It’s the last Sunday Discussion Group of 2005 so it seemed like a good time to look back at the year that was. I’ve compiled my list of favorite political stories of the year and invite you to weigh in with which one you like best. The standards of measurement are entirely subjective, so you can vote for the one you think was most important, or most entertaining, or most outrageous, whatever.
In no particular order:
* Pundit Payola — 2005 saw the administration hire pundits to “catapult the propaganda.” GOP lobbyists were apparently inspired by the idea, and put a few conservative writers on the payroll too.
* Harriet Miers — To this day, no one’s quite sure what Bush was thinking.
* Terri Schiavo — Congressional Republicans exploit a horrible personal tragedy and disgust the nation in the process.
* Social Security — The White House interpreted the 2004 election as a mandate for privatizing Social Security. It’s been a long time since a president was this wrong about a signature domestic policy initiative.
* Gannon/Guckert — A male prostitute pretending to be a journalist is repeatedly given a press pass and invited to ask soft-ball questions at White House press briefings. No, seriously, this really happened.
* Jack Abramoff — The most corrupt lobbyist in recent memory got caught and may take down the Republican Congress.
* Tom DeLay — After playing fast and loose with the law and congressional ethics for years, the former bug-spray salesman is under indictment, stripped of his leadership post, and fighting for his political life.
* Plame scandal — For the first time in 130 years, a high-ranking White House official is under criminal indictment and the White House remains the subject of a criminal investigation. And Patrick Fitzgerald is a star.
* Michael Brown — It’s a phrase that will live on forever, “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job.”
* Randy “Duke” Cunningham — Forget the $2.4 million in bribes; the symbol for Republican excess for this decade is the 19th-century Louis-Philippe commode.
* Dems make gains — Kaine wins in Virginia; Corzine wins in New Jersey; and Paul Hackett almost pulls off a miracle in Ohio. A sign of things to come?
* “Mean Jean” Schmidt — Not long after promising to uphold dignity and decorum in the House, Schmidt attacks Rep. Paul Murtha, a former Marine and decorated war hero, as “a coward.” And intra-party relations reach yet another low.
* Pat “Hit Man” Robertson — TV preacher causes international incident by calling for the assassination of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Can’t you just feel the Christian love?
* Cindy Sheehan — Looking back, August would have been a lot quieter if Bush had taken five minutes to chat with this woman.
* Snoopgate — Warrants? Bush doesn’t need no stinkin’ warrants. And the “rule of law” party slips a little further into the abyss….
I’m no doubt missing a few, so feel free to vote for a political story that’s not on my list. What say you?