President Barack Obama announced on Monday that he intended to seek a second term.
The Obama team launched a video as well as awebsite on Monday.
While the video focused on Obama backers and why they supported the presidents bid for a second term, the website did have one telling feature as it included a reference to Obama-Biden.
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Members of Congress are pushing the timetable for resolving the omnibus appropriations/continuing resolution to the brink by trash talking each other for over a week. This began with Sen. Schumer, D-N.Y., labeling the tea party as extreme early last week. Once this comment became public, then the dueling press conferences and public warfare began to flow continuously through most of last week. This is a shame since the American public and valid government programs stand to be harmed or at least inconvenienced.
Monday's Senate Judiciary Committee meeting promises to be a lively one as immigration-enforcement groups turn up the volume on their demand for an E-Verify bill.
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Sunshine State News delves into the performance of Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs this week. Touted as the key to busting up pill mills in Florida, PDMPs actually have a spotty record.
One example: By improperly including legitimate cases of prescription drug use in analyses, database results are skewed and law enforcement are sent on wild goose chases.
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From the moment Rick Scott issued an executive order expanding state-employee drug testing, Florida media outlets ginned up a stream of stories that the governor stood to profit through his Solantic clinics.
Assuming for a minute that Scott is so naive to think the press wouldn't add 2+2 and get 5, let's pause for a reality check. Scott's chief spokesman Brian Burgess presents these facts:
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A Viewpoint Florida survey finds that President Barack Obama's job-approval rating has fallen to 43 percent in the state, with only a bare majority of independents satisfied with his performance.
The poll, taken over two days immediately following the president's address on America's involvement in Libya, found that 56 percent of likely voters supported U.S. intervention.
For details, read here.
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