And then there were 30

In Texas’ 23rd congressional district, incumbent Rep. Henry Bonilla (R) wasn’t expected to have too much trouble. In November, he’d almost won the district outright, coming just two points short of avoiding a run-off and heading back to DC for an eighth term. There were widespread rumors that Bonilla had come to consider his re-election […]

Tuesday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits. * As Republicans finally give up their majority, they leave the public with a stunningly bad impression of politicians. According to a new USA Today/Gallup poll, only 15% of Americans give senators or very high marks for honesty and ethical standards, while 14% do so for House members. The only […]

Support for the war falls below, well, everything

One of Josh Marshall’s readers raises a really good point. Just to put things in perspective… with public approval solidly in the 20s, the war in Iraq is now less popular than a bevy of social issues that have long been considered political poison for Democrats. Imagine if a Democratic president and Congress had made […]

You can’t keep a good Senate Intelligence Committee investigation down

It will only be three years too late (and three years after it was promised by the Senate GOP), but the Phase II report will see the light of day. The three unreleased sections of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s controversial “Phase Two” report on the Bush administration’s use of prewar intelligence are headed for circulation […]

‘It has everything to do with perception’

The notion of blaming Americans for the Bush administration’s failures in Iraq started catching on among some high-profile conservatives a couple of weeks ago. The offensive approach has already been thoroughly debunked, but that didn’t stop Tom DeLay from spouting his blame-Americans-first nonsense on Fox News last night. Here’s another major Republican name who blames […]

Being a frontrunner isn’t so bad

Tom Edsall had an interesting opinion piece in the NYT today, but I think his broader point gets the story backwards. Hillary Clinton is the Democratic establishment’s anti-establishment candidate. She is simultaneously an insurgent, seeking to end a 220-year reign of men, and the heir apparent — dominant in cash ($14.4 million in the bank), […]

Reyes’ error was bad, but he wasn’t the only one

Following up on a post from Saturday, Congressional Quarterly national security editor Jeff Stein asked Rep. [tag]Silvestre Reyes[/tag] (D-Texas), soon to be the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, a series of questions about the religio-political dynamics of the Middle East, most of which Reyes answered well. Then, he stumbled. [tag]Al Qaeda[/tag] is what, I […]

The media’s interest in Democrats’ attire continues unabated

A month ago, the AP took an odd interest in Nancy Pelosi’s attire. Yesterday, CNN’s [tag]Jeff Greenfield[/tag] continued in this vein by critiquing Barack Obama’s clothing in New Hampshire on Sunday, and comparing it to the style choices of Bush, Kerry, and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. “The senator was in New Hampshire over the weekend, […]

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: * Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) has been a steadfast supporter of John Kerry’s presidential ambitions, but yesterday began to hedge, saying that he won’t wait “indefinitely” for Kerry to declare his intentions while […]

Jeb Bush ‘not ruling in or out’ 2008 race

The scuttlebutt over the last several days is whether the Bush brothers are split in their 2008 presidential preferences. George W. seems to be favoring John McCain’s candidacy, as evidenced by several top aides moving into the senator’s camp. Jeb, meanwhile, seems to prefer Gov. Mitt Romney, with many of the Florida governor’s team signing […]