I'm a preacher's kid, and we were always told, Act right all the time, because someone's always watching.
Is it unreasonable to have proof of citizenship when entering another country?
Tony Blair - good thing there are not parliamentary elections in this country.
It's been years, decades, since a president has lost a major trade initiative. That would be bad headlines.
The common agenda both sides seem to share is: Whatever works.
If you start to catalog Hillary Clinton's positions between now and 2008, we're going to have a lot of conversations because there are a lot of places for her to go.
The President has launched a very agressive campaign of self-defense, with the goal of getting Americans to buy into his vision of America on the world stage.
There seems to be more abiding interest in unearthing old memos abroad than there is here.
We will wait to see if it is a doozy before we decide how to cover it, and what it all means.
We're not paying attention to the fact that Hillary Clinton is running in 2006. Everyone is looking to her for the future. It's the same with anybody else who's positioning themselves.
Whatever their motivations, lawmakers on both side of the aisle have certainly discovered that immigration is one of those issues that resonate strongly with the public.
You would like me to say that the veil will be ripped from the voters' eyes sometime between now and November, thereby restoring the proper version of Democracy to the House and Senate. I won't say that, of course. The simple reason is, I don't know.
The theme with Hillary Clinton is, she wants to know where the outrage is. And we've found where the outrage is. It's in Howard Dean.
Tony Blair barely escaped this year, and now George W. Bush, if elections were to be held today, would be in a serious challenge as well.
The President's got a lot of things working against him which aren't necessarily under his control, and I'm not sure he's familiar with that.