is the new Speaker of the House, the first woman to ever hold the job, and now the third in line for the presidency. DoubleSpeak wishes Nancy all the best and much luck as she and her Democratic colleagues set about pointing our country back in the right direction.
Jan 4, 2007 at 3:18 PM | No Comments »
From AmericaBLOG:

Note to the Hastert advance team: Maybe the graveyard background wasn’t the best idea… I’m just sayin’…
Oct 10, 2006 by Peter Slutsky in
Spread The Word:
Digg this! | No Comments »

House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) is in big trouble. He’s desperately back pedaling, trying to find excuses, but at the end of the day, Hastert cares more about politics than he does this great nation.
Hastert is part of a major Congressional cover up - an organized campaign to protect a known pedophile in the GOP ranks.
A message to Dennis Hastert: resign your post, Mr. Speaker. You are the leader of a party that has lost touch with American values and you must go.
Even the uber-conservative Washington Times agrees.
Time to go, Denny. Sorry, but you brought it on yourself.
Oct 4, 2006 by Peter Slutsky in
Spread The Word:
Digg this! | No Comments »

Nancy Pelosi = bad ass?
Time Magazine writes a great profile of the woman who may just be the Speaker of the House in a couple of months. Pelosi has been an outspoken leader for Democrats and has, it seems, mastered the inside legislative strategy in the U.S. House.
From Time Magazine:
The 66-year-old San Francisco lawmaker is an aggressive, hyperpartisan liberal pol who is the Democrats’ version of Tom DeLay, minus the ethical and legal problems of the former Republican House leader. To condition Democrats for this fall’s midterm elections, she has employed tactics straight out of DeLay’s playbook: insisting other House Democrats vote the party line on everything, avoiding compromise with Republicans at all cost and mandating that members spend much of their time raising money for colleagues in close races. And she has been effective. House Democrats have been more unified in their voting than at any other time in the past quarter-century, with members on average voting the party line 88% of the time in 2005, according to Congressional Quarterly. That cohesion enabled Democrats to hasten President Bush’s slide in the polls when they blocked his plan to reform Social Security by allowing retirees to eschew guaranteed benefits in favor of private accounts. Bush’s approval rating remains depressed–38% in a TIME poll last week–and the Democrats are in their best position to win the House since Republicans took control of it in 1994.
If Democrats are successful in November, it will be mostly the result of Americans’ increasing frustration with the Iraq war and with the perception that Bush and congressional Republicans have bungled everything from Terri Schiavo to Hurricane Katrina. But Pelosi has made sure Democrats didn’t break the Republicans’ fall. And if Democrats win back the 15 seats they need to form a majority, Pelosi will be richly rewarded. She would almost certainly become the first woman to be House Speaker.
Let’s all work to make sure that Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats are able to take control of the House in 2006.
Aug 28, 2006 by Matthew Slutsky in
Spread The Word:
Digg this! | 2 Comments »
If the Democrats take back the House of Represenatives in 2006, Rep. John Murtha has announced that he will run for Speaker of the House. This annoucement is on the heels of a number of stories regarding the Democrats unhappiness with Rep. Nancy Pelosi.
Also in the race is Rep. Steny Hoyer from Maryland. He is currently the Minority Whip of the House.
Listen, I like Murtha more than Pelosi and Hoyer. But bottom line, if the Democrats manage to do the unthinkable and win back the House in 2006, Pelosi will have no problem taking the post of Speaker. Just no way a dark horse will beat her if she’s seen as being a succesful part of the team that helped to swing the House.
From CNN.com:
If we prevail as I hope and know we will, and return to the majority this next Congress, I have decided to run for the open seat of the majority leader,” Murtha said in a letter to his Democratic colleagues.
“I would appreciate your consideration and vote and look forward to speaking to you personally about my decision.”
Murtha’s spokeswoman, Cindy Abram, provided a copy of the letter to CNN.
There was no immediate comment on Murtha’s announcement from the current minority leader, Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California.
Jun 12, 2006 by Matthew Slutsky in
Spread The Word:
Digg this! | 4 Comments »