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By Calvin Woodward |
March 20, 2012
Now here's a tag team for the ages: Richard Nixon, Mitt Romney, Barack Obama.
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By Steve LeBlanc |
February 15, 2012
The debate over the line between religious freedom and federal health care mandates has made its way into Massachusetts' closely watched U.S. Senate race, with Republican Sen. Scott Brown accusing his chief Democratic rival of wanting to "dictate to religious people about what they should believe."
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By Denis Storey |
October 18, 2011
The rise and fall of the Class Act, a key component of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, not only represents a microcosm of the reform law as a whole, but the administration's broader political strategy – for a lack of better word.
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By Carol Einhorn |
August 16, 2011
The fate of the CLASS Act is in the hands of the “Super Committee,” a group of 12 lawmakers created to propose more than one trillion dollars in federal spending cuts. Although the newly created committee may have the motivation and means to stop the clock before the starting bell...
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By Charles Babington |
July 27, 2011
Despite his image as a button-down Republican, House Speaker John Boehner walked to the brink of a dramatic and historic agreement to change the government's spending habits.
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By Dan Shellenbarger |
April 1, 2010
As health care reform faces an even more uncertain future, brokers have been given a second (tenuous) lease on life. Now what do they plan to do with it?
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By Denis Storey |
March 1, 2010
Doug Snowman's from up north. So far north, in fact, that another step takes you into Canada.
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By Denis Storey |
January 20, 2010
| Storey Lines
It's clear from last night's historic political beat down that the Democrats resemble one of those warbling American Idol rejects. (And not even good enough to stick in the brain like old Mr. "Pants on Da Ground".)