Cahill sues staff
This is a very complicated story - or is it?
This is a very complicated story - or is it?
"It's a great thing to have a partner like that in charge of our federal government, and being such a strong partner," Governor Patrick said. The governor says he's excited the president will campaign for him again. "Our agenda is very like the agenda that he has set nationally." Bay Staters see those similarities.
He can say he's still running, but--politically--Tim Cahill is now a dead man walking.
“And they're coming down to the finish,” the horse race commentator said.
Deval Patrick goes into the debate in front, and here's what he should do to come out of it the same way. Like the president, the governor can be a poet, but he has to be careful his pretty words don't exaggerate his record.
This was not a great debate. The format was too formal, so there was very little spontaneity. And there were certainly no memorable moments.
Deval Patrick remains in front, but our poll shows how Charlie Baker can win this race - and why he may.
You watched many of the winners of the primaries last night...but the biggest winner wasn't a candidate... it was a party, the Tea Party, thanks to Christine O’Donnell's victory in Delaware, and Carl Paladino's in New York. And don't discount New Hampshire...where Tea Party backed Ovide Lamontagne came mighty close to winning a senate primary.
We don't know any of the winners or losers yet--and there are no exit polls to guide us. But we've already learned plenty on this primary day.
The votes are still being counted, and it looks like there may be a September surprise brewing in New Hampshire...an upset big enough to make national headlines.
There were four gubernatorial candidates when the debate began, but as it continued, Tim Cahill and Jill Stein seemed to disappear, leaving the stage to Democrat Deval Patrick and Republican Charlie Baker.
The Labor Day parades are over...and so, unofficially, is the summer. Even the Red Sox are done.
Nothing is easy anymore for President Obama. Virtually everything he says divides America into cheers and jeers, and tonight's speech was no exception: it will be praised, and panned.
Seven years and one president ago, the U.S. invaded Iraq with an opening salvo of shock and awe...designed to make Saddam Hussein quickly surrender.
They're off...and the governor's race is on.
Expanded gambling is going nowhere at the State House right now, but Beacon Hill still looks like a casino. Many of the biggest bettors are the biggest losers.
Criticizing John Kerry is so easy, but I'm not sure it accomplishes anything.
What's most newsworthy about this trip is the trip: it was a surprise. But, no one should be surprised it was kept secret.
First of all, don't be fooled. The battle in Washington is not about the people who are already unemployed, it's about the politicians who are worried voters will soon make them unemployed.