ENTERTAINMENT
March 20, 2010
TODAY Good Morning America (N) 7 a.m. KABC McLaughlin Group (N) 6:30 p.m. KCET SUNDAY CBS Sunday Morning Joe Ades; Ben Stiller. (N) 6 a.m. KCBS Today (N) 6 a.m. KNBC Good Morning America (N) 6 a.m. KABC State of the Union Healthcare: Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah); Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.). Healthcare: Rep. John B. Larson (D-Conn.); Rep. Mike Pence (R-Ind.). Healthcare; politics: Donna Brazile; William Bennett.
NATIONAL
December 8, 2005 | Tamara Lytle, Orlando Sentinel
Michael Schiavo, who fought for years to remove his wife, Terri, from a feeding tube that kept her alive, has turned his anger over Congress' intervention into political action. Schiavo announced Wednesday that he had opened TerriPAC to strike back at politicians who tried to keep his brain-damaged wife alive through legislation that he termed a "sickening exercise in raw political power."
ENTERTAINMENT
January 1, 2011
SATURDAY The Chris Matthews Show What President Obama must do to get competitive for 2012; New Year's resolutions for politicians. (N) 5 p.m. KNBC McLaughlin Group (N) 6:30 p.m. KCET SUNDAY Today Lindsay Lohan's exit from rehab. (N) 6 a.m. KNBC Good Morning America (N) 6 a.m. KABC State of the Union With Candy Crowley Investigations, new Congress: Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Vista); Obama's next two years: Democratic National Committee Chairman Tim Kaine; Democrats' way forward: Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.
NEWS
May 12, 2011 | By Paul West, Washington Bureau
Mitt Romney's aides have cautioned reporters not to expect any heart-stopping news when the front-runner for the GOP nomination delivers his first major speech of the 2012 campaign. The topic: healthcare, one that has bedeviled the former Massachusetts governor since his first presidential run four years ago. Romney's remarks, at the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center, are an attempt to get beyond criticism of "Romneycare," the healthcare plan he signed into law in 2006.
NEWS
January 10, 2012 | By James Oliphant
Debbie Wasserman Schultz, chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, just released a statement in which she argues that despite Mitt Romney's sizable margin of victory in New Hampshire, the candidate failed to meet expectations. Here's the statement: "Mitt Romney may have won in New Hampshire tonight, but he can't run from the fact that his support was rapidly eroding before any vote was even cast. Over the course of the last few months Romney had the support of as much as 45 percent of the primary electorate -- at one point boasting a nearly 30 percent lead over the rest of the GOP field.