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Friday, July 14, 2006

GOP approval still going down



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They keep going and going...
Republicans are in jeopardy of losing their grip on Congress in November. With less than four months to the midterm elections, the latest Associated Press-Ipsos poll found that Americans by an almost 3-to-1 margin hold the GOP-controlled Congress in low regard and profess a desire to see Democrats wrest control after a dozen years of Republican rule.

Further complicating the GOP outlook to turn things around is a solid percentage of liberals, moderates and even conservatives who say they'll vote Democratic. The party out of power also holds the edge among persuadable voters, a prospect that doesn't bode well for the Republicans.
I know Chris in Paris wrote earlier that he doesn't think the Dems will take back the House or Senate, but I disagree. Yes, we've had a few too many elections steal defeat from the jaws of the victor y, but I've been around long enough (sadly) to have seen both Republicans and Democrats lament that they'd never win again (you should have seen the Republicans from the inside in 1992, it was the "end of the world"). The cycle of loser-dom goes back and forth.

The Republicans are in serious trouble. I've got a post I'm putting up a little later with an example of why I have that sense in my gut. Does it prove we'll win in November? No. But the stars are aligning exactly how we'd want them to in order to have a victory. And that means we keep pounding and pounding and pounding them, no matter how long it takes, no matter how much we might fear defeat, until we win. And in the end, we will.

(Hat tip Atrios) Read the rest of this post...

"A new kind of courage is needed in journalism"



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Walter Pincus via Nieman Watchdog:
Courage in journalism today takes all the obvious, traditional forms -- reporting from a war zone or from a totalitarian country where a reporter's life or safety are issues. In Washington, D.C., where I work, it's a far less dramatic form of courage if a journalist stands up to a government official or a politician who he or she has reason to believe is not telling the truth or living up to his or her responsibilities.

But I believe a new kind of courage is needed in journalism....

A new element of courage in journalism would be for editors and reporters to decide not to cover the President's statements when he -- or any public figure -- repeats essentially what he or she has said before. The Bush team also has brought forward another totally PR gimmick: The President stands before a background that highlights the key words of his daily message. This tactic serves only to reinforce that what's going on is public relations -- not governing. Journalistic courage should include the refusal to publish in a newspaper or carry on a TV or radio news show any statements made by the President or any other government official that are designed solely as a public relations tool, offering no new or valuable information to the public.
Read the rest of this post...

A taste of the troubles ahead for the GOP come this fall



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These are all five stories on Yahoo's "Election News" coverage. Every single one of them is about Republicans in trouble.

Read the rest of this post...

Middle East crisis: round and round it goes, where it stops, nobody knows



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It's very difficult to assess violent flare-ups, especially in a place as complex as the Middle East, while the conflict is raging. By the time one catches up with the news, something else has happened. But many people at this site and throughout the blogosphere have expressed confusion about what's going on, so here's a quick rundown and as much assessment as I can responsibly do in the midst of a raging conflict.

The abridged backstory is this: On June 25, an Israeli soldier was kidnapped by purported Hamas militants, supposedly in retaliation for a June 9 Israeli artillery hit on a Gaza beach which killed seven and wounded dozens. Israel initially issued an apology, but later said that the explosion could not have come from their artillery and was likely an old unexploded bomb on the beach or the result of a militant group's screwup. Two things about this initial exchange: first, it's weird that Israel would first apologize and then, after an investigation, deny responsibility. From initial reports, I thought the beach strike was likely either stray artillery or a mistake from the belief that the area was uninhabited, but at this point, it's impossible to know. I don't trust either side to be honest about an event like that. Also, the kidnapping, while supposedly retributive, was probably the result of a target of opportunity. Having an Israeli soldier hostage is pretty much as good as it gets for a militant group: strategically, it captures the heart of the entire Israeli nation, and tactically, Israel is sometimes willing to exchange huge numbers of prisoners for a small number of its own people.

In response to the kidnapping, and reacting to its apparent sanction by the Hamas government (which had officially ended the previous 16-month-old cease-fire after the Gaza beach deaths), Israel began a massive incursion into Gaza. The movement included destroying Gaza's only power plant, which, among other things, caused a severe humanitarian crisis. Militants in Gaza stepped up their shelling of Israeli border towns and Israel's army carried out operations which reportedly killed both militants and civilians.

At this point, the conflict was a crisis, but one which was relatively contained. As of early July, the tension was definitely simmering, and the implications for Israel-Palestinian relations were pretty bad. Regional powers, however, were generally keeping their powder dry.

Let me pause to say that, frankly, the acts on both sides at that point were terrible. I find hostage-taking exceptionally repulsive, and the constant -- if largely ineffective -- shelling of Israeli territory by militants is awful, especially considering much of it was occurring under a putative cease-fire. Conversely, Israel's destruction of infrastructure punished Palestinians who had nothing to do with any militant activity, and could be construed as collective punishment, which is expressly forbidden by the Geneva Conventions and other international law. But I'm not going to try to assign tiered moral blame, I'll leave that to pundits more self-righteous than I.

Two days ago, of course, Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based terrorist group (and political party) rashly, and I think unforgivably, upped the ante by staging a raid, kidnapping two Israeli soldiers and killing three others. Action by Hezbollah inevitably regionalizes conflict because it is based in Lebanon, where it's a political party with significant power in the parliament, but it's also supported (and controlled, to an extent that is hotly debated) by Syria and Iran. This was an unconscionable adventure by Hezbollah, one that immediately turned a limited crisis into a greater one. Israel viewed the action as an act of war, and prepared to respond vigorously. It's really important to note that while the Gaza and Lebanon crises are related (in that they're both generally motivated by the Israel/Palestinian conflict), they are separate things. Different political issues, different militants, etc.

The fairly elected government of Lebanon (everybody remember 2005's Cedar Revolution?) doesn't have control over Hezbollah, which is probably the most highly functional organization in the country, and the only one that is significantly armed. When Syrian troops were in Lebanon, they could assert some authority over militant activity, but they're gone, and Hezbollah largely filled that vacuum of armed authority. Over the last two days, Israel has carried out massive retaliatory strikes in Lebanon, its most significant offensive there in 24 years. Israel has struck most major highways (including the primary route from Beirut to Damascus), the Beirut airport, a variety of Hezbollah-controlled areas, and other targets. This offensive continues as the international community scrambles to figure out what the hell it can do.

Timeout for more moral reprobation: Israel, due to having great military power and an elected democracy, has a responsibility to avoid punishing innocents for the actions of barbarians. With special power comes special responsibility. Collective punishment is a bad, bad thing, and the line between that an collateral damage can be a fine one. Conversely, one cannot overestimate the damage done by Hezbollah (and its state supporters, if they in any way sanctioned the kidnappings) in this situation. Israel, keyed up by the Gaza situation, was in no mood to be provoked, and the Hezbollah kidnapping was a terrible provocation.

So . . . what now? There are some cooler heads, among them tangential regional powers (e.g. Saudi Arabia) and even Secretary Rice, all of whom condemned Hezbollah and also urged Israel to utilize diplomacy and patience. Israel (Olmert, supposedly) reportedly told her to back off, and this morning's tepid statement from the Bush administration asking Israel to try to "limit . . . collateral damage" signals that the U.S. will sit this one out, at least for now. Yikes.

As usual, all politics is local. Bush knows that his evangelical base is vehemently pro-Israel (or, I should say, pro-Likud). Olmert knows that he can't look weak after withdrawing from Gaza, so he has to respond forcefully to provocation. The Lebanese government knows that it is in serious danger of being toppled, after which new elections would likely favor Hezbollah (currently a minority party) due to nationalist anger over the Israeli incursion. Hezbollah knows this as well, and so has a political interest in maintaining the violence. Iran and Syria certainly aren't unhappy about the mayhem, as it ties up the attention of U.S. and Israel, as well as undermining international support for both.

One of the scariest and most dangerous things about war is the randomness of its course. It's impossible to predict how this will end up: if Hezbollah rockets continue to miss Haifa, perhaps a diplomatic solution is in the cards; if fate lands one in the midst of Israeli civilians, fighting could go on for weeks or months. If Hezbollah moves the captives to Syria, that could open up another front; if Israel manages to rescue the soldiers quickly, that would go a long way towards management of the crisis. As for U.S. interests in the region, we've got 20 million restive Shia in Iraq around 130,000 American troops as this whole thing plays out, with the Sunni Speaker of Parliament in Iraq blaming Iraq's violence on "the Jews." History may look back at this series of weeks and say it was inevitable in one way or another, but unpredictable events will steer the course over the coming days and weeks. Read the rest of this post...

Open thread



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Don't forget, you can sign up to get AMERICAblog by email, for free. We're using a service called FeedBlitz, and you simply sign up with your email address and you'll get one email each morning containing everything posted on AMERICAblog in the previous 24 hours. It really is a great way to read the past 24 hours of Ablog on your PDA each morning, or to download the site, so to speak, via email and read it on your laptop during your flight, or even more simply, for those of you who find you read your email but don't always have time to surf the Web, this way you can get the Web in a format you prefer (email).

Anyway, if you're interested, the sign-up is in the left-hand column of the blog, top left. Read the rest of this post...

Court Restores Nebraska's Same-Sex Marriage Ban



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AP via NYT.
Supporters of banning gay marriage won two major court rulings Friday, with a federal appeals court reinstating Nebraska's voter-approved ban on same-sex marriage and the Tennessee Supreme Court ruling that voters should have a say on the issue.

Last week, the highest courts in two others states also dealt gay rights advocates setbacks. The New York court rejected a bid by same-sex couples to win marriage rights, and the Georgia court reinstated a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage there.
Gosh, so, contrary to what Republicans claim, America's courts really are independent and do evaluate issues based on the merits, and sometimes they come down on the side of the guys you like and sometimes they come down on the side of the guys you don't like.

Who could ever have imagined that the framers of the Constitution and the founders of our country actually got it right? Read the rest of this post...

Cliff's Corner



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The Week That Was 7/07/06

Another week. More preposterousness to report.

Well thank God we elected a man to set US foreign policy who considers going to Tijuana on a ganja run "informative international travel." Remember all that big talk about the adults coming into office in 2000, delivering that humble foreign policy we were promised. "No nation-building" and all that? I guess humble to the GOP means either immorally invading countries based upon lies and misinformation or entirely ignoring festering problems at home until Bush and his buddies can toast their marshmallows over the flames of war they’ve watched commence on DirectTV.

What is telling right now is that the fact that eight bombs which killed over 200 people in Mumbai barely rate mention on the news, because terrorist attacks likely carried out by Kashmiri extremists aren’t important. It’s not like mortal enemies India and Pakistan have nuclear weapons. Oh, that’s right, they do. But it’s not like they’ve threatened to use them on each other. Ok, they’ve done that too. But at least President Bush doesn’t think that India’s president’s name is Crazy Horse. Oh…right.

And North Korea's Taepodong-2 Missile must be mainlining cocktails right now like Dick Cheney holding a shotgun and eyeing a campaign contributor. I mean this poor projectile goes to all the trouble to convince Japan to consider abrogating its constitution in favor of launching a military strike against North Korea, and yet, this week it has fared about as well as Mary Cheney’s book sales. Last week Taepodong was all the hype. But then Iraq had to go Civil War-ing and the rest of the Middle East had to decide to do its impression of 1973.

Somewhere there's a Neocon who won't have to resort to Marey Carey videos for that usual pick me up this weekend.

So is Bush responsible for all of this? No, of course not for EVERYTHING. But why not go through a checklist of the above and see where The Decider has helped our world become a more special place for all of us whose reading list isn't restricted to the Left Behind series or upside-down goat books.
  • Inflame Muslim World... Check.
  • Alternatively threatening and ignoring North Korea while splitting time between starting war in Iraq, choking on snack food and playing with Lego dinosaurs... Check.
  • Unnecessary war started in Iraq while shutting down CIA unit charged with finding Osama... Check.
  • Spending key homeland security funds on protecting dog parks in Kalamazoo... Check.
  • Kissing young boy’s stomach in creepy display of affection. (Ok, that was an entirely different authoritarian jackass, but some Bush Administration members have contemplated it.)... Half a check.
  • Kissing Sharon’s ass in Israel, when he was still with us (as opposed to say, doing something nutty and working with those who actually seek peace and security, i.e., Israel's Labor Party), and lecturing the Israelis on restraint while carpet-bombing Fallujah - proving we practice what Bush would like to preach during prayer-time in public schools... Check.
So there you have it. The greatest legacy of the Bush Administration. War and wanton destruction. It’s enough to make one proud of a budget deficit that’s ONLY $300 billion. Read the rest of this post...

Report from Valerie Plame's press conference this morning about her lawsuit against Cheney, Rove and Libby (among others)



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AP has the goods:
Former CIA officer Valerie Plame and her husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, said Friday they decided to sue Vice President Dick Cheney and presidential adviser Karl Rove because they engaged in a "whispering campaign" to destroy her career.

Plame told at a news conference that "I and my former colleagues trusted the government to protect us in our jobs" and said it "betrayed that trust. I'd much rather be continuing my career as a public servant than as a plaintiff in a lawsuit."

Said Wilson: "We are under no illusions about how tough this fight will be. But we believe the time has come to hold those who use their official positions to exact personal revenge accountable and responsible for their actions." His wife said they decided to pursue the lawsuit with "heavy hearts."
Read the rest of this post...

Conservative youth group bans liberal youth group from conference



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The conservative group, Young America's Foundation, has told Campus Progress (a division of the Center for American Progress, which also publishes Think Progress) that they will not be allowed to attend the YAF conference as media. Why? Because Campus Progress is liberal.

Interestingly, Campus Progress let the Young America's Foundation cover its conference, twice (including this year). But it gets better. The guy at the YAF who banned Campus Progress' reporter from attending - he's the same guy who was accredited to attend both of Campus Progress' conferences.

Think Progress is asking folks to take action on this one - they tell you how in their post, please do. Campus Progress is a great group, I just spoke at their conference yesterday. They deserve our help. Read the rest of this post...

Creepy speculation about Bush spying on political opponents



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As Josh Marshall notes, it's difficult to interpret this any other way.

And Atrios weighs in on the rather bizarre reality that conservatives are sitting back and accepting one of the largest big-government, authoritarian power-grabs in American history.
It appears Specter is moving ahead with his bullshit bill to provide amnesty for the executive branch's criminal activities, legalize those criminal activities, and then have the FISA court rule on the much more narrow question of whether warrantless wiretapping violates the 4th amendment.

It occurs to me that we're at a fascinating moment in political history. Just about all the leading lights of the conservatarian movement in this country are on the record as being in support of the executive branch's right to spy on American citizens, tapping their phone calls, without any judicial oversight. So much for freedom and small nonintrusive government and all that crap.
Read the rest of this post...

Where does Bush stand on mideast conflict?



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Things are escalting quickly between Hezbollah and Israel, gas is at $77 a barrel and the White House doesn't have a clear position. CNN reports:
According to a statement from Siniora, "President Bush affirmed his readiness to put pressure on Israel to limit the damage to Lebanon as a result of the current military action, and to spare civilians from harm," The Associated Press reported. The Bush administration did not comment on the conversation.
Another report has him defending Israel:
US PRESIDENT George Bush yesterday defended Israel’s attacks on targets in Lebanon but said the Israelis should be careful not to weaken the fragile government there.
While another now has Bush claiming that Israel will stop:
Fouad Siniora, the Lebanese prime minister, said in a statement that he had spoken with Bush. "President Bush affirmed his readiness to put pressure on Israel to limit the damage to Lebanon as a result of the current military action, and to spare civilians from harm," the statement said. The White House confirmed the call.
So which one is it? Read the rest of this post...

Fox News Poll has Bush down



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Bouncing down:
The president’s approval rating dropped to 36 percent, down from 41 percent approval two weeks ago and 40 percent in mid-June. Bush lost ground this week among some key constituent groups, such as Republicans, whites and men. Overall, 53 percent of Americans say they disapprove.
Bush's disapproval is at 100% with my Irish cousins and pretty much everyone I've met here so far. Read the rest of this post...

Good morning, Open thread



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Don't worry, I'm going back to bed. Read the rest of this post...

Off to celebrate Bastille Day



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A neighbor set off fireworks (or were they shots?) at 7AM to wake up everyone, I've had my coffee, helicopters were flying overhead in preparation of the big parade so now it's time to celebrate on this gorgeous, sunny day by applying a second coat of teak oil to the garden furniture. Can it really get any better? At least I have a nice iced (Vietnamese) coffee to look forward to this afternoon. Read the rest of this post...

Is there hope for the Democrats in November?



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More good national polling, but I'm still not convinced. Between the failed campaign to take disgraced congressman Duke Cunningham's seat, the gerrymandering around the country and the mixed messages of the Democrats, I just don't see the Democrats taking either the House or Senate. They ought to make gains, but beyond that...
Republicans are in jeopardy of losing their grip on Congress in November. With less than four months to the midterm elections, the latest Associated Press-Ipsos poll found that Americans by an almost 3-to-1 margin hold the GOP-controlled Congress in low regard and profess a desire to see Democrats wrest control after a dozen years of Republican rule.
Some of the results of the poll:
Overall, only 27 percent approved of the way Congress is doing its job. Lawmakers get favorable marks from 36 percent of conservatives, 28 percent of moderates and 17 percent of liberals.

Some criticism of Congress has focused on lawmakers' inability to control spending, with lawmakers tucking in special projects for their home districts.

"They used to say there's nothing worse than a tax-and-spend liberal Democrat," said Gary Wilson, 51, a self-described liberal from Gaithersburg, Md. "There is something worse: It's a borrow-and-spend Republican. This is going to come back to haunt us."

One bright spot for the GOP is that Republicans hold an advantage over Democrats on issues such as foreign policy and fighting terrorism Â? 43 percent to 33 percent Â? and a smaller edge on handling Iraq Â? 36 percent to 32 percent.

Yikes. I can't even imagine who in the hell these people are who actually think the GOP is performing well enough in these areas but it tells me the Democrats really stink at delivering a message and making it painfully obvious that the GOP is incompetent. With Rove planning to play this card in the autumn, will the Democrats ever have a plan for fighting on these issues?

Read the rest of this post...

Oil jumps again, now over $78 - where's the diplomacy that the media told us about?



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Who would guess that failed talks with Iran, failed war in Iraq and Israeli bombings across Lebanon (and Lebanon's potential to collapse back into a failed state) would have a negative impact on the price of oil? We're really witnessing some great statesmanship with the Bush team these days. As they sit in a corner sucking their thumbs and shrugging their shoulders, the world around them is crumbling. We shouldn't be surprised though, because this reaction is not unlike 9/11 when he fled to Nebraska and hid out in a bunker, leaving everyone wondering what the hell was going on. Let's just sit back and watch the experts in action. After 9/11 they somehow created spin about Bush the leader, but with a few years under his belt and a resource burden in Iraq, spinning out of this won't be as easy.

The media has been telling us to often lately about the "new" Bush and diplomacy, so where the hell is it? Please give us an example because wetting your pants and hiding is not diplomacy. Read the rest of this post...

Happy Bastille Day!



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Et pourquoi pas? Read the rest of this post...


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