Contents Pages by Subject

Legislative Mischief

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AP

Medical groups, politicians and parents began rebelling after disclosure of a behind-the-scenes lobbying by Merck to get state legislatures to require 11- and 12-year-old girls to get the vaccine as a requirement for school attendance.

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by W. James Antle III (Am. Conservative)

Congressional Democrats have the power to defund the war, but they don’t want to risk ending it before 2008. [Blaming a bad war on Bush will ensure Dems control Whitehouse ... how many have to die so they don't have to campaign?]

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AP

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who stripped embattled Rep. William Jefferson of his seat on a powerful tax committee last year, has decided to put him on the Homeland Security panel, infuriating some Republicans who charge he is a security risk.

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Reuters

U.S. lawmakers squared off on Tuesday over President George W. Bush's troop buildup in Iraq, with Democrats declaring Americans had lost faith in the war and Republicans warning against undermining the U.S. struggle with terrorism.

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AP

Text of the Democratic resolution expressing disapproval of President Bush's troop increase in Iraq that the House will debate this week:

Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), that -

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by Dick Meyer (CBS)

These mobile e-tools of Satan provide precisely what many people navigating the outside world want and need: obliviousness. Indeed, young people see it as a basic human right, like free speech and gun-toting.

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LA Times

Pelosi announced she would fly commercial if the military could not provide a plane with a cross-country-sized fuel tank. Pentagon officials, after weeks of deliberation, have offered her the same kind of plane Hastert used but said she could use a l

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Reuters

New Yorkers who blithely cross the street listening to an iPod or talking on a cell phone could soon face a $100 fine. "Government has an obligation to protect its citizenry. This electronic gadgetry is reaching the point where it's becoming

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AP

The House passed a $463.5 billion spending bill today that covers about one-sixth of the federal budget as Congress’ new leadership cleared away the financial mess they inherited from last year.

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by Justin Raimondo (AntiWar)

Democratic complicity in this futile and increasingly dangerous conflict is only underscored by the weakness of the party's ostensible opposition to it: they say they're against it, but they refuse to take meaningful action to end it.

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Washington Post

With the rhetoric of reformers bent on sweeping corruption from the Capitol, the House voted unanimously to deny federal pensions to lawmakers convicted of bribery, perjury and other related felonies. "Corrupt politicians deserve prison sente

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Newsmax

(How about no pensions at all. They do work for us, right???) Lawmakers convicted of crimes such as bribery, fraud and perjury will be stripped of their congressional pensions under legislation the House passed Tuesday in the latest effort

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Washington Post

The new rules, the toughest changes since Watergate, still leave lots of room for special interests to curry favor and lawmakers to raise big dollars. The rules, which differ between the Senate and House, are aimed at some of the most attention-grabb

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AP

The House voted to overhaul the board that supervises its congressional page program, seeking to close the book on a sordid e-mail and sex scandal that sullied its reputation and became a Campaign 2006 issue.

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Washington Post

The Senate broke a difficult stalemate and approved legislation to curtail the influence of lobbyists, tighten congressional ethics rules and prevent the spouses of senators from lobbying senators and their staffs.

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Boston Globe

Propose a "safety fee," which every person convicted of a crime would have to pay. The program is modeled on a similar fee the state now levies against people who violate the law, a program that generate s about $6 million annually to pay f

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Classically Liberal blog

I just hope the American people are prepared for the Democrats to stab them in the backs. At no point did any portion of voters switch parties in order to vote for the Democratic agenda. They were voting against the President’s Iraqi policy.

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AP

[They passed these snoop laws!] The government's ability to use computers to gather personal information about citizens and act on it has far outstripped the federal laws designed to protect them from secret federal dossiers, a privacy advocate t

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Time magazine

Now that they're in charge, Democrats are still talking the talk. But when it comes to actually taking any action to check Bush's war powers, there's not much bite to the Democrats' bark. Which raises the question: will Democrats use

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