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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!President Obama's speech Tuesday night marking the end of combat operations in Iraq drew a largely -- but not universally -- negative response from Republicans. One particular sticking point for many Republicans was the president's failure to tip his cap to the apparent success in Iraq of the counterinsurgency "surge" strategy -- authored by Gen. David Petraeus and implemented by President George W. Bush over the objections of many Democrats, including then-Senators and presidential candidates Barack Obama and Joe Biden. Sen. John McCain, who ran against Obama in the 2008 general election ...
It's the talk of all the Sunday talk shows, of course, the new Arizona anti-immigration law that crash-landed at the top of the nation's agenda on Friday. On Sunday, everyone got into the act. On Meet the Press, Evan Thomas, editor-at-large of Newsweek, called the law "racial profiling," "polarizing and chaotic." David Brooks, the New York Times columnist, said the law was "an invitation to abuse.'' And so on. There was nothing new in any of that. Those are comments generally attached to the measure by critics since it became a national issue last Monday. Then I heard Erin Burnett of CNBC say ...
Race is the never-ending debate of America. In recent days, former President Jimmy Carter said that the intense opposition to President Barack Obama was fueled by racial bigotry. New York Times columnist David Brooks opined that "race is largely beside the point." He contended that the current attack on Barack Obama was race-free populist rage against the elites in the tradition of Huey Long or Father Coughlin. (He did overlook the inconvenient fact that Coughlin's populism was built on a virulent anti-Semitism.) At Friday's daily White House briefing, press secretary Robert Gibbs declined ...
Here's a bizarre anecdote from New York Times columnist David Brooks. He describes attending a Washington dinner where a Republican senator sitting beside him "had his hand on my inner thigh the whole time." Watch: Why Brooks let the senator keep his hand there for the entire dinner is a mystery. Why he described the incident on television, but then refused to name the politician, is another. The relationship between the press and politicians is often scrutinized, with many observers claiming that the two are "in bed" together. Given Brooks's odd story, that untoward relationship apparently ...
The debate over the heart and soul of conservatism continues, and the latest skirmish is apparently between neoconservative David Frum and yours truly. Frum, it seems, was offended by my recent comments about conservatism on Bloggingheads, an online talk show where bloggers debate the issues of the day. My intent was to respond to an e-mailer, who had asked me my definition of what constitutes a conservative. Interestingly, I don't think I even mentioned Frum in this particular segment, though I have certainly mentioned him in the past. For those unfamiliar with Bloggingheads, it should be ...
All this talk about Sen. Arlen Specter's defection -- and the instant karma that ensued -- got me fantasizing about other Republicans who ought to follow him out the door. The following list is by no means comprehensive -- and I do reserve the right to amend it -- but for now, these are the 10 Republicans who annoy me most ... 1. Kathleen Parker - If you've heard of Kathleen Parker, it is probably because of her now-famous early criticisms of Sarah Palin. The defining column came in September 2008, when she condescendingly wrote: "Only Palin can save McCain, her party, and the country she ...
The debate du jour is over President Obama's forceful words yesterday rejecting the restructuring plans of the big three automakers. In effect, the administration signaled that it was prepared to let GM and Chrysler go into bankruptcy rather than continue to pay its bills indefinitely. Here's The Wall Street Journal:Sending GM and Chrysler into bankruptcy isn't a done deal. But both the government and the auto makers are planning for such an eventuality, barring dramatic, 11th-hour concessions from bondholders, unions and others. Given, as David Brooks notes today, that the big three ...
Why is it that those who make a living speaking into microphones don't seem to understand the basic principle of how the things work? When you say something out loud into a live mic, people can hear it! Well, leave it to MSNBC's Chris Matthews, among the most boorish commentators in the history of punditry, to forget how the whole TV thing is done. After Keith Olbermann's introduction of Bobby Jindal, and the Louisiana governor was making his way to his own open mic, Matthews let out a not-so-Freudian slip. Watch:Generally, pundits like Matthews wait until after a given speaker delivers his or ...
As I write this, young conservatives on Twitter are discussing Barack Obama's dinner with certain august members of the conservative intelligentsia, and the general opinion is one of skepticism.David Brooks is certainly no longer a conservative -- if he ever was one. And though George Will certainly qualifies as a conservative, many younger conservative bloggers -- who view how one came down on the issue of Sarah Palin as a sort of "legacy vote" -- would argue that he is, at least, not generally representative of modern conservative thought. Give Obama credit, though, for rounding up ...
Last night, at 6:34 pm, President-elect Barack Obama's motorcade came to a stop in front of an unlikely Maryland address. The occasion was dinner, and the host was none other than George F. Will, one of The Washington Post's conservative columnists. Also waiting in that den of lions were such luminaries as David Brooks, Peggy Noonan, Bill Kristol, and Charles Krauthammer, who, like Will, tend to inhabit distinctly non-liberal portions of the political spectrum.So, no word yet on what was discussed over cocktails and gnosh, but the event itself must come as a surprise to those who have been ...
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