By Andrew P. Napolitano
The president's men trash the Constitution to pursue antagonists

Some 74 family and marriage specialists appealed Tuesday for an end to the fighting over gay marriage, saying both gay and straight marriage-supporters are needed to address the breakdown in America's marriage culture.

From illegal immigrants to defense contractors and millionaires to Medicaid patients, Americans had plenty riding on Tuesday's outcome — but few were expecting the election to provide answers to the gridlock that has prevented Washington from tackling the big issues.

Rep. Allen B. West, the acerbic Florida Republican who emerged two years ago as a leading face of the national tea party movement, is rarely short of words. And as the freshman amps up his re-election bid, neither is he short of money.

The Obama administration says the stimulus worked by creating millions of jobs and staving off a depression - doing so with great transparency. It should be a crowning achievement as Democrats prepare for November's congressional elections.
"There are lots of things we have failed to do for a very long time, but that is not to say that we won't fail to do them a bit longer," said William A. Galston, a political analyst at the Brookings Institution.
ELECTION 2012: Morning-after reality: No easy answers to gridlock →
"There are reasons why Bush's name didn't come up very much at the Republican convention other than a sort of feel-good, personal way, because for a policy standpoint, important elements of the contemporary Republican Party don't want to take ownership of what Bush did," said William A. Galston, a political analyst with the Brookings Institution, a liberal-leaning Washington think tank.