thehill.com — Senator-Elect Scott Brown, the successor to the late-Sen. Ted Kennedy, will be sworn in to office Thursday afternoon, giving Republicans 41 seats in the upper chamber. Brown's entry into the Senate formally marks the end of the Democrats filibuster-proof Senate majority. Senator-Elect Scott Brown, the successor to the late-Sen.
Feb 3, 2010 View in Crawl 4
wishitwerepaulFeb 4, 2010
insightful comment, thank you.
jgzmanFeb 4, 2010
If memory serves, while Bush was president, the democrats passed damn near every bill he sent them.
demolitionistFeb 4, 2010
@KaiosamaYep you definitely aren't biased. Just a normal guy with an open mind looking out for whats best for the county.
Closed AccountFeb 5, 2010
because they had a 1.9 Trillion dollar item they had to pass first. but it's ok, because we saved $20m
Closed AccountFeb 5, 2010
God, I hope so. at least till we get a real President.
jonathazFeb 6, 2010
Umm my point was that it took quite a long time to get Franken seated, that is an actual event that happened where the Republicans drug the process out way beyond a reasonable time. You saying that had the Democratic Party candidate won in this election that she would have been seated sooner than Brown is conjecture, and f**king retarded conjecture at that. Brown got seated right away, as he should have.