Bush administration is awarding Iraq contracts to companies with GOP ties

Before the war in Iraq even began, the White House had announced that post-war Iraq would be reconstructed by private U.S. companies that won lucrative government contracts. In fact, before a single bomb was dropped or a single shot fired, the Agency for International Development “invited” several corporations to bid on a $1 billion engineering […]

Cheney gets hammered by federal judges on secret energy task force

“You have no case.” That’s what Vice President Dick Cheney’s lawyers heard yesterday from a federal appeals court as they fought to keep secret who Cheney’s energy policy task force met with in 2001. This always struck me as the great White House scandal that couldn’t make any traction. In 2001, Cheney was responsible for […]

Bush’s plan to bring the budget deficit back down

Two things were true during the 2000 presidential campaign: the U.S. was enjoying the largest surpluses in the nation’s history and George W. Bush didn’t want to return to the days when America ran deficits. Way back then, Bush claimed that we “owe it to our children” to have a balanced budget. Just as importantly, […]

Bob Graham, please call your webmaster

Bob Graham was making his first campaign swing through New Hampshire yesterday. It’s about time; his rivals for the Democratic nomination have been making dozens of trips to the state for months. During his trip, Graham started chatting with some folks on a lunch break in downtown Manchester. Graham was introducing himself to one woman, […]

New poll tells us very little about Democratic presidential primary field

Since January, none of the major polling firms or media outlets have done national surveys on the Democratic presidential primary field. With news of the war in Iraq dominating the news, and Democratic candidates campaigning less, there simply hasn’t been much need. This week, however, a new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll was released showing the […]

Are Iraqis happy to see us or not?

Leading up to the war in Iraq, the issue of whether the United States would be viewed as “liberators” in Iraq was the subject of intense debate. The administration insisted we would be and our popularity would make the war go smoother, faster, and with fewer casualties on both sides. After some initially tougher-than-expected battles […]

24 offers a handy little lesson in constitutional law

I’m not sure if any of my readers are watching this season’s 24 on Fox. If you are and you haven’t yet seen this week’s episode, you may want to skip this post to avoid a potential “spoiler.” Carpetbagger, you ask, isn’t this blog is about government and politics? Why are you bringing up 24? […]

Montana to reverse voters’ will on indoor smoking ban

I’ve found that politicians will occasionally ignore polls and pursue a policy that may be politically unpopular. Polls, after all, are not always reliable. But when voters speak their minds at the ballot box, and enact a new law by popular demand via a referendum, politicians and lawmakers generally respect the electorate’s wishes. Generally, but […]

Bill Pryor nominated to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals

It would be easier to believe that President Bush was serious about finding qualified judicial nominees, and sincere when he says he wants to remove politics from the judicial nomination process, if he stopped nominating radically conservative activists for the federal bench. Since Bush took office over two years ago, the debate over judicial nominees […]

Pro-voucher “researcher” isn’t above distorting results

The American Prospect’s weblog, Tapped, had a terrific item yesterday about some controversial research indicating that publicly-financed tuition vouchers to religious and other private schools helps African American children. As Tapped explained, Paul Peterson, a long-time advocate of public aid for private schools, published a study showing “that black students who had won in a […]