Advisers see Romney's work at Bain as an opening for the president to gain in the 2012 White House race.
Having knocked off Senate veteran Richard Lugar, the right is now looking to battles in Wisconsin, Utah and Nebraska.
Hard right rhetoric in the House and Senate will cool as November nears.
North Carolina, Missouri, Arizona and Wisconsin may be factors in the 2012 presidential race.
This lame-duck Congress will have big issues to tackle in little time. Feathers are sure to fly.
At a White House summit on personal finance last week, President Obama and his top economic advisors sketched battle lines for his upcoming duel with Mitt Romney.
He nearly overstayed his welcome, but a quick and forceful endorsement of Romney will extend his political future.
The President tells Kiplinger that his working-class upbringing differs from the GOP candidates.
Why the GOP nominee won't pick Palin or Santorum. Why he should pick Rubio.
A faster pullout would be an insult to the U.S. troops who died fighting terrorism.
Even without a chance to win the GOP nomination, the former House speaker has a lot to gain.
As the inevitable GOP nominee, he should focus on Obama and the economy. Now.
He'll try to convince Israel to let sanctions work, but Netanyahu seems ready to act alone.
At some point, the president has to appease his base, and there's little the GOP can offer him in exchange for backing down.
With all of the focus on the economy, other topics get short shrift from White House candidates.
With money and organization behind it, the campaign of the former Massachusetts governor is built for the long haul.
By choosing the Florida senator as his running mate, the GOP nominee-to-be can address some of his own shortcomings.
Both candidates for the White House see early engagement as a chance to move poll numbers and frame the fall debate.
The race for the 2012 GOP presidential nomination will be over quickly, despite what you hear from the pundits.
The House GOP's misplay on the payroll tax may cost Speaker John Boehner his job -- and help preserve the president's.
Some mainstream GOP candidates might sit out 2012 races, much to the delight of incumbent Democrats.
He’ll make it interesting, but GOP voters will find Romney the better bet to beat President Obama.
Though many Republicans don't like him, one by one his opponents are self-destructing.
By tapping into discontent, the new movement might lift Obama, Democrats, in 2012 races. But the road is long and obstacles abound.
How one former official with a vested interest is pressing fellow Democrats to help corporations.
The GOP nomination is his to lose. The sluggish economy might make the general election his to win. Then what?
Unlocking six secrets of predicting the race for president from a close reading of campaign history.
Congress will avert a government shutdown, but the budget process remains gummed-up.
Even without congressional action, the retirement system won’t go broke for decades, so why all the fuss? It’s all about scaring voters.
Republicans, sensing a chance to oust a weakened incumbent, will block key parts of the president’s jobs plan.
The GOP has a chance to topple the incumbent, but presidential candidates might squander it.
It’s too late for any new candidate to make a serious White House bid.
The debt deal will require the GOP to choose between small tax changes and massive military cuts. In the end, the defense hawks will rule.
The Internet amplifies and exaggerates the political fringe -- on both sides. But in the end, the quiet ones will make the most noise.
The upcoming straw poll and next year’s caucuses give the state an outsize role in presidential politics.
With tea partyers reluctant to negotiate, he has only bad choices as the default deadline looms.
Apparently so. The similarities are striking.
The feds are stepping up audits and fines while states are imposing even harsher penalties on employers who hire illegal immigrants.
That's right, we're taking a look way into the future -- when the GOP will have better odds .
Both parties in Congress will give ground to avoid default, but it's not going to be pretty.
As the 2012 election looms, the White House tries to mend fences by delaying government rules that might lead to layoffs and cut investment.
Her strength in Iowa threatens the former Minnesota governor’s bid to become the Republican alternative to Mitt Romney.
Cuts in stimulus money and rising Medicaid costs add up to big budget problems.
At a first-ever White House summit of its kind, the President shares a few life lessons on saving, investing in yourself, and managing debt.
It will be years before most of America sees gains in home prices again that match historic norms. There are too many problems to resolve.
Many questions remain, but some big dropouts help frame the 2012 Republican presidential primary battle.
Deep cuts put local officials on the defensive as recall efforts mount.
The Indiana governor’s candidacy would force a serious discussion of budget cuts and the economy.
Confirmation hearings will give congressional critics a public stage to challenge the president on security issues.
Obama’s political stock will rise, but for how long?
Fixing the economy by greening the earth? That concept will be put on hold.
If Obama is so far left, why are liberals so unhappy?
The stage is set for the real fight over spending. It’ll make the shutdown spat look tame.
GOP gamble on Medicare, possible shutdown will shape outcome for Obama, lawmakers.
The GOP might counter with a Hispanic vice presidential candidate.
The Republican race to face Obama is wide open.
Obama borrows a page from George H.W. Bush’s playbook to deal with a loony leader.
Remembering a reporter who made Washington -- and journalism -- better.
The next defense chief must deal with war, budget cuts and the 2012 elections.
Are lawmakers in the cut-spending camp misreading public sentiment?
Unions will be forced to yield on money issues if they want to hang onto any influence at all.
'Birthers' may please some in the vocal Republican base, but at what cost at the polls?
Presidents' budgets have little resemblance to the final product. That’s truer than ever this year.
U.S. influence and intelligence in the region are proving to be rather limited.
Both have similar backgrounds, and face similar hurdles.
Securities regulators have a chance to stand for average investors.
Congress will need a Plan B if the Supreme Court strikes down the individual mandate.
After Mubarak, oil prices and tensions will rise.
Readying a re-election campaign, the president will largely stay above the fray.
Parties make nice as Obama’s speech nears. But can it last?
Forget fighting with the Democrats. Soon, Republicans will be fighting with themselves.
The Arizona shootings give lawmakers a chance to tone down the rhetoric.
What helps the Mississippi governor in the South hurts him elsewhere.
It costs more to make pennies than they're worth, so why bother?
Without Palin, a wide-open GOP race could play to Mitch Daniels' strengths.
The president has a problem -- with his own party. Will liberals test him?
Compromise and cooperation have to begin at the beginning -- with the way congressional districts are drawn.
Her book and cable show keep interest and dollars swelling. That’s all she wants. For now.
Other presidents have attempted to tackle health care, faced midterm losses, but prevailed.
Even in this toxic political atmosphere, Democrats and Republicans will work out at least some legislative deals,
The good, the bad and the ugly about the GOP’s temporary, nonbinding and limited earmark ban.
It's far from impossible, but it will take some luck as well as an Obama recovery and a smarter strategy in 2012.
The deficit debate may represent the best opportunity for Obama to rescue his presidency.
The FDA won't be deterred from requring that food producers tell consumers more about what they are eating.
Honoring and caring for veterans will soon grow much more costly, forcing Congress to struggle to find funds.
His staff calls it the "golden Rolo" because it contains the names of the next Speaker's closest confidants.
Voters aren’t about to get what they really want from policymakers -- a cooperative effort to help the economy grow.
The Republican team that will soon be running the House is primed for action on everything from taxes to health care.
Finding common ground will prove hard, if not impossible.
GOP gains in Tuesday’s congressional elections will bring big change. Or will they?
Republicans seize control of the House and come close to parity in the Senate as voters send Obama a blunt message.
Social networking sites are giving opposition researchers a whole new field to play in.
They are working for a common goal now, but their interests will likely diverge after Nov. 3.
Don't expect to know all the results on election night.
The only question is how painful it will be.
Count on Republicans claiming a mandate that voters won't give them.
Several Democratic-leaning states will swing Republican at the gubernatorial level.
Anger is one thing, but emotional judgments made in haste could mean huge problems down the road.
It’s time for voters to trade their blindfolds for green eyeshades and think more realistically about budget cutting.
Chairmen would wield enormous power and influence if GOP Rep. John Boehner becomes speaker.
Are we in love with the real thing or just the image?
Here’s what you can expect when Congress takes up several big tax issues in a lame-duck session next month.
Getting anything done will be a tall order in a bitterly divided government.
An accommodation is key to getting the economy moving again.
The president’s decision to make Elizabeth Warren a special assistant rather than head of the new consumer bureau skirted a nasty Senate battle, but it means more uncertainty for firms and consumers.
Its political value is immense, even if little of it actually gets enacted.
Never mind the midterms. The real battle for control is two years away, with no shortage of GOP prospects. Here's our rundown.
The simple answer is no. In fact, the Tea Party is sabotaging its own most important goal.
After months of delay, President Obama will soon get to sign legislation he's touted as a big help to small business.
Anger at almost anyone and anything connected to Washington is creating the most volatile election season in decades.
Emboldened by its surprise win in Alaska, the Tea Party is looking east as it keeps fighting for control of the GOP.
And until the vote, most legislation -- including Obama’s jobs plan -- will be largely stalled.
But it’s no surprise if you missed the story buried in last week’s newspapers.
The Pentagon wants a smaller foreign footprint, and deficit-weary lawmakers will be only too happy to oblige.
There's nothing like truckloads of germy eggs to grab lawmakers' attention.
Next year's Congress will be a very different breed of animal.
Would higher taxes for upper incomers put a damper on small business?
America was built on the notion of religious freedom; that’s why it’s such an important part of the Constitution. But that principle faces a huge test today.
It’ll take a year or three of intensive debate, but a major tax overhaul is a good bet.
Will the shrill campaign rhetoric kill chances for a compromise after the election? The U.S. can’t afford to let that happen.
Those who insist on blocking change to Social Security aren't doing future retirees any favors.
Reining in the filibuster will cause a hue and cry, but some Democrats think it may be necessary and overdue.
Public anger at government spending and the rising debt still seems to stop when proposed cuts hit close to home.
Two liberal legends facing ethics troubles add to Democratic angst ahead of the November elections.
Most Americans think a GOP Congress would be better at running the economy, but few can tell you just what that means.
The consumer bureau created by the financial regulatory bill will have immense power -- and it won’t be shy about using it.
Stress tests on European banks were designed to calm the markets, but don’t count on it.
Republicans will be making a mistake if they take Joe Biden's old seat for granted.
Eighteen months into his first term, pundits and partisans are engaged in a shallow debate over how the president will be judged. They’re missing the point.
Republicans are building the case for a government pay freeze -- and eventually a cut -- as a way to reduce the deficit.