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THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Articles by THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Ray Mabus

EDITORIAL: The USS Karl Marx

The responsibility for naming U.S. warships has traditionally been left to the secretary of the Navy. That needs to change. President Obama's Navy secretary, Ray Mabus, has politicized the christening process to the point where some form of oversight is needed. Published December 7, 2011

'UNBREAKABLE BOND': Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Obama both said reports about more distant relations in the past year were "wrong." Mr. Netanyahu visited Mr. Obama in the Oval Office and talked with a group of reporters. (Associated Press)

EDITORIAL: Obama’s Israel problem

The Obama White House claims to have done more for Israel's security than any in history. If that were the case, President Obama would not have to continually defend his shaky record. Published December 7, 2011

Inside Politics

Republican presidential hopeful Rick Perry — with nowhere to go but up — is making an aggressive play to rise in Iowa by courting Christian evangelicals who could help revive his campaign. Published December 7, 2011

Harry Morgan's long acting career was highlighted by his role as Col. Potter on "M*A*S*H," for which he won an Emmy. He died Wednesday at 96.

Tuning in to TV

Emmy-winning character actor Harry Morgan, whose portrayal of the fatherly Col. Sherman Potter on television's "M*A*S*H" highlighted a show business career that included nine other TV series, 50 films and the Broadway stage, died Wednesday. He was 96. Published December 7, 2011

American Scene

Alabama's attorney general has become the highest-ranking Republican official to suggest throwing out parts of his state's tough new immigration law, as he recommended that lawmakers repeal some portions of the statute that have been put on hold by federal courts and clarify some others. Published December 6, 2011

THE WASHINGTON TIMES FILE
School buses.

EDITORIAL: The school bus shakedown

Montgomery County hopes to be among the first to convert its familiar yellow school buses into rolling speed traps. As each bus picks up and drops off schoolchildren during the day, it also would mail out $250 tickets to passing drivers - all in the name of safety, of course. Published December 6, 2011

Illustration by William Brown

EDITORIAL: Canada cools to global warming

Canada has flat-out rejected the proposals pushed at the United Nations' annual global-warming summit in South Africa. This could be the start of a trend of countries dumping environmentalist fashion statements and returning to rational energy policies. If only the United States would do the same. Published December 6, 2011

Veterans Committee votes Santo into Hall

Ron Santo always kept rooting for the causes dearest to him for his Chicago Cubs to win the World Series, for doctors to find a cure for diabetes and for him to reach the Hall of Fame. Published December 5, 2011

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin speaks during a United Russia party congress in Moscow on Sunday, Nov. 27, 2011, at which he formally was nominated as the party's candidate for president in next March's election. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

EDITORIAL: The czar who bleeds

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin suffered a setback last weekend on his march to resume the Russian presidency. The weak showing for his United Russia party in Sunday's parliamentary elections raised questions whether his return to high executive office will be as smooth as expected. Published December 5, 2011

Illustration: Jobs by Alexander Hunter for The Washington Times

EDITORIAL: The 8.6 percent illusion

The Obama administration received a welcome gift from the Bureau of Labor of Statistics (BLS) on Friday. The government's official unemployment figure dipped to 8.6 percent in November, a rather surprising turn given that the economy added a paltry 120,000 new jobs that month. That's the first tip-off that the scenario isn't rosy. President Obama shouldn't break out the Cristal champagne quite yet. Published December 5, 2011

American Scene

The iced-in city of Nome on Alaska's western coast may be in luck: A Russian tanker that can plow through thick ice will try to deliver 1.5 million gallons of home heating fuel, gasoline and diesel fuel after a massive storm kept a barge from getting in before winter. Published December 5, 2011

Economy Briefs

The unemployment rate, which has refused to budge from the 9 percent neighborhood for 2 1/2 frustrating years, suddenly dropped in November, driven in part by small businesses that finally see reason to hope and hire. Published December 4, 2011

American Scene

Megachurch leader Bishop Eddie Long announced Sunday that he is taking time off to focus on his family after his wife filed for divorce. Published December 4, 2011

Rep. Nathan Deal, Georgia Republican (AP Photo/Gainsville Times, Tom Reed)

EDITORIAL: Nobody wants toll lanes

It takes a certain kind of genius to come up with the most unpopular idea in all of politics. A few years ago, Virginia's then-Gov. Tim Kaine, a Democrat, developed a scheme to lease part of Interstate 95 to an Australian company so it could impose a tax on the commonwealth's drivers for the next 75 years. Gov. Robert F. McDonnell, a Republican, is prepared to give final approval to this misguided high-occupancy toll (HOT) lane proposal. Before he does so, he ought to talk to his Georgia counterpart. Published December 2, 2011

An Egyptian election official waits for the opening of ballot boxes at a vote-counting center in Cairo on Tuesday. "These elections are completely different from anything we've had before," said taxi driver Mohammed Farouk. (Associated Press)

EDITORIAL: Egyptian women, stock up on scarves

It was a strange scene in Cairo Thursday as the head of the country's election commission convened a press conference to announce the results of this week's first round of parliamentary elections. Abdul Moiz Ibrahim hailed the 62 percent turnout in the compulsory poll as the best showing "since the time of the pharaohs" - rulers not known for their belief in participatory government. Mr. Ibrahim alluded vaguely to problems in counting the ballots. Just as Mr. Ibrahim was expected to deliver the results, he abruptly left the room. "I have no more energy," he said, "I've run out of gas." Published December 2, 2011

John Walsh will return to the air Friday when "America's Most Wanted" makes its Lifetime premiere after spending 23 years on Fox. (Associated Press)

Tuning in to TV

John Walsh is rallying America against the nation's bad guys again. Published December 1, 2011

Inside Politics

House Speaker John A. Boehner has pressed President Obama to review the automatic spending cuts set to be triggered by last week's failure of the defunct debt-reduction supercommittee and to work with Congress to develop a Plan B. Published December 1, 2011

Vice President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. comments Wednesday about his recent trip to Afghanistan, Iraq, Kuwait and Pakistan. He is known as a talkative politician, but as a child, he needed to overcome a terrible stutter. (Associated Press)

EDITORIAL: Yes, Mr. Biden, victory in Iraq

Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. said the Obama administration is "not claiming victory" in Iraq. That's good, because the administration had nothing to do with it. Published December 1, 2011