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  • Associated Press CEO Gary Pruitt, a First Amendment lawyer, will "outline ways to protect newsgathering against government interference" when he speaks Wednesday at the National Press Club. (Associated Press)

    Inside the Beltway: A call to protect 'newsgathering'

    It's been a little more than a month since The Associated Press revealed that the Justice Department had gained access to its phone records. The news organization came out swinging: CEO Gary Pruitt declared the action a "massive and unprecedented intrusion" and "unconstitutional." Now he's ready to explore "the way forward," he says, this time taking his case to the National Press Club.

  • Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes was among those awarded Bradley Prizes from the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation on Wednesday in the District. (Associated Press)

    Inside the Beltway: Unifying conservatives by 2014

    Organizers behind the bodacious "Road to Majority" conference are determined to wrangle conservatives onto the same page as the 2014 midterm elections loom. The event, virtually ignored so far by the mainstream press, begins Thursday at a hotel just three blocks from the White House.

  • Herman Cain is in the nation's capitol Monday to discuss the "damaging effects of the current administration on the black community."

    Inside the Beltway: The 9 percent

    The press has amplified 1 percent, 99 percent and 47 percent in recent days as a succinct measure of political culture and public opinion. Here is a fourth measurement to add to the collection: 9 percent. That is the number of Republicans who approve of Congress, this according to Gallup. Things are pretty tepid elsewhere: 15 percent of Americans overall and 17 percent of Democrats give the lawmakers a thumbs-up.

  • **FILE** Herman Cain speaks Dec. 2, 2011, to campaign supporters in Rock Hill, S.C. (Associated Press)

    Righting the ship: Fox News welcomes Herman Cain aboard as contributor

    Asteroid 2012DA14 missed earth, water’s not flowing uphill — and on Friday Fox News Channel announced that former GOP presidential contender and populist conservative darling Herman Cain is joining its stable of contributors.

  • Herman Cain joins Fox News Channel as contributor

    Former presidential candidate Herman Cain will be getting some regular TV work at Fox News Channel.

  • Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain announces he is suspending his campaign as his wife, Gloria (left), looks on, on Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/David Tulis)

    Herman Cain says Nein-Nein-Nein to Georgia GOP Senate run

    Former GOP presidential candidate Herman Cain, reacting to the news Friday that Georgia Sen. Saxby Chambliss plans to retire at the end of his current term, said he won't seek the open seat — despite polls that show the Atlanta businessman the overwhelming favorite in 2014.

  • Illustration Spending Cuts by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times

    CREWS AND YOUNG: Federal rules cost $10,000 per employee

    What do the Progressive Policy Institute, former Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas, former presidential candidate Herman Cain and the Competitive Enterprise Institute have in common? An idea for rolling back overregulation.

  • Inside the Beltway: 12/12/12 cliffhanger

    If President Obama and House Speaker John A. Boehner really hurry, they can tie the "fiscal cliff" to 12/12/12 — as in Dec. 12, 2012, a Wednesday filled with "once in a lifetime" buzz, and the final alliteration date of the century.

  • Costas gun control commentary gets notice

    Bob Costas' "Sunday Night Football" halftime commentary supporting gun control sparked a Fox News Channel debate Monday on whether NBC should fire him and a Twitter storm involving Ted Nugent, Rosie O'Donnell, Herman Cain and many more.

  • Bob Costas (AP photo)

    Costas sets off firestorm with anti-gun spiel about Belcher

    Bob Costas' "Sunday Night Football" halftime commentary supporting gun control sparked a Fox News Channel debate Monday on whether NBC should fire him and a Twitter storm involving Ted Nugent, Rosie O'Donnell, Herman Cain and many more.

  • This undated photo provided by the FBI on Monday, Aug. 6, 2012, shows Wade Michael Page, a suspect in the Sunday, Aug. 5, 2012, Sikh temple shootings in Oak Creek, Wis. (AP Photo/FBI)

    Gunman exhorted other white supremacists to act

    Wade Michael Page played in white supremacist heavy metal bands and posted frequent comments on Internet forums for skinheads, repeatedly exhorting members to act more decisively to support their cause.

  • Inside the Beltway: Veep madness

    Wide-eyed and salivating, hundreds of journalists dream of being the chosen one who breaks the news of Mitt Romney's choice for a running mate, even before word goes out on his campaign's fancy new "Who will be Mitt's VP?" phone app.

  • Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich was quick to defend presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney when he irked Palestinians with a remark during his visit to Israel. (Raymond Thompson/The Washington Times)

    GOP closing ranks to defend Romney

    It had been mere hours since Mitt Romney angered Palestinians by saying Israel's culture was part of the reason the country has prospered. But that didn't stop former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, previously one of Mr. Romney's most bitter rivals in the Republican presidential primaries, from rushing to his defense Monday.

  • President Obama appears at the Oregon Convention Center Tuesday, July 24, 2012, in Portland, Ore.(AP Photo/Don Ryan)

    Households divided by campaign donations

    Husbands and wives may share checking accounts, but they don't always share political preferences. So what happens when one-half of the marriage wants to donate to a candidate?

  • **FILE** Herman Cain (Associated Press)

    Cain's post-candidacy PAC spending raises questions

    With charisma and national name recognition but no imminent political prospects, onetime Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain is using the donor-fueled political action committee created in his name in unusual ways.

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