New Orleans’ Nagin sees divine punishment

I can appreciate that New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin has been under a great deal of pressure the last several months, but by publicly arguing that recent hurricanes are a sign that “God is mad at America” and at African-American communities, I’m afraid Nagin is venturing into Pat Robertson-like territory. Mayor Ray Nagin suggested Monday […]

Gore’s call to arms

I expected today’s speech from Al Gore to be good, but I didn’t appreciate what a sweeping and powerful condemnation it would be of the White House, Congress’ perfidy, and what Gore described as a wholesale rejection of constitutional principles. It was, in a word, devastating. Raw Story has the text of the speech as […]

‘Drive-by ethics’

We don’t yet know exactly how many lawmakers will be caught up in the Abramoff scandal; it could be six, or it could be 60. Surely, all of these transgressions will keep the House Ethics Committee remarkably busy over the next year, right? Wrong. The leaders of Congress’ ethics committees are not committing to any […]

Putting health care on the agenda

Last week, Bush held a town-hall-like forum in Louisville and received a pretty good question: “As a small business owner, like a lot of people in this room, we look at the dramatic cost increases that have been passed along, and that we all really struggle with how do we provide our employees with health […]

Church politicking in Ohio

In light of the controversy surrounding the investigation into All Saints Episcopal in Southern California, this should be an interesting matter for the IRS to look into in Ohio. A group of religious leaders has sent a complaint to the Internal Revenue Service requesting an investigation of two large churches in Ohio that they say […]

Monday’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: * The president’s approval rating seemed to have finally stabilized just about the 40% threshold, but a new Zogby poll suggests the president’s modest boost in December has faded. Bush’s overall job approval […]

Uncharted territory for fluff journalism

Most daily newspapers have a Sunday edition that includes advertising supplements and a substance-less “news magazine” insert, usually either Parade of USA Weekend. Readers can find short, pithy “articles,” including interviews with celebrities, gossip, maybe a recipe or two, etc. But as my friend Cathy Resmer reported, yesterday’s edition of USA Weekend included one item […]

Could the FMA make a comeback in 2006?

After the 2004 elections, several far-right groups insisted they were responsible for turning out “values voters” who tipped the scales for the GOP. In 2005, they wanted a vote on a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage as a reward. They didn’t get it. It seems even less likely to make a comeback in 2006, […]

Vacation, all they ever wanted

According to Bob Novak, whose Republican sources are pretty solid, there’s a good reason the House GOP won’t choose new leaders until Feb. 2 — they’re not at all anxious to get back to work. House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert turned down a White House request to elect a permanent successor to Tom DeLay as […]

Watching Ralph Reed’s career fall apart

The close personal and professional relationship between Ralph Reed — former Christian Coalition director, Bush campaign advisor, and current lieutenant governor candidate in Georgia — and Jack Abramoff is well documented. What’s new, however, is the toll it’s taking on Reed’s career. If Reed assumed voters in Georgia wouldn’t get caught up in what some […]