Ralph Z. Hallow
Articles by Ralph Z. Hallow
Republicans’ secret debate about debates: RNC panel huddles to devise rules, penalties
EXCLUSIVE: While Republicans talked publicly about gaining more control over their presidential debates, a panel of Republican National Committee members conferred in secret for months to create rules and penalties that would ensure 2016 candidates toed the line, according to interviews and internal emails reviewed by The Washington Times. Published May 8, 2014
RNC set to join landmark suit taking on campaign limits
Members of the Republican National Committee gathering in Memphis, Tennessee, for their spring meeting are set to join a lawsuit seeking to strike down campaign finance limits and free the GOP to spend unlimited money on get-out-the-vote efforts. Published May 6, 2014
Superlawyer Jim Bopp takes on McCain-backed tax act that targets Americans overseas
Jim Bopp, the hard-charging lawyer who persuaded the Supreme Court to strike down crucial elements in the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law, has a new target in his legal sights: a bank and taxation statute that hits Americans overseas. Published May 5, 2014
As Main Street deepens schism in GOP, conservative war against compromise heads to Amelia
In years past, the fact that Senate and House GOP leaders meandered their way to the Republican Main Street Partnership gathering this weekend in Florida's picturesque Amelia Island would hardly raise an eyebrow. Published April 10, 2014
Rand Paul experiences first speed bumps as 2016 front-runner
Rising in the polls as a 2016 White House contender, Sen. Rand Paul, Kentucky Republican, is getting a taste of the hard-knocks politics that can accompany an early front-runner. Published March 25, 2014
Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad may replace Iowa straw poll with regional festivals
Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad is contemplating replacing the closely watched Iowa presidential straw poll slated for summer 2015 with four regional "festivals" that would let GOP White House hopefuls mingle with voters, a move that could significantly alter candidate strategies in the nation's first presidential caucus state. Published March 25, 2014
DeLay: GOP failing to fight criminalization of politics
Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay has rejoined the fray, regaining his seat on the American Conservative Union/Conservative Political Action Conference board, taking up the sword against the progressiveism of Democrats and battling what the Texan says is the wimpishness of his fellow Republicans. Published March 6, 2014
Question for CPAC-goers: Is Congress relevant anymore?
Thousands of conservative activists descend Thursday on the nation’s capital for three days of discussions, panels, debates and speeches, and there’s a once-unthinkable slate of questions on their agenda. Published March 5, 2014
Rand Paul looking to hedge bet in 2016 election
Opening a door to hedge his political bets, Sen. Rand Paul has asked the leader of the Kentucky Senate for legislation to ensure that Mr. Paul can run both for the White House and for re-election to the U.S. Senate in 2016. Published March 3, 2014
CPAC conservatives frustrated by GOP’s compromises, lack of leadership
Prominent Republicans see no evidence that their party's electoral successes have advanced the cause of limited government and moral governance. Published March 2, 2014
Big money haul keeps Chris Christie’s role at Republican Governors Association safe
Chris Christie, still one of the hottest names in the 2016 Republican presidential nomination chase, heads to Washington surprisingly secure in his job as New Jersey governor and in his post as chairman of the 29-member Republican Governors Association — despite the "Bridge-gate" scandal still unfolding back home. Published February 20, 2014
Ed Gillespie — A challenger with an exhaustive political resume
Ed Gillespie, whose grandfather and father immigrated from Ireland, has a resume long enough to exhaust a voice coach who tries to read it aloud. Published January 26, 2014
GOP Senate hopeful in Virginia Ed Gillespie takes aim at taxes, gay marriage
NEWSMAKER INTERVIEW: If elected U.S. senator from Virginia this November, former GOP Chairman Ed Gillespie vows he will oppose any policies that expand welfare, federal spending and the national debt — even if proposed by a Republican president. Published January 26, 2014
Mike Huckabee calls for more Republican unity, less focus on social issues
Mike Huckabee will need a lot more than a wealthy financial backer for his 2016 GOP presidential-nomination run, he told The Washington Times on Thursday. Published January 23, 2014
Republicans look at past mistakes to map out a more successful future
Republicans are moving this week to confront some of their biggest problems from 2012, including changing their primary and convention schedules to gain a fundraising advantage and highlighting rising women within their party — a demographic they struggled with in the last presidential election. Published January 23, 2014
GOP prepares counteroffensive to battle Dem claims of a ‘war on women’
The 41st March for Life was punctuated by an unusually blunt exchange between the Republican and Democratic Party leaders that signaled a shifting fight for female voters. Published January 22, 2014
RNC to join Rand Paul’s fight to protect privacy of Americans overseas
EXCLUSIVE: Hoping to attract American voters overseas in time for 2016, the Republican National Committee is poised to join Sen. Rand Paul’s fight to restore privacy rights and financial relief to nearly 8 million U.S. citizens living abroad. Published January 15, 2014
Republican opinions of Chris Christie’s ‘Bridgegate’ range from small potatoes to condemnation
ANALYSIS: If the GOP is still the party of the big tent, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie needs to check the roof over his section for a gaping hole. Published January 13, 2014
Just 25% self ID as Republican; independents soar to record 42%
The number of Americans shedding the Republican label to become independents is exploding. The solution, political strategists suggest, may lie in party leaders' ability to return to core values that distinguish Republicans from Democrats on everything from spending to personal freedom. Published January 8, 2014
EXCLUSIVE: Republicans set to deliver big statement on abortion
EXCLUSIVE: In an unprecedented show of opposition to abortion, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus is delaying the start of the party's annual winter meeting so he and other committee members can join the March for Life on the National Mall, The Washington Times has learned. Published January 5, 2014