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Control of the Senate, two weeks out and counting

Tim Grieve
The rundown on where things stand -- and where we think they'll end up.

Predicting the Senate

Tim Grieve
One source of agreement: Nobody can predict New Jersey.

Riding the “macaca” wave

Tim Grieve
Webb pulls ahead of Allen and other news on November.

The Dean big tent

Mark Follman
The chairman of the DNC is venturing beyond party lines with a major endorsement in his home state.

Nailing the Hammer? Not so fast

Arianna Huffington
Tom DeLay's ethical rap sheet is longer than the list of boys who have shared Michael Jackson's bed. But the new GOP line is "He hasn't done anything wrong."

Dean stays in his chair

Julia Scott
Howard Dean will not campaign for Vermont Senator Jim Jeffords' seat when it opens in 2006.

Indecency wars

Eric Boehlert
Activists who beat back the FCC on media consolidation are dismayed to find former allies leading an unprecedented effort to restrict radio and TV content.

King Kaufman’s Sports Daily

Salon Staff
In a pair of games for the ages, one nearly endless and the other nearly unseen, the Red Sox stay alive and the Astros get within a win of the World Series.

The other guy Democrats love to hate

Sandeep Kaushik
In an interview with Salon, Ralph Nader rejects the spoiler label and says Democrats "need to stop their whining and go to work."

Right Hook

Mark Follman
Bill Kristol applauds President Bush for "dropping the pretense" that everything's under control; Andrew Sullivan says that more terrorist violence in Iraq might not be a bad thing. Plus: Cato's Stephen Moore says Howard Dean is tougher than the GOP thinks.

Pensions for all?

Arianna Huffington
In just a few short years, the nest eggs of the American worker have gone from sunny side up to seriously scrambled.

Wellstone was right

Michelle Goldberg
Politicians who voted against Bush's Iraq resolution were supposed to pay a harsh political price. Instead, they're thriving on the campaign trail.

Baseball 2002’s winners and losers

King Kaufman
Forget the talk of contraction and lockouts. It's spring -- time for the Red Sox to edge the Yankees (really!) and the Cardinals to go all the way.

Arthur Andersen and the Baptists

Terry Greene Sterling
Enron's auditor is no stranger to accounting disasters -- including one of the largest religious foundation bankruptcies in the history of the United States.

Israel’s House foes

Jake Tapper
In a meaningless resolution, a small group of House critics tee off on U.S. foreign policy -- and Israel -- lamenting the "root causes of terrorism."

The Yankees in six

King Kaufman
There. I said it. The Diamondbacks have a shot, but not really.

Better red than brain-dead

Salon Staff
By John Leonard

Early Christmas for Beijing

Bruce Shapiro
The House of Representatives approves permanent trading status for China, but the move is mostly a symbolic gesture.

Not just a Seattle sequel

Bruce Shapiro
The protests surrounding this weekend's meetings of the IMF and World Bank are the next step in the backlash to globalization.

And then there were four …

Micah L.Sifry
Ralph Nader will announce his campaign for president on the Green Party ticket in January, joining those on the Republican, Democrat and Reform tickets in next year's race for the White House.

Microsoft.orgy

Andrew Leonard
When Microsoft started giving away free videoconferencing software, it didn't plan on hosting a global sex party.

Carolyn Chute’s Wicked Good Militia

Dwight Garner
The author of "The Beans of Egypt, Maine" is leading an army of grave, silent woodsmen in a backwoods campaign against corporate greed
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