rudy giuliani
- Jules Witcover: President Trump escaped the clutches of the Mueller investigation by refusing to testify.
- The "no collusion" mantra gets an entirely new spin from Rudy Giuliani who seems to think now that, yup, maybe there was some.
- Michael Cohen's guilty plea just the latest gyration in the explanation of a payoff Donald Trump either didn't know about or knew about and didn't pay for except he did.
- Donald Trump's attorney got it right when he observed that there are often multiple variations of the truth.
- Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump may be presenting the worst White House defense of possible criminal wrongdoing in modern history.
- Collusion with the enemy is betraying your country. It is an impeachable defense — one of the few sins our founding fathers saw fit to considering removing the top executive over — and it’s hard to differentiate whether or to what extent one’s hand is in the cookie jar.
- When a young woman gets mugged in our city center in broad daylight on a work day, we have to ask ourselves: How did we allow this to happen to Baltimore?
- As former Republican House Speaker, John Boehner, stated during a recent GOP meeting in Michigan, “There is no Republican Party. There’s a Trump Party. The Republican Party is kind of taking a nap somewhere.”
- As Mr. Mueller takes his time building a possible case of obstruction of justice against the president, Messrs. Trump and Giuliani are constructing a diversionary smokescreen of an FBI gone rogue.
- Jonah Goldberg: If there were any doubt that the multi-front battle over the Russia investigation has become the political equivalent of a Tong war, Rudy Giuliani removed it.
- Impeachment might be too high a bar for President Trump's political foes to clear, says Jules Witcover.
- After more than a year of deceptive bobbing and weaving in the Robert Mueller investigation, President Trump has, thanks to his latest defense lawyer — former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani — bought into the strategy that best suits his personal style: standing and fighting back.
- Mayor Catherine E. Pugh said she gave President-Elect Donald J. Trump a Baltimore pin when she met with him during last week's Army-Navy football game at M&T Bank Stadium — a symbol she hopes will serve as a constant reminder of the her city's needs.
- As the Maryland Terrapins prepare for the NCAA tournament (and the men continue to not-love their fourth seed), they can get some solace in the fact that they've already conquered one heated tourney.
- Jeb Bush has a long way to go to win over the tea party crowd, says Jules Witcover.
- Republicans who refused to disavow Rudy Guiliani's bizarre statement about Obama showed themselves nothing but haters,
- Rudy Giuliani, once revered for his reaction to 9/11 is now just ridiculous and racist, writes Leonard Pitts Jr.
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- Former CBS News correspondent Eric Engberg followed his blistering Facebook post on Saturday about Bill O'Reilly with an appearance Sunday on CNN's "Reliable Sources."
- French indignation over Fox News inaccuracies highlights our own waning capacity for moral outrage, says Leonard Pitts Jr.
- The NYPD's temper tantrum shames its officers and its profession, writes Leonard Pitts Jr.
- Jonathan Gruber should have been Time's Person of the Year. The magazine gave it to the "Ebola Fighters" instead. Good for them; they're doing God's work. Still, Mr. Gruber would have been better.
- The vast majority of violent crime is committed within -- not between -- racial groups.
- The sharp reduction in violent crime that occurred on Martin O'Malley's watch as mayor of Baltimore is a central theme of the speech he gives as he travels the country and lays the groundwork for a presidential campaign. But ongoing criticism from the city's current mayor could focus attention on an aspect of O'Malley's crime-fighting record he never mentions in New Hampshire or Iowa: A soaring arrest rate during his tenure in Baltimore that angered civil rights groups and locked the city into a
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- Thanks again to the conservative Republican majority on the Supreme Court, big money will be dominating a fall campaign in which combative and often irresponsible advertising will flood the airwaves in congressional districts and states across the land. All in the name of the First Amendment and free speech.
- A Democrat and Republican gubernatorial candidate chatted amicably at Vitale's Little Italy Restaurant Monday evening before retreating to private dining rooms
- Gov. Martin O'Malley did his job with his convention speech in Charlotte, but it's what he did before and after that will determine his political future.
- High Line, New York City's abandoned elevated rail line that's now a park, lets visitors commune with nature in the city
- Maryland's Court of Appeals is threatening to upend thousands of years of tradition about the dissolution of marriages.
- GOP presidential primary contender Herman Cain has a lot more than 15 minutes of fame coming his way
- Bill Press says that gaffes, rants and smaller-than-life candidates are making the Republican race fun for Democrats to watch
- Leonard Pitts notes that women also have affairs, but somehow they have the brains not to take risks that are sure to lead to public embarrassment
- Former Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. remembers William Donald Schaefer as a friend who would forgive anything if he believed you operated from the heart.