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Archive Search Results
Your search for
L. Gordon Crovitz
returned 4 results
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Author |
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October 2008 |
Reviewed by L. Gordon Crovitz |
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The Constitution established two-year terms in the House of Representatives in order to make it the body most accountable to the voters. Yet the near-complete success of incumbents has transformed the House of Representatives from the most responsive to the least responsive political body.
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March 1989 |
L. Gordon Crovitz |
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There is a general impression that Ronald Reagan has been a strong President, perhaps the strongest since Franklin D. Roosevelt. And indeed in a number of ways Reagan has exercised power very effectively. Yet as keeper of the institution of the presidency, he has been a failure.
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September 1988 |
L. Gordon Crovitz |
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It was obvious that the announcement on November 25, 1986 by Attorney General Edwin Meese that profits from the secret sale of arms to Iran had been diverted to the democratic resistance in Nicaragua would trigger the bloodiest political battle since Watergate. It was not, however, obvious that self-evidently illegal acts had been committed in the Iran-contra affair.
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October 1987 |
L. Gordon Crovitz |
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