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In a single Washington Post column, Richard Cohen recycled at least half a dozen myths, fallacies, and half-truths of what sometimes passes for conventional wisdom in Washington when it comes to health care.
Published every two years, The Almanac of American Politics is the definitive guide to understanding the forces that shape American politics.
The impulse to blame America first lingers, an atavistic reflex that jerks the knees of too many on the left and has cost the Democratic Party plenty over the years.
It was particularly shocking to hear Richard Perle call Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) a liar to his face.
Frederick M. Hess, AEI director of education policy studies and Education Week blogger, released today his second annual "Edu-Scholar Public Presence Rankings." Traditional measures of research productivity, which focus on academic publication, are useful in their own right, but do not offer as much insight into how education scholars influence thinking and the national discourse.
Despite Congress's move to the political center this year, the partisan voting patterns of 1995 were evident again in 1996, according to National Journal's annual congressional vote ratings.
Today, RHSU unveils the 2012 Edu-Scholar Public Presence rankings. The metrics, as explained yesterday, are designed to recognize those university-based academics who are contributing most substantially to public debates about schools and schooling.
As co-authors of Why ObamaCare Is Wrong for America,we strongly recommend that the Affordable Care Act of 2010 should be repealed and replaced as soon as possible.





