Word: d-calif
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Representative Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), expected to become the new House minority leader tomorrow, is the perfect cure for an ailing and ill-defined Democratic Party. Blaming the Democrats’ election shortfalls on the terrorism issue belies a greater problem: that, presently, the Democratic Party has no clear agenda or message. There is no political leader currently demonstrating how the party differs from its adversaries across the aisle. Now that the Republicans control both houses and the presidency, Democratic success in 2004 relies on how the party defines its own political agenda...
...Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) defended her vote against using force in Iraq last night and told a crowd at Harvard Law School (HLS) that the Bush administration is exploiting the Iraq issue for political gain...
...political consultant James Carville, Rep. Barney Frank ’62 (D-Mass.), Democratic Leadership Council Chief Executive Officer Al From and Rep. Ellen Tauscher (D-Calif.) were unclear on how exactly the party could achieve these goals...
...been only 10 months since the Levy-Condit scandal broke. Although Chandra Levy came into the news for tragic reasons she quickly ceased to be the impetus for investigation. Instead, journalists reported on Representative Gary Condit’s (D-Calif.) past extramarital affairs, again taking up countless hours of precious news time...
...shouldn't do. And for all Pitt's genially droning delivery, and all the time he spent dodging grandstanders digging for pungent quotes on Bush's budget priorities, at least the general theme of the exchange was figuring out - and fixing - the real problem. As Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., put it: "What shocked me was how close Enron came to being completely legal...