Richard Cohen’s latest WaPo column has received ample derision today, but I’d like to pile on anyway. The piece is just that annoying. Cohen spends the first two-thirds of his column explaining the ways in which the president has shown liberal tendencies. He expanded Medicare (a liberal idea), passed a national education reform measure (another […]
About a year ago, the AP’s Jennifer Loven wrote a terrific item about the president relying on non-existent straw men to get through most policy arguments. As Loven explained in March 2006, when the president “starts a sentence with ‘some say’ or offers up what ‘some in Washington’ believe, as he is doing more often […]
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: * Barack Obama will unveil his healthcare plan in a speech in Iowa City today, proposing a system that would provide universal coverage by 2012, paid for by employers and the expiration of […]
The Wall Street Journal ran an op-ed today from Peter Berkowtiz, a senior fellow at the conservative Hoover Institution, who argued that the left “prides itself on, and frequently boasts of, its superior appreciation of the complexity and depth of moral and political life,” when in fact it’s the right that takes the competition of […]
Late last week, at a White House press conference, a reporter asked the president to respond to an inconvenient reality: the war in Iraq has made al Qaeda stronger and make counter-terrorism efforts more difficult. Bush offered a long, meandering answer that was largely incoherent, made very little sense, and avoided the subject altogether. I […]
Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay told The New Yorker about his future plans, and what’s motivating him to keep up his conservative crusade. (via Ron Chusid) Earlier this year, [DeLay] published a memoir called “No Retreat, No Surrender” … in which he claimed that as a young congressman he would on occasion drink ten […]
It was more of an implicit strategy than an explicit one, but holding September out as the key moment for Iraq analysis was a way for Republicans to push off their short-term problems. Dems wanted a withdrawal timeline now. By insisting that policy makers wait until Gen. David Petraeus reports on Iraq’s progress in September, […]
Gen. Peter Pace, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, appeared on the CBS Early Show this morning in honor of Memorial Day. In an interview with Harry Smith, Pace paid tribute to the sacrifices of the troops and their families, but there was one exchange that was disappointing. (via Raw Story) Smith: Almost 1,000 […]
The good news is there appears to be something of an “exodus” of terrorists leaving Iraq. The bad news is they’re leaving because they’ve finished their training and are now prepared to wreak havoc elsewhere. The Iraq war, which for years has drawn militants from around the world, is beginning to export fighters and the […]
The Alabama Department of Homeland Security maintains a website of groups suspected of including terrorists. I haven’t seen the page, but on the surface, the site seems a little odd — if officials had reason to believe certain groups had terrorist ties, the state a) should arrest them; and/or b) conduct some kind of intelligence […]