chinese military be suspended, then revoked the order after the White House got upset, which led to speculation of a power struggle within the Republican cabal. “We're going to review all opportunities to interface with the Chinese,” President Bush clarified.
March 20, 2001 California's Republican Party was trying to convince Arnold Schwarzenegger to run for governor.
February 20, 2001 Republican governors such as Tommy Thompson and Christie Whitman, both of whom are now Bush cabinet members, were embarrassed by revelations that they, too, had made a number of apparently corrupt pardons.
January 2, 2001 President Clinton signed the 1998 Rome Treaty on the International Criminal Court over the objections of the Pentagon and many Republicans, who on this subject do perhaps protest too much.
January 2, 2001Spokesmen for the Republican cabal denounced the recount as an attempt to “rewrite history”; Christine Todd Whitman suggested sealing the ballots for ten years.
December 26, 2000 Republicans were upset about Senator-elect Hillary Clinton's $8 million book deal; concerns were expressed about the potential conflict of interest created by accepting money from a major media company with an aggressive legislative agenda.
December 19, 2000General Henry Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called for an increase in military spending to stop the “fraying of our force.” Virginia Lamp Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, was working for the rightist Heritage Foundation, vetting résumés of courtiers seeking places at the Republican banquet.
November 21, 2000New Jersey Republicans accused Democrats of providing crazy people in mental hospitals with absentee ballots; it was suggested that the crazy vote may have decided a close congressional race.
November 21, 2000 Republicans accused Democratic vote counters in Florida of eating chads they had secretly and illegally punched for Al Gore.
November 7, 2000Irish republican terrorists put a bomb in a traffic cone that blew the leg off a Royal Ulster Constabulary officer when he picked it up.
October 31, 2000 Republican partisans were running a knock-off of the famous “Daisy” commercial used by LBJ against Barry Goldwater in 1964; the ad claimed that Clinton and Gore sold the nation's security to the Red Chinese.
September 12, 2000In a Spanish article posted to Voter.com, Texas Republican representative Henry Bonilla said that Governor George W. Bush was “extending the monkey” to Hispanic voters.
September 12, 2000Two Florida state representatives, both Republicans, had a fistfight in the parking lot of Radio Mambi, a talk-radio station in Miami.
August 22, 2000 Democrats received higher overall Nielsen ratings for their convention than did Republicans; journalists noted that ratings were higher in 1996.
August 15, 2000 New York Republican Governor George Pataki signed the nation's strictest gun control law.
August 8, 2000 Republicans formally nominated George W. Bush as presidential candidate at their convention in Philadelphia; a display of dark-skinned speakers elicited much comment from journalists who noticed the contrast with rank-and-file Republicans on the convention floor.
August 8, 2000 Ralph Nader, the Green Party candidate, made a brief appearance, much to the delight of bored journalists, before he was removed by Republican officials.
August 8, 2000The United States Immigration and Naturalization Service naturalized 180,000 immigrants without performing proper background checks, according to a Justice Department report; the report failed to support the Republican charge that the Clinton administration rushed the approvals in hopes of acquiring additional Democratic voters in the 1996 election.
August 8, 2000 Voters in the Kansas Republican primary selected pro-evolution candidates for the state school board, ensuring thereby that the state's current science standards, which for the last three years have required the teaching of creationism in the schools, will be overturned.
August 1, 2000 Republican Presidential Candidate George W. Bush chose Dick Cheney, his father's secretary of defense during the Gulf War, to be his running mate.
August 1, 2000Reform Party leaders voted to remove right-wing columnist Pat Buchanan from the presidential ballot; Buchanan said the vote was “of no consequence.” George W. Bush killed an attempt to make the Republican primary more democratic using what he called “an iron fist rule” to keep divisive politics off the stage at the Republican National Convention.
August 1, 2000The Pentagon mounted an arms show in Philadelphia for the Republican National Convention that will cost at least $100,000.
August 1, 2000Speaker of the House Dennis J. Hastert took several members of the Republican party's “Regents,” some 100 campaign contributors who have given $250,000 apiece to the party since January 1999, on a fishing trip.
August 1, 2000The Republican Platform committee defeated attempts to moderate the party's anti-abortion stance.
April 0, 2000 Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter rejoined the Democratic Party after more than 40 years as a Republican. “There's more than being reelected here,” he insisted. “There's the factor of principle.”
Source:

Politico

February 0, 2000 Republicans launched an organization called National Council for a New America. Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush urged his party to “listen a little bit, learn a little bit”; former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney called the Democrats “the party of the monarchists.”
Source:

CNN


    December 2009

    THE GENERAL ELECTRIC SUPERFRAUD
    Why the Hudson River Will Never Run Clean
    By David Gargill

    THE MASTER OF SPIN BOLDAK
    Undercover with Afghanistan’s Drug-Trafficking Border Police
    By Matthieu Aikins

    MERMAID FEVER
    A story by Steven Millhauser

    UNDERSTANDING OBAMACARE
    By Luke Mitchell

    Also: Dave Hickey and Wendell Berry