Open season on Pelosi

The bipartisan congressional delegation House Speaker [tag]Nancy Pelosi[/tag] is leading in the Middle East this week has come under fire for a variety of reasons, all of them misguided. The right (and the White House) said Pelosi shouldn’t visit Syria, but didn’t criticize a Republican delegation that arrived in Syria shortly before the Speaker. The right said any diplomatic outreach to [tag]Syria[/tag] is dangerous, but overlooked the fact that Bush’s State Department recently did the same thing. The right said Pelosi was wrong to wear a head scarf in a mosque, but neglected to mention that Laura Bush and Condi Rice did the same thing.

You’d think, given how wrong the attacks have been, that Pelosi critics would back off a bit and find something else to complain about. Instead, mainstream media outlets are picking up with the GOP smear machine left off.

Take, for example, today’s editorial in the Washington Post, which called Pelosi’s trip “foolish,” “counterproductive,” “ludicrous,” and “an excellent demonstration…of why members of Congress should not attempt to supplant the secretary of state.”

After a meeting with Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in Damascus, Ms. Pelosi announced that she had delivered a message from Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert that “Israel was ready to engage in peace talks” with Syria. What’s more, she added, Mr. Assad was ready to “resume the peace process” as well. Having announced this seeming diplomatic breakthrough, Ms. Pelosi suggested that her Kissingerian shuttle diplomacy was just getting started….

Only one problem: The Israeli prime minister entrusted Ms. Pelosi with no such message. “What was communicated to the U.S. House Speaker does not contain any change in the policies of Israel,” said a statement quickly issued by the prime minister’s office…. Pelosi not only misrepresented Israel’s position but was virtually alone in failing to discern that Mr. Assad’s words were mere propaganda.

This is very misleading, and nearly the opposite was what actually occurred in Damascus. As Nico explained, the Israeli Prime Minister’s office “simply reiterated its position that talks with Syria will not take place until Syria has taken steps to end its support for extremist elements. There is no evidence that Pelosi failed to communicate this message. In fact, Pelosi’s delegation specifically pressed the Syrian president ‘over Syria’s support for militant groups and insist[ed] that his government block militants seeking to cross into Iraq and join insurgents there.'”

The WaPo went on to accuse Pelosi of trying “establish a shadow presidency.” This is debunked — by the WaPo’s own reporting: “Foreign policy experts generally agree that Pelosi’s dealings with Middle East leaders have not strayed far, if at all, from those typical for a congressional trip.”

The editorial added this gem:

Two weeks ago Ms. Pelosi rammed legislation through the House of Representatives that would strip Mr. Bush of his authority as commander in chief to manage troop movements in Iraq.

Oh, is that what happened? The House and Senate approved withdrawal timelines for a disastrous war, as other Congresses have done with other presidents. Where was the provision in the bill about “stripping” Bush of his commander-in-chief authority?

I should note that it’s not just the Washington Post editorial board that’s attacking Pelosi needlessly. CNN’s Suzanne Malveaux suggested yesterday that Pelosi may “on her way to becoming the most controversial House Speaker yet.” Why? Well, Malveaux never really got around to explaining why, but she alluded to the White House being mad at Pelosi.

Maybe this is some kind of hazing ritual? The media wants the Speaker’s office to know that her exceedingly short honeymoon period is over?

I suspect it’s simpler than that. Pelosi is demonstrating leadership abilities that the White House and its allies resent. She is, for lack of a better phrase, making the president look bad, and the media feels compelled (for some reason) to acknowledge the Republican push-back and report on it in a non-critical fashion.

That’s fine. The White House and the Post editorial board can rehash conservative talking points, while grown-ups in Congress, led by Pelosi, do real work. Josh Marshall noted yesterday, “Pelosi’s trip is an embarrassment for the president because it shows an American actually involving herself in realities on the world stage rather than stuck in denial and fantasy.”

It’s a shame this is, to borrow CNN’s Suzanne Malveaux’s word, “controversial.”

So, the WaPo editorial board is the rejects from the WSJ board?

Said it before, I’ll say it again: if these scum had been in their positions 35 years ago, Nixon would be Permanent President, even planted six feet under as he is now.

I think it’s time for subscriptions to be canceled. Sink the futhermuckers.

  • “I think it’s time for subscriptions to be canceled. Sink the futhermuckers.”

    Agreed. Start with NPR. They are supposed to get this crap right, yet they consistently don’t, and only add facts to their erroneous ‘news’ reports (which are the reports heard by most of us and set the initial impression of the story) after a whole lot of complaining. And although I find the current daily lengthy reports of life on a river in India somewhat educational, I can’t help but wonder what NPR might have been able to do or facts they might have been able to uncover had they spent that much time and effort investigating and reporting on the administration’s false claims during the run-up to the Iraq war (or after the war began, by properly interviewing administration officials).

  • I only read occasional on-line articles from the WAPO and haven’t seen the whole paper since my last trip to DC. But has their Editorial page always been so clueless? I always thought they were among the top five on the right’s journalistic enemies list. This piece just seemed so uninformed — and dumb, actually — it’s hard to believe it wasn’t scripted for some Fox News commentator.

  • If you really want to have some fun, go read the comments to the editorial, particularly those from the shrieking sedentary one-handed militants of WingerWorld. Why is it these people always manage to prove themselves sixth-grade dropouts with their ability to use the English language? I sometimes think posts by Wingers must really be part of a lefty disinformation campaign, to show them as the halfwitted illiterate trailer trash they are.

  • Bush has created a huge vacuum of leadership. Pelosi is stepping in to fill it. Nature abhores a vacuum as does the American electorate.

  • Yep. It’s foolish to reach out to a country that’s sheltering countless refugees from the clusterfuck Chimperor Fuckwit created next door. I wonder when the fRighties will start flinging spittle about her meeting with King Abdullah.

    [crickets chirp]

  • I have no idea who write the editorials on foreign policy and defense/natural security topics for the WaPo – but they are either getting their talking points directly from Karl Rove or are hopelessly naive/stupid. I never take them seriously and not just becuase I disagree. I don’t take them seriously because they are truly lame and weak and frequently just as out of touch with reality as the entire Bush Administration, Republican hacks on the Hill, and GOP pundit land.

  • #8 – I was hoping Pelosi had arranged a photo op with some of those refugees… and when Bush threw another tantrum, she could have reminded him of his good Iraqi refugee friend, Ahmed Chalabi…

    Ah well, it was a pleasant dream.

  • I haven’t had any interest in what the WaPo has had to say ever since Katharine Graham left it in 1991. All these “left wing” newspapers (not to mention TeeVee channels) are no more than trained monkeys delivering sales pitches, mouthpieces for corporations and wealthy individuals which their own interests to promote. Once in a while I’ll glance at a column online, but if they start charging for that I won’t miss it at all. You can’t even use the online version for bird cage liner or for puppies to shit on.

  • BREAKING: Suzanne Malveaux kicks it up a notch, conjures soft-porn between Pelosi and Al-Assad:

    From her interview with Syrian Ambassador on CNN:

    MALVEAUX: Why should the Americans, or even the international community, see this any more as a political stunt here, a publicity stunt, a big wet kiss to President Al-Assad?

    MOUSTAPHA: First, she was not negotiating. Second, somebody should tell the American public opinion that what they are being told about Syria is a myth. Stop trying to portray Syria as an enemy to the United States. We are not an enemy to the United States.

  • The truth? Pelosi’s being targeted because she’s a woman who’s doing a job that has always belonged to a man. If that pisses anyone off, then good for you! Maybe you can think back to other events when women first “broke the barrier.” The Reich couldn’t stand it when they got their butts waxed by liberals; their absolutely rabid, now that their “Dear Leader” is getting slapped across the global stage by a woman.

    My ideal DC drama? I want to see the chimp executive try to demand that Pelosi appear at the WH—and then see “The Speaker of the House” reply with a very Cheney-esque “go fuck yourself.”

    Bush has his back against the proverbial wall—and he knows it. So do his pathetic minions, and the “groupies” who tag along after His Royal Monkeyness, hoping for a favor or two. Let’s call this what it is—“the beginning death throes of neoconservativism….”

  • Listen-up folks.

    The Washington Post editorial board is just an extension of Israel’s Likhud government. Because Israel can do no wrong, all possible–or perceived–threats must be crushed. And who commands the WaPo editorial board? Fred Hiatt, neocon-in-residence.

    Now, any questions why the WaPo’s editorial suck–just like Fox News?

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