High-interest Republican disparages Bush over Social Security

Rep. Ginny Brown-Waite (R-Fla.) has been a long-time member of the Conscience Caucus. She’s a loyal Republican on almost every possible area of public policy, but when it comes to Social Security, she not only disagrees with Bush, she’s not afraid to say so. And in a sign of just how difficult it’ll be for […]

The straw(s) that broke The Hammer’s back?

In March, House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, already awash in scandal and a four-time target of House Ethics Committee rebukes, found himself in more hot water. Reports surfaced that DeLay took an expense-paid trip to South Korea, paid for by a South Korean lobbying group, in violation of House rules. Shortly thereafter, we learned that […]

Corporate lobbyists shudder at ‘nuclear option,’ hint at yet another GOP fissure

When it comes to the “nuclear option,” the conventional wisdom tells us that most Republicans are feeling feisty and aggressive, while most Dems are worried and on the defensive. The situation is, fortunately, far more nuanced. Dems, to a large extent, have been in a near-panic because the end of judicial filibusters means that Bush […]

The difference between campaigning and governing

During the presidential campaign, the Bush campaign was relentless in attacking John Kerry for his willingness to alter the Patriot Act. One of the campaign’s first ads featured a female voiceover darkly warning voters about Kerry’s agenda, charging, “On the war on terror: weaken the Patriot Act used to arrest terrorists and protect America.” A […]

Tuesday’s political round-up

Today’s installment of campaign-related news items that wouldn’t generate a post of their own, but may be of interest to political observers: * Former Rhode Island Attorney General Sheldon Whitehouse made it official yesterday, announcing his campaign against Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R). Whitehouse cited the need for another Dem in the Senate to “fight back” […]

John Danforth, holding his ground — for now

Ever since John Danforth wrote that devastating New York Times op-ed last week, I’ve been waiting to see whether he’s forced to take it all back. (I keep seeing the image of Karl Rove leaving a horse head in his bed….) It would be pretty ordinary at this point. Conservatives who have crossed paths with […]

An important email, a startling omission

This seems like the kind of email that would be included in a comprehensive, “independent” report on intelligence failures before the war in Iraq. The CIA had evidence that Curveball was a shameless fabricator months before Secretary of State Colin Powell cited the Iraqi’s reports before the United Nations. But in the Feb. 4, 2003, […]

Feeling the heat at home

For years, taking on Tom DeLay in his home district was a thankless, futile task. When a powerful lawmaker climbs the political ladder, amasses huge sums of money, and represents a district that shares his or her ideology, there’s not much of a point in mounting a serious challenge. Before 2004, DeLay’s closest race ever […]

Maybe he’ll learn who Paul Martin is before he gets the gig

Bush has a habit of finding uniquely unqualified people to fill administration posts (tapping a man who wants to eliminate the U.N. to be the U.N. ambassador, for example), but tapping Pete Coors to be the next ambassador to Canada seems like an almost-comedic choice. (Thanks to B.A. for the tip) Coors, who lost his […]

The role reversal on rationalizing evil

Just to follow up on John Cornyn’s madness for a moment, I think it’s interesting to see the way in which the traditional, almost stereotypical, philosophies about how the left and right look at wrong-doing have almost completely reversed. For the better part of my lifetime, the right looked at evil in stark and absolute […]