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“Let’s not perfume the pig here. The Democrats have some seriously deep fissures that they are going to have to mend outside of any formal rules committee.”
— Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway, in a May 29 appearance on CNN’s “Larry King Live.” “Lipstick on a pig!”
— A heckler at the May 31 meeting of the Democratic Party’s Rules and Bylaws Committee, which ruled on Michigan’s and Florida’s primary delegates. “You can put lipstick on a pig, but guess what? It’s still a pig.”
— Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), discussing in April 2004 a Bush administration proposal to eliminate overtime pay. “You know the old saying about putting lipstick on a pig? Well, I smell bacon.”
— Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-Calif.) in a May 21 House floor speech on U.S. trade policy. “Calling this surrender a ‘withdrawal’ or a ‘redeployment’ is like putting lipstick on a pig. No matter what you call it, it is still a pig.”
— Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) during an April 26 speech on the Senate floor about supplemental funding for the Iraq war. Definition: (phrase) an expression used to illustrate that something unattractive cannot be beautified or otherwise positively changed by any amount of makeup or other exterior alterations.
Suggested synonyms: ignoring faults, overlooking substantive problems.
Synonyms Congress members should avoid: giving Medusa a makeover, primping a gorilla, shampooing a mullet.
To suggest a word or phrase for Congress Speak, e-mail Capital Living at
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