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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!(March 16) -- Open wide and say "fraud." A grand jury in Bristol County, Mass., has indicted a dentist for bilking Medicare for false claims, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said today. Michael Clair, 51, stands accused of using pieces of paper clips for root canal procedures, then billing Medicare for much costlier stainless steel posts instead. Clair was indicted on charges of submitting false Medicaid claims using other dentists' provider numbers, and for illegally prescribing the prescription drugs hydrocodone, Combunox and Percocet to members of his own staff. The ...
If British Prime Minister Gordon Brown didn't watch CNN International last week, let's hope that one of his staffers did. Two landmark elections in Chile and Massachusetts delivered stunning victories for right-wing political parties. And in my humble opinion, both elections have portentous implications for the upcoming elections in the U.K. ...
After a year of tightly scripted, largely predictable speeches, President Barack Obama went slightly, but tellingly, off script Friday afternoon during his town hall meeting in Lorain County, Ohio. Before getting into the meat of his speech on the economy, he said, "It's just nice being out of Washington. There are some nice people in Washington, but it can drive you crazy."The president returned to his script to talk about his days on the campaign trail, when he could eat in diners and walk into barber shops to ask people what's on their minds. "It's harder to do that nowadays, to get out of ...
Nobody ever called President Obama the Great Communicator. That honor belongs to President Ronald Reagan. But during the 2008 campaign Obama became known as the Great Orator for his ability to inspire the American people -- "Yes, we can" -- that anything was possible. ...
Republican Scott Brown's defeat of Martha Coakley in Massachusetts is both stunning and, at the same time, a scenario all too familiar for Democrats. How did it happen? The same way Massachusetts nominees lost the presidency for Democrats in 1988 and 2004, and the same way Democrats in Congress lost health reform and their majorities in 1994. They think they have all the time in the world to define themselves, to sell themselves and their policies, to respond to attacks, to dicker over bills, to win elections. And then it turns out they don't. ...
BOSTON -- The last time a Republican was elected to fill a Massachusetts seat in the U.S. Senate, Barack Obama was still Barry. It was 1972 when Ed Brooke was re-elected, and the future 44th president of the United States was just 11 years old. Ted Kennedy, of course, had already been a senator for a decade when Brooke was elected. Kennedy's nearly five-decade reign makes it easy to believe that there has never been life without the so-called Lion of the Senate representing Massachusetts. The months since Kennedy's August death excepted, for a staggering 59.8 percent of Massachusettians -- ...
(Jan. 20) – Democrats distraught in the aftermath of Martha Coakley's tumultuous defeat in Massachusetts may one day look back and find a silver lining. Scott Brown's upset victory – propelled by suburban and independent voters – should serve as a wake-up call to Democrats in Washington: If we want to preserve a Democratic governing majority in November, we'll have to earn the trust of the forgotten middle class every step of the way. Some Democrats may be tempted to blame Coakley's loss simply on a disastrous campaign – that but for a series of missteps, the outcome ...
(Jan. 20) -- At first glance, it's quite clear who's the biggest winner in Tuesday's Massachusetts election. State Sen. Scott Brown has become the GOP's latest hero by capturing the U.S. Senate seat Democrats held for decades. And not just any Democrats -- the Kennedys. Brown's victory over state Attorney General Martha Coakley -- Tuesday's biggest loser -- in the battle to succeed Ted Kennedy might spell defeat for health care reform, which the late senator called the cause of his life. A closer look at what online commentators are saying about the election that ended the Democrats' 60-vote ...
(Jan. 19) -- Scott Brown, a little-known Republican state senator, has pulled off one of the biggest political upsets in recent memory, winning the special election to replace the late Ted Kennedy in the U.S. Senate over Attorney General Martha Coakley. ...
Scott Brown, once a little-known Republican state senator, has pulled off one of the biggest political upsets in recent memory, beating Democratic Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley 52 percent to 47 percent in the special election to replace the late Ted Kennedy in the U.S. Senate. Brown ran an energetic, outsider's campaign in a year that Gallup has called the most anti-incumbent since the Watergate era. His populist message tapped into a deep well of voter anger and frustration and gave him a massive, 75 percent advantage among independent voters, who make up more than half of ...
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