Since March 7, 2010, roughly three months before he announced his candidacy for president, Mitt Romney has avoided appearances on Sunday morning political shows. That is, until he ended the drought on this week’s edition of “Fox News Sunday.” (more)
Now that Texas Republican Rep. Ron Paul is gaining in some polls on front-runner Newt Gingrich in Iowa, pundits are speculating on what would happen if he won. (more)
With former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney set to make a long-awaited appearance on Fox News Sunday next week, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough and Fox host Chris Wallace have begun to trade barbs. (more)
Earlier this week, conservative columnist and author Ann Coulter attacked “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace for comparison of civil rights and gay marriage when challenging GOP presidential hopeful Rick Santorum on his stance against gays in the military. (more)
During Wednesday’s GOP debate in Simi Valley, Calif., former House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s approach went beyond sniping at his competition: He sniped at the media covering the candidates. That seems to have disappointed “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace. (more)
Herman Cain has signed up for another Sunday morning grilling, The Daily Caller has learned. (more)
On Sunday morning, while scrambling to finish editing a manuscript, I turned on Fox News to catch Chris Wallace’s interview with Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann. (more)
Last week, “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace interviewed Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart. And throughout the week, their exchange was analyzed and criticized, and some even chalked it up as a victory for Stewart because he supposedly exposed Fox News as some sort of tool of the right. (more)
flake noun \ˈflāk\ – Slang A somewhat eccentric person; an oddball. (more)
The Huffington Post headline proclaimed triumphantly, “Jon Stewart LIVE on Fox News, Tells Host ‘You’re Insane.’” Well yes, Jon Stewart did indeed say that to Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace at one point during their riveting discussion yesterday of media bias. But that headline doesn’t come close to capturing how the interview actually went down, and more accurately captures HuffPo’s wishful thinking that their hero would march into the Faux News Evil Empire and kick some serious butt. HuffPo didn’t get its wish. The rest of us, however, were treated to an excellent discussion in which Stewart eventually admitted that many longstanding conservative complaints about the media are valid. (more)
Team Georgia had a great day on Saturday. After the stumbling entry into the race by Georgia’s Newt Gingrich last week, the momentum behind former CEO and talk show host Herman Cain began to grow. By the time he announced on Saturday in front of a crowd of more than 10,000 people in Centennial Olympic Park, he had started getting “some respect.” (more)
House Speaker John Boehner is being asked on TV about his political ally and deputy, Majority Leader Eric Cantor, but TV viewers don’t know the tangled back story, which involves rumors of rivalries and a history of GOP infighting. (more)
While much of the attention has been cast toward who President Barack Obama might face in his 2012 reelection bid from the Republican side, if he plays his cards right that whole storyline could prove irrelevant. (more)
Imagine a Republican debate moderated by a network whose marquee commentators include Rachel Maddow, Lawrence O’Donnell and Ed Schultz. Seems like there could be an ideological clash? Not according to Politico’s John F. Harris. (more)
Is the White House playing favorites again with media outlets? (more)
During a White House address on Wednesday, President Barack Obama alongside Secretary of State Hillary Clinton denounced the violence in Libya as “outrageous” and “unacceptable.” But what does that mean? (more)
Fox host Bill O’Reilly says that Speaker of the House John Boehner needs to sort out his public crying habit, but Boehner said Sunday that he has no plans to change or explain his teary-eyed ways. (more)
In the 2010 election, women made history. Since the advent of exit polling data in 1982, women voters have consistently favored Democrats. Not this time. For the first time, women voters preferred the GOP. A rather shocking occurrence given just two short years ago, President Obama had a 14 point advantage with women. (more)
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Senate candidates Republican Rand Paul and Democrat Jack Conway of Kentucky have committed to a fourth political debate, this one on Fox News in early October. (more)
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs implied Thursday that President Obama does not subscribe to a version of Christianity dubbed as “liberation theology,” and argued that the president’s beliefs are more akin to traditional Protestantism. (more)

























