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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!Once a cheerleader, always a cheerleader. Just ask my mom, who proudly cheered on her Rison High School Wildcats for four years. She's always contended that cheerleading was a sport just as much as football or basketball even back in the 1950s, when girls wore long skirts, shook their pompoms, and yelled into a megaphone. Cheerleading has come a long way since the days when cheerleaders were chosen by football players instead of by competitive tryouts. The 2000 "Bring It On" movie -- and its four straight-to-video sequels -- about competing high school cheerleading teams showed that ...
Six states have Tea Party-backed Republican senate candidates who have either won or are favored in upcoming primaries, and some in GOP circles back in Washington are worried about what might happen if voters see Republicans as aligned with some of the positions espoused by the movement such as privatizing Social Security, the Washington Post reports. Kentucky's Rand Paul has already started talking about forming a Tea Party Caucus in the Senate if elected. "I think I will be part of a nucleus with Jim DeMint and Tom Coburn, who are unafraid to stand up," Paul told the National Review in an ...
WASHINGTON (Jan. 11) -- A double standard? Republicans seeking Sen. Harry Reid's resignation as majority leader over racial remarks he made about Barack Obama say yes - that Reid should be held to the same standard as former GOP Sen. Trent Lott, whose own racial gaffes cost him the Senate leadership in 2002. Democrats say no, that Reid's comments - while unfortunate - were nothing like Lott's. Reid apologized to Obama and a handful of black political leaders after a new book reported that he was favorably impressed by Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign and, in a private ...
Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele today called for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to resign his leadership position after it was revealed he had made racially insensitive remarks about then-candidate Barack Obama, saying that an apology was not enough. ...
The U.S. Senate re-convened today, but the chamber didn't seem as-- dare we say?-- harmonious as in past sessions.That's because for the first time in several decades, the body did not include any of the Singing Senators, a barbershop quartet comprised of four Republican lawmakers-- who were also united by making total fools of themselves on the national stage.Let's meet the four erstwhile Capitol crooners, whose gifts for both music and public shame knew no equals: Name Range Embarassment John Ashcroft Baritone Lost re-election to a dead man. ...
It's a sad day in America. Not because Trent Lott is stepping down from the U.S. Senate -- if I offered up grief, it would be in the form of crocodile tears. The bad news isn't that the Minority Whip in the U.S. Senate is leaving, but when and why he is leaving.Think about it. Put aside the political angling for a second (who will be appointed, who will line up to run, which cushy K Street job has Lott lined up) and let's think about what this man is doing. A single year into his current six year term in the U.S. Senate, he is resigning in order to pursue other opportunities, a euphemism ...
Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS), regarded as the second most powerful Republican in the Senate, intends to resign before the end of the year. Lott thus becomes the sixth Senate Republican to announce retirement this year - electoral defeat and minority stature apparently having a marked effect within the GOP senatorial ranks. Lott is the Minority Whip, the party member who counts votes and attempts to barter and horse-trade in order to secure party cohesion. Allegedly, Sen. Lott quite enjoys the position and possesses some talent at the essential back-room diplomacy. However, Lott displayed ...
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