Anti-Romney calls — a political whodunit in New Hampshire

Following up on an earlier item, New Hampshire’s Union Leader reports today that voters in the first two Republican contests have received phone calls with negative messages about Mitt Romney, “his Mormon faith and the Vietnam War-era military deferments he received while serving as a missionary in France.” The same calls asked about Romney’s sons […]

Lou Dobbs for president?

Last year, Michael Crowley and Marshall Wittmann, among others, suggested CNN’s resident bully Lou Dobbs could mount a credible presidential campaign. Dobbs didn’t express any public interest, but as Wittmann argued, the immigration controversy has led to “a combustible political situation that could provide an opening for an outsider. It has the feel of 1992 […]

The Coalition for a Conservative Majority joins the fray

Disgraced former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay has been making noises for a year about creating his own MoveOn.org-for-the-right activist group, which presumably would offer him a vehicle for, well, whatever it is DeLay does. Yesterday, he made it official. Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay has formed a new grass-roots organization that he says […]

Friday’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: * The Republican push-polling season has begun: “Here’s today’s key story out of the New Hampshire local press: The Union Leader reports that New Hampshirites have been getting push-poll calls … targeted against […]

An ‘intimate, clandestine gathering of the secret Federalist Society’

At a black-tie shindig in DC, the Federalist Society, a powerful legal group that has become an influential conservative outlet for legal thinking, celebrated its 25th anniversary. Former solicitor general Ted Olson was the master of ceremonies, and quickly poked fun at liberals’ notion of a shadowy right-wing organization. He welcomed the large audience to […]

Moving closer to a showdown on telecom immunity

After several weeks of wrangling, debating, and positioning, the looming congressional showdown over retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies that cooperated with Bush’s warrantless-surveillance scheme is coming to a head. Reflecting the deep divisions within Congress over granting legal immunity to telephone companies for cooperating with the Bush administration’s program of wiretapping without warrants, the Senate […]