Today’s edition of quick hits.
* CNN: “President Bush on Friday proposed a temporary, broad-based tax relief package aimed at spurring the nation’s slowing economy…. It should equal about 1 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, or roughly $140 billion, he added. Bush said the economy will continue to grow but at a slower rate. The president offered no specific details of the proposed package, but he did insist that it include tax incentives for business, ‘including small businesses, to make major investments in their enterprises this year.’ Bush also said the economic package must include ‘rapid income tax relief’ for consumers to ‘lift our economy at a time when people otherwise might spend less.'”
* Paul Krugman summarizes the president’s rhetoric on tax cuts: “Wouldn’t it be nice if, just once, the Bushies could refrain from trying to con the public?” If I only had a nickel for every time I’ve thought that phrase over the last seven years.
* Speaking of Republicans, tax cuts, and lies, Jonathan Chait explains, “John McCain is a recent convert to supply-side economics and still working on getting the talking points down. Speaking yesterday in South Carolina, the straight talker ‘proclaimed himself a believer in the notion that cutting taxes increases revenue for the government by spurring economic growth. ‘Don’t listen to this siren song about cutting taxes,’ Mr. McCain told supporters gathered here under a tent in a driving rain. ‘Every time in history we have raised taxes it has cut revenues.’ What? Every time?” Actually, no.
* Keith Olbermann made a mistake, so he apologized. Given that apologies from major news outlets are incredibly rare, I found this noteworthy.
* Iraq National Security Adviser Mowaffak al-Rubaie: “Iraq’s government is at a stalemate…. I understand that the political objectives of Iraq’s three main communities are unrealizable within the framework of a unitary, centralized state. It has been impossible to maintain a political consensus on many important issues. For one thing, the U.S.-dominated coalition, which has its own objectives, must be accommodated. The regional “superpowers” (Iran and Saudi Arabia) meddle in Iraq’s affairs, and their own sectarian tensions are reflected in the violence here. The absence of truly national political parties and leadership that reach the Iraqi people exacerbates the problem.”
* NYT: Mitt Romney will be flying this afternoon from Reno to Burbank, Calif., for a taping of the ‘The Tonight Show’ with Jay Leno. ‘It occurred to us the best way to be in South Carolina and Nevada at the same time, was to be on the Tonight Show,’ said Eric Fehrnstrom, Mr. Romney’s spokesman. ‘Plus, it worked for Mike Huckabee, he won Iowa.'”
* McClatchy: “New data from the Labor Department confirm what most middle-class Americans already know: Inflation is squeezing them. As consumer prices rose by 4.1 percent last year, the highest rate since 1990, the prices of basic essentials such as food, gasoline and health insurance climbed far more steeply, explaining why so many Americans are telling pollsters that the economy is their chief concern. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday that the price of food and beverages rose 4.8 percent. At the same time, real weekly earnings failed to keep pace, rising 0.9 percent for the year. In the simplest of terms, a dollar earned bought less. This partly explains why the economy so frustrates Americans.” (thanks to R.K. for the heads-up)
* How strong is the animosity towards John McCain in some far-right GOP circles? Tom DeLay isn’t prepared to vote for the Republican ticket if McCain’s the nominee. “If McCain gets the nomination, I don’t know what I’ll do,” DeLay said at the Capitol Hill Club. “I might have to sit this one out.”
* The Pew Research Center has an interesting chart on how voters perceive themselves and the presidential candidates on the liberal-conservative spectrum. Take a look. (thanks to R.P. for the tip)
* Sweet Jesus I Hate Chris Matthews. I’m surprised this hasn’t come up sooner.
* Only a Fox News personality would say people who make $100,000 a year are “poor.”
* My friend Errington Thompson on what really happened in the Straits of Hormuz.
* Stephen Colbert’s portrait was “hung Wednesday at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery in Washington for a six-week showing in what the museum considers an ‘appropriate place’ — right between the bathrooms near the ‘America’s Presidents’ exhibit. Museum officials stress it’s only temporary. ‘We agreed to go along with the joke and hang it for a short time in between the bathrooms,’ said museum spokeswoman Bethany Bentley. ‘Let me tell you two key things here: His portrait is not coming into the collection, and it’s not hanging permanently.'”
* And finally, the latest gem from the incomparable Lee Stranahan: “The war on change.” Take a look; it’s a good way to end the week.
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.