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Iraq Study Group: Baker & Co.'s Burden
Tweet Share on Facebook November 28, 2006 CommentPity the poor Iraq Study Group. Never has so much been expected from so few: They began toiling in relative obscurityas much as these wise men are able. They include a couple of former secretaries of state (James Baker, Lawrence Eagleburger), a former White House chief of staff (Leon Panetta), a former presidential best friend (Vernon Jordan), and a former Supreme Court justice (Sandra Day O'Connor). Quite a group. And, as one member told me, "The expectations of our group are far beyond what we anticipated."
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Pelosi: Snatching Defeat From the Jaws of Victory
Tweet Share on Facebook November 17, 2006 CommentTalk about stepping on your own story. There she was, the first female speaker of the House, voted in by acclamation, and what does Nancy Pelosi do? She ensures that the headlines are instead about her defeatin backing a candidate for majority leader, Rep. John Murtha, who lost. And not only did he lose to Rep. Steny Hoyerhe was thumped, as the president might say. And that loss became her personal loss. Most Democratsparticularly the new onesjust scratched their heads and asked why.
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Senate Control: Watch the Battlegrounds
Tweet Share on Facebook November 7, 2006 CommentIt's finally hereand those of us who have had to cover this midterm election from start to finish couldn't be happier. It's been a long, nasty, exhausting, and interesting season. And tonight we'll see whether the House changes handsfrom Republican to Democraticfor the first time in 12 years, and whether the Senate follows suit. At this point, the House turnover almost seems like a done dealwith some seats lost because of scandal, others because of the war and the economy. The Democrats need six seats to win the Senate, but that could prove to be more problematicso keep your eyes on battleground states like Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia, and Montana.
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John Kerry Redux
Tweet Share on Facebook November 1, 2006 CommentIt was like watching a bad dreamthe ghost of elections past, John Kerry, rising againto make a mistake, then try to correct itand, in the process, handing the Republicans an issue. It was something that left the Democrats cringing: They had "won" the month of October, were heading into the homestretch, and there he goes again. He made a mistakea bungled joke about how if you're a young person and you don't work and study hard and go to college, you wind up in the armed forces. He should have just apologized and left it at that. In other words, don't become a distraction when the Democrats are doing just fine.

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.