The intertwined fates of Marco Rubio and immigration reform
Edward Morrissey | January 29, 2013The bipartisan package won't pass if Rubio backs out. And if Rubio fails on immigration, it could imperil his future political prospects
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The bipartisan package won't pass if Rubio backs out. And if Rubio fails on immigration, it could imperil his future political prospects
Eric Cantor seems willing to compromise. Now it's up to Democrats to end the Age of Cliffs
After the fiscal-cliff fiasco, Republicans have almost nothing to lose
Republicans are pillorying the past of Obama's nominee for defense secretary. His future may be even worse
For starters, a little humility
Labor groups should have to convince members that their goods and services are worth the price demanded — and not just take the money and run
By using guns as a scapegoat, Bob Costas wrongly absolves the NFL of the need to examine the dangerous effects of its violent game
Temporarily lowering payroll taxes on American workers failed to stimulate the economy — and ending the holiday promises to invite major political blowback
The electorate has spoken. And if Republicans want to win over Latino voters, conservatives must stop talking about self-deportations and instead devise solutions
It's Election Day! And President Obama would like you to vote. Why? "Voting's the best revenge."
What happened to "we report, you decide?"
Last night's debate won't move the needle. Because for better or worse, voters are laser-focused on jobs and the economy, not Iran and Benghazi
Anyone who tells you that tonight's debate will definitely be a game-changer is guilty of peddling, well, malarkey
The president is blowing it big time — and even a masterful debate performance from his running mate won't be enough to right this ship
Despite the media's many premature post mortems, the presidential race is actually still quite close
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