This being April Fool’s Day, how I wish the subject of this column was only a put-up job with a “just kidding” punchline at the end. Sadly for all of us, it’s not.
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Leave it to those humorless, sunglasses-wearing, sleeve-talking killjoys at the U.S. Secret Service to take all the fun out of a political convention.
With the world on fire, the American president goes on ideological holiday.
The conservative Republican primary season has officially gotten underway, as members of the party’s anti-tax wing begin to confront their moremoderate peers on the campaign trail as both vie for voter’s approval.
Say what you will about the Center for American Progress, but don’t say the group lacks faith in the government of the United States.
If you’d have asked me before the close of filing last week, I’d have told you I didn’t think there was any way former Assemblywoman Sharron Angle would file to run again for U.S. Senate.
We should induce Google to test their driverless cars right here in Las Vegas. In fact, we provide the perfect place to do it.
By international and historical standards, political violence is exceedingly rare in the United States. The last serious outburst was 1968, with its bloody Democratic convention riots. By that standard, 2016 is, as yet, tame. It may not remain so.
In the space of a morning news conference in the Rose Garden of the White House, the dilemma faced by the Shutdown Party went from abstract and theoretical to acute and imminent.
So who’s the real Donald Trump? I ask because there are plenty of people — not least Trump himself — who’ve suggested the brash, sometimes boorish public personaisn’t at all the real Trump. But since Trump is the Republican front-runner, it’s a question that has plenty of import for Democrats andRepublicans.