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March 17, 2010, 9:53 am
By
Christina Wilkie
The basketball-fan-in-chief will show off his "Barack-Etology" skills for the second year in a row on Wednesday night when he appears on ESPN's SportsCenter to fill out his NCAA basketball tournament bracket choices.
According to White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, President Barack Obama made the picks Tuesday afternoon, taking a brief respite from his efforts to pass healthcare reform.
The Chicago Sun-Times reports that the 44th president's Final Four picks are Kansas, Kansas State, Villanova and Kentucky. Last year, Obama correctly predicted that North Carolina would win it all.
For what it's worth, ITK has Kansas beating Kentucky in the finals. No word on who Obama picked to emerge victorious.
Basketball is a family affair in the Obama household. The president plays with his daughters whenever he gets a chance, his brother-in-law Craig Robinson is an NCAA coach, and both First Lady Michelle Obama and First Grandmother Marian Robinson have accompanied him to D.C.-area college games since he took office. Jordan Fabian contributed to this item.
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March 17, 2010, 9:45 am
By
Sean J. Miller
His battle with weight started when he was a baby, Bill Clinton confessed to Newsweek’s Jon Meacham.
The 42nd president, who struggled to stay fit during his two-terms in office and had quadruple bypass surgery in 2004, spoke at the National Press Club Tuesday.
He was there to lend support to First Lady Michelle Obama’s drive to reduce childhood obesity, and he said he had been overfed by his mother from an early age. “I had food shoved down my gullet from the time I was an infant.”
Looking a bit sunburned, Clinton reflected on his recent hospitalization for chest pain. Shortly before entering the hospital he said, "I looked like death warmed over."
Since the latest scare, Clinton said he's made even more changes to his diet. “I stopped eating red meat, except once a month. Now, it’s almost always vegetables and fruits.”
Once known for his love of burgers and fries, Clinton said that he didn’t mind the sacrifices. “Besides, my daughter’s getting married this summer,” he joked, and Chelsea wants her dad alive and well to walk her down the aisle.
He’s not completely depriving himself, Clinton admitted. He still walks to Starbucks for coffee and a raspberry scone, (the scone alone packs a whopping 460 calories and 19 grams of fat).
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March 16, 2010, 3:48 pm
By
Christina Wilkie
It looked like the ultimate GOP rally on Constitution Avenue and 3rd Streets, NW Tuesday afternoon, as a row of elephants marched down the street towards the Verizon Center and stopped in front of the Capitol and waved to the tourists.
But it wasn't a political rally. The elephants were courtesy Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey Circus, which strode into town today for a three week-long run in D.C. and Va.
Perhaps out of sensitivity when visiting a bipartisan town, the elephants were followed up by a few miniature horses and some of the full-size show ponies, but no actual donkeys.

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March 16, 2010, 1:45 pm
By
Jordan Fabian
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) on Tuesday let her Twitter
followers know that she is going to be ready to take to the diamond.
The
lawmaker tweeted that she is preparing for the Congressional Women's
Softball Game: Started practice this a.m. for our 2nd
annual Congressional Women's Softball Game 2 raise $ and breast cancer
awareness for younger women. Wasserman Schultz, who
co-hosts the charity event, is a breast cancer survivor herself and has
been very outspoken on awareness and treatment of the disease.
The softball game will take place in June. It follows the
Congressional Hockey Game, which took place last week and benefited a
local Washington, D.C. hockey club for inner-city youth.
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March 16, 2010, 10:39 am
By
Bob Cusack
During a Monday night appearance on the O'Reilly Factor, Karl Rove said
Democrats probably won't pass healthcare reform, but added, "I wouldn't
bet the ranch on it." O'Reilly asked, "Do you have a ranch?"
After a pause, the GOP strategist responded that he has a "mini" ranch, noting that many people in Texas have ranches.
Rove said the chances of comprehensive reform passing this year are 40 percent.
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March 16, 2010, 9:55 am
By
Christina Wilkie
If you looked out an office window on the Senate side Monday night
after the upper chamber finished voting, you might have caught a
glimpse of what Sen. Barbara Mikulski’s (D-Md.) campaign office calls
the Super Senator Shuttle, bound for Baltimore and loaded with
Democratic female senators.
That’s because
Mikulski, often called the “dean” of the Senate ladies, was
transporting the sisterhood of the traveling pantsuits, as it is
sometimes jokingly known, to the Baltimore Hilton for a special
fundraiser she hosts every six years, at which her fellow female
members sing her praises at an event her campaign told ITK honors “the
great women that lead the efforts of Maryland, and the great men who
stand behind them.”
Scheduled
to hop a ride on the Super Senator Shuttle with Mikulski at press time
were Sens. Maria Cantwell (Wash.), Kay Hagan (N.C.), Amy Klobuchar
(Minn.), Mary Landrieu (La.), Patty Murray (Wash.), Jeanne Shaheen
(N.H.) and Debbie Stabenow (Mich.). Can you pick them out in the photo above?
As for whether Mikulski
will repay the favor, her spokeswoman Simone Ward said she’s willing to
campaign for anyone who asks her to.
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March 16, 2010, 9:44 am
By
Emily Goodin
It’s a confession sure to spark jealousy in a generation of American
men, but Karl Rove writes in his new memoir that he once had breakfast
with Elizabeth Taylor. He in a suit. She in lingerie. According
to "Courage and Consequence," the former White House political adviser
was 25 years old at the time and working for the Virginia Republican
Party. Taylor was on her
seventh marriage, this one to former Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), who asked Rove to come by one morning
and discuss a speech he was giving.
Rove
writes that he arrived at their house for the meeting, but instead of
being greeted by Warner, Taylor answered the door — “Herself. Alone. In
a revealing dressing gown and lingerie. I was agog. Her eyes really
were violet.” We’re glad to know he was only looking at her, um, eyes.
While
Warner went upstairs to change, Rove and Taylor settled down to eat
breakfast. “I had breakfast with one of history’s most beautiful
women,” Rove recalls, “sitting across the table from me in her nightie,
making small talk about her husband’s appearance later that morning.
She was thinking politics, I was not.”
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March 16, 2010, 9:38 am
By
Eric Zimmermann
Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) taunted Sarah Palin Monday afternoon as a "wild Alaskan dingbat" who knows nothing about policy. The comments come in response to Palin's speech at a Republican fundraiser in his home district on Friday.
At the time, Palin had this to say:
"[W]hat
can you say about Alan Grayson? Piper is with me tonight, so I won't
say anything about Alan Grayson that can't be said around children. But
thank you, Florida, for allowing candidates in a contested primary to
duke it out over ideas and principles and values, all with the same
goal, and that is unseating those who have such a disconnect from the
people of America. That's what the goal is here in this race against
Alan Grayson. Please fight hard, and do this for the rest of the
country. Fight hard, and send a conservative to Washington, DC." Grayson responded with a snarky email to supporters. "I
look forward to an honest debate with Governor Palin on the issues, in
the unlikely event that she ever learns anything about them," he said.
The
email continues: "Scientists are studying Sarah Palin's travel between
Alaska and Florida carefully. They hope to learn more about the flight
patterns of that elusive migratory species, the wild Alaskan dingbat.
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March 15, 2010, 2:09 pm
By
Christina Wilkie
Maybe it's the good hair, or the manly jawlines. But the number of attractive Republican politicians from Massachusetts has grown recently, and for at least for one voter, it's getting confusing.
As Sen. Scott Brown told a gathering at a St. Patrick's Day breakfast on Sunday, a woman recently paid him a high compliment. Sort of.
"I know you," she said, approaching Brown, "you're that handsome Republican from Massachusetts."
Brown, who's admittedly a good-looking guy, took the compliment in stride, "I'm pleased to meet you," he said to her.
The woman replied, "I'm pleased to meet you too, Mr. Romney."
The line got a good laugh, although the resemblance between Brown and former Gov. Mitt Romney (R) is a bit of a stretch.
No Brown appearance would be complete without the joke that never dies: Life-sized posters of Brown's nude Cosmopolitan magazine photo were photoshopped with the heads of his fellow Bay State politicians, Gov. Deval Patrick (D) and state Sen. Jack Hart (D), superimposed on the photo of Brown in his birthday suit.
Brown, Hart, and Patrick were even joined on stage by Attorney General Martha Coakley, in what was her first joint appearance with Brown since January's special Senate election, which Brown won in an upset.
With the defeat is still fresh in political memories, Coakley bravely told a well-worn campaign joke, which helped to relieve some of the tension. "I want to thank you to everyone from Southie who voted for me," she said to the crowd of more than 1,000, "and I think both of them are here, actually."
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March 15, 2010, 12:14 pm
By
Eric Zimmermann
Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.) is doing something much more
exciting than a Sunday morning talk show this weekend.
The
Florida Republican tweeted
that he's taking the mound at a pre-season MLB game:
MLB Spring Training is a great Florida tradition. I'm on my way to
throw out 1st pitch at Pirates vs. Yankees. #fb #mlb Both
Pittsburgh and New York have spring training facilities in Buchanan's
home state.
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