Today’s edition of quick hits.
* The Hillary Clinton/Barack Obama quarrel is still going strong in its fourth day, with Obama goings so far today as to suggest that Clinton may be “Bush-Cheney Lite.” Clinton responded, “You know, I have been called a lot of things in my life, but I have never been called George Bush or Dick Cheney certainly. You know you have to ask whatever has happened to the politics of hope?”
* Clinton added, “I have been absolutely clear that we’ve got to return to robust and effective diplomacy. But I don’t want to see the power and prestige of the United States President put at risk by rushing into meetings with the likes of Chavez, and Castro, and Ahmadinejad.” Matt Yglesias makes the argument that comments like that suggest Clinton “really does sound like what Bush thinks about these things.”
* For what it’s worth, Mitt Romney and John McCain are sticking up for Clinton’s position on this, and questioning Obama’s judgment. Given the circumstances, I suspect she doesn’t want their help.
* It didn’t get quite as much attention as it deserves, but a presidential commission, led by Donna Shalala and Bob Dole, made a series of substantive recommendations yesterday on how to make “fundamental changes” in the ways in which veterans navigate the convoluted health-care bureaucracy. Most of the changes can be made by executive order — but the White House initially balked at its own commission’s ideas. White House press secretary Tony Snow initially told reporters yesterday that Bush would not act immediately on the panel’s advice. “He’s not going to be making recommendations; he’s not going to be issuing calls for actions,” Snow said. Shortly thereafter, the White House reversed course.
* From my friend Blue Girl: “As if more proof was needed that the Army is broken and George Bush is the vandal that broke it; the Army is lagging both on new recruits and reenlistments. The situation with recruiting shortfalls is so dire – the Army fell 16% short of recruiting goals in June alone – that 1,106 former recruiters have been reassigned and ordered back to recruiting stations throughout the land. The sudden TDY reassignments will run from this coming Friday to 15 October. (FY 2007 ends on 30 September.)”
* Bob Novak thinks Henry Waxman is mean. I’m sure it’ll keep the congressman up at night.
* If you missed it, be sure to check out this great piece today on torture policy from retired Marine Gen. P.X. Kelley and respectable Republican Robert Turner.
* Also in the in-case-you-missed-it category, Josh Marshall still opposes Bush impeachment, but he’s beginning to wonder if we’ve reached a point in which it’s necessary.
* Speaking of impeachment, conservative Cal Thomas and liberal Bob Beckel are discussing the issue over at USA Today. Thomas is open to the possibility, just so long as the inquiry is led by “responsible Republicans and Democrats who no longer hold office. It could be modeled on the Iraq Study Group, or the base closings commission.”
* This may come as a shock, but Fox News really, really hates liberal blogs. I can’t imagine why; liberal blogs always say nice things about Fox News.
* Would you believe Sean Hannity is still talking about Vince Foster? Is it even possible for a person to be more pathetic?
* Were all of the workers building the U.S. Embassy in Iraq there voluntarily? Apparently not. (Nothing says “democratic values” like forced labor.)
* David Broder can’t imagine why governors aren’t rushing to endorse Bill Richardson and Mitt Romney. Maybe because the governors don’t like them that much?
* It’s extremely unusual for me to actually enjoy at a post at RedState, but I thought this was hilarious: “No, Alberto Gonzales should not be offed…. But the man President Bush calls “Fredo”–was a Presidential nickname ever more apt?–should at long last be invited to spend more time with his family. Much more time…. Especially if he suddenly gets a hankering to serve his country once again. In which case, the legions upon legions of intelligent adults accompanying him in a supervisory capacity should move Heaven and Earth to convince Alberto Gonzales that ‘his country’ is Kazakhstan.”
* Ann Coulter’s latest column suggests, “Fox News ought to buy a copy of Monday’s Democrat debate on CNN to play over and over during the general election campaign,” because the only people it could possibly convince to vote for a Democrat are ‘losers blogging from their mother’s basements.'” Rick Perlstein notes, “Now why ever would Fox care about electing Republicans, given that they’re a news organization in the business of ‘fair and balanced’?”
* And Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), he of the prostitution scandal, told his Senate Republican colleagues yesterday at GOP policy luncheon that he wants to help “rebrand” the party by emphasizing fiscal conservatism. Yes, David Vitter wants to work on the party’s image. Apparently, the audience didn’t have much of a response. Perhaps they appreciated the irony.
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.