[ Posted Tuesday, October 6th, 2009 – 16:38 UTC ]
[Program Note: I'm reproducing a press release today, instead of writing a column, so I hope you'll forgive my laziness. But while it is tempting to take the salient facts and quotes from the press release and make it appear as if I dug this story out on my own, I think it's more honest just to reprint the press release itself. Some might call it mere stenography, but I'd prefer my readers to draw their own conclusions. Having said all that, below is the press release from Populist Caucus Chair Bruce Braley's office, followed by the text of the letter they signed their names to (complete with a list of those who signed it).]
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[ Posted Monday, October 5th, 2009 – 14:54 UTC ]
As October dawns... well, actually... we're more into mid-morning October, as it were (see Program Note, below)... perhaps "as October gets underway" (that's better) -- it's time again to take our monthly look back, to see how President Obama is doing in the opinion polls. This month, the news for Obama fans is not bad. It's not get-up-and-cheer good, either, but it's a lot better than the news has been for the past two months.
I say this because Obama has stopped his slide in the polls. The downward slope of his approval numbers came to a screeching halt, and instead began hovering above (but never dipping below) the 50 percent mark. Since then, they have wavered in the 50-55 point range -- not trending clearly upwards, but at least not trending clearly downwards, either. Better news for Obama fans is the fact that his disapproval numbers did actually reverse course, after hitting a mid-month peak, and have settled downwards from that point on.
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[ Posted Friday, October 2nd, 2009 – 16:44 UTC ]
First, let's get rid of the distractions this week. Chicago will not be getting the Olympics in 2016, even after President Obama went over to Copenhagen on a personal charm offensive. While I think Rio is a good choice, personally (come on -- it's not just Rio's first Olympics, or Brazil's first Olympics, it is South America's first Olympics -- this is supposed to be a worldwide event, and yet Africa and South America have never hosted), I also think the cheap shots will be flying from Republicans soon -- and that they're going to shoot themselves in the foot by doing so. Glorifying an Obama defeat is fine for the GOP when we're talking domestic affairs, but Obama was promoting an American city on the world's stage. Republicans will pay a price for gleefully rooting for America to fail in such a fashion. Polls showed overwhelming (84 percent) support of the American public for a Chicago Olympics. And Republicans are looking more and more like they just want Obama to fail -- no matter what he is attempting. This is not exactly the best way to rebuild the party's appeal among suburban moderate voters.
And just think what those same Republicans would be saying if Democrats had cheered for a Republican president to fail in such an effort. My guess is the word "anti-American" would be used (if you'll forgive the irony) liberally.
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[ Posted Thursday, October 1st, 2009 – 16:10 UTC ]
This time next year, we will be in the midst of the congressional midterm election circus ("Peanuts! ... Getcher peanuts here!"). That much, at least, is beyond dispute. What will be in dispute are 435 seats in the House, and a third of the Senate. I'm going to go way out on a limb and predict here what the Republican rallying cry will be next year at this time: Lower taxes!
Now that I've actually typed that out, it doesn't seem as much of a revelation as when the thought struck me out of the blue the other day. So allow me to provide some detail to what I think the Republican midterm playbook will contain.
Of course, predicting the actual outcome of the 2010 midterms is virtually impossible at this point, so you shouldn't listen to anyone (me included) who confidently says anything about what's going to happen. There are so many "ifs" and other caveats that it's a fool's game. Having said that, allow me to play the fool for a bit.
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[ Posted Wednesday, September 30th, 2009 – 16:51 UTC ]
The Washington Post, one of the leading newspapers in the country, has announced on its website a contest to name "America's Next Great Pundit." In an enticing blend of reality television contests and print journalism, they are going to run a contest to see who deserves to be printed on their op-ed pages, on the sheer strength of writing. I heartily applaud this innovative effort -- even though I seem to be ineligible to enter. I also applaud anyone who reads this who might normally be inclined to write me a comment, and who instead decides to write an entry to the contest. Because you could be "America's Next Great Pundit." The winner receives a 13-week run for a weekly column, paid at $200 a pop. That's not the million-dollar prize reality TV routinely awards, but the newspaper industry is hurting, so you've got to make allowances. Kidding aside, it's not really the money anyway -- it's the prestige they're offering. But, since I've been an advocate for newspapers to do exactly this sort of thing for a while now, I have to cheer the Washington Post for their outside-the-box thinking.
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[ Posted Tuesday, September 29th, 2009 – 16:27 UTC ]
Did the Obama administration just issue a veto threat? I saw a headline suggesting the hint of a veto threat, so I thought I'd check out today's White House press briefing to see what was said. Now, I have to admit in all honesty, I haven't been reading these transcripts on a daily basis, so the Obama team may have previously issued veto threats of which I am unaware, but either way, I have to applaud them for even subtly hinting at the possibility of a veto. It's a weapon they haven't used much, and should consider using a lot more frequently.
The hedging is really par for the course in White House press briefings in our modern age, of course. The "Serious Journalist" crowd always gets up in arms over this fact, but it's been like that for so long and it isn't going to change any time soon, so it's really not even worth decrying here. The White House Press Secretary's job is to spin. And obfuscate. His job is not (as you might think) to answer questions. He is the official spokesperson for the administration, and so you have to expect the spin and the dodging when he speaks. It's his job, as both he sees it and how recent presidents have seen it. So be it.
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[ Posted Monday, September 28th, 2009 – 15:31 UTC ]
[Note: This column originally ran August 17, 2009. I don't usually re-run columns (and never so soon after their original appearance), but after watching the debut of Ken Burn's "The National Parks: America's Best Idea" last night, I had to dig this out. I strongly encourage everyone to watch the rest of Burns' series, which is running all week long on your local PBS station. I also strongly urge everyone to visit our National Parks, as well. This column was written just after a road trip I took this summer, and just after President Obama had visited Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon.]
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[ Posted Friday, September 25th, 2009 – 17:29 UTC ]
"Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the party."
Of course, this really should be (in today's inclusive society): "Now is the time for all good men and women to come to the aid of the party." But what it really should say is something more like: "Now is the time for all good men and women to pick up the phone and give their party representative an earful about what it actually means to be a member of that party, and that we actually expect them to stand up and vote for what the party not only believes in at its core but also what we were promised in the last election, and (by the way) why we gave you such overwhelming majorities in both houses of Congress to play around with -- but the time for playing is over, and it's time for you to now either stand tall with the people in your party, or admit you're just a corporate whore at heart." But that's a little hard to type, so maybe not. We'll get to this ranting and raving in the Talking Points part of the program, after a quick trip down Memory Lane.
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[ Posted Thursday, September 24th, 2009 – 16:38 UTC ]
The horse-trading has begun in earnest on the healthcare reform front in Congress. The sausage-making currently going on in the House and Senate has somewhat of a "through the microscope" quality to it, but it's interesting to highlight a few stories from this week for a peek into what the final legislation may look like. This will, necessarily, be an incomplete look, so I warn you in advance there won't be any sweeping conclusions at the end of the article. Consider it merely a snapshot of where things stand this week. Or two snapshots, since we'll look at each house separately.
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[ Posted Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009 – 15:39 UTC ]
No so very long ago, Afghanistan was known as "the forgotten war." While America's attention was largely focused on Baghdad, many forgot our military was even in another country. But these days, Afghanistan is hard to miss in the headlines. Rumors are swirling over what President Obama will do there -- increase American troops, draw down troops, keep the same troops (it depends on which headlines you read) -- and how he will change our strategy and goals. Talk of "failure" is rampant, except that now it is not coming from the anti-war crowd, but instead from the Pentagon. President Obama needs to get out front on this issue, by beginning to talk about our newly-forgotten war: Iraq.
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