Opinion · 115th Congress
Opinion: Congress Must Act to Limit Hostile Foreign Influences
Congressional records over the years have included some outrageous examples.
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Congressional records over the years have included some outrageous examples.
Two years ago, Republicans like Paul Ryan were under pressure to repudiate prior campaign contributions from Denny Hastert, the prison-bound former House speaker.
Democrats since then are not immune: See Bill Clinton’s support of sentencing guidelines that led to mass incarceration, and the “superpredator” quote that came back to haunt Hillary Clinton and
He had voted to remove Clinton from office.
But in the modern annals of the White House (including the Bill and Hillary Clinton 1994 health care debacle), nothing can top Trump’s uncanny ability to sabotage GOP efforts to repeal and replace Obamacare
What should scare Congress, the American public and White House officials, is that Trump shows no signs of remorse — of having committed an error by behaving in a way that was tolerable in the private
‘Not a liar’ Responding to the Comey testimony, White House Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared, “I can definitely say that the president is not a liar.”
But with a special counsel and two congressional panels investigating President Donald Trump — and with not too much time having passed since President Bill Clinton was impeached by the House or
Southern Democrats pursuing a centrist path to the presidency — think Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter — have occasionally broken through.
Now that the buses have returned from the White House victory-lap rally and House Republicans have headed home for what undoubtedly will be ticker-tape parades, it is time to step back from the partisan
Every year, Congress affixes the same toe tag to the White House budget within minutes of its delivery: “Dead on Arrival.”
But that talented freshman won the White House and tapped Clinton as his secretary of State, giving her both a position of honor and a platform to launch her next bid for president.