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Should Obama triangulate between the unpopular left and unpopular right in Congress? Clinton did, but the political landscape is much different now.
The president's trip to meet with leaders and revive the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) closely resembles a trip he took two years ago. We've been down this road before. Past experience cautions against reading too much into Obama's embrace of the TPP.
Since the end of the Cold War, many conservatives have consoled themselves with the thought that, in the end, there was a bipartisan consensus on America's role in the world, that the commitment to preserving U.S. power was deeply ingrained.
Elena Kagan's academic work suggests that her views on executive power are vigorous domestically and constrained internationally, which conflict with the original intent of the Constitution's framers.
The allure of securing a place in history could account for the about-face on key foreign policy issues in North Korea and the Middle East.
The percentage of Americans who say Iraq was not worth a war has doubled.
Ken Blackwell, the Republican candidate for governor in Ohio, is fast becoming a Party superstar and a Democratic nightmare.
The working class in America continues to ping-pong between the parties and is there for the taking by any group that can seriously and directly address its concerns.




