• Morning cartoon round-up

    Marco Rubio continues to remain in the focus of the Romney veep-stakes, both candidates face a do-nothing Congress and Ron Paul is still in the face. Here is our morning round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...

    Jeff Parker / Florida Today (click to view more cartoons by Parker)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen (click to view more cartoons by Cardow)

    Joe Heller / Green Bay Press-Gazette (click to view more cartoons by Heller)

    Jimmy Margulies / The Record (click to view more cartoons by Margulies)



     

  • Afternoon cartoon round-up

    The economic recovery continues to lag, Fox News sidesteps the facts and the Post Office fights for its own survival. Here is our afternoon round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...

    Gary McCoy / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by McCoy)

    Nate Beeler / Washington Examiner (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Bagley)

    Chris Weyant / The Hill (click to view more cartoons by Weyant)

    Osama Hajjaj / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Hajjaj)



     

  • Morning cartoon round-up: Gingrich finished?

    If it wasn’t desperate enough that Newt Gingrich made Delaware his Waterloo, Newt was completely routed last night by Mitt Romney in all five primaries. Gingrich plans to move on to North Carolina, who holds their primary next Tuesday, but he did finally indicate that over the next couple of days, his campaign is “going to look realistically at where we’re at.”

    Here’s a round-up of cartoons about desperate Newt…

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Rick McKee / Augusta Chronicle (click to view more cartoons by McKee)

    Adam Zyglis / Buffalo News (click to view more cartoons by Zyglis)

    Larry Wright / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by Wright)



     

  • Afternoon cartoon round-up

    Graduates face an uncertain employment future, Earth Day is already forgotten and John Edwards starts his trial. Here is our afternoon round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...

    Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Bagley)

    Jeremy Nell / The New Age, South Africa (click to view more cartoons by Nell)

    Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    Dave Granlund / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Granlund)



     

  • Sarkozy's Election: Five Cartoons

    It’s interesting that Americans tend to disregard presidential elections in other countries, while our foreign counterparts wait with baited breath for Obama and Romney to go after one another.

    It’s too bad, because there’s a really interesting election shaping up in France between incumbent president Nicolas Sarkozy and Socialist candidate Francois Hollande. The two came neck and neck in the first round of the country’s presidential election, with the final round between the two set for May 6. Things aren’t looking good for Sarkozy, and if he’s defeated, he’d become the first president in France’s history not to serve two terms.

    We have a great stable of foreign cartoonists that have been covering this race, so I thought I’d share five terrific cartoons here on my blog…

    Joep Bertrams / The Netherlands, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Bertrams)

    Patrick Chappattee / Switzerland, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Chappatte)

    Petar Pismestrovic / Austria, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Pismestrovic)

    Hajo / The Netherlands, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Hajo)

    Dario Castillejos / Mexico, Politicalcartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Castillejos)



     

  • Five Great Earth Day Cartoons

    Happy Earth Day! Each April 22, Earth Day marks the anniversary of what many consider the birth of the modern environmental movement in 1970. The idea came to founder Gaylord Nelson, then a U.S. Senator from Wisconsin, after witnessing the aftermath of the horrific 1969 oil spill in Santa Barbara, California.

    Every year around this time, cartoonists weigh in on the fate of the planet, so I thought I’d pull together five terrific cartoons about Earth Day for your environment-loving enjoyment…

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Adam Zyglis / Buffalo News (click to view more cartoons by Zyglis)

    Steve Greenberg / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Greenberg)

    Loujie / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by Loujie)

    Tab / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Tab)



     

  • South African Cartoonist Zapiro Talks Press Censorship, Showerheads

    Fans of American editorial cartoons might not be too familiar with brilliant cartoonist Jonathan Shapiro, who goes by the pen name “Zapiro.” He is the most famous cartoonist working in South Africa, and his hard-hitting cartoons have garnered the attention of the entire country, including its president Jacob Zuma.

    Using a tactic often employed in oppressive regimes to crack down on freedom of the press, Zuma is currently suing Zapiro for five million rand (about $640,000) over his 2008 “Rape of Lady Justice” cartoon. The lawsuit is set for trial in the South Gauteng High Court on August 28.

    I sat with Zapiro while attending this year’s Cartooning for Peace event in Caen, France, and we spoke about lawsuits, freedom of the press in South Africa and the origin of the famous showerhead that Zapiro always draws on top of Zuma’s head.

    Here are some of Zapiro’s famous cartoons, including the famous rape scene. To view our collection of his cartoons,  click here. You can also visit his Web site here.


     

  • Cartoonists Dig In on Obama Dog Meat Story

    This week, The Daily Caller “broke” the story that while living in Indonesia with his stepfather, a young President Obama ate many adventurous meals, including dog meat.

    From a passage of his book “Dreams From My Father,” Obama recounts that he “learned how to eat small green chili peppers raw with dinner (plenty of rice), and, away from the dinner table, I was introduced to dog meat (tough), snake meat (tougher), and roasted grasshopper (crunchy).”

    Romney supporters leaped on the news, as the former Massachusetts governor has been dogged by the story of  the family’s Irish setter Seamus, who traveled in a crate strapped to the top of the family’s station wagon on a 1983 trip from Boston to Canada.

    Leave it to our terrific conservative cartoonist Eric Allie to nail the president with his latest cartoon:

    Nate Beeler, the new staff cartoonist for the Columbus Dispatch, also weighed in on “Dogmeatgate”:

    I asked Nate about his dog meat cartoon, and if he thought either dog story were fair game for reporters. Here are his thoughts:

    The “Obama ate a dog” story was too juicy (apologies) to ignore. It’s just plain funny. Adding to the comedy is the fact that people are talking about the candidates’ decades-ago treatment of dogs in the first place. Obama’s campaign is “obsessed with the dog thing,” as even liberal commentators like Chris Hayes acknowledge. And now Romney supporters will obsess over the ate-a-dog thing. There are much bigger fish to fry — and like most people, I prefer seafood over canine. When it comes to election politics, fairness goes out the window. I hope my cartoon helps highlight how silly it is.

    So what do you think – is it fair to attack Obama on something he did as a child? Comment below and let us know, or leave a note on our Facebook page.


     

     

  • The Future of Manned Spaceflight: Five Cartoons

    This week, the nation seemed fixated by images of the space shuttle Discovery flying over Washington on the back of a 747. The shuttle program has long been an symbol of American innovation and captured the imagination of millions across the globe, but with nothing in the pipeline to take its place, seeing the old workhorse circle around the Capital seems just like a sad reminder of an America in decline.

    Here are five terrific cartoons that comment on our suddenly listless future of manned space flight.

    Jeff Parker / Florida Today (click to view more cartoons by Parker)

    Chris Weyant / The Hill (click to view more cartoons by Weyant)

    John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Cole)

    Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    Bob Englehart / Hartford Courant (click to view more cartoons by Englehart)