Tuesday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* A variety of news reports indicated that Robert Zoellick has been tapped to replace Paul Wolfowitz at the World Bank. (More on Zoellick’s background)

* Over the weekend, White House Political Director Sara Taylor announced her departure, citing a desire to work in the private sector. Taylor was one of the Bush campaign’s first employees in 2000 and her departure came as something of a surprise. Though it may or may not be related, Taylor was recently implicated in the U.S. Attorney scandal, with Kyle Sampson testifying that it was Taylor’s idea to bypassing the Senate in replacing Bud Cummins with Rove acolyte Tim Griffin. Taylor is likely to testify in the investigation.

* Speaking of stepping down, Cindy Sheehan, who became an anti-war activist after her son was killed in Iraq, announced yesterday that she will no longer be part of the peace movement. Sheehan made her announcement in a Daily Kos diary.

* Congressional Dems are apparently inching closer to calling for a special prosecutor to be named in the U.S. Attorney scandal, but they’re still waiting for a smoking gun, which would lead to a series of charges. Attorney and former House counsel Stan Brand told Roll Call, “Obstruction, perjury, false statements — that’s always how these things get started.”

* And speaking of special counsels, Dan Froomkin explained today, “Despite all the public interest in the case, Fitzgerald has repeatedly asserted that grand-jury secrecy rules prohibit him from being more forthcoming about either the course of his investigation or any findings beyond those he disclosed to make the case against Libby. But when his motives have been attacked during court proceedings, Fitzgerald has occasionally shown flashes of anger — and has hinted that he and his investigative team suspected more malfeasance at higher levels of government than they were able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. In Friday’s eminently readable court filing, Fitzgerald quotes the Libby defense calling his prosecution ‘unwarranted, unjust, and motivated by politics.’ In responding to that charge, the special counsel evidently felt obliged to put Libby’s crime in context. And that context is Dick Cheney.”

* With so many presidential candidates, the WaPo reports that the “U.S. Secret Service expects to borrow more than 2,000 immigration officers and federal airport screeners next year to help guard an ever-expanding field of presidential candidates, while shifting 250 of its own agents from investigations to security details.”

* I really meant to get to David Brooks’ very annoying anti-Gore column today, but I ran out of time. For commentary, MiniPundit has some good insights, as does Mustang Bobby, Attaturk, and Ron Chusid.

* So long, federally-financed abstinence-only education.

* If the U.S. government kept its books like a business, we would have run a $1.3 trillion loss last year.

* Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.), one of only four congressional Republicans to break with Bush’s war policy, has an idea for Paul Wolfowitz’s new job: “I would like to suggest…that maybe we give Paul Wolfowitz a new job and send him over [to Iraq] as mayor, since the neocons got us in over there.”

* Who would have guessed that Alaska would become such a hotbed for corruption?

* Remember the U.S. embassy in Baghdad I mentioned last week? Wait until you see the pictures.

* The far-right blogs’ record this year on political scoops reaches 0-for-72.

* Many, many of you emailed me about a suspicious-looking executive order issued by the president on May 9th. TPMM reports exactly what I’ve been hearing from all of my sources — this is routine and not at all alarming.

* And finally, Jerry Falwell may be gone, but his legacy lives on: “A senior Polish official has ordered psychologists to investigate whether the popular BBC TV show Teletubbies promotes a homosexual lifestyle.”

Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.

“A senior Polish official has ordered psychologists to investigate whether the popular BBC TV show Teletubbies promotes a homosexual lifestyle.”

I think it is painfully obvious that Tinky-Winky (the Teletubbie in question) who carries a red bag, is not a homosexual, but has in fact gone through a very painful operation.

Let’s hope this puts an end to this rumor.

  • Fitz has the goods on Cheney. He has teed the investigation up, but lacks the authority/power to take on Cheney. He has teed this up for Congressional Democrats–unlike a single and potentially politically endangered US prosecutor, Congress DOES have the weight, power, resources and authority to take on Cheney.

    Impeach Him Now. With Abu G.

  • re Baghdad embassy:
    I fell off my chair when I read that the operating cost for the embassy is going to be $1.2 billion a year. That’s obscene.

  • -* A variety of news reports indicated that Robert Zoellick has been tapped to replace Paul Wolfowitz at the World Bank. (More on Zoellick’s background)

    Better than Kitten Killer Frist.

    “In responding to that charge, the special counsel evidently felt obliged to put Libby’s crime in context. And that context is Dick Cheney.”

    No shit.

    * Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.), one of only four congressional Republicans to break with Bush’s war policy, has an idea for Paul Wolfowitz’s new job: “I would like to suggest…that maybe we give Paul Wolfowitz a new job and send him over [to Iraq] as mayor, since the neocons got us in over there.”

    Walter formerly of Freedom Fries definitely wins the prize for best Mikkado suggestion of the week. I’ll second the nomination. He can travel the streets of Baghdad General Petraeus style as done by John McCain (unarmored Hummer without escort.)

  • Zoellick? PNAC anyone?

    Sixteen months after taking his post, Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick announced in mid-June 2006 that he was resigning to become vice chairman of international operations at the investment firm Goldman Sachs, where he will also be chairman of the bank’s international advisers. Having previously served as U.S. trade representative during George W. Bush’s first term, Zoellick’s 2005 appointment to serve as Condoleezza Rice’s chief deputy was viewed by many as a sign that the administration would be taking a softer line in foreign policy during Bush’s second term. As the right-wing Washington Times reported (June 20, 2006): “Mr. Zoellick’s selection by Miss Rice in early 2005 was seen as a victory for foreign-policy ‘realists’ in the administration against the hardline diplomacy favored by Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who were said to back State Department arms chief John R. Bolton“ for the post.

    According to observers, Zoellick’s decision to leave the administration was driven in part by frustration at being overlooked for higher-level Cabinet posts, in particular the opening as treasury secretary, which was filled by outgoing Goldman Sachs executive Henry Paulson. Weeks before Zoellick made his resignation official, there was speculation that “Zoellick had at times felt marginalized at the State Department, where his subordinates, including R. Nicholas Burns, an under secretary of state, manage most of the major issues, including matters related to Iran, Iraq, the rest of the Middle East, and North Korea” ( Washington Post , May 25, 2006).

    On the other hand, Zoellick has played leading roles in a number of high-profile decisions taken by the administration, including the effort to mediate the crisis in Sudan, where according to the Post he “was instrumental in pushing Darfur’s rebel leaders to sign a peace accord.” He is also credited with playing a constructive role in establishing a strategic dialogue with Beijing, which was highlighted in the press in January 2006 when Zoellick, then visiting the city of Chengdu, was photographed hugging a baby panda. Commenting on the incident, John Tkacik, a research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, wrote that the “images of Zoellick clad in a sterile veterinary smock and gloves, cuddling a distinctly uncomfortable baby panda, could have been seen as evidence the Bush administration had gone a bit soft in the noggin on China. Indeed, the initial reaction among Washington China-skeptics was horror. We have since been reassured that Zoellick indeed has a special fondness for pandas derived from his service on a World Wildlife Fund advisory council, and that Mrs. Zoellick did indeed want such a photo. Zoellick also believed that his appearance with the panda would reassure the Chinese that he is still open to a ‘global dialogue’—provided the Chinese start to act like they’re interested” (“Revenge of the Panda,” Heritage Foundation, February 26, 2006).

    Lots more here: http://rightweb.irc-online.org/profile/1397

  • Mr. Boehner cited a May 9 letter from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

    Oh yes. Let’s have a huge religious organization be our guide for determining what children are/not taught in public schools. Let’s ask the Talevan for their thoughts on evolution while we’re at it!

    Tool.

    And would it be crass to note that the U..S.C.C.B. would be better off not talking about sexual abstinence for kiddies until the last of the predator priest scandals is at least five decades old?

    Not that I care or anything.

    that warned if the federal government embraced the “safer-sex” contraceptive-education approach, “Catholic schools and other organizations dedicated to the message of personal responsibility and abstinence before marriage will be unable to participate in government programs.”

    You’re warning us? Warning us what? That you’ll cut off your charity efforts until you get your way? Oh well. Bye. Don’t let the door hit you on the ass.

    All ranting aside, the A-O programs just don’t work. Although it’s amusing to hear the same people who scream about taxe hikes, Social Security and spendthrift libruls turn around and scream that we have to keep pumping money into yet another neo-con pet project, just because. I just wonder which of the BushBrood is profitting from this turkey.

  • ” Many, many of you emailed me about a suspicious-looking executive order issued by the president on May 9th. TPMM reports exactly what I’ve been hearing from all of my sources — this is routine and not at all alarming.”

    I still don’t like the language. Pardon my French, but I think that any document that says “The President shall lead the activities of the Federal Government for ensuring constitutional government” is all fucked up.

    Signed,
    A concerned U.S. Constitution Loyalist

  • “With so many presidential candidates, the WaPo reports that the “U.S. Secret Service expects to borrow more than 2,000 immigration officers and federal airport screeners next year to help guard an ever-expanding field of presidential candidates, while shifting 250 of its own agents from investigations to security details.”

    I’m certain all the presidential candidates feel safer already, knowing that airport screeners are going to be masquerading as Secret Service agents. Has anyone ever found one of these bozos who had the brains to find the zipper on his/her fly with both hands on a clear day and with a 30 minute advance notice?

  • I like Al Gore. I don’t like David Brooks. But, Brooks may have a point. Elitist speech by Gore doesn’t endear you to the (unwashed) masses. Bill Clinton knew how to connect to the millions who drive pickup trucks and not the snooty SUV drivers that we know too well.

  • Irony Alert!

    Warning: This link will take you to a story in which Dr. Rice claims the Iranian Government may have violated the rule of law in detaining suspected spies. To avoid destruction of property Please unplug any Irony Detection Devices in your home before you click on this link.

  • “Taylor was one of the Bush campaign’s first employees in 2000 and her departure came as something of a surprise.”

    Well, since she, apparently, cleaned out her office over a week ago, I dare say some people closer to her must have seen it coming…

    “With so many presidential candidates, the WaPo reports that the “U.S. Secret Service expects to borrow more than 2,000 immigration officers and federal airport screeners next year”

    They may have to fight it out with the military. I expect, with the National Guards being just about depleted through the ∞ occupation of Iraq, the immigration officers are,probably, the next target for deployment.

    […] David Brooks’ very annoying anti-Gore column today […]

    Bobo is just jealous. His mama told him he was the brightest star in the universe and he can’t stand seing someone else being smarter.

    * So long, federally-financed abstinence-only education.

    Don’t divide the bear’s pelt yet; the bear is still alive. But, if the bill passes, without the “corrections”… God speed .

    * The far-right blogs’ record this year on political scoops reaches 0-for-72.

    Dammit… I can never get to Greenwald’s articles. *What is* the “sponsor” whose logo I’m supposed to click on to get to read the stuff for free? I clicked on Verizon, but still no dice…

    * And finally, Jerry Falwell may be gone, but his legacy lives on: “A senior Polish official has ordered psychologists to investigate whether the popular BBC TV show Teletubbies promotes a homosexual lifestyle.”

    It’s not Jerry Fallwell’s legacy; it’s religious rabidity of its own kind. Jerry Fallwell, not being a good *Catholic*, would have got an “apage satanas” of his own from this government..

  • I haven’t seen anything about this in Leftbogistan. Has anyone else?

    Not being a political blog, we’re not so interested in the latest political scandal brewing from the administration, which supposedly involves a leaked email that highlights some more potentially illegal actions out of our Justice Department. However, what is interesting is what David Cassel pointed us to about how those emails were leaked. The details aren’t entirely clear fromthis interview with the reporter who has the emails, but it looks as though some web pranksters who registered domains like whitehouse.org and georgewbush.org have been collecting emails that are sent to those domains. Occasionally, people who think they’re emailing someone at whitehouse.gov or georgewbush.com address their emails to the .orgs instead. In the latest example, it involves an email from Tim Griffin on the subject of “caging” (which apparently is the practice of kicking voters off the voting rolls through questionable and illegal means). Unfortunately for Griffin, it appears he sent a somewhat incriminating email to a bunch of people — including one email address at georgewbush.org. Oops. The reporter later asked administration officials about the emails, the administration didn’t deny the content — but just took issue with the interpretation, effectively admitting that the emails were real. Again, we have no clue about the political issues involved — but find it amusing that the email leaks were due to someone typing in the wrong top level domain and having the emails go
    to some pranksters. The reporter in question claims to have about 500 such emails.

    Here is the original story.

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