Jack Colwell

Jack Colwell

Opinion

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He relied on common sense and facts

He relied on common sense and facts

May 6, 2013

Even as governor of Indiana and then in Washington as a member of President Reagan's Cabinet, Otis R. Bowen remained "Doc" Bowen, never pretentious, always with the same friendly, caring ways of his years as a family doctor in Bremen.

  • 'Sort of' a good session for Gov. Pence

    May 6, 2013

    How did the governor do?

  • Stands against the majority opinion

    April 28, 2013

    A statewide poll shows that Joe Donnelly and Dan Coats, Indiana's U.S. senators, took stands opposed by a majority of their Hoosier constituents -- one on gay marriage, the other on background checks for gun purchases.

  • The most dangerous threat is fear

    April 21, 2013

    A graffiti-type message left in a women's restroom at an Elkhart license branch kept thousands of kids from school on the day of the Boston Marathon.

  • No merit to 'fixing' selection process

    April 14, 2013

    If it ain't broke, don't fix it. That sound advice is ignored repeatedly by politicians who want to change the merit selection system for selection of St. Joseph County Superior Court judges. The system has worked well for four decades.

  • Survey reveals the slimy underbelly

    April 8, 2013

    American voters don't understand the very real threat of the Lizard People. Don't they see on the Internet about those shape-shifting reptilian people seeking to rule the world?

  • A Dyngus Day for the history books

    March 31, 2013

    Forty-five years ago, Bobby Kennedy came to South Bend for the wildest of all Dyngus Days. Kennedy would have been president if he had lived long enough.

  • Shifting party fortunes is nothing new

    March 25, 2013

    Is the Republican Party toast? You would think so, listening to the political analysts and strategists, including those who prepared a harshly critical self-appraisal for the Republican National Committee.

  • Weigh what you hear on the 'news'

    March 17, 2013

    With focus now on Lincoln and other celebrated figures in American history, we hear discussions of what they would think, do or say today.

  • Slip-up may have cost Pence his tax cut

    March 10, 2013

    Chances of Gov. Mike Pence winning legislative approval of his signature 10 percent income tax cut began to slip away last Oct. 23.

  • Who sacrifices for sequestration?

    March 3, 2013

    There was a way to convince Congress to act responsibly to prevent the damage from that thing called sequester.

  • Who picks up the tab for the so-called 'free' lunch?

    February 24, 2013

    There's no such thing as a free lunch.

  • Lugar still speaking his own mind

    February 18, 2013

    Politicians on the Far Right, seeking to turn the Republican Party into an uncompromising, unquestioning cause in their own image, sought to silence Dick Lugar's voice of moderation, promising that Indiana still would send a Republican to the Senate.

  • Sky is no limit in battling the New World Order

    February 10, 2013

    Sales of assault rifles and 30-round ammo clips are sky high since those 20 first-graders were slain in Connecticut. And for many purchasers, the sky is why.

  • Governors are prey to economic tide

    February 4, 2013

    Candidates for governor, all of them, campaign on jobs, more jobs for Indiana and vast improvement in the state's economy. When elected, they brag about accomplishments in job creation, especially in seeking re-election. And they leave office citing a legacy of economic expansion, whether or not there has been much or any.

  • One inaugural address, two very different reactions

    January 27, 2013

    Reaction from the more partisan evaluators of President Barack Obama's second inaugural address can be summed up succinctly this way:

  • Leading two very different Houses

    January 24, 2013

    Speaker of the House.

  • Congress' popularity reaches new low

    January 13, 2013

    How low can Congress go? Well, lower than a cockroach. Really. A nationwide poll last week conducted by Public Policy Polling found Americans had a higher opinion of cockroaches than of Congress.

  • Congress holds its noise and votes

    January 6, 2013

    Just shut up.

  • Let's focus the discussion on safety

    December 30, 2012

    Let's stop talking about "gun control."

  • Santa has noted these newsmakers

    December 23, 2012

    As he does every year at this time, a very reliable source dropped off a list of what some prominent people will find under their Christmas trees.

  • Political weapon knows no boundaries

    December 16, 2012

    Boundaries more than ballots determine members of Congress in many states.

  • Mark your calendars: The end is near

    December 9, 2012

    Fear not the fiscal cliff. It won't be looming there on Jan. 1. Nothing will be there. The world ends on Dec. 21.

  • How one side misread the electorate

    December 2, 2012

    We now know from exit polls and post-election interviews that most supporters of Mitt Romney, including his campaign officials and, apparently, Romney himself, were convinced as Election Day dawned that the election was in the bag. For Romney. Quite likely by the landslide over a hapless Barack Obama that was predicted by Dick Morris on Fox News.

  • The odds of a 2nd District rematch

    November 25, 2012

    If they meet in an expected 2nd Congressional District rematch in 2014 -- Brendan Mullen vs. Jackie Walorski -- some things will be different. One very important thing will be the same.

  • Time to trot out this year's turkeys

    November 18, 2012

    With Thanksgiving almost here, it's time to present the annual Turkey of the Year Awards.

  • A political debate gaffe that just kept on giving

    November 11, 2012

    The Mourdock mistake was costly.

  • Answers to these burning questions will come Tuesday

    November 4, 2012

    Questions abound as polls paint a confusing map of projected red and blue states and pundits ponder effects of a hurricane disaster on the election. In Indiana, not a battleground this time in the presidential race, the big question is whether Richard Mourdock self-destructed with his famous -- or infamous -- debate claim that a pregnancy resulting from rape is "something that God intended to happen."

  • Will 'prevent defense' win the race?

    October 28, 2012

    In football, a prevent defense often is used by a team with a narrow lead near the end of a game to guard against a big play by the opponent. It can stymie the opponent. Or, sometimes, it can lead to shorter but effective gains that enable the opponent to come back to win.

  • Will Chrysler be a vehicle for Donnelly Senate win?

    October 21, 2012

    Joe Donnelly travels on the wheels of Chrysler toward the U.S. Senate. If he gets there -- and it's about a 50-50 chance -- it will be because of the jobs issue, specifically, the jobs saved at Chrysler and beyond in the vital automotive-related industry in Indiana.