This Was Hillary Clinton’s Week—and Her Moment Is Just Beginning

If this week proved anything, it’s that Hillary Clinton’s presidential candidacy is pretty much inevitable, not only because of who she is and what she has done over the past decade, but also because of its historic import. After years of controversy and endless jibes about her hair, clothing, and manner, she has succeeded in becoming a transformational, touchstone figure not only in politics but American culture.
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Hate Congress? Blame yourself

Recent polls showing extreme dissatisfaction with Washington and the direction the country is headed are akin to telling a drowning man he’s not a very good swimmer. He’s well aware of the fact; but while the lifeguard (in this case, elected officials) is too busy flirting and showing off to do his job, the sharks are circling, and it looks like the only way to be saved is learn how to swim fast, because no one else is coming to the rescue.
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Time to stop fighting and start fixing

Perhaps the most overused and misunderstood term in politics is the word mandate. Does simply winning an election give the winning candidate and party a mandate? Not automatically. Does the size and scope of the win determine the power of the mandate? It can. By any measure President Barack Obama and Senate Democrats won a decisive victory.
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A no-win election for independents

Whatever the result of the national election, one thing is certain – independent voters in swing states who will be determining the outcome will be disappointed no matter what happens. That’s because most independents feel they are choosing from their least bad option this year. The lack of enthusiasm in this election is palpable.
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Goodbye to Olympia Snowe, Maine independent

Maine’s Olympia Snowe is officially a Republican, but really she is an independent, perfectly in keeping with her state’s independent streak. In other words, Snowe is a centrist, committed to finding common sense, bipartisan solutions for our nation’s many serious challenges, which makes her one of a vanishing breed in Congress.
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