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Wednesday, January 09, 2008
John McCaslin :: Townhall.com Columnist
'Change' Is Coming
by John McCaslin
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After however many grueling months, campaign-weary presidential candidates, some flashing bigger smiles than others, one reduced to tears, can kiss snowbound New Hampshire goodbye — just as its hills are beginning to thaw.

It's now on to Michigan next Tuesday, for whatever that's worth to Barack Obama, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and John Edwards given the Democratic National Committee stripped the state of its delegates owing to the state's earlier-than-preferred primary.

On Jan. 19, however, there's a Democratic leadership-approved vote — the Nevada caucuses, which are being ushered in by native son and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. The uniquely early Western caucuses will be followed by the always significant South Carolina primary on Jan. 26, and three days later, the Florida primary — once again, a DNC-penalized (sorry, no delegates) contest owing to breaking party rules.

Primary-heavy Super Tuesday comes next on Feb. 5 ("High School Musical" opens that night in Washington, but we'll try to cover both), with primaries and caucuses from Alaska to American Samoa.

Locally, the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia will hold their Republican and Democratic primaries on Feb. 12, the only three jurisdictions to do so on that Tuesday. Otherwise, the remaining states and territories, including Guam and U.S. Virgin Islands, will cast votes all the way through June 3.

By then, if neither party knows its nominee, there are always the Democratic and Republican national conventions, which given the aforementioned are not the nominating contests they used to be. Democrats party first in Denver from Aug. 25-28, followed by Republican cocktails in St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 1-4.

Election Day this year falls on Nov. 4, and Inauguration Day — when all this "change" we've been promised will supposedly start taking place — is Jan. 20, 2009, little more than a year away. Hang in there, Hillary. And don't trust the pollsters.

Us vs. Them

As if there's not enough writing competition in town, we're told that lawyers — a dime (hardly) a dozen in Washington — now want to compete in the Fourth Estate.

The ABA Journal reports that Hamline University in St. Paul, Minn., will soon offer a first-of-its-kind "pen-ultimate" legal education: a joint degree program that pairs a juris doctorate with a master of fine arts degree.

From politics to community affairs, increasingly "lawyers have moved to the public arena to affect social policy," university Dean Jon Garon explains. "There's tremendous interest in writing books, articles and documents that open up new avenues of public dialogue."

The dean says that based on interest for the combination of law and writing, "We think this will really take off."

Taxed and taken Continued...

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About The Author

John McCaslin is a contributing columnist on Townhall.com and author of Inside The Beltway: Offbeat Stories, Scoops, and Shenanigans from around the Nation's Capital .

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Separation of pork amendment
If you want to separate required pork from non-required pork read the Constitution. What are the responsibilities of the Federal Government ? If it isn't listed for the Feds, then it is the responsibility of the states.

But you say that the states need help!!! Folks, we the American people have succumbed to the "Taxholm Syndrome". ( I borrowed it from the Stockholm Syndrome) We have our hands out begging for money from our generous benefactors. We are grateful and thankful (reads voting blocks) for the crumbs we receive.

But we get our money back you say. Yes we do. After a "small" processing fee called government takes a cut. "My earmarks" are always more important than "your earmarks". My pork is essential, yours is wasteful.

There is not a government or municipality out there that would send money back to the Feds. I have heard of a few colleges that will not take Federal subsidies because they do not want to be controlled. It irritates the daylights out of government when you refuse to take the money.

Does anyone remember the name of the mayor of a major U.S. city that sent a check for 10 million dollars back to the "benefactor"?

Tibby

One more idea...
... before I close down for the night.

Someone should start a research project and RANK all of our Senators and Representatives. At the moment I can think of two sets of statistics I'd like to see:

1. The percentage of times they vote with their party. (Don't care about the vote before, just the final vote).

2. The total package of earmarks they send back home. This one would be tougher to calculate because we would have to make decisions as to what constitutes "pork". Is it something we would expect a state to pay for itself if they wanted it? Another example would be... could it have qualified for matching funds if the state picked up some (and not all) of the tab.
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