Diane Sawyer revels in the irony

I have not yet had the pleasure of reading Al Gore’s new book, The Assault on Reason, but given the excerpts I’ve seen, the former Vice President laments the breakdown of public discourse, and holds the traditional national media largely responsible for the problems. At first I thought the exhaustive, nonstop coverage of the O.J. […]

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: * As much as I’m disinterested in national polls for 2008, I nevertheless think polls from the early primary states are fairly significant, because voters in the first handful of states will help […]

Meet Lt. Cmdr. Matthew Diaz

This didn’t get much attention over the weekend, which is a shame because it’s a pretty important story. A military jury recommended Friday that a Navy lawyer be discharged and imprisoned for six months for sending a human rights attorney the names of 550 Guantanamo Bay detainees. Lt. Cmdr. Matthew Diaz was convicted Thursday of […]

Giving the ‘old’ law another look

In early 2006, when the scandal over the administration’s warrantless-search program was front-page news, one of the central questions of the debate was whether the president had violated FISA. During a press conference, a reporter asked Bush why he decided to “circumvent” the law. “[T]he FISA law was written in 1978,” the president said. “We’re […]

It depends on what you mean by ‘courage’

I’ve been a little tough on the WaPo’s David Broder lately. OK, more than a little. In column after column, the “dean” of the DC media establishment has been wildly off his game for months — with odd observations, silly predictions, and tired rehashes of far-right talking points. Yesterday, Broder wrote a relatively inoffensive piece […]

Iraq helping raise money for al Qaeda

At the end of a fairly interesting debate on Iraq policy on Meet the Press yesterday, Tim Russert asked Newt Gingrich what would happen if the U.S. set a firm date for withdrawal of our troops in Iraq. The former House Speaker didn’t hesitate. “[W]atch what our enemies say. If this Congress passes a definitive […]

Reconsidering Ashcroft — or not

James Comey’s startling testimony earlier this week stunned much of the political world, but for many of us on the left, there was one point that was particularly hard to digest: in this dramatic tale, John Ashcroft was (gulp) something of a hero. Peter Baker and Susan Schmidt report today that the revelations are leading […]

Sunday Discussion Group

Less than a week after Jerry Falwell’s death, Newt Gingrich appeared at Falwell’s college, Liberty University, yesterday to address the school’s 2007 graduating class. The former House Speaker and likely presidential candidate denounced the “growing culture of radical secularism.” In a speech heavy with religious allusions but devoid of hints about his presidential ambitions, Gingrich […]

‘I’d rather trade places with Jose Padilla’

In March, we started hearing about the panic and paralysis that had taken over the Justice Department in the wake of the prosecutor purge scandal. “You have no idea,” said one Justice official, “how bad it is here.” By one account, top DoJ officials — the ones who haven’t resigned — were turning on each […]

It’s the voter suppression, stupid

Rick Hasen alerted me to this Houston Chronicle piece from the other day, about legislation in Texas that would — in the interest of preventing non-existent “voter fraud” — require that registered voters present photo IDs proving their citizenship before voting. The measure is championed by Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst (R) and GOP lawmakers in […]