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George Allen, presidential candidate?
Tweet Share on Facebook September 25, 2006 CommentWhen this fall campaign got underway, Virginia Sen. George Allen was considered two thingsa shoo-in, and a very high-level Republican presidential contender in 2008. Now, he is neitherand if the way he has handled his campaign recently is any indication, he could be out of politics altogether.
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Allen's roots
Tweet Share on Facebook September 22, 2006 CommentI don't know what it is about these politicians, but when you get them off message it's as if they lose their ability to reason and speak. Take Sen. George Allen. Asked about his Jewish heritage (admittedly, in a debate setting, which was not the place to do it), all he could say was that it's important not to make "aspersions about people because of their religious beliefs." Unfortunately for Allen, no one was making aspersions. Is being Jewish (or the fact that your mother is Jewish) an aspersion? Hardly.
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A torturous compromise
Tweet Share on Facebook September 19, 2006 CommentIn the end, you know there will be a compromise. The three GOP senatorsled by the ex-POW John McCainwill no doubt strike a deal with the White House on this sticky question of torture. They need to work out the question of whether intelligence operatives interrogating prisoners need to adhere to the Geneva Conventionswhich the senators want. After all, they say, what would happen to our men and women taken prisoner if we treated our prisoners another way?
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The defender in chief
Tweet Share on Facebook September 15, 2006 CommentIt's not hard to understand why the president had a press conference today. His pre-election plan to link Iraq to the war on terrorism had been going very well, to the point where he was rising in the polls. And it looked as if his plan to deal with terrorists would move quickly, but then he came upon a few human speed bumpsRepublican speed bumps. And big bumps they are: Sens. John McCain, John Warner, Lindsey Graham, Susan Collinsall GOP senators of quite some stature (joined by former Secretary of State Colin Powell) who disagree with his plans for interrogating suspected terrorists. So he had to have a press conference in his own defense.
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Rhode Island: A Republican bastion?
Tweet Share on Facebook September 12, 2006 CommentUsually, when you think of Rhode Island, you might think of a tranquil placesay, Newport. It's a moderate state, no doubtoverwhelmingly Democratic, but it has elected a Republican to the Senate for the past 30 years.
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The flip side of a nationalized election
Tweet Share on Facebook September 11, 2006 CommentYou don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what is going on in politics these days. The Democrats, salivating at the prospect of retaking the House (and maybe even the Senate, although that's much less likely), have decided to play their big cards: Iraq, Iraq, Iraq. So the talk is all about dumping Rummy, deploying the troops (home), the incompetence of the Bush administration in prosecuting the war. They want to nationalize this election as a referendum on George W. Bush and his war, and why not? The polls show that the public believes that the president made a mistake in Iraq and hasn't managed it well. It's a no-brainer.
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Democrats opt to play on the terrorism turf
Tweet Share on Facebook September 5, 2006 CommentThe stakes could not be higher this political year: Control of the Congress is at stake, not to mention the rest of the president's agenda. If he loses control of either house this fall, Congress might just as well adjourn for a couple of years, because nothing will get done.

Gloria Borger, a contributing editor at U.S.News & World Report, writes the magazine's On Politics column. Borger is also the national political correspondent for CBS and a regular panelist on the PBS public affairs program, Washington Week in Review. Borger is a 1974 graduate of Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., and is now a member of the university's board of trustees.