Obama’s Anti-recession Policies: George Bush on Steroids
After promising change, the 44th president simply expanded on his predecessor’s bad economic ideas.
Critics are right to question the economic legacy of the now-ended Bush administration – but most of them are wrong about the specifics.
The Democrats mauled Republicans because big-government neoconservatives abandoned the conservative principles that brought them to power.
Critics of George W. Bush have discovered the Gnostic truth at last: the president's name, rearranged, spells "He grew bogus." But what do the anagrams reveal about a certain columnist?
Bush must make some bold decisions to salvage the upcoming election for the Republican Party.
Even when they win, liberals still have to lose.
President Bush's fiscal-policy record is far worse than a President Gore’s would probably have been, if history is any guide.
The corpulent Kennedy has a new beef with the Bush administration: its plans to offer Katrina victims federal aid to attend the schools of their choice. Here’s why his complaint is baseless, though a better objection exists.
President Bush is up to his neck in political hot potatoes. He needs to secure the homeland and define our mission in Iraq.
The Electoral College has come under a lot of fire since the 2000 vote. If Bush was to win the popular vote this time and Kerry the electoral vote, would questions of legitimacy remain?
President Bush entered the presidential debates with a measurable lead over John Kerry, and his more effective and charming performance Wednesday night may have restored it.
WASHINGTON — President Bush retains overwhelming support among much of the military’s professional core despite a troubled mission in Iraq and a decorated combat veteran as an opponent, a Military Times survey suggests. Bush leads John Kerry 73 percent to 18 percent in the survey of 4,165 active-duty, National Guard and Reserve subscribers to Army Times, Navy Times, Marine Corps Times and Air Force Times. Though the results are likely not representative of the opinions of the military as a whole, they are a disappointment to Democrats who hoped Kerry’s record and doubts about Bush would give their candidate an opening with a traditionally Republican group.