Republican Party chairman hires attorneys to fight ouster

The News Review:

- Republican Party chairman hires attorneys to fight ouster
- Man of Steele or super-mistake?
- Road to reelection will be a rough one
- No laws passed without party leaders’ approval in Albany

Republican Party chairman hires attorneys to fight ouster
Richmond Times Dispatch
Frederick is not going down as state Republican Party chairman without a fight. The embattled Prince William County delegate who faces an ouster vote Saturday by the party’s state central committee hired two lawyers Sunday to represent him. Bill Stanley chairman of the Franklin County Republican Committee who once represented Paula Jones in a sexual-harassment case against then-Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas and A.

Man of Steele or super-mistake?
Baltimore Sun
1 million raised in February with $24 million cash on hand and (unlike its Democratic counterpart) zero debt. Steele retains considerable charm as well as the necessary goal of making the Republican Party a “big tent. “But his recent behavior has put that goal in jeopardy. In many ways he has become a mirror of the party he represents: once robust now conflicted and unsure. If he is to steady the Republican ship and bring focus to its course he must first do unto himself. Matt Patterson is a Montgomery County author and commentator whose books include “Union of Hearts: The.

Road to reelection will be a rough one
Philadelphia Inquirer
But unlike his Connecticut counterpart who emerged from the Democratic Party’s banishment to return to Washington as an independent Specter’s alternate route back to Capitol Hill is strewn with obstacles that may mean the end of the line for the ultimate political survivor. Specter’s potential problems in next year’s Republican primary are well-documented. The seething antipathy toward him within the conservative base of the state’s Republican Party has created a toxic environment for his reelection bid. And with many of the GP’s moderates now residing in the Democratic Party Specter faces a more conservative and hostile primary electorate than he has in the past. Given these bleak prospects one could not blame Specter for considering other ways of getting reelected to the Senate. ne option would be a switch to the Democratic side. But this possibility seems remote for a number of reasons.

No laws passed without party leaders’ approval in Albany
New York Daily News
5% ? or 642 ? were signed into law the New York Public Research Interest Group says. That?s the lowest ratio in the nation. ?Sometimes during the debate the new guys would get hope that it would change some people?s minds? said former Assemblyman Thomas Kirwan a longtime member of the minority Republican Party. ?Like watching a cartoon??I would tell them there?s no way. It?s like watching a cartoon and hoping the stuff.
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