Your Abbreviated Pundit Round-up
14 seconds ago
No one disputes that Domenici's call to Iglesias was at best inappropriate. But there's been a lack of direct evidence that Iglesias's refusal to bow to political pressure led directly to his firing. Now we have that evidence. And it's not Kyle Sampson or even Alberto Gonzales whom Domenici went to to get sign off for Iglesias's ouster. It was right to the president. And the available evidence now points strongly to the conclusion that the final decision to fire David Iglesias came from the President of the United States.This scandal gets uglier every day. No wonder all the players have either been lying about it -- or taking the Fifth. The loyal Bushies are protecting Bush. Read More......
The evangelical Christian movement conjures up a very negative picture to many Europeans and to more than a few Americans. A Bloomberg/Los Angeles Times poll last year found that more than one-fifth of Americans would not vote for an evangelical Christian for president, far more than those who ruled out a Jew or a Catholic.Read More......
This picture is of a narrow, bigoted collection of pious people who wish to impose their politics and religion on the United States. It is reinforced by the likes of James Dobson, an influential religious leader who recently pronounced a Republican presidential hopeful, Fred Thompson, as insufficiently Christian. There is another portrait. It is contained in an interesting book, "Applebee's America," written by Ron Fournier, a journalist; Doug Sosnik, formerly a political strategist for President Bill Clinton; and Matthew Dowd, who helped run President George W. Bush's 2004 campaign. It focuses on the megachurches, home to much of the evangelical Christian movement.
The authors' conclusion: "They're not all gun toting, gay-bashing Republican Party pawns."
The book notes that exit polls from the 2004 election found that 60 percent of the attendees at megachurches are women; almost one-quarter are African-American or Hispanic; half are independents or Democrats, and their views on issues like abortion and homosexuality are close to those of the general public.
This is the evangelical movement of Rick Warren, a best-selling author and head of the Saddleback Church in California, one of the largest congregations in America.
Warren and Dobson are a microcosm of the controversy and confusion over the role evangelical Christians play in American social and political life. Warren is about inclusion and hope. Dobson is about exclusion and polarization.
Democrats know they might lose this month's showdown with President Bush on legislation to pull troops out of Iraq. But with 2008 elections in mind, majority Democrats says it is only a matter of time before they will get their way. Senior Democrats are calculating that if they keep the pressure on, eventually more Republicans will jump ship and challenge the president - or lose their seats to Democratic contenders.The irony is that the GOP picked up Senate seats in 2002 because of Bush's build up to the Iraq war. That same batch of GOP Senators who won in 2002 because of Bush and his war are going to lose in 2008 because of Bush and his war. Read More......
"It's at least my belief that they are going to have to break because they're going to look extinction, some of them, in the eye," said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., of his Republican colleagues.
Added Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.: "We're going to pick up Senate seats as a result of this war."
FOX NEWS SUNDAY...: Sens. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.) and Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.); the Rev. Al Sharpton; and National Security Archive Director Thomas S. Blanton.Watch and comment. Or just talk about anything.
THIS WEEK (ABC...: Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D).
NEWSMAKERS (C-SPAN), 10 a.m. [EST]: FDA Administrator Andrew C. von Eschenbach.
FACE THE NATION (CBS....: Vice President Cheney.
MEET THE PRESS (NBC...: Retired Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni.
LATE EDITION (CNN), 11 a.m. [EST]: Sens. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) and James Webb (D-Va.); National Urban League President Marc Morial; Children's Defense Fund President Marian Wright Edelman; American Enterprise Institute fellow Richard Perle; Iraqi government spokesman Ali Dabbagh; and former vice president Walter Mondale.
Thousands of police officers massed to keep the demonstrators off landmark Pushkin Square in downtown Moscow, beating some and detaining many others, including Garry Kasparov, the former world chess champion who has emerged as the most prominent leader of the opposition alliance.Read More......
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