Clinton on voting for McCain: ‘It is not a wise decision for yourself or your country’

There’s been some discussion this week about whether Hillary Clinton, despite a record of reliable Democratic partisanship, might actually prefer that John McCain win in November if Barack Obama is the Democratic nominee. This occurred on the heels of a Gallup poll that showed that a whopping 28% of Clinton supporters are prepared to vote […]

After having been railroaded by Rove machine, Siegelman released

There are far too many examples of the Bush White House politicizing the justice system in this country, and using federal prosecutors as partisan tools to help Republicans win elections. The case of former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman (D) is easily among the most offensive. Fortunately, Siegelman (and the rule of law) got some very […]

Thursday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits. * Like McCain, Maliki doesn’t care what anybody says: “Iraq’s prime minister vowed Thursday to fight ‘until the end’ against Shiite militias in Basra despite protests by tens of thousands of followers of a radical cleric in Baghdad and deadly clashes in the capital and the oil-rich south.” * Bloodshed […]

OK, how anti-war is he?

Listening to John McCain’s big speech on foreign policy yesterday, it was hard not to notice the extent to which he emphasized how much he’s against military confrontations. On the first go-through, I thought it was just insincere rhetoric — like when a war-monger says he doesn’t want to send U.S. troops into battle, but […]

McCain waffles on sensible tobacco policy

There was a point, a couple of personas ago, at which John McCain didn’t mind showing some leadership skills on matters pertaining to public health. It’s what led him to work with John Edwards on a Patients’ Bill of Rights (which he has since given up on) and, for many years, support efforts to crack […]

Is Al Gore the ‘way out of a mess’?

The political world spent a fair amount of time last year mulling over whether Al Gore would run for president, who his running mate would be, whether he could win, etc. Once it became clear that Gore wouldn’t run, speculation shifted to who he’d endorse, when, and what kind of impact it might have. Now, […]

Obama campaign picks up on Krugman’s good advice

On Monday, the NYT’s Paul Krugman wrote some fair criticism of all three presidential candidates: they’re talking about the economy in general, but they aren’t sufficiently addressing the ongoing fiscal crisis. More importantly, they aren’t offering the kinds of regulations the system needs. Now, the shadow banking system is facing the 21st-century equivalent of the […]

Thursday’s campaign 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: * At a townhall meeting in North Carolina yesterday, Barack Obama was asked about the role that Jesus and his teachings have had in the senator’s life. “I’m a Christian,” Obama said. “What […]

Bush’s heads-I-win-tails-you-lose argument in Iraq

We’ve been dealing with this kind of argument for a little too long now. When conditions in Iraq deteriorate, the Bush administration says, “We can’t withdraw U.S. troops now; this is when they’re needed most.” When violence wanes, those same officials say, “We can’t withdraw U.S. troops now; their presence is helping bring some stability […]

The candidate characteristic that’s lingering just below the surface

When it comes to personal characteristics and diversity, the 2008 presidential race has covered a lot of ground. Are Americans prepared to embrace an African-American candidate (Obama)? A woman (Clinton)? A Mormon (Romney)? A Latino (Richardson)? A thrice-married serial adulterer (Giuliani)? But the one question that no one seems anxious to talk about is the […]