By John Solomon
How the government's punishing of the exposure of official wrongdoing can linger for years

My son, age 42, finally married. His bride walked down a red carpet with rose petals scattered by his 8-year-old twin nieces to join a cantor who sang the Jewish blessings under a chuppah, a canopy held by a man on each corner, in a quasi-traditional wedding ceremony.
"The real news wasn't how the singles broke," writes Jonathan V. Last in the Weekly Standard, "it was that their share of the total vote increased by a whopping 6 percentage points."