Senate Republicans Promise To Keep "Don't Ask Don't Tell" Alive
John McCain and John Cornryn basically tell Senate Democrats it's not worth their time.
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John McCain and John Cornryn basically tell Senate Democrats it's not worth their time.
But just yesterday, she didn't.
The Supreme Court says enforcement is officially back on . . . for now.
Mrs. McCain is not shy about pointing the finger.
A draft of a report reveals that seven out of ten soldiers wouldn't mind the end of "don't ask, don't tell."
Bob Gates wants it gone before the next Congress steps in.
The military can still keep gays from serving openly.
The No. 1 answer was: I'm not really sure what the fuss is about.
He's made more gay appointments than any president in history.
He's not the only one.
She'll issue her final decision about rejecting the stay early today.
"In light of the appeal and the application for the stay, a certain amount of uncertainty now exists."
That's even though the Obama administration has moved to appeal a recent ruling.
President Obama prefers an "orderly" legislative repeal.
This doesn't look good.
There was a setback for gay-rights advocates this week. What next?
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