Author: HL

  • McCain Avatar Ad: JD Hayworth’s Drudge Report Ad Condemned By McCain

    McCain Avatar Ad: JD Hayworth’s Drudge Report Ad Condemned By McCain
    John McCain wasn’t mad until after he turned blue in the face. The Arizona Senator’s re-election campaign slammed his Republican challenger, J.D. Hayworth, Thursday over…

    Steven G. Brant: Beyond Krugman’s “And that’s just the way it is.”
    Paul Krugman has written an otherwise excellent essay entitled “Senator Bunning’s Universe,” in which he describes the totally different universes in which America’s two major…

    9/11 Trial Reversal: Obama Advisers Set To Recommend Military Tribunals
    WASHINGTON — In a potential reversal, White House advisers are close to recommending that President Barack Obama opt for military tribunals for self-professed Sept. 11…

  • Right-wing media invent scandals to malign Dems

    Right-wing media invent scandals to malign Dems

    Right-wing media figures have recently concocted several baseless scandals in an attempt to portray Democrats as corrupt or guilty of wrongdoing. These include the suggestion that the Democratic leadership acted improperly after learning about sexual harassment allegations against Rep. Eric Massa, the baseless accusation that President Obama is “selling judgeships” for health care reform votes, and the false claim that Rep. Pete Stark has an “ethics scandal.”

    Right-wing baselessly accuses Obama of “selling judgeships” for health care vote

    Following Weekly Standard’s McCormack, right-wing baselessly speculated that Obama appointed Scott Matheson to buy his brother’s vote. Right-wing media figures have run with The Weekly Standard’s John McCormack’s completely baseless accusation that Obama is buying Rep. Jim Matheson’s (D-UT) vote on health care reform by appointing his brother, Scott Matheson, to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. McCormack provided no evidence to support the allegation — which both Rep. Matheson and the White House have called “absurd” — and even those pushing the charge acknowledge that Scott Matheson is “plenty qualified for the job.”

    Rep. Matheson’s office and White House have called the smear “ridiculous” and “absurd.” Noting that McCormack’s “report raises the question but doesn’t answer it,” Politico’s Chris Frates reported that Rep. Matheson’s spokeswoman “called the question ‘patently ridiculous,’ saying there was no deal made between her boss and the president that guranteed [sic] Scott Matheson’s nomination in exchange for Rep. Matheson’s vote.” Frates later noted that a “White House official calls the charge ‘absurd.’ ‘Scott Matheson is a leading law scholar and has served as a law school dean and U.S. Attorney. He’s respected across Utah and eminently qualified to serve on the federal bench,’ the official said.”

    Right-wingers spread baseless allegation despite acknowledging that Scott Matheson is “plenty qualified for the job.” McCormack’s post noted that “Matheson appears to have the credentials to be a judge,” and Hot Air’s Allahpundit stated that “Scott Matheson’s plenty qualified for the job.” Nevertheless, they advanced the baseless speculation that Obama is “selling” judgeships for votes on health care reform.

    Hatch praised Matheson nomination and said Matheson “is a capable, bright attorney whose experience has prepared him for judicial service.” The Associated Press reported on March 3 that “[t]he nomination was also praised by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who reiterated that Matheson’s experience has prepared him well for the position”:

    The nomination was also praised by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who reiterated that Matheson’s experience has prepared him well for the position.

    “I’m pleased President Obama has nominated Scott Matheson to fill the vacancy on the 10th Circuit,” Hatch said. “I’ve known Scott a long time, and he is a capable, bright attorney whose experience has prepared him for judicial service. The Matheson family has had a significant impact on Utah and can rightly be proud of Scott’s nomination.”

    Malkin and Hannity falsely claimed Stark has an “ethics scandal”

    Hannity and Malkin claim Stark has “his own ethics scandal.” During the March 3 edition of his Fox News program, Sean Hannity stated, “The story gets more interesting now, because you’ve got Rangel’s successor, a guy by the name of Congressman Pete Stark, who himself has been investigated for ethics violations.” Fox News contributor Michelle Malkin later added, “[H]is own ethics scandal, as you mentioned, regarding a house that he claimed deductions for apparently in Maryland, and then he went and cussed the people who were investigating that as well.”

    Ethics committee flatly rejected allegations against Stark. In a January 29 report, the House ethics committee flatly rejected allegations that Stark “violated Maryland criminal tax law and ethics rules of the House of Representatives by intentionally filing a false application for a Maryland property tax credit.” The ethics committee found that Stark “did not violate House ethics rules. Nor did he run afoul of Maryland’s criminal or tax laws.”

    Ethics committee: Stark did not “seek” tax credit and did not “file a false application.” The ethics committee found:

    The evidence clearly establishes that Representative Stark did not receive a tax credit as a result of filing an application for the credit. The evidence also establishes that he did not file a false application for the Maryland property tax credit.

    Representative Stark did not seek out the Maryland property tax credit. The State of Maryland required every homeowner in Maryland to fill out a form to determine their eligibility for the tax credit.

    Therefore, Representative Stark did not violate House ethics rules. Nor did he run afoul of Maryland’s criminal or tax laws.

    Media baselessly implicate Democratic leadership in Massa allegation

    NRO’s Lopez: “This could be very bad news for the Dems” because “Hoyer knew.” Linking to a Politico report stating that House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer “confirmed that the Democratic leadership had been informed of the allegations” that Massa “made unwanted advances toward a junior male staffer,” National Review Online’s Kathryn Jean Lopez wrote, “Massa-gate? This could be very bad news for the Dems — Hoyer knew and it seems made some unleader-like presumptions.” Lopez was referring to Hoyer’s statement that “I’ve heard of that allegation before. … And my presumption [is] it’s being pursued in the course of business.”

    Hoyer’s office said he ensured that the ethics committee “was immediately involved to determine the facts.” Politico reported on March 3 that “several House aides told POLITICO that the House ethics committee has been informed of allegations that the New York Democrat, who is married with two children, made unwanted advances toward a junior male staffer.” Politico further reported that Hoyer “confirmed that the Democratic leadership had been informed of the allegations before the news broke” and issued the following statement:

    “The week of February 8th, a member of Rep. Massa’s staff brought to the attention of Mr. Hoyer’s staff allegations of misconduct that had been made against Mr. Massa. Mr. Hoyer’s staff immediately informed him of what they had been told. Mr. Hoyer instructed his staff that if Mr. Massa or his staff did not bring the matter to the attention of the bipartisan Ethics Committee within 48 hours, Mr. Hoyer would do so. Within 48 hours, Mr. Hoyer received confirmation from both the Ethics Committee staff and Mr. Massa’s staff that the Ethics Committee had been contacted and would review the allegations. Mr. Hoyer does not know whether the allegations are true or false, but wanted to ensure that the bipartisan committee charged with overseeing conduct of Members was immediately involved to determine the facts.”

    Russert baselessly claims Democrats may have “a Mark Foley situation.” In a March 3 Twitter post, NBC’s Luke Russert linked to the Politico article reporting that “the House ethics committee has been informed of allegations” that Massa “made unwanted advances toward a junior male staffer” — allegations Massa has reportedly denied. In his post, Russert made the completely baseless assertion that “if true the Dems got a Mark Foley situation.” In addition to Foley’s inappropriate emails and explicit instant messages to teenage House pages, the Foley scandal also involved the widespread failure of Republican members of Congress and their staffs to appropriately address Foley’s behavior. However, there is no evidence that Democrats handled the Massa situation in a manner similar to the Republicans’ handling of Foley. As the House ethics committee reported regarding the Foley scandal, “The Investigative Subcommittee finds that few of the individuals who ultimately came to participate in those events handled their roles in the manner that should be expected given the important and sensitive nature of the issues involved.”

    Specifically, as Media Matters for America has noted, the ethics committee criticized Rep. Rodney Alexander’s (R-LA) staff’s “refusal” to give Foley emails to a House clerk; found that then-Speaker Dennis Hastert’s counsel “showed an inexplicable lack of interest in the e-mails”; found that Hastert was likely told about Foley emails and apparently took no action; found that Rep. John Boehner and then-Rep. Tom Reynolds (R-NY) failed to show “any curiosity regarding” Foley emails; criticized Rep. John Shimkus’ (R-IL) handling of the Foley scandal; and criticized then-Rep. Jim Kolbe’s (R-AZ) handling of allegations that his former page received a “sexually graphic instant message” from Foley.

    As Hot Air blogger Allahpundit noted, “Good thing for the Dems that Hoyer took this seriously; if he’d dithered the way the GOP did with the allegations against Mark Foley, they’d have a raging fire to put out here.”

  • Top Tea Party Leader Was Paid By GOP Biz Group’s Campaign

    Top Tea Party Leader Was Paid By GOP Biz Group’s Campaign
    A top Tea Party leader who has publicly distanced his group from the GOP, was recently paid by a campaign run by an influential California Republican business organization, to gather signatures for a ballot initiative that’s long been a key goal of the state party.

    Ethics Committee Says It’s Investigating Massa Allegations
    The House ethics committee announced today it is investigating “allegations” about Rep. Eric Massa (D-NY) but does not detail the charges. According to Politico, Massa has been accused of making unwanted advances toward a male staffer.

  • Cahill Brings McCain Team to Massachusetts

    Cahill Brings McCain Team to Massachusetts
    Marc Ambinder breaks the news that Massachusetts state treasurer Tim Cahill (I), who is running in close third in the race for governor, will be adding some major names to his campaign that could “shake up the race in an interesting way.”

    The new additions: John Weaver, the former chief strategist for Sen. John McCain (R-AZ); Mark Salter, McCain’s voice and co-author; and Michael Dennehy, McCain’s former national political director.

  • Does Republican Governor Rick Perry’s Record of Executing Potentially Innocent People Hurt or Help Him in Texas?

    Does Republican Governor Rick Perry’s Record of Executing Potentially Innocent People Hurt or Help Him in Texas?
    Perry crushed his primary challengers this week and also signed off on the 211th execution of his gubernatorial career, breaking all TX history records.

    Perry crushed his primary challengers this week and also signed off on the 211th execution of his gubernatorial career, breaking all TX history records.

    Fish Oil Supplements — Want PCBs With That?
    A lawsuit filed in California claims many popular fish oil companies knowingly sell products contaminated with high levels of toxic PCBs.

    A lawsuit filed in California claims many popular fish oil companies knowingly sell products contaminated with high levels of toxic PCBs.

    Wall Street Took Your House and Your Retirement, Now They’re After Your Social Security
    Wall Street tycoon Pete Peterson wants to bring IMF-style economic insanity to the U.S. The scary part? He might get away with it.

    Wall Street tycoon Pete Peterson wants to bring IMF-style economic insanity to the U.S. The scary part? He might get away with it.

  • Liz Cheney Falsely Claims Her ?Al Qaeda 7’ Smear Ad ?Doesn?t Question Anybody?s Loyalty?

    Liz Cheney Falsely Claims Her ?Al Qaeda 7’ Smear Ad ?Doesn?t Question Anybody?s Loyalty?
    As ThinkProgress has noted, Liz Cheney and Bill Kristol’s Keep America Safe organization released a web ad on Monday targeting yet-to-be named Justice Department lawyers who had worked on Guantanamo detainee issues as the “al Qaeda 7.” “Whose values do they share?” asked the ad over an image of seven silhouettes juxtaposed with images of […]

    As ThinkProgress has noted, Liz Cheney and Bill Kristol’s Keep America Safe organization released a web ad on Monday targeting yet-to-be named Justice Department lawyers who had worked on Guantanamo detainee issues as the “al Qaeda 7.” “Whose values do they share?” asked the ad over an image of seven silhouettes juxtaposed with images of Arabic men. When Politico’s Ben Smith first reported on the attack ad, he noted that it “questions the loyalties of Justice Department lawyers.”

    But in an interview today on the Washington Times’ “America’s Morning News” radio show, Cheney denied that the ad questioned “anybody’s loyalty”:

    HOLMES: Liz, good morning. So you released a fairly provocative ad, I have to say. And you ask the question “whose values” [does] Eric Holder share? In your view, whose values does he share?

    CHENEY: Well, what the ad does — and actually it doesn’t question anybody’s loyalty. What the ad does is it says that there are nine lawyers in the Justice Department who used to represent al Qaeda terrorists and the Attorney General will only tell us who two of them are and we want the American people to have the right to know who the others are.

    Guest host Amy Holmes continued to press Cheney on the point, repeating her question. “But your ad does raise the question ‘whose values’ does Eric Holder share. Who would you say?” Cheney dodged the question, stating that she thinks Holder “believes that you can defeat terror, you can win this war we’re engaged in by treating terrorism like law enforcement.” Listen here:

    Cheney is simply lying. Not only does the ad suggest that the lawyers might “share” the “values” of al Qaeda, but it also flashes an image of a headline from the far right Investor’s Business Daily asking if the Justice Department was the “Department of Jihad?” “Just whose side are they on?” asked the editorial.

    When Politico’s Smith first reported on the ad, Keep America Safe spokesman Michael Goldfarb gave him a quote that essentially accused the lawyers of treason, saying that they “did far more than represent criminals.” “They have propagandized on behalf of our enemies, engaging in a worldwide smear campaign against the CIA, the U.S. military and the United States itself while we are at war,” said Goldfarb. On Tuesday, Keep America Safe released a fundraising letter in Cheney’s name that used the exact same language:

    Keep America Safe e-mail solicitation from 3/2/2010

    Former Bush administration officials have pushed back against the ad. “While it’s legitimate for the public to inquire about the past work of DOJ political appointees, we need to recognize that our judicial system cannot function without pro bono counsel, and it doesn’t make a lawyer less patriotic just because he or she has represented a criminal or terrorist suspect,” former U.S. attorney and homeland security adviser Kenneth Wainstein told the Washington Post. “It’s beyond a cheap shot to suggest that a lawyer is an al-Qaeda sympathizer because he advocates a detainee’s position in the Supreme Court,” said former Bush White House lawyer Reginald Brown.

    For more on Cheney’s smearing of the Justice Department lawyers, read today’s Progress Report.

  • On foreign policy, Obama and the GOP find room for agreement

    On foreign policy, Obama and the GOP find room for agreement
    Unnoticed amid the wailing about “broken government,” a broad bipartisan consensus is emerging in one unlikely area: foreign policy. On Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran — the most expensive and potentially dangerous foreign challenges facing the United States — little separates the Obama administration from most Republican leaders in and out of Congress. A substantial majority of Republicans has supported President Obama’s troop surge in Afghanistan. Both the administration and the Republican opposition are committed to a stable, increasingly democratic Iraq. On Iran, differences have narrowed as engagement gives way to pressure on what Secretary of State Hillary Clinton calls the “military dictatorship” in Tehran. And Republicans have to admit that Obama’s prolonged effort at engagement accomplished what George W. Bush never could: convincing most of the world, including most Democrats, that Iran does not want any deal that threatens its nuclear weapons program. Partisan divisiveness will return only if the administration backs down from its own stated objectives.


    Obama risks alienating Latinos with lack of immigration reform
    I have known Barack Obama since 1986, when we were both community organizers. I am still organizing on the streets of Chicago, and what I see in the Latino community makes me fear that the president is oblivious to the pain wrought by our broken immigration system. It could have a profound effect on the 2010 and 2012 elections.

    Over Turkish protests, House panel calls killing of Armenians ‘genocide’
    A congressional committee voted Thursday to label as “genocide” the Ottoman-era slaughter of Armenians, shrugging off a last-minute warning from Obama administration officials that it would alienate Turkey, a key U.S. ally.

    U.S. criticized on Iran sanctions
    The Obama administration is pushing to carve out an exemption for China and other permanent members of the U.N. Security Council from legislation pending in the Senate and the House that would tighten sanctions on companies doing business in Iran, administration and congressional sources said.


  • Obama Rebuilding Trust With Pakistan

    Obama Rebuilding Trust With Pakistan
    David Ignatius, Washington Post

    We Must Do Whatever It Takes to Pass Bill
    Rep. John Dingell, Detroit News
    The newest incarnation of federal health insurance reform will be bipartisan in terms of ideas, but it unfortunately looks doubtful we will have bipartisan support. That said, there is little debate about the course of our current health insurance system — we can't afford the status quo. Warren Buffett has said that, as have the chief executive officers of the Business Roundtable. Companies can't cover health care expenses — which is why we see downsizing, stagnation and shrinking benefits. AdvertisementFamilies can't handle the costs — and as a result we are seeing more…

    The Democrats’ Choice on Health Care

  • Going Nuclear, Again

    Going Nuclear, Again
    Get ready for the new nuclear option. You may remember the old version, legislatively speaking, which came up during the George W. Bush-era controversy over filibustering judicial nominees. By Ruth Marcus

    Get ready for the new nuclear option. You may remember the old version, legislatively speaking, which came up during the George W. Bush-era controversy over filibustering judicial nominees.

    Related Entries


    Weir and Behar Rise Above ‘Nasty’ Talk at the Olympics
    Joy Behar was all kinds of brassy sympathy on her show Tuesday night as she chatted with U.S. figure skater Johnny Weir about how “two Canadian commentatehs” clearly couldn’t get ready for Weir’s unique brand of fierceness on ice during a regrettable moment of Olympic reportage.

    Weir

    Joy Behar was all kinds of brassy sympathy on her show Tuesday night as she chatted with U.S. figure skater Johnny Weir about how “two Canadian commentatehs” clearly couldn’t get ready for Weir’s unique brand of fierceness on ice during a regrettable moment of Olympic reportage.

    Related Entries


  • Jobs Bill: House Expected To Pass New Hire Tax Credit, Highway Funds

    Jobs Bill: House Expected To Pass New Hire Tax Credit, Highway Funds
    WASHINGTON — A measure blending highway funding eagerly sought by the states with tax breaks for companies that hire unemployed workers appeared headed for House…

    Janine R. Wedel: Shadow Elite: Why Did Military Top Brass Flout Its Own Chain of Command?
    This post was co-authored by Linda Keenan and Janine R. Wedel. In December, Major General Michael T. Flynn told a reporter, “I’ve always operated so…

    Sarah Palin Reality Show? Palin Shopping Alaska TV Docudrama
    Sarah Palin is making the most of her time in LA. Fresh off her appearance on the “Tonight Show,” Palin is meeting with network executives…

    Leo W. Gerard: Bunning Put a Face on Obstructionist, Mean-Spirited Republican Party
    Sen. Jim Bunning, the Kentucky Republican who single-handedly delayed unemployment benefits for 400,000 desperate Americans and forced an unnecessary furlough of another 2,000, should…

    Pete Stark Runs Into Resistance As Rangel’s Interim Ways And Means Replacement
    Rep. Pete Stark (Calif.) may have the shortest chairmanship in the young history of the House Democratic majority….

  • Malkin and Hannity falsely claimed Rep. Stark has an “ethics scandal”

    Malkin and Hannity falsely claimed Rep. Stark has an “ethics scandal”

    On Fox News’ Hannity, Michelle Malkin falsely claimed that Rep. Pete Stark has “his own ethics scandal … regarding a house that he claimed deductions for apparently in Maryland.” In fact, the House ethics committee flatly rejected these allegations and concluded that Stark did not seek a Maryland property tax credit and did not violate Maryland law or House rules.

    From the March 3 edition of Fox News’ Hannity:

    HANNITY: The story gets more interesting now, because you’ve got [Rep. Charles] Rangel’s [D-NY] successor [as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee], a guy by the name of Congressman Pete Stark [D-CA], who himself has been investigated for ethics violations.

    […]

    MALKIN: And then, of course, his own ethics scandal, as you mentioned, regarding a house that he claimed deductions for apparently in Maryland, and then he went and cussed the people who were investigating that as well.

    Ethics committee flatly rejected allegations against Stark

    Ethics committee: Stark did not violate Maryland law or House rules. In a January 29 report, the House ethics committee flatly rejected allegations that Stark “violated Maryland criminal tax law and ethics rules of the House of Representatives by intentionally filing a false application for a Maryland property tax credit.” The ethics committee found that Stark “did not violate House ethics rules. Nor did he run afoul of Maryland’s criminal or tax laws.”

    Ethics committee: Stark did not “seek” tax credit and did not “file a false application.” The ethics committee found:

    The evidence clearly establishes that Representative Stark did not receive a tax credit as a result of filing an application for the credit. The evidence also establishes that he did not file a false application for the Maryland property tax credit.

    Representative Stark did not seek out the Maryland property tax credit. The State of Maryland required every homeowner in Maryland to fill out a form to determine their eligibility for the tax credit.

    Therefore, Representative Stark did not violate House ethics rules. Nor did he run afoul of Maryland’s criminal or tax laws.

  • Rove Lifts Veil on Bush Presidency

    Rove Lifts Veil on Bush Presidency
    The New York Times previews next week’s release of Karl Rove’s memoir, Courage and Confidence.

    “The book is the latest in a stream by top figures from the Bush administration. Mr. Rove’s may carry special interest given his outsized reputation as the political maestro who vaulted a Texas governor to the presidency and guided him through a tumultuous tenure that saw war, terrorism, natural disaster and recession. A hero to conservatives and villain to liberals, Mr. Rove may be the most high-profile White House aide in modern times.”

    The Washington Post notes Rove claims in the book not to know why President Bush gave him the nickname “Turd Blossom.”

    Democratic Retirements in Tough Districts to Defend
    Rep. Eric Massa’s (D-NY) surprise retirement announcement yesterday was overshadowed by the controversy why he was leaving but it’s important to note that he’s the seventh House Democrat leaving a seat that Sen. John McCain won in the 2008 presidential election.

    While it’s true that more House Republicans have decided not to seek re-election, the vast majority of them are from solidly Republican districts that shouldn’t be too hard for the GOP to defend.

    The Fix: “Remember, too, that filing deadlines have passed in only eight states. The next month, which includes filing deadlines in places like California (March 12), Iowa (March 19) and Missouri (March 30), will be critical in determining just how bad it is going to get for Democrats this fall.”

    CQ Politics has the complete list of members in transition this cycle.

  • Glenn Beck Is Still Smearing Van Jones, Even After Jones Takes High Road Preaching ‘Love’ for Fox Host

    Glenn Beck Is Still Smearing Van Jones, Even After Jones Takes High Road Preaching ‘Love’ for Fox Host
    Six months after Gateway Pundit forced Jones’ White House resignation over a 9/11 petition, Beck revives ridiculous red-baiting act.

    Six months after Gateway Pundit forced Jones' White House resignation over a 9/11 petition, Beck revives ridiculous red-baiting act.

    Anti-Pot Propaganda As Stupid As Ever — Yet Our Alarmist Media Continues to Hype It
    Once again mainstream media are running wild with the absurd notion that marijuana use causes psychological problems, despite much evidence to the contrary.

    Once again mainstream media are running wild with the absurd notion that marijuana use causes psychological problems, despite much evidence to the contrary.

    Obama Adopts Bush Plan to Hide Outsourced Job Data
    The U.S. is hemorrhaging jobs thanks to terrible trade policies. Instead of fixing the problem, Obama wants to hide the data.

    The U.S. is hemorrhaging jobs thanks to terrible trade policies. Instead of fixing the problem, Obama wants to hide the data.

    How the Monsters at Goldman Sachs Caused a Greek Tragedy
    Greece’s crushing debt has exploded into a full-blown crisis, with the country on the precipice of the unthinkable: the default of a sovereign nation. Thanks Goldman Sachs.

    Greece's crushing debt has exploded into a full-blown crisis, with the country on the precipice of the unthinkable: the default of a sovereign nation. Thanks Goldman Sachs.

  • The Narrative

    The Narrative
    [In which I vent about the ‘public mood’ by voicing the argument as it sounds to me.] “Why do we have all this bickering over health care? Obviously the real priority is the economy and jobs, which don’t have anything…


    United StatesPoliticsHealthHealth careHealth Policy

    The Enthusiasm Gap
    I had dinner the other night with a Democratic pollster who told me Dems are heading toward next fall’s mid-term elections with a serious enthusiasm gap: The Republican base is fired up. The Dem base is packing up. The Dem…


    DemocraticUnited States midterm electionPoliticsNancy PelosiUnited States

  • In Just Over 12 Hours, Romney Goes From Praising To Attacking Obama On Afghanistan

    In Just Over 12 Hours, Romney Goes From Praising To Attacking Obama On Afghanistan
    Yesterday, former Gov. Mitt Romney made the rounds on various television shows as part of a promotional tour for his new book, “No Apology: The Case For American Greatness.” During an interview on NBC’s Today show, host Matt Lauer noted that Romney has “been having a good time taking some shots at President Obama over […]

    Yesterday, former Gov. Mitt Romney made the rounds on various television shows as part of a promotional tour for his new book, “No Apology: The Case For American Greatness.” During an interview on NBC’s Today show, host Matt Lauer noted that Romney has “been having a good time taking some shots at President Obama over the last several months.” When Lauer asked if Obama has “done anything right,” Romney cited the President’s Afghanistan policy:

    LAUER: Has President Obama done anything right, anything good in the past 12 months?

    ROMNEY: Yeah. No question about it, he’s done several things well. … He boosted our effort in Afghanistan, which is the right course to take.

    Yet nearly 12 hours later on Fox News, Romney attacked the President’s handling of Afghanistan, claiming that Obama had diverted attention away from Afghanistan to focus on health care, which he dubbed a “classic error”:

    HANNITY: Do you think Barack Obama is tone deaf? What do you think of him?

    ROMNEY: Look, I think he’s a lot worse than tone deaf. I think he has such a low level of experience in dealing with tough situations like this that he’s made some classic errors. One of which is not to focus on job one from the first day he was in office. And that, of course, was getting jobs back to the American people. And then the second issue should have been making sure that we’re successful in our fight against terrorism around the world particularly in Afghanistan. But instead he diverted onto health care.

    Watch a compilation:

    Romney’s quick shift should probably come as no surprise. During his run for president in 2008, his penchant for changing positions on a number of key issues — including abortion, gay rights, and immigration — in order to placate to the right-wing base became widely known.

    Most recently, Romney has now flipped back to supporting comprehensive immigration reform (something he supported as late as 2005 before he derided it during the campaign) and just last September, Romney attacked the bank bailouts he had once supported.

    The Washington Independent’s Spencer Ackerman notes that in his new book, Romney “has absolutely nothing to say” about the 8-year-old Afghanistan conflict. “He proposes expanding the counterinsurgency capabilities of the military,” Ackerman writes, “but manages to say absolutely nothing about what they ought to do in Afghanistan, except for the content-free platitude that ‘we must draw upon the resources of our entire military.’”

  • Four Democratic senators aim to halt stimulus wind project

    Four Democratic senators aim to halt stimulus wind project
    A group of Democratic senators called Wednesday for the government to halt a federal stimulus program aimed at building wind farms and other clean-energy projects, arguing that too much of the money spent so far has gone to create jobs overseas.

    Conservatives raise ruckus over Justice appointees’ prior work with detainees
    Conservatives who are unhappy with the decision to close the prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have trained their fire on an unusual target: political appointees in the Obama Justice Department who represented detainees earlier in their careers.

    Democrats vow quick end to ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ as Senate bill is introduced
    Leading Senate Democrats pledged Wednesday to move quickly to repeal the ban on gays serving openly in the armed forces rather than wait, as the Pentagon has requested, for the military to complete a lengthy review.

    Karl Rove’s memoir takes to the defense of the Bush legacy
    Former president George W. Bush did not mislead the nation about weapons of mass destruction as a way to “lie us” into war, his former top political aide, Karl Rove, asserts in a new memoir, “Courage and Consequence.”


    Republican fundraising document portrays Democrats as evil
    Democrats on Wednesday sharply criticized a Republican National Committee fundraising document that caricatured President Obama as the Joker, while Chairman Michael S. Steele sought to distance himself from it.


  • In Praise of the Tea Party Movement

    In Praise of the Tea Party Movement
    Jay Ambrose, Orange County Register

    Rick Perry’s Big Win in Texas
    Michael Barone, Washington Examiner

    3rd Term for Jerry Brown, 27 Years Later?
    Richard Paddock, Politics Daily