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Monday, October 23, 2006
Poll: Most Americans say no one winning in Iraq
(CNN) -- One in five Americans believes the United States is winning the war in Iraq, according to a poll. The number has dropped by half since December.
About the same number -- 18 percent -- believe insurgents are winning. But the majority, 60 percent, say no one is winning in Iraq. The poll of 1,013 adult Americans interviewed by telephone found two-thirds -- 64 percent -- of those polled oppose the war in Iraq. Full Story DNC says GOP tax ad sign of desperation
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The Democratic National Committee sharply disputed a new Republican National Committee web ad that insinuates Democrats will raise taxes if they win control of Congress in November.
"Republicans are so desperate to win, they will do and say anything to distract voters from their legacy of deficits, deceit and divisiveness," DNC spokeswoman Stacie Paxton said in a statement Monday. "The truth is you can't trust Republicans to manage the economy." --CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney
Ahead on CNN
4 p.m. ET, The Situation Room
-Democratic strategist Paul Begala and former Congressman J.C. Watts, will discuss the midterm elections and weigh in on Sen. Barack Obama's recent acknowledgement that he is considering a run for the White House. -Ambassador David Satterfield, senior advisor to the Secretary of State, will discuss the latest violence in Iraq. 5 p.m. ET, The Situation Room -Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-California, and CNN military analyst Gen. David Grange (ret.) will discuss CNN's decision to air an Iraqi insurgent video. -Former Defense Secretary William Cohen will discuss the increasing violence in Iraq and the latest developments in North Korea. 6 p.m. ET, Lou Dobbs Tonight -Authors Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten will discuss their new book, "One Party Country: The Republican Plan for Dominance in the 21st Century." -Election experts DeForest Soaries and Ray Martinez will talk about possible problems with electronic voting machines. 10 p.m., Anderson Cooper 360 -Time columnist and political blogger Andrew Sullivan will weigh in on fighting within the GOP as Election Day draws near. Ford and Corker accuse each other of mudslinging
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Rep. Harold Ford Jr. suggested Sunday night that former Chattanooga Mayor Bob Corker knew about a Republican National Committee's television advertisement that sharply criticizes Ford and implies he parties with Playboy playmates.
Corker denied he knew the RNC was going to run the ad and reiterated his call for the committee to pull the ad down. "We think the ad is tacky, we think it's not senatorial," Corker said in an interview with CNN's Carol Lin. "We think it has no place in this race." Federal campaign finance laws prohibit campaigns from communicating with independent expenditures made by party committees. But Ford, appearing on the same program, said an RNC staffer works hand-in-hand with the Corker campaign. "The young lady that works for the Republican National Committee actually travels with my opponent wherever he goes," Ford said. "Now, I don't know if they talk or not, but they ride in the same car." An RNC spokeswoman said there are no plans to stop running the ad. --CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney
Clinton Cheering on Obama
(AP) -- Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday that it was great her fellow Democrat, Sen. Barack Obama, is thinking about running for president.
Polls show Clinton is the front-runner among potential 2008 Democratic presidential contenders and she said Friday during a debate that she has also been thinking about running. "I think it's great that anybody thinks about whatever they want to do in the future," she said when asked about Obama during a campaign stop at a senior citizens' center just north of Albany. Full Story Spencer denies disparaging Clinton's appearance
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Former Yonkers Mayor John Spencer is denying a report published in Monday's Daily News that he made a disparaging remark about Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's appearance while en route to Rochester Friday to debate the New York Democrat.
"You ever see a picture of her back then? Whew," Daily News political reporter Ben Smith quotes Spencer as saying. "I don't know why Bill married her." The Daily News also reported that Spencer, the Republican nominee challenging Clinton in November, said the senator had undergone "millions of dollars of work -- plastic surgery" to help improve her appearance. "She looks good now," Smith quotes Spencer as saying. Rob Ryan, Spencer's spokesman, denied Smith's account, but acknowledged that a conversation took place on the flight to Rochester. "The comment that he said was something to the effect of, 'If you have ever seen a picture of Hillary Clinton from college,' I think he said, 'Whew, she changed,'" Ryan said in an interview with CNN. "Which is obvious if you look at the picture of her. That is what he said. He never said anything about her having plastic surgery." Smith told CNN Monday that he stands by his story. And the Daily News reporter posted a response to Spencer's denial on his blog that he writes for the newspaper. -- CNN Political Editor Mark Preston Biden: Americans can cause change of course in Iraq
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Delaware Sen. Joe Biden, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Monday the American people can express their dissatisfaction with the Bush Administration's handling of the Iraq war by voting for Democrats on Election Day. "If the Democrats make significant gains in the United States Senate and take control of the House we will be able to forge a bipartisan consensus for change in Iraq," Biden told reporters Monday. "But if the Republicans hold on and there's not real significant gain for Democrats, I think Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld will take that as a sign to continue to stay the course." Biden, who has expressed interest in a potential presidential run, also said "at least two" senior Republicans have told him directly they are prepared to "force a substantial change" in Iraq policy after the election and the Delaware Democrat says he thinks a dozen or more Republicans would be willing to join the effort. --CNN Congressional Correspondent Ted Barrett
Poll: 3 out of 4 say U.S. government 'broken'
(CNN) -- Nearly 3 out of 4 Americans believe that the U.S. government is "broken" and cannot be fixed, according to a poll released Monday by CNN.
An overwhelming 71 percent of respondents agreed with the statement that "our system of government is broken and cannot be fixed," with another 7 percent agreeing that the government is seriously flawed but expressing hope it can be get better. Only 22 percent of respondents said the U.S. government is "not broken." The survey of 1,012 Americans was conducted between October 13-15 by pollsters from Opinion Research Corporation. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points. CNN continues its special documentary series on "Broken Government" tonight at 8 and 11 p.m. ET. Obama says Republicans have failed
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sen. Barack Obama accuses Republicans of failed leadership in a new Democratic fundraising solicitation sent Monday, the day after the Illinois senator made headlines for acknowledging interest in running for president.
"Now is our time to make our mark on history," Obama writes in the e-mail to potential Democratic Congressional Committee contributors. "The Republican's have had their chance to lead -- and they have failed. We have had enough!" Obama said on NBC's "Meet the Press" Sunday that the enthusiasm he has received while campaigning for Democratic candidates has led him to consider a potential presidential run. In an interview with CNN's Larry King last week, Obama expressed similar interest in a potential White House run. --CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney
Reagan assailant to continue visits to parents
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Presidential assailant John Hinckley Jr.'s visits to his parents' home in Virginia without hospital staff supervision can continue, a federal judge said Monday, but there may need to be some changes in oversight.
At a hearing Monday federal prosecutors sought to block the visits because of concerns his aging parents are experiencing health problems and may not be up to the task of serving as his custodians. U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman agreed to let the visits continue but said he could end up deciding to add one of Hinckley's siblings as a custodian on the overnight visits with family. Hinckley's attorney, Barry Levine, argued Hinckley should continue to be able to stay with his parents in Williamsburg, Va. "Mr. Hinckley as a matter of mental health is doing exceedingly well," said Levine. "He poses no danger -- I would submit -- to himself or others." -- CNN Senior Producer Carol Cratty
CNN Investigates America's Broken Government
The Do Nothing Congress
CNN's Ed Henry looks inside a paralyzed Congress -- where little gets done because campaigning never stops. Tonight, 8 p.m. ET and again at 11 p.m. ET Lieberman challenger complains to FEC
HARTFORD, Connecticut (AP) -- Ned Lamont's campaign filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission on Monday, accusing Sen. Joe Lieberman of failing to account for $387,000 in petty cash his campaign spent days before the Democratic primary. The Lieberman campaign has denied any wrongdoing.
"The public has a right to know how nearly $400,000 in cash was spread around the streets of Connecticut," said Lamont campaign co-chairman George Jepsen at a news conference. Full Story For CNN's coverage of key races, check out America Votes 2006 Bartlett: No change in Iraq policy
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- White House Counsel Dan Bartlett told CNN that the Bush administration has established new benchmarks for the Iraqi military, but dismissed a New York Times article in Sunday's edition suggesting the benchmarks signal a change in policy.
"This is something that we've been working for months with the Iraqi government on," Bartlett told CNN's Miles O'Brien. "Both on the security front, as I mentioned earlier, and on the political front because it's important that the Iraqi government have very understandable goals for them to reach over the period of the coming months." Bartlett also said the administration has not instituted a timeframe for withdrawal if the Iraqi military does not meet the benchmarks. "The president has constantly said that it's going to be up to the commanders and our diplomats on the ground to give him advice about what our troop strength ought to be in order to prevail in this conflict," Bartlett said. Full Story Transcript of interview --CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney
Active troops ask congress to end Iraqi occupation
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sixty five active duty service members are officially asking Congress to end the war in Iraq -- the first time active troops have done so since U.S. invasion began in 2003.
Three of the service members will hold a press conference Wednesday explaining their decision to send "Appeals for Redress" under the Military Whistleblower Protection Act to their members of Congress. Under the act, National Guard and Reservists can send communications about any subject to their member of Congress without punishment. -CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney
Shaw has edge over Klein
WASHINGTON (CNN)--Rep. Clay Shaw (R) has a 5-point edge over Democratic challenger Ron Klein in the race for Florida’s 22nd Congressional District seat. The poll was conducted by Research 2000/Sun-Sentinel on October 16 through October 19, 2006.
--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai
Crist and Davis in a dead heat for the Florida governor's seat
WASHINGTON (CNN--State Attorney General Charlie Crist (R) is in a virtual tie with Rep. Jim Davis (D) for the governor's seat in Florida. The poll was conducted by Quinnipiac University from October 18 through October 22, 2006.
--CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai RNC Web ad: Here cometh the taxman
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The Republican National Committee Monday released a web ad that purports to evaluate the implications of the Democrat's tax policy, in a change in tone from an RNC ad last week that focused on the terrorist threat.
The new ad, directed by David Zucker of "Naked Gun" fame, depicts overly aggressive taxmen under Democratic rule. "And from the day we're born, no matter where you live, no matter what you do, no matter who you are--man, woman, young, old, East Coast, West Coast, Midwest or Deep South--until the day we die, they will never stop," the ad warns. The ad will be emailed to GOP supporters and activists and is available on the RNC website. View ad -- CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney
Biden to assess Iraq developments
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sen. Joe Biden, D-Delaware, will hold a press conference Monday to assess the escalating violence in Iraq and articulate his plan for the war-torn country.
The ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee also plans to evaluate the latest comments from GOP leaders about the Iraq war and assess of how it may affect the upcoming midterm elections. Biden, who has expressed interest in a presidential run, has crisscrossed the country this election season campaigning for democratic candidates and expressing his plan for Iraq. --CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney
GOP shuns its immigration hardline candidate in Arizona
TUCSON, Arizona (AP) -- Randy Graf is a tough-on-immigration Republican in a district that is fed up with people pouring illegally across the border and hasn't elected a Democrat to the House in two decades.
Yet Graf's national party is turning its back on him, the retiring Republican congressman he wants to succeed has disavowed his candidacy and he's finding trouble getting traction beyond the most secure GOP voters -- and a border militia that's backing him. Arizona's 8th District, which stretches from Tucson to the Mexican border, has returned moderate Republican Rep. Jim Kolbe to office for 22 years, faithfully backing him even after he revealed in 1996 that he was gay. Now a rift in the Republican Party over immigration is playing to the benefit of the Democratic candidate, former state Sen. Gabrielle Giffords, 36. Full story GOP strategist: Sen. Kennedy can only lose 'in bizarro world'
(AP) -- Sen. Ted Kennedy's Republican challenger, Kenneth Chase, stood alone on a sidewalk outside a Dunkin' Donuts in Belmont. Holding a stack of campaign pamphlets, he introduced himself to the customers.
Most seem unaware of the Senate contest, or even the fact that Kennedy has an opponent. That's the slice of humble pie when you're running against the brother of a president, the last son of an Irish-American political dynasty in Massachusetts and a Democratic stalwart with a stack of laws that carry his name. Even Republican campaign strategist Todd Domke says Chase has no shot at toppling one of the nation's longest-serving senators. "I think in bizarro world, (Chase) could win," Domke said. "And while Massachusetts politics often seem bizarre, I don't think we've reached the point where anyone could argue that Chase can possibly win." Full story Heavyweight Sens. Clinton, McCain stump for N.J. hopefuls
EDISON, New Jersey (AP) -- Two heavy hitters from Washington came to New Jersey on Sunday to campaign in the tight race between Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez and Republican challenger Tom Kean, Jr.
While the focus remained largely on the Senate race, appearances by Sens. John McCain, R-Arizona, and Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-New York, also looked like a potential preview of the 2008 presidential campaign. Full story Rural voters could tip critical Missouri Senate race
CLINTON, Missouri (AP) -- State Auditor Claire McCaskill and Sen. Jim Talent have returned to Missouri's heartland often this year in search of votes for a race that could determine whether Democrats regain control of the Senate.
For months, the Missouri contest has been a dead heat between Talent, a strong supporter of the war, and McCaskill, who wants Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld fired and U.S. troops in Iraq to be redeployed over the next two years. Both candidates are projecting a centrist image as they appeal to voters nestled between St. Louis and Kansas City, an area widely viewed as crucial to winning the state. Full story CNN Political Ticker AM
For the latest, breaking political news, check for updates throughout the day on the CNN Political Ticker. All politics, all the time.
Compiled by Stephen Bach CNN Washington Bureau Making news today... TIM RUSSERT: It's fair to say you're thinking about running for president in 2008? SEN. OBAMA: It's fair, yes. MR. RUSSERT: And so when you said to me in January, "I will not," that statement is no longer operative. SEN. OBAMA: The - I would say that I am still at the point where I have not made a decision to, to pursue higher office, but it is true that I have thought about it over the last several months. MR. RUSSERT: So, it sounds as if the door has opened a bit. SEN. OBAMA: A bit. President's Schedule: Also on the Political Radar today: ================================================================= Political Hot Topics (Today's top political stories from news organizations across the country) OBAMA OPENS THE DOOR "A BIT" ON 2008: In a decided and unequivocal shift, Sen. Barack Obama said Sunday he is seriously considering a run for the White House in 2008, affirming the stunningly rapid trajectory of a political career that saw him in the Illinois legislature just two years ago. In an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press," the same program where he categorically ruled out a run just last January, Obama went further than ever in discussing his Oval Office ambitions, and left clear the impression that he could well run, a move that would fundamentally reshape the contest for the Democratic nomination. Chicago Tribune: Audacity of a hopeful FULL TRANSCRIPT OF OBAMA'S APPEARANCE ON NBC'S "MEET THE PRESS" "OPTIMIST IN CHIEF" PLANS 10-DAY TRAVEL BLITZ BEFORE E-DAY: President Bush and his political strategists may be the most outwardly optimistic Republicans in Washington these days, and perhaps the only ones. They are doing their best to fend off the sense of impending doom within their party that they fear will become a self-fulfilling prophecy on Nov. 7. They are enlisting longtime allies for an all-hands-on-deck effort to change the mood for the final push to Election Day, and they are putting out the word for Republicans to keep a lid on any pessimistic talk. They are also planning a travel blitz for Mr. Bush during the final week to 10 days of the campaign. New York Times: As G.O.P. Mopes, Bush Adds the Duties of Optimist in Chief "BRACING FOR GUERILLA WARFARE ON THE HOMEFRONT POLITICALLY": The White House is bracing for guerrilla warfare on the homefront politically if Republicans lose control of the House, the Senate or both - and with it, the president's ability to shape and dominate the national agenda. Republicans are battling to keep control of Congress. But polls and analysts in both parties increasingly suggest Democrats will capture the House and possibly the Senate on Election Day Nov. 7. Democrats need a 15-seat pickup to regain the House and a gain of six seats to claim the Senate. Everything could change overnight for President Bush, who has governed for most of the past six years with a Republican Congress and with little support from Democrats. AP via Yahoo! News: GOP losses could spark partisan warfare MORE GOP-HELD SEATS BECOMING COMPETITIVE: A growing number of GOP incumbents in seats once considered "safe" - including Melissa A. Hart in Pennsylvania, Ron Lewis in Kentucky, Richard W. Pombo in Tracy, Calif., and [Gil] Gutknecht [in Minnesota] - are struggling this month against a powerful current of discontent with the nation's direction, the performance of Congress and President Bush, and the war in Iraq. Republican seats at risk have nearly tripled since January, according to the nonpartisan Cook Political Report. Then, 18 GOP seats were endangered; now, 48 are considered in play... To take back the House, which they lost in 1994, Democrats need a net gain of 15 seats - something they could do, perhaps, without capturing any of these newly competitive seats. But Democratic strategists believe that if the party can break into this second tier of Republican-leaning districts, they could greatly increase their odds of building a majority large enough to survive for longer than two years. Los Angeles Times: The battlefield widens for House GOP seats DEMS COULD HOLD MOST STATE CAPITALS: For the first time since 1994, Democrats are poised to surpass Republicans in the number of state capitals where one party enjoys complete political control - holding the governor's mansion and both chambers of the state legislature. Having the political upper hand in state capitals has enabled Republicans to draw congressional districts that are more favorable to their party's candidates, notably in Texas and Georgia. It has also helped the party develop strong candidates for higher office. According to the non-partisan National Conference of State Legislatures, 57% of members of Congress started out as state legislators. Republicans hold the governorships and both chambers of the state legislatures in 12 states; Democrats, in eight. Republicans' control is in jeopardy in three of those states: Ohio, Alaska and Indiana. Democrats face the possibility of losing dominance in only one state: Maine. Meanwhile, the party has a chance for control in eight other states: Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana and Tennessee. USA Today: Fight for control of state capitals heats up WILL ALLEN AND WEBB START WEARING SWEATERS? Their biographies exude machismo: James Webb, the Marine firing his M50 antitank rifles in the jungles of Vietnam, and George Allen, the tobacco-chewing cowboy who as governor once stirred GOP delegates with this line about Democrats: "Let's enjoy knocking their soft teeth down their whining throats." But Webb, the former Navy secretary, and Allen, the first-term Republican senator, are trying to soften their tough-guy personas as they appeal to the 1.9 million women who represent more than half of Virginia voters. The candidates are virtually tied among likely female voters, a recent Washington Post poll shows. Washington Post: Women's Vote Could Tip Close Contest FAMOUS NAME AN EXTRA CHALLENGE FOR KEAN: When Thomas H. Kean Jr. first ran for public office, in a crowded Republican primary for a House seat in 2000, he was blindsided by a campaign flier from one of his opponents that cribbed from Mr. Kean's own résumé. Drawing attention to selected items via circles and bullet points, the leaflet belittled Mr. Kean's experience, arguing that he, the fortunate son of a popular former governor, had never demonstrated any leadership skills beyond organizing a canoe trip down the length of the Danube River after graduating from Dartmouth. As Mr. Kean, now a state senator, tries again to land a job in Congress - this time to fill a Senate seat formerly held by his great-grandfather and great-great-uncle - he must still persuade skeptics that he possesses more than just a revered political name. New York Times: Out to Show He's Not Just an Old New Jersey Name SENATE RACE MAY BE BORING, BUT HARRIS ISN'T: Though polls suggest Florida's U.S. Senate race is all but over, tonight's first debate between the candidates will be one of the state's more intriguing political events for this reason: Katherine Harris. For the past year, the long-shot Republican congresswoman, already famous for her role in the 2000 presidential election debacle, has created so much news and controversy in her bid to unseat Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson that her campaign has become an object of curiosity. Miami Herald: What might Harris say? RNC AD CAUSES FRICTION IN TN RACE: Both the Republican candidate, Bob Corker, and the Democratic candidate, Rep. Harold E. Ford Jr. complain that the national parties are slinging so much "mud" [in Tennessee] that they can barely get their points across to voters. The stakes are huge in Tennessee. Control of the U.S. Senate may hinge on the result here. Mr. Corker, a former mayor of Chattanooga, asked the Republican National Committee (RNC) to take down an ad that first aired Friday accusing Mr. Ford of taking money from pornographers, and said it hinted at interracial dating -- the ending shows a scantily clad, white blonde winking and saying, "Hey, Harold call me."... After viewing the ad, Mr. Ford lost his cool and confronted Mr. Corker, ambush style, just before a press conference at a Friday campaign stop at the Memphis airport. He got in Mr. Corker's face and asked him to stop talking about his family, then asked him to talk about Iraq. Washington Times: National parties roil Tennessee race ELLISON WOULD BE FIRST MUSLIM ELECTED TO CONGRESS: While there is no such thing as a sure thing in politics, congressional candidate Keith Ellison is a good bet to join the freshman class of 2006 in the US House of Representatives. If he does, Ellison, who is the Democratic nominee in an overwhelmingly Democratic district, will take the oath of office with his hand on the Koran and not the Bible -- the first Muslim in American history to be elected to Congress. Though he publicly downplays his faith, it helped boost Ellison past two local party heavyweights to capture the nomination. In the primary, his campaign triggered a record turnout among Minneapolis's largely Muslim Somali community. Boston Globe: Muslim could be a 1st in Congress "DUDE, I HEARD WAXMAN IS AVAILABLE ON WAIVERS!" Fantasy Congress, a Web site created by four students at Claremont McKenna College in Southern California, made its debut three weeks ago. Through word of mouth and blog entries, it has attracted nearly 600 participants from states including Texas and Florida, from as far away as Denmark and, of course, from the Beltway. For those who have no idea how many yards Peyton Manning threw for on Sunday but can cite every legislative amendment proposed by Senator Richard Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, the game could be an alternative to the prevailing fantasy sports culture. New York Times: Fantasy Sports? Child's Play. Here, Politics Is the Game. Fantasy Congress web site PELOSI NOT HOT ON "BETTER KNOW A DISTRICT": Most politicians are as likely to pass up free TV face time before an election as they would be to refuse a campaign check. Then again, there's a price to be paid for looking stupid. That's what members of Congress have learned recently about "Better Know a District," a sarcastic weekly skit that is part of "The Colbert Report," a nightly half-hour on Viacom Inc.'s Comedy Central network... Many lawmakers initially played along with the segments in which [Stephen] Colbert interviews a member of the House of Representatives, with few checks and balances on his proclivity to make fools of them. But after a couple of House members stumbled badly on the show, some incumbents decided that the dumbest thing to do with Colbert's offer of free TV exposure was to take it. "I watch it all the time," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), "and I think, 'Why would anybody go on there?'" Los Angeles Times: Running for office? Better run from Colbert GOP losses could spark partisan warfare
WASHINGTON (AP) The White House is bracing for guerrilla warfare on the homefront politically if Republicans lose control of the House, the Senate or both _ and with it, the president's ability to shape and dominate the national agenda.
Full story Senate: campaign cash
Who has the financial edge in the nation's hotly contested Senate races?
Joe Lieberman (D) Ned Lamont (D) Alan Schlesinger (R) --CNN Political Researcher Xuan Thai
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About the CNN Political Ticker
The CNN Political Ticker provides the latest political news.To sign up for our twice daily Ticker emails, visit CNN.com member services page. If you do not have a CNN.com account, you can register here. If you have any feedback, suggestions or news tips, drop us a line at politicalticker@cnn.com. NEW IN THE TICKER
• Hagel to announce decision on presidential bid Monday• Does Tiger Woods have a political future? • AFL-CIO makes push to keep unions united behind one presidential candidate • Obama: "No place for politics" in voter intimidation • Muslim congressman talks up 'American values' in State Department outreach • Year of the 'smaller' Pig • Pataki joins law firm • Bush 'sad' about Libby's conviction • House Dems urge colleagues to fund a withdrawal from Iraq • Romney recruits from the Sunshine State ARCHIVE
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