George Will takes a break from ruining baseball with learned analyses of the infield fly rule and asks the sort of question that led Charlton Heston to discover a senses-shattering secret in Planet of the Apes: As New York's other senator from 1981 to 1999, D'Amato was the un-Moynihan, reveling in the title of Senator Pothole, a tribute, of sorts, to his unapologetic parochialism. So what is Rick Santorum, the third-ranking member of the Republican's Senate leadership and one of the nation's most prominent social conservatives, doing telling The New York Times that he wants to be like D'Amato, eschewing "frilly stuff" and practicing "meat and potatoes" politics?
Sen. Bunghole Meets Sen. Pothole
Sen. Bunghole Meets Sen. Pothole
Sen. Bunghole Meets Sen. Pothole
George Will takes a break from ruining baseball with learned analyses of the infield fly rule and asks the sort of question that led Charlton Heston to discover a senses-shattering secret in Planet of the Apes: As New York's other senator from 1981 to 1999, D'Amato was the un-Moynihan, reveling in the title of Senator Pothole, a tribute, of sorts, to his unapologetic parochialism. So what is Rick Santorum, the third-ranking member of the Republican's Senate leadership and one of the nation's most prominent social conservatives, doing telling The New York Times that he wants to be like D'Amato, eschewing "frilly stuff" and practicing "meat and potatoes" politics?