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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!With a controversial permit from the National Park Service in hand, White House party crashers Tareq and Michaele Salahi are set to to hold their annual charity polo match this weekend on the National Mall, despite an ongoing investigation into the event's fundraising practices. Americas Polo Cup is produced by the spotlight-seeking couple every year. According to its website, the event is "one of the worlds most prestigious sporting and cultural experiences," and attracts "successful, educated and premier clientele and senior level government officials annually." But Americas Polo Cup is ...
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Politics in 2009 was pretty serious business, except when it wasn't. Some serious moments made for amusing parodies; others remind us that there can be an absurd quality to high-profile transgressions, criminal acts, and even death. So, please take a step back from the contentious nature of politics to enjoy some year-end, bipartisan, moments courtesy of YouTube. 1. "Don't Call Me Liz," as re-enacted on Keith Olbermann's show The e-mail chain between Elizabeth Becton (aka "Don't Call me Liz!") -- the scheduler for Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) – and a Democratic lobbyist's assistant was ...
RICHMOND, Va. (Dec. 10) -- A Virginia man who crashed a White House state dinner without an invitation has resigned under criticism from the Virginia Tourism Authority board. Tareq Salahi resigned in an e-mail sent to Gov. Tim Kaine and Alisa Bailey, president of the Virginia Tourism Corp. Salahi and his wife, Michaele, are aspiring reality TV stars and have been subpoenaed by the House Homeland Security Committee, which is investigating the security breach. The couple say they will invoke their Fifth Amendment right not to testify. Virginia's Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services ...
(WASHINGTON (Dec. 9) -- Congress authorized subpoenas Wednesday for the White House gate-crashers to testify about how the couple got into a state dinner without an invitation. Lawmakers on the House Homeland Security Committee voted Wednesday to compel the attention-hungry couple to answer questions about the Nov. 24 incident. The couple, Tareq and Michaele Salahi, have said they will invoke their Fifth Amendment right to refuse to answer questions. Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan has said normal security protocols weren't followed and three uniformed Secret Service officers have ...
On Nov. 24, 2008, Desiree Rogers was tapped by then President-elect Barack Obama to be the new White House Social Secretary, working in an office of the East Wing overseen by First Lady Michelle Obama. The night before the announcement, Rogers and Mrs. Obama dined privately at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, where they worked out the final details of the position that would transplant Rogers -- a fixture in Chicago's business, social, and political circles -- into the highest profile job of her life. ...
WASHINGTON – The Salahis were hardly the first to embarrass the Secret Service by crashing presidential security. And it will probably happen again. One man did it twice. The Rev. Rich C. Weber shook hands with President Clinton at his second inauguration, then was back four years later in 2001, welcoming President George W. Bush with a brief conversation. There were also more frightening incidents -- a man who hopped the White House gate with a .38-caliber revolver and got within 50 feet of the residence. Another man crashed a plane into the White House. But until Tareq and Michaele ...
WASHINGTON (Dec. 3) -- This time, Tareq and Michaele Salahi really had an invitation. The White House gatecrashers had been summoned to appear before the House Homeland Security Committee to explain how they got past the U.S. Secret Service last week at a state dinner for the Indian prime minister. A nameplate reading "Mrs. Salahi" sat to one side of the witness table. Huge blowups of their grip-and-grins with Vice President Joe Biden and others were on display. Dozens of paparazzi jostled in a hallway of the Cannon House Office Building to await their arrival. Alex Ogle, AFP / Getty ...
(Dec. 2) - Some people are so upset about Michaele and Tareq Salahi crashing the White House State Dinner that they want the publicity-hungry socialites prosecuted. While there's new evidence that they weren't invited, it's not clear whether they did anything illegal. The Salahis were not on the guest list for last week's party, according to the White House and Secret Service. And although they've said they believed they were invited, newly released e-mails undercut the couple's claim. News that they were escorted out of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's awards dinner a month ago ...
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