You want to toe the line with tough investigations without falling into political grandstanding inherent in Washington on both sides of the aisle.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Congress does investigations better than they do anything else.
The president really shouldn't be involved in terms of dictating what course the investigation should take.
The mystery of government is not how Washington works but how to make it stop.
I think that people on both sides of the aisle are rejecting what's going on with Washington and the establishment.
I believe there's too little patience and context to many of the investigations I read or see on television.
Too often in Washington special interests urge us to fight one another just because we belong to different parties. It is time for this to stop and for Washington to focus on what needs to be done.
Whenever you're faced with an explanation of what's going on in Washington, the choice between incompetence and conspiracy, always choose incompetence.
One of the reasons Americans hold Washington in such low regard is the perception that nothing ever gets done. Whatever the issue - no matter how urgent - they always seem to be 'working on it.'
In the absence of full-fledged Congressional investigations, American policymakers rarely look back. They are bound by continuity and fealty across administrations and generations.
It's not the function of Congress to do criminal investigations.