HANNITY: When you think about the vast majorities that they have in Congress and they had to bribe, backroom deals, corruption, that’s all because the tea party movement, the people — all these Tim McVeigh wannabes here. (CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)
HANNITY: When you think about the vast majorities that they have in Congress and they had to bribe, backroom deals, corruption, that’s all because the tea party movement, the people — all these Tim McVeigh wannabes here.
(CHEERS AND APPLAUSE)
Tim McVeigh's handywork:
And no, this isn't an April Fool's Day joke. We actually verified with the transcript, thinking this was too absurd to be real.
Paul spokeswoman Rachel Mills said he thinks Washington already extracts too much money from his constituents, and "part of his job is to work hard in Washington, D.C., to get that money back to those constituents in any form that he can." She said Paul also believes that earmarking is more transparent than the regular budget process because you know exactly where the money goes and that it doesn't affect the total amount appropriated by one dime.
Currently Arkansas has one black federal judge, Brian Miller in the Eastern District. Miller was appointed in April 2008 after Republican Rep. John Boozman suggested his name to former President George W. Bush. When Democrats regained control of the White House in January 2009 under President Obama, it became the prerogative of the state's two Democratic senators to submit candidates for federal judgeships to the administration. Lincoln and Pryor initially submitted nine names as candidates but none was African American. "We had a golden opportunity to add to that [one black judge] and Sen. Lincoln and Sen. Pryor decided one was enough," [Arkansas NAACP President Dale] Charles said, adding that the two are practicing a "quota" system.
Currently Arkansas has one black federal judge, Brian Miller in the Eastern District. Miller was appointed in April 2008 after Republican Rep. John Boozman suggested his name to former President George W. Bush.
When Democrats regained control of the White House in January 2009 under President Obama, it became the prerogative of the state's two Democratic senators to submit candidates for federal judgeships to the administration. Lincoln and Pryor initially submitted nine names as candidates but none was African American.
"We had a golden opportunity to add to that [one black judge] and Sen. Lincoln and Sen. Pryor decided one was enough," [Arkansas NAACP President Dale] Charles said, adding that the two are practicing a "quota" system.
Though there's a part of me that wouldn't care if it was.
The Washington Post's David Broder, ostensibly the "dean" of the D.C. political media establishment, thinks he knows why Congress is so unpopular with the public in the wake of the debate over health care reform. Care to guess his explanation? If you said, "because Democrats and Republicans aren't being bipartisan enough for the Broderesque mainstream," you're not only correct, you've also probably read most of David Broder's other columns.
The Washington Post's David Broder, ostensibly the "dean" of the D.C. political media establishment, thinks he knows why Congress is so unpopular with the public in the wake of the debate over health care reform. Care to guess his explanation?
If you said, "because Democrats and Republicans aren't being bipartisan enough for the Broderesque mainstream," you're not only correct, you've also probably read most of David Broder's other columns.
Q: Will the IRS hire 16,500 new agents to enforce the health care law? A: No. The law requires the IRS mostly to hand out tax credits, not collect penalties. The claim of 16,500 new agents stems from a partisan analysis based on guesswork and false assumptions, and compounded by outright misrepresentation.
Q: Will the IRS hire 16,500 new agents to enforce the health care law?
A: No. The law requires the IRS mostly to hand out tax credits, not collect penalties. The claim of 16,500 new agents stems from a partisan analysis based on guesswork and false assumptions, and compounded by outright misrepresentation.
It's like the new "Al Gore invented the internet" lie.