Solving the energy crisis requires sacrifice. For the good of the country, we should be sweating
Analysis: Why is the Democratic nominee considering former generals and officers to be his running mate?
A form guide to the former military officers under consideration to be Barack Obama's running mate
The parents of a captive Israeli soldier received a letter from their son Monday, according to the Carter Center, which arranged delivery of the message.
The next president is likely to have an unprecedented opportunity to name a majority of the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors immediately after being sworn into office.
What Bush and his would-be successors can learn from the fate of the 39th President
Hamilton Jordan Sr., campaign adviser and chief of staff under President Carter, died Tuesday of cancer, his family said. He was 63.
Your paycheck is shrinking, gas costs $4 a gallon, and your house is losing value. Here's what can be done
Thirty-five years ago today, Nixon was the first President to use the term "God bless America" in an official speech. A look at how the phrase has become de rigueur in American politics ever since.
Former President Carter very politely denied Wednesday that the secretary of state or anyone else in her department had warned him against meeting with Hamas leaders during his recent trip to the Middle East.
Solving the energy crisis requires sacrifice. For the good of the country, we should be sweating
Analysis: Why is the Democratic nominee considering former generals and officers to be his running mate?
A form guide to the former military officers under consideration to be Barack Obama's running mate
The parents of a captive Israeli soldier received a letter from their son Monday, according to the Carter Center, which arranged delivery of the message.
The next president is likely to have an unprecedented opportunity to name a majority of the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors immediately after being sworn into office.
What Bush and his would-be successors can learn from the fate of the 39th President
Hamilton Jordan Sr., campaign adviser and chief of staff under President Carter, died Tuesday of cancer, his family said. He was 63.
Your paycheck is shrinking, gas costs $4 a gallon, and your house is losing value. Here's what can be done
Thirty-five years ago today, Nixon was the first President to use the term "God bless America" in an official speech. A look at how the phrase has become de rigueur in American politics ever since.
Former President Carter very politely denied Wednesday that the secretary of state or anyone else in her department had warned him against meeting with Hamas leaders during his recent trip to the Middle East.
A group of Nigerian rebels who wrote a letter to U.S. President George W. Bush, stating that they attacked two oil pipelines Monday, have asked for former President Jimmy Carter and actor George Clooney to help solve issues in the oil-rich Niger-delta.
After talks with former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, Hamas' exiled leader Khalid Meshaal said Monday the militant group has no plans to recognize Israel.
Former President Carter met Friday with a top Hamas politician, exiled leader Khalid Meshaal, in Damascus, Syria, Carter aides said.
Former President Carter met with senior Hamas officials in the Egyptian capital Thursday, rankling the Israeli and U.S. governments, which say it runs counter to their policies of not negotiating with terrorists.
The Bush administration has urged former President Jimmy Carter not to go forward with plans to meet with the leader of Hamas, the U.S. State Department said Thursday.
Under the glow of a southwest Florida sun, sleek sailboats dance on turquoise seas. With every gentle lapping of the warm blue water on Captiva, a whispered tinkling sound settles around your bare feet. It's the murmur of the Gulf of Mexico tumbling pink, orange, red, gray and blue shells on the ivory sand.
It was a woman's raw, bleeding hands that led Jock Brandis to make a promise.
The presidential candidate beat both former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter to win best spoken word album for his audio version of his book "The Audacity Of Hope: Thoughts On Reclaiming The American Dream"
Some historians credit Republican President Warren G. Harding with running the first campaign that made use of celebrity endorsement.
Big decisions will be made in Iowa on Thursday. Caucus-goers will vote based on politics, leadership, group psychology -- and sometimes just 'cause Daddy told them so
"I have a dream". Martin Luther King's famous speech cemented his status as one of the world's greatest peace makers. The American civil rights activist was the youngest man ever to win the Nobel Peace Prize. His life mission was to make the planet a better place.
It's one year until Election Day 2008. Do the current polls tell us anything a year before the election? Yes, they tell us something, but you have to be careful.
The United States tortures prisoners in violation of international law, former President Carter said Wednesday.
Former President Carter got in a shouting match Wednesday with Sudanese security officials who blocked him from a town in Darfur
For a long time, during the middle of the 20th Century, it wasn't even clear what it meant to be a judicial conservative. Then, with great suddenness, during the presidency of Ronald Reagan, judges and lawyers on the right found a voice and an agenda. Their goals reflected and reinforced the political goals of the conservative wing of the Republican Party.
A group of elder statesmen, including former President Carter and Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu, urged all sides in Darfur's bloodshed to reach a peace deal
The groundbreaking on an expansion of the Panama Canal is seen by many Panamanians as a coming of age moment
Former President Jimmy Carter welcomed Democratic presidential hopeful John Edwards to South Georgia on Wednesday, embracing the fellow Southerner as a kindred spirit on poverty and the environment.
Former President Jimmy Carter expressed his support for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's trip to Syria, rejecting White House criticism of the visit.
For weeks now, many of my colleagues have been torn between either wringing their hands about how soon the presidential campaign is starting or plunging full-scale into overcovering it. But let's take a bold step toward the next thing to worry about -- how soon it will end.
Former President Jimmy Carter's controversial book and subsequent remarks about the Israel-Palestinian conflict have prompted the resignations of 14 people from an advisory board of the Carter Center, the 25-year-old Atlanta-based humanitarian organization.
The body of former President Gerald Ford ended its sentimental journey Wednesday afternoon in Grand Rapids, where his body was placed in a hillside tomb as the sun declined in the cloudless winter sky.
Former President Gerald Ford, who became president in 1974 after the resignation of Richard Nixon, died Tuesday at 93.
It was at Jeane Kirkpatrick's funeral this week that I finally heard of some good achieved by the United Nations amidst all its dithering and graft. According to Jeane's pastor, during her momentous tenure as our U.N. ambassador, Jeane was so wobbled by the international body's cynicism and moral emptiness that she forsook years of atheism and became a person of faith. Mind you, she had always had an abundance of secular faith before President Ronald Reagan tapped her for the United Nations. Her faith in the American way of life, its freedom, democracy and equality was as ardent as it was intelligently conceived. But after leaving the house of hustlers on the East River, she became deeply Christian; and religion gently informed all she thought and did thereafter.
So, one of the most secretive and repressive nations on Earth has tested a nuclear device: the "real" question, obviously, is not what this means for the peace of the world, but whether it pushes the Mark Foley scandal to the political sidelines. So let's ask: When does an unexpected news event change the subject?
Facts are facts, and such is the degree of politicization in the republic today that when a political organization announces a literary prize the perspicacious among us have a pretty good idea who the winner will be. When the left-leaning New York Times Book Review announced on its cover that a survey of litterateurs had chosen the finest novel of the past 25 years, close students of that tribe knew before opening the magazine that the award had gone to Toni Morrison. Thus, you will not be surprised to hear that the conservative panel that annually awards the J. Gordon Coogler Award for the Worst Book of the Year has conferred the 2005 prize on Jimmy Carter. Jimmy published a book; he wins the Worst Book of the Year Award -- once again. This is not Jimmy's first Coogler. He has now won the award twice. No other literary impostor can make that claim.
Former President Jimmy Carter said Wednesday that he opposes the House's version of immigration legislation, and he encouraged Israel to negotiate directly with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.
When Shakespeare asked "What's in a name?" he was talking about doomed love, not political debate. But if you look at the argument over immigration, you can see how just about every word we use is packed with powerful meaning.
For weeks now civilized observers around the world have been astonished by the dispendious angers vented by indignant young Muslims. These young indignados have listened to the counsel of their venerable leaders in government and in the mosques. They have noted the intolerable provocations of the unbelievers. Finally, they have taken to the streets and city squares to burn flags, bash passersby, rush the cops, and -- from what I have observed on the TV news -- take a swing or two at each other. Their righteous anger could be contained only so long.
Four U.S. presidents -- including President George W. Bush -- were among the luminaries at Coretta Scott King's funeral Tuesday. Among some speakers' accolades and tributes to the civil rights icon were criticisms of the current administration's actions -- the war in Iraq and domestic eavesdropping.
A U.S. president's cabinet can indeed be bought, if you've got enough money.
Hamas deserves to be recognized by the international community, and despite the group's militant history, there is a chance the soon-to-be Palestinian leaders could turn away from violence, former President Jimmy Carter said Wednesday.
We live in interesting times, we do, we do. We can read in our daily newspapers that our government is about to launch a three-day propaganda blitz to convince us all that its secret program to spy on us is something we really want and need. "A campaign of high-profile national security events," reports The New York Times, follows "Karl Rove's blistering speech to national Republicans" about what a swell political issue this is for their party.
Americans are, by actual measurement, the most optimistic people on the planet. It's deep in our genes. With the exception of those whose ancestors were here when Columbus arrived or those whose ancestors were brought here against their will in chains, every American is either an immigrant or the direct descendant of immigrants.
Former President Jimmy Carter said Friday that there isn't "any doubt" the American people were misled about the war in Iraq and that President George Bush's policy on the war is a "radical departure from the policies of any president."
A TIME inquiry finds that at top positions in some vital government agencies, the Bush Administration is putting connections before experience.
I think it was Broadway impresario David Merrick who once advertised a show using blurbs from people who had the same names as New York theater critics.
You have to hand it to the Washington wise guys both in and out of the political press corps.
Former President Jimmy Carter said Monday that the new Palestinian Authority leadership has expressed support for the U.S.-backed Middle East peace plan, but that Israel still had concerns.
When people learn that my adult life has been spent either working in or covering American politics, they often ask what I think was the best run national campaign. My answer surprises many: the 1976 Republican campaign in behalf of Gerald Ford.
Years ago, before I began writing a column, one of the nation's great columnists gave me some wise advice.
President Bush joined Bill Clinton and two other former U.S. presidents Thursday to dedicate Clinton's presidential library, a ceremony that also brought together celebrities from both Washington and Hollywood.
It's the question Ronald Reagan used to win the presidency in 1980: Are you better off now than you were four years ago?
The Thursday before Tuesday's presidential election, I gave a noontime speech to a group that politically, one of its members told me privately, was somewhere to the right of Romania's late, unlamented boss, Nicolae Ceausescu.
To those of us who eat, sleep and occasionally drink politics, nearly everything that happens in a presidential campaign is interesting, but very few things are really important.
As long as the crowds keep coming, Will Smith will be ready to walk down the red carpet to promote his latest movie.
Former President Jimmy Carter addressed the Democratic National Convention Monday night. This is a transcript of his speech.
Former President Jimmy Carter called on Americans Monday night to repudiate the "extremist doctrines" of the Bush administration that he said have "cost our nation its reputation as the world's most admired champion of freedom and justice."
Hours before former President Jimmy Carter was to speak at the Democratic National Convention on Monday evening, CNN's Judy Woodruff asked him if his party has changed in the 28 years since he was first nominated for president.
Gentlemen, start your hair dryers.
Check out the links below to hot political stories around the country this morning.
A veritable who's who of the Democratic establishment gathered with presumptive presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry for a fund-raising gala designed to show off party unity in the coming battle with President Bush.
Not all of president bush's critics are Democrats. "I guess the word I have to use is 'disappointing,'" says James Gattuso, who researches regulatory policy at the conservative Heritage Foundation....
Former President Jimmy Carter said Friday he was embarrassed by the Georgia Department of Education proposal to eliminate the word "evolution" from the state's curriculum.
Before Evian, double lattes, and wheat-grass shakes, there was the three-martini lunch, the iconic noontime ritual of the corporate crowd. Now that we're returning to our old-economy ways, FORTUNE ...
Common sense says that a growing economy during a presidential election year ought to favor the party in power. Professor Patrick Lynch of Georgetown University has studied the relationship between...
If you could hire anyone to manage your money, whom would you choose? For most of us, it's a pointless question. But if you're the President of the United States, you have your pick of the savviest...
ASK MR. STATISTICS
Having finally clinched the Republican presidential nomination after 16 years and three tries, Bob Dole can afford to catch some spring sunshine outside his Capitol office on the marble porch he ca...
The consumer spending party may be winding down in a hurry. Credit card debt has been the stimulant that's kept the party hearty. But even though many lenders are still offering whatever they can t...
With the 1996 presidential election season at hand, prognosticators will soon be barraging us with leading indicators that purport to shed light on the eventual results. Here's one most of them ove...
Dear Oddsgiver: I am one of the millions of newspaper readers who thought of you whilst reading about the latest constitutional imbroglio before the American judiciary. The issue is whether the Cli...
Consumer prices shot up at a 4.3% annual rate in the first four months of this year -- nearly half again as fast as the 3% rate for 1992. But don't panic. Bill Clinton is no Jimmy Carter -- yet. In...
You talk about a labor lobby. Well, it is a child compared to this utility lobby . . . ((It is)) the most powerful, dangerous lobby . . . that has ever been created by any organization in this coun...
Individualism is a calm and considered feeling which disposes each citizen to isolate himself from the mass of his fellows and withdraw into the circle of family and friends; with this little socie...
Lying is suddenly in the news, or at least the op-ed section. Back in October, Leslie H. Gelb of the New York Times showed up there bemoaning the loss of respect for the truth in Washington and con...
Your servant instantly winced upon turning to the recent indictment of U.S. District Judge Robert F. Collins of Louisiana, as he happened to open this document at the place where the grand jury was...
For several months now, your correspondent has been worried about the future of ''Only in America,'' a staple of this department for virtually all its 14 years. The worry is that we are running out...
The present writer has long tended to twitch uncontrollably any time somebody speaks warmly of Jimmy Carter, so he has been more spastic than usual lately. Esteemwise -- there is no denying it -- J...
Dramatic, silly, outrageous . . . gestures are becoming increasingly common in American business. And those gestures . . . are winning praise from . . . consultants. ''This is a very positive trend...
Worldwide expenditures on military equipment are about $1 trillion annually, of which the Soviet Union, the U.S., and our allies spend $800 billion. With the lessening of tension between the superp...
14 AN AMERICAN VISION FOR THE 1990s When FORTUNE began in 1930, America had a vision -- in fact, it has had many visions over the years. Most have been realized, some beyond our wildest dreams. So ...
Hey, remember windmills? They were going to help solve the energy crisis. Or at least that's what Jerry Brown said, according to this little mountain of faded clips on the desk. That was when Jerry...
We turn now to a fascinating and strangely unanalyzed moment in recent history. It is Wednesday, August 17. President Zia of Pakistan has just died in a plane crash. Senator Quayle of Indiana has b...
WHATEVER THE Democrats have going for them this year, you'd think the Republicans would at least have a lock on the one issue that most often decides presidential elections -- the economy. Think ag...
''No foundation. All the way down the line.'' Those words are from William Saroyan's The Time of Your Life (1939), where they kept getting muttered moodily by a certain character complaining about ...
Americans are so accustomed to plenty of everything that we easily forget temporary scarcities. Yet there was -- if you will -- an abundance of shortages during the past 15 years. Relive, if you da...
We like Nancy Reagan's resonant solution to the drug problem: ''Just say no.'' But how about applying it more broadly? Holding aloft a beacon, here is a random selection of phenomena to which yours...

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