Nuclear Week — Undecided Watch

The six-by-six negotiators will continue to try and work out some kind of deal that will short circuit the nuclear option. But let’s say it doesn’t work out and the matter comes to the floor tomorrow for a vote. How’s this going to play out? Harry Reid says he’s “cautiously optimistic,” while Mitch McConnell answered […]

In the end, it’s all about Bush

Through most of the fight over the nuclear option, it’s seemed, at least on the surface, as though the White House has been on the outside looking in. Senate Republicans were the ones who came up with the idea in 2003, conservative activists have been demanding it ever since, and the debate has put Bill […]

Monday’s political 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: * Californians apparently don’t mind electing actors as governor, so Warren Beatty is apparently mulling a bid. After delivering a blistering critique of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s leadership of the state, Beatty initially indicated he […]

Courts in the balance

Some may be tempted, especially if they don’t think Harry Reid doesn’t have the votes, to give in on the nuclear option and let Owen, Brown, Pryor, et al win confirmation votes. After all, a bad judge here and there can’t make too big a difference, right? Especially on appeals courts, where there are multiple […]

Hager to leave FDA panel

W. David Hager was a ridiculous choice to serve on an FDA panel on an advisory panel on the safety and effectiveness of drugs for use in obstetrics. After all, before Bush tapped him for the job, Hager was best known for writing a book advocating Bible reading as an appropriate treatment for PMS, denying […]

Changing the rules about changing the rules

Barring a last-minute compromise, here’s what’s going to happen tomorrow on the nuclear option fight: Bill Frist will try to end debate on Priscilla Owen’s judicial nomination. If there are fewer than 60 votes to do so (and there will be), Frist will call a point of order arguing that the filibuster is unconstitutional. The […]

Abstaining from making sense

If you missed last night’s report on abstinence education on 60 Minutes, you missed a stunning segment on the painfully absurd abstinence-only policy that is now commonplace across the country. The fiasco is a microcosm of everything that’s wrong with the Bush administration’s approach to public policy. The report focused on Silver Ring Thing, an […]

Bad advice from the Secretary of Education

I can appreciate the fact that education policy can be complicated, but when Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, who has a reputation for policy expertise, talks to the New York Times about a national controversy, she should know what she’s talking about. Spellings sat down with the Times for a Q and A published in yesterday’s […]

Sunday Discussion Group

Last week’s Sunday Discussion Group went pretty well, so here’s another. This week’s topic: Best Political Speech of the TV era. I’m thinking that would include any speech delivered since, say, 1960. This, of course, can include speeches short and long, from Dems and Republicans, partisan and non-partisan. (If you have a link to the […]

Stop them before they open a joint bank account!

Guest Post by Morbo Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. claims to be a moderate Republican. He was recently handed a perfect opportunity to prove it but dropped the ball. Maryland’s General Assembly passed a very modest gay-rights bill. Ehrlich couldn’t seem to muster up the gumption to scrawl a signature on it. Instead, he […]