in front of her. so, there have been problems with sarah ferguson, to put it blu bluntly, but clearly, prince william is saying, look, i want my cousins to be there, i want their mother to be there. i want us to be a united family for me as i plan my new future with my wife. all right. well, how about we move on to the dress? what do you know about designers, details, anything like that for kate? reporter: not very much, i m afraid. what we are hearing today is that buckingham palace are very keen to keep it a secret. you know, people are putting bets on who the designer will be. we don t know. we might not find out until the big day. the thinking here appears to be that before that royal wedding between charles and diana, diana, if you like, became a bit of a debating point for the fashion industry, something, a bit of a clothes force, if you like. they don t want that to happen to kate middleton. they want the focus not just to be on what she is wearing, but on other aspects of h
i m you. none of us are perfect, but none of us can be happy with what we see around us. let s start about the debate about whether to be up front and deal with the dabbling in witchcraft and saying i m not a witch. that had to be a debating point about whether you wanted to just ignore that or take it head on. it was to an extent, john, but maybe less than you would think. think of it in context. a few days earlier she had been not a joke on saturday night live, but the lead the lead skit, introducing the whole show was on christine o donnell. she was the butt of every joke, every late night comedian, and, you know, of course, bill maher had a cottage industry out of people watching on friday night to see what he would drum up out of her past this week. and so with that in place, she s down 20 points in the polls, roughly, at that time, i don t see that you have a choice. you have to address it. why ignore it completely? so when she reads that script, what does she say to
student loan reform, wall street reform among the more obvious achievements. the congress and ezra klein, first about pelosi. mother jones magazine, washington bureau chief, columnist, david corn. good evening. good evening, keith. in some ways, what speaker pelosi is saying seems obvious and effectively articulated before? have democrats come close to drawing that straight a line for the electorate gop equals big oil, big insurance, big et cetera? i don t think it s a matter of drawing a line. even inking a tattoo. i think it really is a matter of picking up a baseball bat and swinging. you know, big oil, gop. bam. big banks and gop. bam. you have to do this again and again. people are busy. they don t always pay attention and they want to see it as a fight, not as a debating point. and there s really only one person to town to swing a hammer
reform among the more obvious achievements. the congress and ezra klein, first about pelosi. mother jones magazine, washington bureau chief, columnist, david corn. good evening. good evening, keith. in some ways, what speaker pelosi is saying seems obvious and effectively articulated before? have democrats come close to drawing that straight a line for the electorate gop equals big oil, big insurance, big et cetera? i don t think it s a matter of drawing a line. even inking a tattoo. i think it really is a matter of picking up a baseball bat and swinging. you know, big oil, gop. bam. big banks and gop. bam. you have to do this again and again. people are busy. they don t always pay attention and they want to see it as a fight, not as a debating point. and there s really only one person to town to swing a hammer that way, that is the president. so let s talk doo-doo for a
that according to norm orenstein. student loan reform, wall street reform among the more obvious achievements. the congress and ezra klein, first about pelosi. mother jones magazine, washington bureau chief, columnist, david corn. good evening. good evening, keith. in some ways, what speaker pelosi is saying seems obvious and effectively articulated before? have democrats come close to drawing that straight a line for the electorate gop equals big oil, big insurance, big et cetera? i don t think it s a matter of drawing a line. even inking a tattoo. i think it really is a matter of picking up a baseball bat and swinging. you know, big oil, gop. bam. big banks and gop. bam. you have to do this again and again. people are busy. they don t always pay attention and they want to see it as a fight, not as a debating point. and there s really only one