Author: David Weigel

  • Larry Sinclair on the Campaign Trail

    The last time we saw Larry Sinclair, an ex-con who won a strange sort of fame in 2008 for his wild and unsubstantiated allegations against Barack Obama, he was refusing to become a prop in one of Orly Taitz’s lawsuits — and he was mounting a bid for Congress in his new district, Florida-24.

    One of Sinclair’s longtime fans, the mysterious “Citizen Wells,” has uploaded video of Sinclair introducing himself at a meet-the-candidates forum. It’s … fairly awkward. Sinclair spends much of his time warning the crowd that there’s something shady about him. “I’ve served my time,” he says. “I’ve accepted responsibility for what I’ve done.” And after some vague promises about staying closer to the district if elected, he notes that he’s “probably going to be the most vetted candidate in this entire race.”

    In happier times, Sinclair was airing his allegations (which are re-aired by the Globe tabloid every few months) on a Puerto Rican talk show co-hosted by a puppet.

  • GOP Gets Massa Investigation in the House

    The GOP’s privileged resolution on an investigation of what members of Congress knew about Rep. Eric Massa’s (D-N.Y.) problems has passed the House, on a 360-2 vote. Both “no” votes came from Republicans.

  • ‘I Think Humpty Dumpty Was Pushed!’

    I hadn’t paid much attention to the shrinking role of James Dobson at Focus on the Family — he’d been on the way out for a while — but TPM’s follow-up with the would-be whistleblower of this story, Kenneth Hutcherson of Antioch Bible church, is worth reading. As is Hutcherson’s angry column that sparked this round of arguments about whether, post-Dobson, Focus on the Family is going too soft.

    A great example of the products currently coming out of the new Focus on the Family is the Tim Tebow ad during the Super Bowl. It said nothing. What a great opportunity that was to promote the pro-life position by revealing what abortion really is. But I guess they didn’t want to offend the world and wanted to make sure everyone loved them.

    The current emphasis at Focus is on being loved and understood. I have read the entire Bible from Genesis 1:1 through Revelation 22:21 – and while it says, “The truth shall set you free,” nowhere does it say, “Sensitivity shall set you free.” What set the Focus board free to take Dr. Dobson off the air?

    Focus on the Family is helping Dobson and his son launch a new radio show, starting in May.

  • Rep. Pete Hoekstra Surging in Michigan Gubernatorial Bid

    The ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee — you couldn’t flip on a TV without seeing him in the aftermath of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab’s botched terrorism attempt — has steadily moved into the lead in the GOP’s primary for governor of Michigan. A new poll for Michigan’s Booth Newspapers has Hoekstra at 28 percent, up 10 points over his nearest rival, and up 16 points over the man long seen as the nominee-in-waiting, Attorney General Mike Cox.

    The trendlines since November:

    Pete Hoekstra – 28 percent (+7)
    Rick Snyder – 18 percent (+13)
    Mike Cox – 12 percent (-3)
    Mike Bouchard – 8 percent (-5)
    Tom George – 2 percent (-1)

    Snyder, the businessman who bought an ad during the Superbowl, gets the headlines — he’s moving up faster. But Hoekstra’s clearly benefited from being out front attacking the Obama administration on national security. (Less dramatically, he’s benefited from being the only candidate with strong ties to conservative western Michigan.)

  • GOP Will Call for a Massa Investigation

    After some confusion over what the party would do, the GOP will offer a privileged resolution calling for an investigation of the Democratic leadership’s handling of Rep. Eric Massa’s (D-N.Y.) harassment charges.

    It’s the sort of play minority parties always pull when the majority has just ejected a problem member. And it’s fed in this case by enterprise reporting on the Hill about when, exactly, aides to Speaker Nancy Pelosi found out about Massa’s antics.

    UPDATE: According to Jordan Fabian, a reporter for the Hill, the resolution will pass.

  • Senor (Tales of Yankee Power)

    Michael Barbaro previews a possible New York Senate bid by former Defense Department adviser Dan Senor, by my count the 1045th person to consider challenging Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.). At CPAC, Conservative Party chairman Mike Long told me that the party was looking hard at a serious candidate against Gillibrand; Barabo’s reporting suggests that this was the candidate. And just look at the resume:

    An adviser to Spencer Abraham of Michigan when Mr. Abraham was a senator, he has rotated in and out of government over the last two decades. He worked briefly at the politically connected Carlyle Group, a private equity firm in Washington. After the American-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, he became the civilian face of the coalition government, as policy adviser to the government and chief spokesman for L. Paul Bremer III, the top American administrator in Iraq.

    Ben Smith runs down the reasons why team Gillibrand isn’t broadcasting a lot of fear about this bid — a neoconservative hedge fund manager has, you could say, some potential vulnerabilities in a heavily Democratic state.

  • Tea Party Nation Knocks Anti-Reid ‘Tea Party’ for Copyright Infringement

    Tea Party Nation, the group that sponsored the National Tea Party Convention and announced a clear stance against third parties, is helping the effort to discredit the “Tea Party” candidate in Nevada by accusing him of trademark infringement. The group accuses the candidate, John Ashjian, of being “liberal-funded” — an allegation I haven’t seen proof to back up.

    Here’s TPN’s message to its members.
    It has recently come to our attention that an email is circulating referring to the newly established liberal-funded Tea Party of Nevada as TPN.  This email repeatedly disparages the Tea Party group using the acronym TPN.
    TPN – Tea Party Nation is Trademarked.  If you receive this email or have forwarded this email, please make any and all attempts to correct this misinformation.
    TPN (Tea Party Nation) is against the formation of a third party political party.

    Thank you for your help in this matter.

    Sherry Phillips
    Vice President
    Tea Party Nation
  • A Love/Hate Relationship with Eric Massa

    Glenn Beck on Eric Massa, March 8:

    I’m not saying he is as pure as the driven snow, I don’t know, I don’t know the guy, but this is a moment that will decide the course of this nation, possibly.

    Glenn Beck on Eric Massa, March 10:

    I think we found out who he is — someone who can’t be trusted to tell the truth about his life… now that we spent the hour, we don’t have to ever pay attention to this man ever again

    Republicans on Eric Massa, later on March 10:

    House Republicans are considering whether to ask Thursday for the Ethics Committee to investigate House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Majority Leader Steny Hoyer for their handling of information about misbehavior by former Rep. Eric Massa, who resigned Monday for sexually harassing male staffers.

    So, here’s what happened. On March 3, Massa resigned amid rumors that he sexually harassed a staff member. There was unanimity among conservatives — this might be the Democrats’ Mark Foley scandal. On March 7, Massa melted down on a radio show and lobbed wild accusations at the Democratic Party establishment. The conservative unanimity broke, with Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and Mark Levin treating Massa like a truth-telling exile. On March 9, Massa melted down, again, on Glenn Beck’s show, and nuked his own credibility. So now we’re back to the “Democrats’ Mark Foley” strategy. It’s going to cause Democrats some trouble, but not as much as it would have if conservatives had stuck to their first instincts about Massa.

  • Primarying Mike Castle

    Christine O’Donnell, a longtime conservative activist who took on the thankless task of challenging Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.) in 2008, is running against Rep. Mike Castle (R-Del.) for the GOP’s Senate nomination. Castle is almost sure to win, O’Donnell almost sure to join the ranks of Tea Party candidates who fell flat, but this demonstrates two things — the conservative movement’s annoyance with being told to settle for some moderate candidates, and the hunger of GOP candidates to try and find some office to run for this year.

  • The Plot Against Fishing

    Media Matters does a good rundown on a conservative meme that had, frankly, perplexed me — fear of President Obama banning sport fishing.

  • ‘Coast to Coast AM’ Host Mulls White House Bid

    If circumstances have put you in a car on a long drive in the very, very early morning, you’ve probably heard “Coast to Coast AM” host George Noory dish with guests about extraterrestrial life, time travel and ghosts. WorldNetDaily grabs a scoop: Noory wants to run for president.

    WND asked Noory how he could be a serious candidate for president when “Coast to Coast AM” has been known for its emphasis on UFOs, ancient Egypt and the supernatural.

    “The current crop of political candidates looks out of touch, saying nothing new or genuine. By 2012 people are going to be saying, ‘We cannot continue down the path we have been going as it will lead us only back to the familiar dead end we now see in Congress and the White House,’” he said.

    Will that fly in a debate?

    Conspiracy shows have never wanted for content, but the Obama presidency has provided particularly strong material — Jeff Rense, another late-night weirdness expert, has probably done more interviews with Obama conspiracy theorists than anyone else.

  • Poll: Democrat Bounces Back in IL-Sen Race

    The Republican response to Alexi Giannoulias, the Democrats’ nominee for President Obama’s old Senate seat in Illinois, has been one of outright derision. As soon as he locked up his nomination last month, the NRSC blasted out a video tying Giannoulias to the scandals surrounding his family’s Broadway Bank; when Giannoulias visited the White House yesterday, the NRSC mocked Giannoulias when Obama called him a “potential” (as opposed to “the next”) senator from Illinois.

    Now Giannoulias is getting a boost from, of all things, a Rasmussen Poll — it shows him jumping into a lead over Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) since last month. (Scott Rasmussen has confirmed to me that the leaked results are accurate.)

    Alexi Giannoulias (D) – 44 (+4)
    Mark Kirk (R) – 41 (-5)

    That’s after an air-clearing interview that, many Democrats thought, didn’t do much for Giannoulias.

  • Video: Michele Bachmann Kicks off ‘Take the Town Halls to DC’: ‘Now is the Time to See the Whites of Their Eyes’

    The “Take the Town Halls to DC” coalition has put up video of its kick-off last night, with the Memphis Tea Party’s Mark Skoda introducing a speech by Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) by casting the effort as a low-key lobbying push.

    “Our objective, here, is really to have a conversation with our representatives,” said Skoda. “It’s not about placards.”

    Bachmann took it a little further. “We the people are going to roll them out,” said Bachmann, “and when we roll them out we’re going to roll this bill back.” Activists needed to get into their representatives’ faces: “Now is the time to see the whites of their eyes.”

  • Glenn Beck on Massa: ‘I Almost Threw Him Out of the Studio’

    On his radio show today, Glenn Beck lit into former Rep. Eric Massa (D-N.Y.) for his disastrous, rambling appearance on the Tuesday episode of Beck’s Fox News Show.

    “America, have you ever heard of a 50-year old man having a tickle-fight — five men tickling each other so hard that they can’t breathe?” said Beck. “I think we found out who he is — someone who can’t be trusted to tell the truth about his life.”


    Beck indulged the “possibility” that somebody “got to” Massa and turned him — at the very least, said Beck, the former congressman “lied” in a pre-interview. Beck’s crew laughed about Massa’s generic answers to Beck’s questions about corruption, asking Beck why he didn’t push him further.

    “I almost said, ‘I think we could, but you’ve wasted enough of my time, get out,’” said Beck. “I almost threw him out of the studio three times. … What a waste of time this man was!”

    Bitterly, Beck expressed hope that he’d helped Massa kill his own credibility. “Now that we spent the hour,” said Beck, “we don’t have to ever pay attention to this man ever again.”

    Later in the show, Beck invited on Michelle Malkin — who’d sounded the alarm to conservatives about trusting Massa — and bowed to her foresight.

  • Will ‘The People’s Surge’ Be the Last Big Anti-Health Care Reform Rally?

    There’s some waning enthusiasm in the most powerful Tea Party-organizing groups for staging more protests against health care reform legislation. In comparison to the “House call” rallies that preceded the House and Senate votes on reform, the much-reported-on “Take the Town Halls to Washington” campaign has made no visible impact so far — it was first reported five days ago — outside of point-and-laugh coverage on liberal blogs.

    The rally to watch might be the March 16 “People’s Surge” being organized by FreedomWorks. Only 18 people have officially signed on so far, but FreedomWorks knows how to put these things together. That could double whatever efforts the “Take the Town Halls” coalition, of activists like Mark Skoda and Michael Patrick Leahy, can muster. But for the first time I’m sensing fatigue over this issue among Tea Party groups. The fate of this bill rests with a small number of members of Congress — the fate of their groups (i.e., whether they take over the GOP) rests on the result of primaries and elections that are coming on fast.

  • Rubio: I Believe the Children Are Our Future

    How many TV ads has Marco Rubio run as he’s muscled past Gov. Charlie Crist (R-Fla.) in the Florida GOP’s primary for U.S. Senate? None. Rubio’s surge has been a function of talk radio and netroots support, of his own campaigning and Crist’s sagging fortunes. Only now is he up with an ad that crystallizes his appeal to Republicans.

    Not much policy there, although Rubio hints that his possible January 2011 arrival in the Senate will come with a largely futile “stimulus repeal” bill and lots of comparisons between the agendas of Timothy Geithner and Fidel Castro.

  • Massa: The Morning After

    Before Eric Massa appeared on Glenn Beck’s show, there was a short war of words between the Fox News host and blogger/columnist Michelle Malkin. Beck likened Massa to a captured enemy soldier who could be pumped for information; Malkin argued that Massa was a lying opportunist. In the wake of Massa’s meltdown of an interview, Malkin’s clearly got the upper hand.

    From Malkin:

    “Conservative hero” my foot.

    “Crapweasel” is too kind a description for the desperate, bottom-feeding Massa. He is not a useful idiot. He’s just an idiot.

    Allahpundit of Hot Air goes a little further:

    When pressed on corruption, all he could do was blow smoke about how super-keen he thinks the tea party is, etc. In fact, not only didn’t he dish new dirt, he cleaned up some of the dirt he’d already dished: In the first clip below, he dismisses the suggestion that the Dems had forced him out unfairly for his behavior. “I forced myself out,” he says — i.e., he deserved to go. Good work, Massa.

    And Ace of Spades:

    You Know… Beck could have improved his credibility — and provided entertaining TV — if he had switched midway through to a hostile interrogation of Massa, instead of allowing him to blather vaguely that he made some “mistakes” which he takes ownership of but which also weren’t really mistakes, it’s just that people took his tickle-parties the wrong way.

    There’s some debate over whether the interview was salvageable at all, with the “no, it wasn’t side” confident that Massa is/was too much of an opportunist for his spin to be taken seriously.

  • Orly Taitz Challenges the Eligibility of an African-American Politician

    No, not that one. Another one — Damon Dunn, a mainstream Republican candidate for Secretary of State in California. Dunn stands in the way of Taitz’s vanity campaign for that office. So Taitz has waged a two-tier campaign against him. First, accusing him of being an affirmative action candidate.

    The only reason he was endorsed so far, is because he is an African American, and Republicans want to have an African American to show diversity. He admits to having no knowledge or experience with law, elections or election law.

    Second, Taitz has accused Dunn of being registered to vote in Florida. As Spencer Kornhaber discovered, he was once, but he isn’t now. Still, there are obviously no racial overtones to the “birther” crusade.

  • Rove Speaks: It’s Everybody Else’s Fault

    Karl Rove (J.D. Pooley/ZUMA Press)

    Karl Rove (J.D. Pooley/ZUMA Press)

    Washington memoirs are all about settling scores. Karl Rove’s “Courage and Consequence: My Life as a Conservative in the Fight” takes that tradition to new and self-parodying heights. To read Rove’s recollections of George W. Bush’s White House is to believe that, for eight years, men of “courage and moral clarity” governed the United States and were beset by critics who refused to give them any credit. On page after page, Rove names the naysayers and picks apart their claims. He’s most at ease — his delight jumps right off of the page — when he’s able to recount times he shoved the criticisms back in their faces.

    Image by: Matt Mahurin

    Image by: Matt Mahurin

    In the memoir’s final chapter, humbly titled “Rove: the Myth,” the architect of a two-term Republican presidency reports how angry he was when he read a passage in then-Sen. Barack Obama’s second book lumping him in with Newt Gingrich, Grover Norquist, and Ralph Reed as “conservative operatives” with “fiery rhetoric” like “No new taxes” or “We are a Christian nation.”

    “I certainly don’t believe and have never said, ‘We are a Christian nation,’” writes Rove. “I put the offending page in my pocket and went about my business.” Later that day, he encountered Obama and fell victim to “feistiness,” challenging the senator for using “my name and the word ’said’ and quote marks.” Obama, Rove reports, blanched when the torn-out page was shown to him and tried to wriggle out of the conversation: “It seemed to me he didn’t much care that he had attributed to me something I had never said and found offensive.”

    Four years later, Rove offers up the encounter as proof that Obama’s image as “the truest, purest proponent of a fresh new style of politics” is a ruse, and snarls that “the last time I checked, I hadn’t bombed any government building (like, say, Obama’s great friend William Ayers); or asked that God ‘damn’ America (like, say, Obama’s former pastor and close friend Jeremiah Wright); or declared that I was proud of my country for the first time in my life only when I was in my forties (like, say, Obama’s wife, Michelle).”

    It’s a revealing passage — it takes up three whole pages — that demonstrates just how Rove thinks. Accused of being a steamrolling, divisive political operative, he locates a loophole in the argument, and closes by insulting the wife of the person who criticized him. Apart from some gripping narrative sections about how the inner sanctum of the White House reacted to the September 11 attacks, “Courage and Consequence” reads less like the story of one of history’s most powerful presidential advisers and more like a quickie fightback book from some apparatchik ensnared in a petty scandal.

    Rove’s quest to debunk and overpower his enemies in politics and the press begins with his account of the “broken family” that raised him. Nineteen pages in, he starts swinging at journalists — James Moore, Paul Alexander, Wayne Slater — who’ve looked into the suicide of his mother and the rumored homosexuality of his father for clues about his psychology. “The writers who are fascinated with whether my father was gay,” Rove snarls, “are really more interested in implying that all people who have gay relatives or friends must support same-sex marriage; otherwise they are bigots and hypocrites. And if one of these people happens to be Karl Rove, so much the better.”

    In other, less personal sections of the book, Rove takes the same care in dissembling what his enemies have been saying. Throughout, he settles scores with political opponents while seeing past the fault in his own. Recapping one of the coups of his early career, he admits that he “destroyed the career” of former Texas Railroad Commissioner Lena Guerroro by leaking the proof that she had embellished her academic record. “Did I pass on to a reporter the information that pointed to our opponent’s lie?” Rove writes. “Absolutely, you bet, and I have no regrets about it whatsoever. Why should I? The information, after all, was true. That should have some bearing on this issue.”

    Rove doesn’t have the same attitude about information that damaged his own client, George W. Bush. Rove devotes a chapter title — “Derailed by a DUI” — and five pages to how Democrats killed the 2000 Bush-Cheney campaign’s momentum with a leak about Bush’s 1976 DUI arrest in Maine. Mournfully, Rove recounts the reaction of his campaign — “Bush called it ‘dirty politics’ and said, ‘I don’t know if my opponent’s campaign was involved, but I do know that the person who admitted doing it at the last minute was a Democratic and partisan in Maine.” Rove’s regret was that he didn’t outsmart the Democrats by leaking the information before they did: “Of the things I would redo in the 2000 election, making a timely announcement about Bush’s DUI would top the list.”

    Rove’s pride and tunnel vision about his campaign tactics aren’t anything new in the Washington memoir genre. Much of Sarah Palin’s “Going Rogue” featured the same sort of finger-pointing about her brief bid for the vice presidency. If anything, Rove takes more obvious relish in attacking the people who made his campaigns difficult — it’s mostly “the kooky left-wing blogosphere” that thinks he ran a dirty campaign against John McCain in 2000, or that only an “imbecile” could have believed the 2004 exit polls that showed a Kerry-Edwards win, and so on.

    But unlike Palin — unlike most people with his portfolio — Rove was in the cockpit for much of a consequential presidency that launched two wars and dramatically expanded the size of the federal government. He writes about this the same way he writes about minor tiffs and campaign tricks. He spends a page trying to debunk the idea that Bush ever told Americans to “go shopping” after the September 11 attacks. Technically, he’s right. The closest Bush ever came to using those two precise words — the moment that most people remember as the “go shopping” moment — were his September 27, 2001 remarks at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport when he urged Americans to “get down to Disney World in Florida” and “take your families and enjoy life, the way we want it to be enjoyed.” But Rove insists that the “closest he ever came” was a different speech in which Bush praised Americans for “going about their daily lives, working and shopping and playing, worshiping at churches and synagogues and mosques, going to movies and to baseball.” Even there, Rove skips past the argument made by critics — that Bush, in a unique position to demand more of Americans, gave an “all-clear” sign and moved on. In writing about Hurricane Katrina, one of his only regrets is “flying over the region in Air Force One on Wednesday, rather than landing.” In one of Rove’s few admissions, he admits that he’s “one of the people responsible for this mistake.”

    “Courage and Consequence” is filled with such arguments. Pre-release excepts about Rove’s take on the Iraq War — that his biggest regret was that he should have worked harder to spin the fallout over the lack of WMD in Iraq — foreshadowed the way Rove would tackle most of the controversies of his tenure. At several points, he simply misstates facts. He impugns the character of former U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, who was removed from his position in New Mexico after declining to file politicized lawsuits, by claiming that Iglesias was incompetent and gunning for electoral office. Paragraphs later, he claims that the only qualm that Democrats have with former U.S. Attorney Tim Griffin — who resigned after negative attention on his own politicized appointment — is that they feared it would help Griffin’s career. Left unmentioned is the real Democratic argument, that Griffin helped the Bush-Cheney campaign challenge the voter registrations of voters in largely African-American, Democratic-leaning areas. But to Rove, the most important Republican political strategist of his generation, Democratic worries about election integrity are basically one big joke. In an unsurprising chapter about the 2000 presidential election recount — revelations are limited to the angry looks and sighs that various players gave to Rove — he refers to the Bush team in Florida as “freedom fighters whose homeland had been occupied as they grappled with a blitzkrieg of lawsuits filed by Gore’s attorneys and street protests led by Jesse Jackson.”

    Very little of this should surprise observers of Rove in power or out of power, as a quotable White House aide and then as a Fox News pundit who has reliably attacked the Democrats. Rove’s disinterest in policy or consequences of policy isn’t surprising, either. (”I didn’t pretend to be Carl von Clausewitz or Henry Kissinger, but I knew the Iraq War wasn’t going well,” Rove writes of his thinking in December 2006.) The historical value of the book itself is minimal. It functions, instead, as a test of whether Rove’s combination of pique and pride will be helpful as Bush administration veterans argue that they spent eight years changing America for the better, over the cries of critics, only to watch their work be ruined by Barack Obama and his pack of elitist liberals.

  • Before We Hear From Our Senate Candidate, Let’s Tell Some Birther Jokes

    Christina Bellantoni obtains audio of a Lincoln Day dinner in Ohio where — on their way to introducing the party’s U.S. Senate candidate, Rob Portman — a former and current GOP official both make jokes about President Obama’s citizenship.

    Worth noting: The laughter for master of ceremonies and former state Rep. Jim Buchy dies down audibly when he jokes that Obama wasn’t born in the United States. There’s not a lot of laughter when State Rep. James Zehringer says this, either.