I had hoped to keep our little blog Weiner-free. Seriously, if I never hear another phallic pun it will be too soon. And so I was totally prepared to accept the story offered by Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., that when his Twitter account sent a picture of a...well, you know...to a girl in Seattle, it was just a hack or a prank or something like that. I was ready to forget about it and move on.
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President Obama's choice to lead the Commerce Department is a revolving-door former regulator who has spent his private-sector career earning millions from government-granted monopolies that depend on subsidies for their profits.
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The mystery surrounding an illicit photo on Rep. Anthony Weiner's Twitter account deepened Wednesday after the New York Democrat admitted that he "can't say with certitude" that the lewd picture was not of him. Weiner insisted, however, that he didn't send the picture of a man's crotch in gray underwear to a female college student in Seattle. Weiner repeated to MSNBC on Wednesday that his Twitter account was hacked over the weekend when the picture was sent.
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Earlier today, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit heard a suit challenging the national health care law, and Cato's Ilya Shapiro, who was on hand for the oral arguments, found reason for opponents of the law to be "cautiously optimistic."
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A meeting between President Obama and House Republicans on Wednesday yielded no progress toward a deal that would prevent the U.S. from defaulting on its debt, and Republicans are now demanding that Obama take a more direct role in negotiations.
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Ray LaHood was a Republican member of Congress, and now he is the Republican in President Obama's Cabinet, serving as Transportation Secretary. His son, Darin, was appointed to a vacant State Senate seat in 2009, and he is currently running for a full term. Bernie Robinson was chief of staff for liberal Democrat James McGovern of Massachusetts. Now, he's a wealthy lobbyist with the powerful Livingston Group, where he lobbies on transportation issues.
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House Republicans yanked a resolution from the floor that called for an end to U.S. participation in a NATO military action in Libya after it appeared the measure may have had enough support to pass. A House Republican leadership aide acknowledged to The Washington Examiner that U.S. action in Libya has brought "significant bipartisan concern," which for the most part is made up of a coalition of liberal anti-war Democrats and conservative freshmen Republicans.
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