Health insurance bills could be hardship for many WFMJ Youngstown Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:13 PM PDT WASHINGTON (AP) - Many middle-class Americans would still struggle to pay for health insurance despite efforts by President Barack Obama and Democrats to make coverage more affordable. | Christian care: Opposing Obama is Satan's work? New Hampshire Union Leader Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:09 PM PDT What makes health care so much more important than food, clothing and shelter that it must be financed by forcibly extracting money from some and giving it to others? | Administration eyes ways to help laid-off workers Marshalltown Times-Republican Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:07 PM PDT WASHINGTON - The Obama administration is considering steps to ease the burdens of laid-off workers, including possible extensions of unemployment and health benefits, officials said Saturday. The administration has stopped short of calling for a second economic stimulus package to augment the $787 billion measure approved this year. | Bitter fruits of Mideast wars Hutchinson News Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:07 PM PDT Barack Obama faces two of the most critical decision he will ever make, which may determine the fate ... | Ryan Lizza: Larry Summers and the White House economic team. The New Yorker Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:07 PM PDT In early August, Lawrence H. Summers, President Barack Obamaâs top economic adviser, accompanied Vice-President Joseph Biden aboard Air Force Two on a trip to Detroit. Michigan has a fifteen-per-cent unemployment rate, the highest in America, and Detroit has become virtually a ward of the federal . . . | Obama faces Afghan dilemma Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:06 PM PDT With his military commanders stiffening their commitment to a troop buildup in Afghanistan, and his political advisers hardening their support for pulling back, Obama is carrying the weight of one his young presidency's most pivotal decisions. | Palin vs. the GOP establishment Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:06 PM PDT President Obama has lost much of his voting support base. As the midterm election machinery cranks into gear, past presidents are dragooned into supporting the new president and a Republican landslide is forecast. But the Republicans are still unloved and need urgently to revamp their image. Furthermore, they need a credible candidate. | Invisible, but not unfeeling The Biloxi Sun Herald Sat, 03 Oct 2009 21:04 PM PDT President Obama later this month will be visiting the âhurricane-damaged Gulf Coastâ â" you know, where Katrina hit. | | |
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