March 31, 2006

3/31: All Together Now

Today's hottest topic is the release of freelance journalist Jill Carroll, perhaps because the story features a convergance of some of bloggers' favorite pastimes: debating success in Iraq; discussing the Muslim culture divide; and bashing MSM outlets. Some on the right became suspicious and downright hostile toward Carroll after hearing her speak well of her captors, and even after seeing her wardrobe. Others on the right and most on the left react with joy, followed by shock at the way the right was reacting.

Elsewhere, there's some follow-up on Mohammed cartoon front, with a movement afoot to pressure Borders into carrying a magazine that features said images. Also, a new story in National Journal raises our Plame antennae. And, what's this about anniversaries?

CARROLL: Welcome Home?

Early on, news of Jill Carroll's release was welcomed with relief, and perhaps excitement that her captors realized their tactics weren't working. Guest blogging for Michelle Malkin, Allahpundit calls it "Excellent news." Nathan Goulding: "Whatever the real reason for her release, one thing is clear: This is a victory. Whether her captors feared for their lives, or whether they simply saw the pointlessness of their despicable actions, they gave up." Stop The ACLU: "Details of why she was released are unknown, but the main thing is that she is alive and healthy. We wish the best for her and her family!"

But as video footage was released, sentiment on the right began to change. Little Green Footballs tries to dissect the Carroll tapes. "Note that even after her release, Carroll maintained that she had been treated well by her captors -- so it would appear that this journalist for the Christian Science Monitor made these anti-American comments voluntarily." Allahpundit updates: "In fairness to Carroll, a lot of people would say a lot of things they didn't mean in those circumstances. Let's see whether she defends it now. Assuming, that is, that anyone in the media bothers to ask her." But Debbie Schlussel doesn't think these comments were pressured: "Why are so many people who claim to be patriotic Americans so overjoyed that Jill Carroll was freed, yet hardly a peep when American contractors and others were freed? ... Maybe it had something to do with the fact that she HATES AMERICA and our Mid-East policy. And, oh yeah, she HATES ISRAEL, too." Jonah Goldberg: "It would be nice to hear her say something remotely critical of her captors, particularly about the fact that they murdered her translator in cold blood. I'm very glad she's alive, but I'm getting a very bad vibe." Also at The Corner, John Podehertz writes: "It's wonderful that she's free, but after watching someone who was a hostage for three months say on television she was well-treated because she wasn't beaten or killed -- while being dressed in the garb of a modest Muslim woman rather than the non-Muslim woman she actually is -- I expect there will be some Stockholm Syndrome talk in the coming days." UNCoRRELATED: "Apparently the insurgents are realizing the American left are their allies in restoring the glorious regime of Saddam Hussein."

The Counterterrorism Blog: "Her future writings are going to tell the world more about the reasons behind the kidnapping." JAWA Report: "It's quite sickening some of the answers she gives, but understandable under the circumstances. But, before you accuse Jill of being a victim of Stockholm Syndrome, keep in mind that she was under duress." John Hinderaker directs his ire at the media: "To anyone who saw the videos in which she pleaded for her life, her mental distress was obvious. ... No doubt, in saying that she had been 'well treated,' Ms. Carroll was mostly trying to assure her friends and family that her physical condition was OK. That's obviously appropriate. But let's not encourage a lot of warm feelings toward the murderous thugs who kidnapped Carroll, shot her translator, and may well have received a ransom to let her go."

The left is a bit surprised at all the fuss. Firedoglake: "The woman has been free for less than a day, and the wingnut attack brigade has already geared up to paint her as being mental." Judd at ThinkProgress: "It is totally inappropriate to assume that her description of how she was treated is motivated by anything other than a desire to tell the truth." A New World: "It's as if these people expected her to throw on some fatigues and wrap herself in a mission accomplished banner."

BUSH: Roving Reporter

Once again, National Journal's Murray Waas has a story involving Karl Rove and the WMD debate. Waas' latest story spurs a blogswarm about the Valerie Plame affair. Waas reports: Rove warned WH staff that if it were disclosed that Bush had been told that some of his pre-Iraq evidence may not be legitimate, it would hurt the pres' re-election hopes. The aluminum tubes SOTU claim was found to be on shaky ground after a review of intelligence by now-NSA Stephen Hadley. Josh Marshall adds: "While I and reporters from CBS were working on this story through 2004 it was clear that folks on the Hill would agree to talk and then suddenly un-agree when they got the call from the White House. The White House worked doggedly at almost every turn to get the story killed or delayed beyond the election, which they of course did." And Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) writes at Huffington Post that he wants the Hadley memo released.

Steve Soto: "Eriposte has already reported here at TLC that Bush was told about concerns within his own administration about the 'tubes=centrifuges' assertions months ago." He adds: "Democrats need to focus on Bush's declaration to Congress and show that Bush knowingly lied to Congress to start the war in March 2003." The Next Hurrah: "Thanks to Waas, we now know that in October 2002, a briefer came in and said, 'Mr. President, you're making claims the Intelligence Community doesn't agree on.'" Joe Gandelman: "Each week there seems a new entry in the drip-drip-drip of stories that are virtual cautionary notes to take assertions from this administration with a big chunk of salt."

But Legal Fiction has a hard time believing the story will have an impact. "If this story actually did change anyone's mind, it's going to be hard for me to take that person seriously. If it's taken you until spring of 2006 to come around on the nuclear program, well, I'm sorry, but you've got problems. ... Of course, there's something to be said for punishing the conduct of so casually disregarding the lives of our soldiers and their families that you can't tell them the truth about the threat they're so bravely willing to die to protect us against. But again, what's the point? It's not going to change anything about Iraq." Norwegianity: "Someday Fitzgerald will get to go to trial and when he does George Bush had best pray there won't be a Democratic Congress in place to start impeachment hearings."

JYLLANDS-POSTEN: Closing The Borders

As we reported yesterday, a decision by a large bookselling chain not to carry the 4-5/06 issue of Free Inquiry Magazine because it portrays cartoons that inspired violent riots throughout the Muslim world has consumed the conservative blogosphere. The bookseller claimed they wouldn't carry the magazine because the safety and security of the company's employees and customers might be threatened. The Bidinotto Blog, in an open letter to Borders and their affiliate, Waldenbooks, sums up the feelings of just about every blogger out there: "Your company's craven policy of capitulation in the face of the mere hypothetical threat of terrorism is absolutely appalling -- a complete moral abdication that only encourages those threatening our rights and liberties." Little Green Footballs has become the clearinghouse for bloggers writing about the matter, and the site publishes a letter from a Borders employee who reveals more about the company's perceived fear of angering the Muslim community. Infidel Bloggers Alliance comments on the letter. INDC: "It's one thing to cave in to threats to save your own skin. Though not particularly noble, it's at least understandable. But to cave in when there's a distinct lack of violence in the area in question, now that takes a pretty amazing lack of intenstinal fortitude to pull off." Others commenting on the matter: John In Carolina, American Thinker, Ed Driscoll, Dynamist Blog, Clayton Cramer, Dean's World, Andrew Sullivan, Samizdata, American Diva and Tim Blair.

Kesher Talk reveals that Barnes & Noble may be the next chain to refuse the magazine. PSoTD is one lefty blog that defends Borders' actions, and thinks even Free Inquiry will come out on top: "Borders has given Free Inquiry magazine more promotion than they probably get in a year with this action, so more good than harm has come to them as well." Gates of Vienna notes that Borders has just signed a deal to open stores in -- where else? -- the UAE.

SAME-SEX MARRIAGE: The Hundred-Year Law

MA's high court ruled 3/30 that same-sex couples from other states cannot travel to MA to legally get married. CBS News reports. Magpie offers a comprehensive breakdown of the two 6-1 decisions handed down by the court, which apparently hinged on a 1913 law about marriage reciprocity with other states. Suburban Guerilla questions that '13 law. Indiana Law Blog is the post for aspiring attys to read. Lefty Pam's House Blend calls it "a blow to civil equality for now."

DEMOCRATS: Turned Upside Down

Expose the Left has video of Pelosi holding a "Real Security" sign upside down. California Conservative: "We're feeling safer already."

Meanwhile, Captain's Quarters continues dissecting Dems' nat'l security plan, saying they'd "starve the National Security Agency in a fit of pique over the work performed by the agency in terrorist surveillance."

IN THE STATES: King Barack In The Connecticut Yankees' Court

Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) keynoted the CT Jefferson Jackson Bailey dinner 3/30 and loaned some support to Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-CT), who's facing a primary challenge from businessman Ned Lamont (D). The Hartford Courant reports. Atrios notes that one of Obama's speechwriters may have thrown a little jab at Lieberman in Obama's speech. California Yankee notes the audience's less-than-ecstatic response to Lieberman's speech. And The Agonist is disappointed in Obama for his support of Lieberman.

WashingtonPost.com's Cillizzareports that VA Sen candidate/ex-Navy Sec./ex-GOPer James Webb (D) has thus far "assiduously courted the liberal blogosphere." Cillizza calls Webb the first candidate with backing from the Netroots with a chance to win, and that got some on the left reminding Cillizza of the roles played by bloggers in other races. The Agonist sums up.

The VA Sen race continues to get a lot of blogger attention, as MyDD's Jonathan Singer sat down for an interview with lobbyist/Dem activist Harris Miller (D) earlier this week.

CONGRESS: Reconsidering

Captain's Quarters notes that folks on Capitol Hill are starting to have second thoughts about changes made at the behest of the 9/11 Commission. The House Intel Cmte is threatening to withhold funding until NID John Negroponte can justify increases in staff, etc. "Anyone who looked at this document with any careful scrutiny could see that the solution promised more bureaucracy and never addressed the real issues in communication and coordination. We had ten people on this panel who represented bureaucracies their entire lives; when one only owns a hammer, every problem looks like a nail, and this is a perfect example of that wise proverb."

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Happy Birthday, Mr. Blogometer...

Yesterday marked the 1st birthday of The Hotline's Blogometer. It's healthy, walking on two feet and eating solid foods now, but it's still not sleeping through the night. Come to think of it, it might never. If you feel nostalgic, check out the very first edition. Seriously, we hope you've enjoyed the first year of what we once called "an experiment," our attempt to condense the entire blogosphere into something you can read. A particular note of thanks to the recently-departed William Beutler, who got us off the ground.

On a similar note, happy 2nd birthday to Air America Radio, the popcorn for liberals, the fodder for conservatives, and the vehicle for Al Franken's '08 MN Sen bid. DailyKos pays tribute.

LEST WE FORGET: Three-Stage High-Five

For those of you who remember the simple joys of making Walter Payton burst through a hole while avoiding diving tacklers, then rushing the quarterback with Mike Singletary -- yes, we're talking about Tecmo Bowl -- we've got a website for you. Console Classix offers just about every original Nintendo game we can remember, all for free. It's a great way to waste an afternoon. Or several. And while none of us are from Chicago, you all know the Bears were the best team in that game.

And this? This is just strange.

NOTES AND ERRATA

In the FISA section of our 3/30 edition, we identified Kevin Drum as a righty. He assures us that he's still "planted firmly on the left."

Questions, comments, reservations? Drop us a line at blogometer@nationaljournal.com.

Posted by at 12:21 PM

March 30, 2006

3/30: The Undapped

Bloggers can be bitter, and today's edition is chock full of "I told you so" references to predictions they made months ago over warrantless wiretapping. Also, a blogger gets booted from a top blog, and he wants to know why. And finally, still no dap from the MSM as more bloggers come forward claiming their material has been lifted by the AP and others without so much as a hat tip.

Elsewhere, Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-GA) found herself in a Cheney-like blogswarm after punching a Capitol Police officer. The left, meanwhile, slams a CA-50 candidate for misrepresenting a photo that he claimed showed a tranquil Baghdad. And there's some debate about Dems' new nat'l security strategy.

EAVESDROPPING: That Clicking Sound Is Just The Microphone, We Assure You

Yesterday's testimony by five former FISA judges before the Senate Jud Cmte sparked a considerable flare-up in the ongoing debate over Pres. Bush's wiretapping program. The debate starts with MSM coverage of the matter, as many noted the discrepancy in tones between articles reporting testimony from the Washington Times and the New York Times. Power Line is first among them: "New York Times reporter Eric Lichtblau has a considerable career investment (and, I suspect, an ideological investment as well) in the idea that the NSA program is illegal." Power Line also links to a full transcript of the hearing. Captain Ed calls the NYT's story a "serious misrepresentation." Confederate Yankee, Jeff Gannon, Don Surber, NRO's Media Blog, JustOneMinute, ProteinWisdom, AJ Strata, Macsmind.

Commentary on the right about the actual testimony comes complete with much back-patting. Everyone, it seems, predicted exactly what the FISA judges would say several months ago. Confederate Yankee goes with the Washington Times' version and thinks the FISA judges came down on Bush's side. Don Surber agrees, and takes this message away from the hearings: "What the president did was perfectly legal." Captain Ed takes a slightly different view: "The judges confirm that the matter is far from settled, and in fact told Congress that they don't have the jurisdiction to make the judgment." Moderate Charging RINO thinks the judges didn't absolve the admin of anything: "I continue to see no compelling evidence that end-running FISA is necessarily the best way to get the job done." Kevin Drum observes, of Judge Harold Baker's assertion that the pres. is bound to follow the law "like everyone else": "Bound by the law like anyone else?!? That's treason talk."

From the left, yesterday's testimony sparked renewed interest in Sen. Russ Feingold's (D-WI) push to censure Bush. Huffington Post's Cenk Uygur, questioning attacks on Feingold as acting for political purposes: "Is there anything more brazenly political than the way President Bush has used 9/11 as a bludgeoning stick against his political opponents?" AMERICAblog hints at censure, or more: "Congress can't and won't deal with the simple fact that Bush broke the law. To paraphrase Judge Baker, since the president ignored the law, he should be in legal peril." The Heretik focused on the five jurists' testimony: "From the secret court comes news the judges will not secrete themselves away. It's no secret the secret judges are more than a little annoyed with the way George Bush has turned national security into a secret club and they're not in. So they are out in public talking about things George Bush doesn't want talked about at all." The Carpetbagger Report shakes his head: "I know it's pre-9/11 thinking to believe the president is bound by the law 'like everyone else,' but maybe there are still a few members of the Senate who are inclined to agree." Decision '08 reports on two competing pieces of legislation that "are battling it out to see which will be the first to explicitly legalize Bush's NSA surveillance." Finally, Ron Coleman notes the long and involved history of one of the judges who testified yesterday, Allan Kornblum, who's described in some news accounts as the "author" of the original FISA law back in '78.

IRAQ: Vacation Photos From Iraq? Did You Not See Our Travel Warning? Yesterday?

Daily Kos exposes CA-50 candidate Howard Kaloogian (R) who claimed to be telling "the truth" about Iraq. Well, if by Iraq he meant Turkey, then yes. TPM Muckraker has his explanation: "We turned all the photographs [from the trip] over to the webmaster, and it appears he took one from the stopover and not from Baghdad. If a mistake happened, we'll correct it." Talking Points Memo then highlights the new photo Kaloogian uses to show that things in Iraq are better than reported. But it's an aerial shot that, suffice to say, doesn't show much of anything. "What this joke of a picture -- given what it's supposed to demonstrate -- tells me is that Kaloogian's bogus fact-finding mission probably didn't get outside the heavily fortified safe zones guarded by the US military. And that's not surprising since even a lot reporters don't venture beyond those areas much any more."

Running Scared: "Sounds like good old Howard is off to a fine start if he wants to fill the shoes of Duke Cunningham." Preemptive Karma: "If you're going to put up a photo to prove that Baghdad is all about peace and the press is rapping it for no good reason--you'd better be sure you've got the goods." Magpie: "Didn't Kaloogian expect that, given that he's running for Cunningham's seat, that left-wing bloggers would be going over his website with a fine-tooth comb? Or did Kaloogian figured that no one would care if he was caught in a lie?"

DEMOCRATS: We Have A Plan

Dems announced their nat'l security platform 3/29, with ex-Sec/State Madeline Albright and Ret. Gen. Wesley Clark joining cong. leaders. Reviews on the left: Oliver Willis: "Makes sense to me (its certainly better than not saying anything), but now they've got to repeat that like a mantra until they're blue in the face. ... I don't know if the Dems can beat the GOP in the polls on national security, simply because they've been so afraid to assert anything, but if they were able to come to some sort of equilibrium it would be a bit of a breakthrough." MyDD: " The only way to change the situation is to change leadership. That's what the Democrats should run on." Atrios: "The real issue isn't what Democrats are saying about Iraq now. ... f 2006 fails to be 'a year of significant transition' what will Democrats be saying then? Forget the unified message now, what will be the unified message then?" Georgia 10 at Kos: "For those that say today's plan did not offer enough detail, I urge you to look at that page and see the solutions Democrats have offered time and time again--only to be stonewalled by an administration beholden more to corporate interests and politics than actually safeguarding our nation. "

On the right, many have a hard time taking Dems seriously. Gateway Pundit: "Mark your calendars. Today is a historic day. Democrats are announcing today, four-and-one-half years after 9-11, that THEY have saved a can of Whoopass for the jihadists! Well, Alright!" Captain Ed: "The plan is a collection of slogans and mission statements with almost no specifics about legislation, financing, strategies, tactics, or military efforts to achieve them." Hugh Hewitt: "The fact that a plan this flimsy is getting this much attention is the clearest testament I've seen in some time to the Democratic Party's lack of ideas." Wizbang: "These folks can show up to a press conference and say they're going to be tough on national security, but it won't change the fact that they fought President Bush on virtually every national security issue that came before them in the House." JunkYardBlog: "On the other hand, eliminating bin Laden is a better platform than impeaching Bush. Too bad the Democrats are more likely to pursue the former if the voters actually give them Congress this fall."

Also worth noting today: Matt Stoller criticizes Dems for holding a fundraiser for Rep. William Jefferson (D-LA) while he's being investigated for bribery.

McKINNEY: New Spin On The Fighting Dems

As first reported by Hotline in Last Call!, and explained at On Call, McKinney punched a Capitol Police officer "after he mistakenly pursued her for failing to pass through a metal detector." Reaction is a mix of comedy and serious criticism. Suitably Flip: "Just can't be bothered with that pesky security, eh Cynthia?" Right Wing News: "Sounds like a clear cut case of assault. Wonder if Cynthia will 1) give a heartfelt apology, 2) give a cheap non-apology apology, 3) blame the cop for "making her" hit him, or 4) play the race card?" State Of The Qusan: "I guess I shouldn't be condoning violence but in addition to a very deadly look, I think my reflexes might have caused me to punch this guy too!" Explore For Truth: "If she were Republican would be asking for her resignation??" Captain's Quarters: "Today the Democrats launched their mission to revamp their image on security and national defense. They have long complained about a national perception of their party as wimpish, but Cynthia McKinney decided to set the record straight" The American Princess: "Her record speaks to a torrid history of relations with Capitol security guards." RedState: "Assaulting a police officer is a felony is most districts, and felonious behavior is just cause for expulsion. I'm just saying."

IMMIGRATION: No GOP Divide In The Blogosphere

The Senate began debate on immigration reform proposals last p.m., and the righty blogosphere continues to watch with baited breath. Right Wing News tries to answer some FAQs about illegal immigrants. The questions tend to play in to the more conservative GOP's talking points. Iowa Voice is firmly entrenched in the "send 'em home" camp. The divide within the GOP over the immigration issue is highlighted by Captain's Quarters take on George Will's "moderate" stance on the issue, especially his analogizing a border fence with the Berlin wall. "Will sounds a reasonable note in the immigration debate, and his column is well worth a read -- once you get past the implied analogy of America transforming itself into a prison state."

Others on the right continue to discuss last weekend's marches throughout the nation protesting immigration reform legislation passed by the House. Mark Krikorian at The Corner: "The president has got to offer a public critique of the illegal-alien marches, especially since he's going to Mexico this week to yuk it up with Vicente Fox. ... These protests -- with their ubiquitous Mexican flags, open claims of irredentism, and support from the Mexican government -- are a direct challenge to the American regime, and must not go unanswered." A Blog For All notes that the demonstrations weren't exactly spontaneous. RedState concurs. The News Blog argues that the GOP is playing with fire: "Latinos had been slightly more receptive to GOP pitches, but like Katrina with blacks, this is about family. This isn't some abstract debate, this is about cousins, friends, even kids. And when you do that, people take it personally. Blacks took Bush's failure in Katrina personally. Latinos take this personally."

ABRAMOFF: Play Time Is Over

Disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff received the minimum possible sentence, according to the Washington Post, for his role in a fraud case stemming from the attempted purchase of SunCruz casinos. Lefties had a field day with this one. TPM's Muckraker reports -- before yesterday's sentencing -- on Abramoff's defense team's efforts to get the sentence as light as possible. Muckraker updates just after sentencing with a list of just who Abramoff could be implicating in his cooperation (more than 200 hours of it thus far) with the DoJ. Off the Kuff licks his chops: "The main point to remember here is that this is not the Washington case; that investigation, and presumably Abramoff's cooperation in it, is ongoing." Demagogue and The Carpetbagger Report note the same. Why Are We Back In Iraq? looks at Abramoff's plea deal in terms of his role in producing "Red Scorpion." Righty John Cole thinks Abramoff's sentence is about right: "I am willing to bet this sentence reflects a degree of cooperation in future prosecutions that will probably pay greater political dividends for our friends on the left and will more than outweigh the sheer satisfaction they might have gained by watching Abramoff go to jail for a longer period of time."

BLOGS VS. THE MSM: Dapless

At Talking Points Memo, Josh Marshall echoes the recent complaints of others about "how routinely mainstream media outlets rip off stories that are originally reported on blogs. ... Last week, over a three or four day period, there were four instances in which a mainstream media outlet took a story or scoop we ... had first published and ran it as their own without crediting or mentioning that TPMmuckraker.com had originally broken the story. Writing up or following up on a story and not crediting the news organiztion that first reported it is not a journalistic felony. It's more on the order of a misdemeanor or moving violation. But it is a breach. And mainstream news outlets, a few of which I've actually written for, don't seem to think it applies to blogs that are doing original reporting."

Atrios responds: "Look, personally I've never cared about getting credit for stuff other media types might happen to lift from this site. ... I've always been interested in just getting the good stuff out there and not really caring how it's done or where it comes from, and it's silly to try to take credit for stuff which is often highly collaborative between readers, other blogs, me, etc., just because I have a big megaphone. ... While journalism doesn't have the same citation standards of academia, and it generally shouldn't, reporters shouldn't feel entitled to rip things off just because they were originally reported on the internets. I'm sure Alt Weekly reporters are chuckling to themselves, 'welcome to our world...'"

JYLLANDS-POSTEN: Embers Flare Up

Skirmishes over cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammed continue to rage around the world, and several bloggers are picking up on them. Ed Driscoll rounds up the latest battles, from Alberta to NYU, and even at your local corporate bookstore. That last is the one causing a lot of renewed buzz, and comes by way of the San Francisco Chronicle, which reports that Borders and Waldenbooks won't carry the April-May issue of Free Inquiry magazine, which contains the cartoons. This has the blogosphere discussing Islamic shari'a law and what the country should do in the face of Islam. Dr. Sanity, like most bloggers, criticizes the companies: "These businesses claim this was a business decision made for the safety of its customers and staff. I think that political correctness played an even bigger role. Well, I too, can make a business decision and I choose not to buy books from either outlet anymore since they have bowed to shari'a." Kesher Talk, describing themselves as of a "hawkish Jewish liberal perspecive," notes: "Don't let anyone tell you this is about high-minded sensitivity to other cultures. It's about fear." Righty Little Green Footballs concurs: "The big bookstore chains will not be standing up for free speech." Using various four-letter words to describe the companies, the Infidel Bloggers Alliance calls for a boycott. NRO's TKS doesn't like the move, but thanks the companies for their honesty: "I would observe that if nothing else, applaud the honesty of Borders/Waldenbooks. They're not claiming that not stocking the magazine is a matter of 'sensitivity,' it's a matter of safety for their employees. I can disagree whether that's the right decision, but I can at least understand it and appreciate it." Eugene Volokh comments on the "seemingly troubling behavior" of NYU.

WHITE HOUSE '08: All's Well That's Falwell

It's the left's turn to take issue with Sen. John McCain's (R-AZ) upcoming speech to Liberty Univ. and his flirtation with the Fed Marriage Amendment. ABC News has today's analysis and article. The Moderate Voice analyzes McCain's circus trick: "He has to do a political tightrope act to get the nomination ... and one false step and in a general election he could wind up a political dead duck. He hasn't quite taken that step yet, but the tightrope is shaking a bit." Lefty The Reaction: "He's a conservative, and he always has been. But, looking ahead to '08 as the presumed early front-runner, he's now cuddling up to the far right. He knows he needs to win over the Republican base in order to get through the primaries. He knows that a maverick will ever win the GOP nomination. He knows has has to play politics. That's predictable, but unfortunate." AMERICAblog thinks McCain is letting Jerry Falwell do his talking for him. And The Carpetbagger Report is right on message: "I guess McCain was sort of against the amendment before he was sort of for it." Think Progress points out McCain's flip-flop as well.

IN THE STATES: Raspberry Jam?!? I HATE Raspberry Jam!

Lone Star Project has conducted what it calls a "baseline analysis" of the TX GOV race. The conclusion they reach? Ex-Rep. Chris Bell (D) has a much better shot at the gov's mansion than others may think -- but only if he can keep Dems with him. If enough Dems defect to Compt./ex-Dem/ex-GOPer Carole Strayhorn (I), Gov. Rick Perry (R) is safe, but if she can peel both Dems and GOPers away, she'll get the win. By the way, check out their cool vote calculator, which you can use to plug in numbers that assure a Kinky Friedman (I) win. Others commenting on various aspects of the race, including Strayhorn and Friedman's attempts to get on the ballot and an Austin TV station declaring the race neck-and-neck include The Red State and Off the Kuff.

BLOGGER VS. BLOGGER: The Great Kos Purge

Tom Duncombe of My Left Wing has some questions for DailyKos. Duncombe tells his story: "I'm not from the blog world originally--and where I come from, credentials are not looked down upon or sneered at. In the course of the thread, I got sworn at quite a bit, but was also exposed to a new theory of authentication that I had never been exposed to before--that in blogs, people earn their credentials through good writing and group approval. So far so good--I learned something. And I moved on from there. I posted some posts, I earned some mojo. And then I came back to Daily Kos this evening to see that I've been kicked off the site. I've been "disappeared." An electronic firing squad has taken my persona to the big, evil sports arena in the sky, assassinated me, and then buried my pixillated bones in the desert somewhere. I'm very disillusioned with Daily Kos." Armando says Duncombe was "autobanned" by the community. Buckeye State Blog wants to know if anyone will ask Kos about the incident on his current book tour.

BLOGGER SPOTLIGHT: Coffey Clutch

Today the Blogometer talks to Mark Coffey, who writes Decision '08.

What is your full name?

Mark Alan Coffey.

What is your age?

37.

Where did you grow up?

Lamesa, TX -- midway between Lubbock and Midland.

Where do you live now?

Austin, TX -- a very blue city in a very red state.

What is your occupation?

Analyst.

Have you ever worked on a political campaign or for the mainstream media?

No -- though I did run for the student council years ago (and won!).

When did you start blogging and why?

I started blogging, oddly enough, after the 2004 election, thus missing the biggest traffic period. I was reading all the blogs, e-mailing friends and relatives relevant news stories, and generally doing everything but putting the content on the web. When I hit on the idea of getting an early jump on 2008, my mind was made up, and I went live on November 21st, 2004.

What has been your favorite post, or favorite story to write about, in that time?

Lately, I've been on a campaign to rename the Netroots as the Nutroots (r), but with limited success (it's not that my audience is not big enough - oh, no! Rather, like Spinal Tap, my appeal is very selective). My formation of the Coalition of the Chilling was much more successful - I was able to convince a number of prominent bloggers to joing me in decrying the harsh rhetoric that greeted the Gang of 14 Deal (a deal that has worked out remarkably well for Republicans, I might add).

Describe your typical blogging schedule. And what is your average output?

I blog on and off pretty much all day, everyday ... I enjoy it and I need to build up my audience.

And what is your average output?

I'd say probably about 7 or 8 posts a day.

Who is your favorite political blogger? Favorite non-political blogger?

Tom Maguire of JustOneMinute, hands down. A true blogger, through and through (honorable mentions to Tim Blair and Mickey Kaus). [For non-political:] Although both sometimes cover politics, amongst many other things, I really enjoy Be Be Re and NBR.

Who is your favorite mainstream media columnist?

Who is your favorite mainstream media columnist? Christopher Hitchens , without a doubt (I know I'm stretching a bit, but he is a columnist for Slate and Vanity Fair, as well as the AtlanticMonthly ).

What is your favorite television news program, either network or cable?

I like the occasional hour-long specials, like CNN Presents, but I can't abide the soundbite nature of regular news on television.

What MSM-produced websites (i.e. newspapers, magazines) do you visit on a daily basis?

The Washington Post, The New York Times, and the Wall Street Journal's OpinionJournal.

What non-MSM websites (i.e. blogs) do you visit on a daily basis?

Besides the previously mentioned blogs, I always visit Memeorandum, Real Clear Politics, and Pajamas Media (with whom I am affiliated). I also visit the Huffington Post and Daily Kos for the entertainment value and to keep up with what's hot among the lefties.

How often, or do you ever, read a newspaper in its dead-tree (i.e. print) form?

I rarely purchase a newspaper ... but if I do, it's the Wall Street Journal.

How do you see the new media and old media affecting and influencing each other in the next five years?

Too many people see the world of media through the prism of blogs vs. MSM. The reality is that the two are complementary; the MSM, with its large budgets and professional journalists, can cover the world in a way that most bloggers, who are local by nature, can't (although all those local bloggers collectively cover the globe, as well). Bloggers can react quickly to breaking news, however, and can engage in dialogue with an immediacy that can't be matched by television or print. The reality is we are one huge disfunctional family.

MISCELLANY: That Guy?!?! For That Job?!?!

Mark Kilmer at RedState follows up on talk of Club For Growth's Pat Toomey taking over at OMB. He admits it's not likely, but that WH advisers "would serve [Bush] well to put Mr. Toomey's name into the mix. The President would serve himself and the country by making the pick, and Mr. Toomey would serve everyone well by accepting." And worth noting is that RedState's Blanton is ending his run at the site.

Mark Tapscott tries to draw attention to "potentially landmark" legislation pending in the Senate on earmark disclosure.

Winds of Change notes that in CA, HAVA -- "as implemented by California Secretary of State Bruce McPherson -- is killing over 40% of the attempts to register that were made in Los Angeles County this quarter."

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Double Vision

Kevin Drum writes about cloning: "It's true that the last few years have produced a flood of headlines about the genetic basis of various personality characteristics, but surely very few people believe that genes are the sole basis of personality, do they?" Most literature on the subject suggests that personality is "some mysterious combination of both" nature and nurture. "We already know the answer to the clone question. Identical twins are clones, and although twins can be remarkably similar, any parent of twins can tell you that they also have very distinct personalities. It's not all in the genes. On the other hand, it might be different for cats and dogs. I mean, I'd like to pretend that Inkblot has such a distinct personality that I could tell him apart from his hypothetical clone, but I wonder if I really could?"

LEST WE FORGET: Killing Your Productivity, One Afternoon At A Time

We love bad predictions about the future, and it's nice to see that someone's compiled a bunch of them. Sorry for ruining your afternoon, but these are like Pringles: You can't read just one.

Posted by at 12:31 PM

March 29, 2006

3/29: Full Plate

Between the resignation of WH CoS Andy Card, elections in Israel that turned out poorly for everyone the average American has heard of and the Senate battle over immigration, we wonder how bloggers with regular jobs got any work done yesterday. Developments in Iraq and Afghanistan gave bloggers good excuses to take extra breaks as well.

Also today, we report on two potential WH '08ers who cut through to the blogosphere. One blogger wonders whether Card's resignation is part of a larger push for MA Gov. Mitt Romney's (R) WH bid, and several others note, with varying degrees of approval and skepticism, Sen. John McCain's (R-AZ) slated speaking engagement at Jerry Falwell's Liberty U.

Finally, for those of you interested in a more academic debate, two heavyweights of the modern neoconservative movement duke it out over just where that movement's headed. If you're in for the political junkie's equivalent of a cat fight, this brawl's for you.

BUSH: They're Daring Us Not To Use Lame Card Puns

Yesterday, we noted the reaction of PowerLine: "Yawn." Reaction rises a bit above that level, speculation doesn't break much new ground. Andrew Sullivan: "Bottom line: this is better than nothing, but also merely the minimum necessary. Maybe there's more to come." Daniel Drezner: "What's amazing to me is not that Card has resigned -- it's that there are so many people who have been working at high levels in this administration for six years and show no signs of leaving." UNCoRRELATED: "Card controls access to the president and has undoubtedly ruffled some feathers over the years. His resignation allows for a 'reconcilation' of sorts with members of Congress who may have felt annoyed at not having more face-time with the President." The Sideshow: "The problem is the policies, and Card didn't set those. No one was calling for Andy Card's head. Rumsfeld's, sure. Cheney's -- oh, yeah. Rice's -- yes, and well before she got her new job. Karl 'Security Breach' Rove's? Uh huh. And Bush's, f'sure. But Card? Please." Outside The Beltway: "Unless [Bolten] comes up with some bold new policy initiatives, it is unclear how this move will bolster the president's sagging poll numbers." BottleOfBlog "There's only one guy who could resign and make the executive branch run any better at this point. And he ain't going back to Crawford just yet."

Craig Crawford offers five reasons this won't help. First among them: "He wasn't the problem. ... Card was a glorified scheduler who took a back seat to Vice President Dick Cheney and his own supposed deputy, Karl Rove." Meanwhile, Ankle Biting Pundits hears from sources that Card is leaving to play a "significant role" in Romney's (R) WH bid. New Donkey also doubts the "fatigue" excuse: "Fatigue from what, exactly? I mean, it's not like this administration has been terribly active in terms of meeting the big domestic or national security challenges facing the country, right?"

What about the new guy? Think Progress says: "Josh Bolten's record suggests he will not be a strong enough voice to stand up to" Bush, Cheney, Rove and Rumsfeld. Left Coaster points to Bolten's role in the Medicare Part D legislation. Bull Moose: "The distinguishing feature about both of them is their loyalty to the President. Loyalty, indeed, is a worthy virtue. But, this is a moment for creativity and boldness. And Bolten for Card isn't exactly bold."

RedState floated the idea of replacing Bolten at OMB with Club for Growth pres/'04 SEN candidate Pat Toomey (R). "Getting Pat Toomey on board, putting Pat Toomey on the team, could enliven fiscal conservatives who haven't had much to shout about from this Administration since the President's tax cuts. It would also help the resume of a talented conservative for when or if he decides to seek public office in the future." Club for Growth's blog responded.

IMMIGRATION: We Wonder If McCain And Feingold Had A Quarrel Of Sorts. That Makes Kennedy The Rebound

Folks are starting to analyze the bill passed by the Senate Jud. Cmte. At Red State, Leon Wolf says the McCain-Kennedy bill isn't perfect, "but it's a surprisingly good one, and the Republican Senators who voted it out of Committee absolutely do not deserve to treatment they have received in some quarters of the conservative blogosphere." Captain Ed: "Immigration stalwarts might hope that the House approach will prevail in the joint conference committee that will reconcile the two bills, but that hope appears fading at best" Steve Soto sees signs that the GOP is "Stepping Back From The Political Abyss" on the issue, except for Senate Maj. Leader Bill Frist, "who apparently feels that he cannot allow Specter to substitute his bill for Frist's more extreme proposal if the GOP caucus isn't with Specter. What Frist and the GOP caucus miss however is that they will lose huge politically this November if they let Specter, McCain, and the entire Democratic caucus beat their brains out over this for a couple of days. And the only person who will look like the imbecile that he is will be Frist himself." Off The Kuff looks at demonstrations in TX 3/28 and also at how it's impacting state campaigns. Michelle Malkin, meanwhile, highlights the upside-down American flag at a CA demonstration.

Glenn Reynolds highlights some key points about the debate: "It's not really about security. It's only sort of about economics. A lot of it is anger at Washington. The debate stinks. It could be poison for both parties." Daily Kos' Darkside wonders why people would trust a "helpless" admin to solve the immigration divide. "With a competent admin and an independent Congress, even one[s] we might not care for generally, there would still be hope that they're really going to hammer out a half-ass, intermediate-term solution to illegal immigration. ... But then grim reality comes crashing in." Dean's World looks at it from the minority perspective: "It is blacks (along with legal Latinos) who bear the brunt of illegal immigration, in employment rates. And it is lower-income black communities that are often overrun first with illegal immigrants, who drain social services that should go to citizens and legal residents. ... If black folks must follow the law, then no special rights for anyone else. And no way should illegal immigrants immediately get rights that took centuries for blacks to acquire."

John Cole just can't get into the issue. "To make things even worse, I don't have any desire to educate myself about the current Senate/House legislation. The way I see it, a wall is impractical, not granting amnesty is pointless (does anyone really think we are going to round up all the illegals?), I am not convinced by arguments that illegals are an economic drain or boon (if I had to make an uneducated guess, I would argue it is a wash), and if terrorists want to sneak bombs in, they will find a way that does not involve illegals." His only view is that the feds should help border states with any immigrant-related expenses.

WHITE HOUSE '08: Give Me Liberty Or Give Me A Better Speaking Gig

McCain will deliver the Liberty U. commencement address, having reportedly improved ties with Falwell. Paul Mirengoff: "McCain may be unsuccessful in courting enough conservatives to win the nomination, and that's my hope. But if he's the Republican nominee, he will be running against Hillary Clinton or someone to her left, not against the John McCain of old. As such, he'll have a lock on the centrist vote." Georgia 10: "Ah, a full embrace of the man McCain referred to as 'pandering to the outer reaches of American politics and the agents of intolerance.' My question: will Tim Russert ask Senator McCain if he agrees with Falwell's comments?" Carpetbagger Report: "McCain has no excuse for this. If he's capable of feeling shame, this would be a good time for it. This is, after, the same Falwell that McCain (accurately) criticized as 'an agent of intolerance.'"

DEMOCRATS: Joining The Fight?

AP reports on Dems' terrorism plan, to "eliminate" Osama bin Laden. Nodding approval from AMERICAblog. The Agonist: "Finally the Democrats are talking about the ideas progressives have been developing for 5 years. Finally Democrats, instead of gnashing their teeth about 'getting a plan,' have put together a smart, hard-nosed and realistic appraisal of the global situation and have presented the American people with real choices, not rhetoric." Captain Ed disagrees: "They shrewdly selected Osama as a focal point, reminding the country that after over four years, the Bush administration hasn't captured the terrorist leader. ... However, the Bush administration has isolated the AQ leadership and forced it back into Pakistan, as well as killed off or captured most of the operational leadership in the organization." RightWinged: "Here come the no plan Democrats shouting that they have a better plan, but offering nothing but more Bush bashing and insane promises again."

Daily Kos' Georgia10 looks at Gallup's poll ranking the top 10 issue items, and reminds readers of DCCC chair Rahm Emanuel's proposing universal health care, "A practical proposal which, by the looks of this poll, may widely appeal to the American people."

RedState and some other conservative blogs are discussing fines handed to Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) stemming from a '96 eavesdropping case. "So, if you are keeping score at home, that would be one House Democrat to zero current Congressional or White House Republicans who have been found by a court of law to have participated in illegal domestic surveillance of political opponents."

And Democracy Now publishes an interview with ex-Sen. Gary Hart (D-CO). Both a transcript and audio are available.

ABRAMOFF: We're Off On The Road To Jail, We Certainly Do Get Around

Convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff will be sentenced today for his role in a wire-fraud scheme. TPM Muckracher notes: "The defense team for ... Abramoff is pulling out all the stops as his first trial enters its sentencing phase." While his lawyers claim Abramoff is broke, Sisyphus Shrugged (in a long and very detailed post updating us on the course of the trial leading to sentencing, including just about every link to every document on the case you'd want to find) inquires: "Raise your hand if you think this guy doesn't have money hidden overseas." TalkLeft also offers lots of documents, and calls Abramoff's attys' tactics "great, creative lawyering." Sentencing Law and Policy agrees. Noting letters to the judge on Abramoff's behalf, including some from his children, Roger Ailes responds: "If I was the court, defense counsel's happy horseshit would make me want to throw the book at Abramoff with extra velocity."

ISRAELI ELECTIONS: We Called It -- Likud's In Trouble

Yesterday's elections in Israel drew comment from across the spectrum. As expected, Ariel Sharon's Kadima party won the most seats, with 28, though they had expected better results, and Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party fared much worse than expected, finishing fifth. See the Jerusalem Post for the full wrap-up. New Republic's Yossi Klein Halevi also pens a summary in the L.A. Times. Vital Perspective posts Israeli TV's preliminary exit polling, and An Unsealed Room posts actual results. Her conclusion: "The Likud has been smashed to pieces." The Corner's John Podhoretz: "So the polls are closed, and the story is: Oy." New Donkey summarizes: "Israeli elections appear to have confirmed the much-expected mandate for Ariel Sharon's creation, the Kadima Party, to lead the next government, though with fewer Knesset seats than expected. The real shocker, however, was the collapse of Likud under Bibi Netanyahu, who wrested control of the party from Sharon: it will apparently be the fifth-ranking party in the next Knesset." The Politiburo Diktat sees the results as a positive, and tries to count seats Kadima can use to form a coalition: "If these results hold up, Kadima should be able to begin its unilateral withdrawal." AMERICAblog isn't so optimistic: "Passing anything is not going to be easy." Peaktalk agrees and sees trouble ahead for the coalition gov't: "Israel needs a broad national consensus to give effect to Ariel Sharon's vision and while Ehud Olmert can probably make things work, there will always be a risk that such a fragile coalition may fall apart at a critical juncture." Hugh Hewitt sees a short-lived coalition.

Low turnout was the talk of a number of blogs as well. Fewer Israelis than ever turned out to vote. Captain Ed thinks low turnout "shows that the Israelis have given up on the hardliner approach to stand their ground wherever Israelis live." A Blog For All notes turnout as well, and Dutchblog Israel, who worked the polls yesterday, offers his thoughts on turnout. Meanwhile, soon-to-be-official PM Ehud Olmert has called on Palestinian Pres. Mahmoud Abbas to resume negotiations on Israel's permanent borders. Steve Clemons at The Washington Note: "This is just hopeful news -- but it's important for proponents of negotiations not to get carried away with illusions." Paul Mirengoff makes an international point: "It's interesting, but not heartening, to compare these fragmented election results, in the context of low voter turnout, to the crystal clear Palestinian election results. A people who knows what it wants has a big advantage over a people who is unclear. And when the former wants destruction of the latter, things become scary."

IRAQ: Maybe It Was Just An Advisory Election

3/28's report in the New York Times that the U.S., through Amb. Zalmay Khalilzad, is pressuring Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari to step aside had the left up in arms. AMERICAblog gets the most worked up: "Clearly Iraq is such a mess that Bush is now getting desperate. There is no other way to explain why he would take such a drastic, heavy-handed, and full-of-potential-backfire approach to dealing with the Iraqi prime minister. I think the administration has decided that it's going to be all out civil war - well, it already IS all out civil war, but what Bush now has decided is that Iraq is LOST if the current guy remains in power, and thus they aren't worrying about harming Iraq's democracy, or provoking the shi'ites into joining the anti-American insurgency, simply because Bush already knows we're toast, Iraq is toast, if we stick with the status quo." DailyKos' SusanG: "So those vaunted elections were for ... what exactly? Remind me again. I thought it was to usher in an era of democratic self-determination for Iraqis." Brilliant at Breakfast: "The Bush Junta believes that democracy and free elections are only a good thing when they produce the desired result." Lefty Bluememe concurs. Righty Outside The Beltway agrees to some extent, but offers an alternative explanation: "Such interference goes against the very idea of 'democracy' that we are supposed to be fighting for. On the other hand, installation of an inept government unable to meet basic security needs is in no one's interest." Lefty Road To Surfdom, tounge firmly implanted in cheek, concludes: "If the Iraqis don't accede to Mr. Bush's request, the solution is obvious: invade and force regime change." The Lunch Counter supports the move, linking al-Jaafari to radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

Meanwhile, Power Line thinks there's more evidence of Saddam Hussein making deals with Russia, and moving nuclear materials out of Iraq.

AFGHANISTAN: Disappearing Act

The AP's Shaw reports that Abdul Rahman, the Muslim who converted to Christianity and was threatened with death in Afghanistan, has disappeared. California Conservative notes that Rahman sought asylum in several countries, and that Italy had offered him a home, though it's unclear if he's left Afghanistan already. A Blog For All, Jihad Watch, "Jack Lewis", Michelle Malkin, Sister Toldjah, In The Bullpen, Freedom Folks, Justin Gardner, Ace Of Spades, Below The Beltway, Jawa Report and dozens of others all comment. The Volokh Conspiracy sees Afghanistan's treatment of Rahman as part of a larger problem of democracies that continue to oppress people. Glenn Reynolds points to a report that claims that Rahman's case has generated interest about Christianity in Afghanistan.

SCOTUS: Did Hamden Wear The Same Thing As Anna Nicole?

Justices heard oral arguments in the case of Hamden v. Rumsfeld 3/28, and the Los Angeles Times reports some bad news for the WH on the matter, which deals with presidential authority to set up military tribunals for purported war criminals. Despite being asked by a group of retired admirals and generals to recuse himself from the case (per Washington Post), Justice Antonin Scalia heard the case "and appeared to be the Justice most amenable to the government's position," according to the American Constitution Society. SCOTUSblog, whose author's firm is co-counsel to Hamden, reports on the case and recaps the hearing. Lawyers, Guns and Money calls Scalia a hypocrite and offers previous instances in which Scalia has chastized other members of the court for straying from judicial norms. Even with Scalia still on the bench, Donklephant notes, based on other justices' questions: "It doesn't look good for the government right now." The Left Coaster and TalkLeft reach similar conclusions.

BLOGS VS. THE MACHINE: ACLU Gets More Biz

Jeff Jarvis laments: "The FCC has outlawed the single most essential word in political discourse and protest: bullshit. This is not only an absurd misinterpretation of our community standards and another perilous attack on our First Amendment, I also believe it is a violation of our civil rights worthy of court challenge. Get me to a lawyer, I think we now have the basis for a citizens' suit."

BLOGS VS. THE MSM: DeLayed Quotation

Washington Post's Milbank writes on the redemption of Ex-House Maj. Leader Tom DeLay and his appearance at the Vision America conference in NW DC 3/28. Milbank's piece is taken to task for misquoting The Corner's Tim Graham, who responds to the piece and to what he sees as an anti-evangelical, anti-conservative bias in the Post. NewsBusters piles on.

MISCELLANY: Seriously, People Go Crazy About Their Time Zones

Some quick hits: Hit & Run thinks the FCC needs a lesson on the IN time zone system. Captain's Quarters celebrates the end of anonymous holds in the Senate, but is discouraged by other reforms being tabled in a bill passed 3/28.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: So Is This Civil War?

For those of you in need of some serious mental exercise, an interesting debate between two pillars of the modern Neoconservative movement continues to simmer in the MSM, but lately it's spilled over into the blogosphere as well. First brought to our attention through a New Yorker review of his new book, "America At The Crossroads," the debate centers on Johns Hopkins Prof. Francis Fukuyama's split with Neoconservatives. His main target: Syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer. Round I: Fuyukama's book. Round II: Krauthammer's response, posted at RealClearPolitics and elsewhere, in which Krauthammer derides Fukuyama's "Road to Damascus moment." Suffice it to say, the debate gets nasty quickly, though the fundamental philosophy of neoconservatism is laid bare for all to see, and it's pretty interesting. Just about all the bloggers weighing in, though, take Krauthammer's side, including Wizblog, Jim Rose (who holds an "ideological funeral"), D.C. Thornton, Captain's Quarters, Instapundit, Sister Toldjah and Hugh Hewitt. Just a few come down with Fuyukama, including JustOneMinute, lefty Matthew Yglesias.

Round III still to come.

LEST WE FORGET: "D'oh!"

Ever written a long post, paper for school, article, letter to Mom, etc., just to delete it by mistake right when you've finished? Well, you're in good company.

Also, Fat Dude is on vacation in Iraq. That reminds us, it's a good thing the State Department issued those travelwarnings . And we'd heard Fallujah was lovely this time of year.

NOTES AND ERRATA

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Posted by at 01:17 PM

March 28, 2006

3/28: Fence Sitting

Sometimes bloggers have a knack for being ahead of the curve. But as we find today, they just as often reflect the prevailing CW on the day's dominant story. The reemergence of immigration as a dominant topic nationally, especially after this weekend's mass demonstrations and yesterday's developments on Capitol Hill, has provided a flashpoint again. And while there are some key distinctions between the left and right on policy, no one seems quite sure just how much of an impact any moves will have come 11/06, or whether the issue itself is a decisive one among voters. But these things have a way of working themselves out, so perhaps better indicators are to come.

Elsewhere, today is another day where any number of subjects compete for second billing. Andy Card's resignation as WH CoS is sure to be big talk. The Ben Domenech blogswarm has died down, as AP finds itself scrutinized for its supposed policy not to cite blogs. Also: developments in the Moussaoui case raise some questions; FEC makes moves on regulating the blog world; Antonin Scalia's finger gets some love, and don't miss our latest Blogger Spotlight.

IMMIGRATION: Hot Topic Du Jour

Late 3/27, the Senate Jud. Cmte. voted on comprehensive immigration reform legislation. The cmte's bill, which passed 12-6 and heads to the floor today, is widely seen as more moderate than a version the House passed in '05. In the wake of this weekend's massive protests around the nation (see 3/27 Blogometer), immigration remains a hot topic in the blogosphere. Joe Gandelman at The Moderate Voice covered immigration issues as a reporter and shares his views on the whole spectrum of issues immigration brings up. Reaction on the left was mostly upbeat, as Dems felt like they'd beaten back amendments that were perceived as anti-immigrant. Polimom was one of the optimists, and offers a breakdown of the issue through several issue lenses. She concludes: "The Senate did the right thing yesterday when they put the brakes on this emotional roller-coaster." Ezra Klein sees a move away from "the failed, moralistic, xenophobic policies of the past." Lefties had a fun time debating the politics of immigration as well. DailyKos' Georgia10 thinks the debate helps Dems by hurting GOPers: "Republicans want to make immigration a 'wedge' issue for the midterm elections -- but it appears it is acting as a wedge for the Republican Party itself." The Left Coaster: The bill "will be too much for conservatives, but Democrats are able to get this to the floor now. All eyes turn to Frist now to see if he will blow this up." Everything Between and The Democratic Daily offer similar political analysis. Meteor Blades at The Next Hurrah criticizes Dems for their lack of a coherent position: "I have no hopes that, even if they could, elected Democrats would follow the Iroquois model of looking ahead seven generations in evaluating the possible effects of any policy decisions they make in this matter. Can I at least suggest they look beyond the November elections in choosing a stance?" American Street's Kevin Hayden and Low On The Hog think eliminating the word "illegal" will take the wind out of GOPers' sails. Several conservative blogs follow Meteor Blades' lead, but criticize GOPers in the Sen. John Hawkins, of Right Wing News: "Sometimes, you just have to scratch your head and wonder what goes on in the vast empty space between the ears of some of the Republicans in the Senate." The bill passed, he said, "might as well have been written by Vicente Fox." Jawa Report's Bluto: "Presumably, the Republicans are motivated by the prospect of dirt-cheap labor, while the Democrats hope to harvest votes from the illegal immigrant 'community'." Red State's California Yankee blames the four GOPers who joined Dems to pass the bill out of cmte. Hugh Hewitt blames Sen. John McCain (R-AZ). But Mickey Kaus thinks the issue will work for Republicans. "1) Voters say it's an important issue; 2) A majority wants some sort of border-control action; 3) The GOP base feels intensely about it; 4) Many Congressional Democrats are -- by ideology or interest group pressure -- locked in to a pro-immigrant, non-tough stance (or if they strike a tough pose it seems just that). In all these respects, immigration resembles welfare reform, a key hot-button base-mobilizing issue for Republicans in the 1994 midterms." Glenn Reynolds calls immigration on the whole "poison for both parties." For his part, Wizbang wins our Creative-If-Futile Idea of the Day award with his proposal to scrap the 13th Amendment. Mark Noonan at GOP Bloggers is still peeved about the weekend's demonstrations: "The more these illegals and their foolhardy allies demonstrate, the more likely the House immigration bill (the one that makes it a felony to be in the US illegally) will eventually be signed into law." Euphoric Reality's Heidi thinks L.A., where 500K people protested over the weekend and thousands more walked out of school 3/27 and today, "is fast becoming a Third World dump." Michelle Malkin wonders about Pres. Bush's "shadows" rhetoric in light of the eye-popping number of demonstrators.

BUSH: Knows When To Fold 'Em

This a.m., AP broke news that WH CoS Andy Card resigned. Replacing him will be OMB dir. Josh Bolten. Surprisingly, perhaps, few celebrated Card's tenure. Macs Mind, one of the few offering a handshake on the way out: "Thanks Andy for the service." Other GOPers greeted the news happily. RedState, citing Harriet Miers, the Dubai ports deal and other fiascos, is pleased: "It is about time Mr. Card resigned." More, on the new CoS: "Mr. Bolten has been a forward thinker and we welcome him to the job." Decision '08: "The President has been the victim of poor political handling, beginning at least with Katrina and perhaps before. Anything that will change the personnel dynamic can only be a good thing at this point." But some on the right don't think Bolten will make for much change: Power Line header: "Yawn." More: "I doubt that the change will make any difference, except maybe cosmetically, but it may satisfy some of those who have been demanding 'change' in the administration." Outside The Beltway notes: "Unless Bolton comes up with some bold new policy initiatives, it is unclear how this move will bolster the president's sagging poll numbers." The Moderate Voice: "The Card resignation which just so happens to come amid continued suggestions that Bush change his staff, coupled with the change in approach to dealing with the press, indicate the White House is moving to stem political damage and try to rebuild support in some areas." The left is at once dismissing Card and welcoming Bolten with, erm, open palms. Lefty Firedoglake welcomes the "new" guy: "Bolten has worked with Bush since his time in Texas -- nothing like looking to your circle of cronies first for someone. Wouldn't want anyone who would irritate the President with pesky truthiness or anything." More hits on Bolten from the Booman Tribune: "Since Bolten has done such a bang up job as budget director, I believe it's probably safe for all of us to put bags over our heads and pretend that the next three [years] aren't happening. Think of puppies and kittens. It's better that way." Middle Earth Journal, one of many to sound a common refrain: "Another case of rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic." And Georgia10 chimes in: "There's no saving this failed Presidency now." Blogging of the President also piles on.

In other news, some righties are still talking about Sen. Russ Feingold's (D-WI) censure measure. Matt Margolis: "President Bush actually fights the war on terror, and the Democrats consider that reason for censure, if not impeachment. While Feingold's censure resolution has received little support, some Democrats won't rule it out either."

WAR ON TERRORISM: Tales From An Arlington Courtroom

Convicted Al Qaeda conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui made a splash 3/27 p.m. when he told a jury that he and convicted shoe bomber Richard Reid were to be two hijackers on a fifth plane on 9/11/01. Their target? The WH. Plenty of bloggers responded to the AP's version of the story. Moussaoui's "revelation itself isn't all that shocking. The fact that Moussaoui blurted it out in court is," says righty PunditGuy. Fellow righty Outside The Beltway: "One suspects this will not make the jury sympathetic to his cause." Below The Beltway thanks him for salvaging the gov't's case: "Before today, the government's case looked like it was a loser, especially after the fiasco with the coached TSA witnesses. After this testimony, though, I will be surprised if he doesn't get the death penalty." Instapundit thinks, however, that the testimony "underscores the damage done by the inept investigation after his arrest." Gina Cobb forsees the left's reaction: "Only the very naive or the very anti-American will be surprised by Moussaoui's testimony." Strata-Sphere agrees. Righty Debbie Schlussel takes the opportunity to bash the FBI again.

Others are skeptical that Moussaoui, who once stated that Muslims are permitted to lie in three circumstances, including in the execution of jihad, is telling the truth now. In The Bullpen's Chad Evans: "Richard Reid? I have a hard time believing that." Lefty Newshog smells a ploy: "My gut feeling is that this is a man who has given up the will to live or has discovered the will to die. He is trying to force the jury into making him a martyr." Viking Pundit reaches the same conclusion. Righty Ace of Spades, A Blog For All and Confederate Yankee are likewise skeptical. Captain's Quarters: "I'm rather suspicious of the testimony today, and in the absence of corroboration, I'm inclined to chalk this up to a streak of egotistical, suicidal idiocy on Moussaoui's part." Gates of Vienna also questions Moussaoui's veracity through the lens of a paradox written by Epimenides, a 6th-century Greek prophet and philosopher.

IRAQ: Interviewing The Interviewer

Democracy Project talks with retiring Knight Ridder military editor Joe Galloway. He says the U.S. military has, in Bruce Kessler's words, "painfully earned successful experience that's coming to bear," but the problem is: the "American people are fed up with it." Asked to compare Saigon with Baghdad, Galloway says South Vietnam had a "semi-orderly" military dictatorship, compared to the "not even semi-orderly" early democracy in Iraq.

Daily Kos' SusanG cites Reuters' report that the ruling Shiite majority wants U.S. forces to return control of security to the Iraqi gov't after the latest mosque attack. She the refers to Bush's 1/05 statement, that he'd withdraw forces from Iraq if the new gov't asked him to. "Mr. Bush, Can We Go Home Now?"

SCOTUS: The Sicilian Wave

Not content with expressing his views on a case yet to be argued (see 3/27's Blogometer), SCOTUS Justice Antonin Scalia responded to his critics by flipping them off. Boston Herald reports. Lefty No More Mister Nice Blog comes out firing: "If Ted Kennedy had done something like this thirty years ago, they'd still be attacking him for it." The Carpetbagger Report makes a similar point: "Classy guy. I wonder what conservatives would say if Ruth Bader Ginsburg had done something similar." Two Glasses and The Washington Note make similar points while calling for Scalia's recusal, and AMERICAblog, which first started talking about the incident, wants an apology for "every Christian." Stop The ACLU: "So what if he did [flip the bird]? They deserved it."

Going back to yesterday's argument about whether Scalia ought to recuse himself from Hamden v. Rumsfeld, Joe Gandelman of The Moderate Voice changed his mind and doesn't think Scalia should step aside.

BLOGS VS. THE MSM: Plagiarism The New Black?

Brad DeLong wants WashingtonPost.com exec. ed. Jim Brady to provide examples of Ben Domenech's work that justified his hiring. "I haven't gotten an answer. Somehow I don't think I [will]." Meanwhile, INDC Journal has posted a poem to mark the occasion. But elsewhere, the topic seems to have died down completely.

The AP, apparently, doesn't value blogs as much as their other sources. That, predictably, has bloggers mad. When Raw Story ran a piece 3/13 claiming the Bush admin was changing certain rules relating to granting security clearances, especially based on sexual orientation, several GLBT groups approached the authors and asked for their notes. Given the notes, those groups went to the AP, which followed up with an article of its own. The problem: AP didn't bother to cite Raw Story or the authors who wrote the piece. The AP told one of the authors, Larisa Alexandrovna, that they don't credit blogs. She provides a breakdown of the situation at Huffington Post. Roger L. Simon writes: "This is more than picking on the small fry. This is fear of the small fry -- the media class struggle in its MSM vs. blogs essence." Matt Stoller, Jim Lindgren, Majikthise and L'Ombre de L'Olivier call AP's actions either stealing or plagarism. Captain's Quarters: "After seeing the pillorying that Ben Domenech received -- and rightly so -- for plagiarism, this arrogant dismissal of outright theft by the supposed "professionals" of the mainstream media puts the whole issue in perspective. This implicates not just the AP, one of the world's largest newsgathering organizations, but every client of the AP that runs their stories on their sites and in their newspapers."

FEC: They Let Me Be Me

The FEC ruled 3/27 to exempt blogs and other internet communications from political advertising laws. Those weighing in were resoundingly positive. RedState, as always, has coverage of the meeting, complete with remarks from FEC chair Michael Toner. Wizbang called the new rules, which were approved on a 6-0 vote, "excellent news for all those who opine about politics and politicians on the internet." DailyKos' Adam B: "The netroots have won."

In other campaign finance news, Tim Chapman, one of the bloggers on a conference call with top GOP members discussing 527 reform, concludes that, instead of properly regulating 527 groups under McCain-Feingold, "I think in their zeal to come up with a 'temporary fix' to a real problem," Reps. Eric Cantor (R-VA), Tom Price (R-GA), Tom Cole (R-OK), Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and Patrick McHenry (R-NC) "have chosen more regulation instead of less." Hugh Hewitt agrees: "This seems like a cough syrup nastier than the cough." Of note, Club For Growth is adding the bill, HR 4975, to their "key vote" list. They're calling a "No" vote one that is pro-economic growth.

BLOGGER SPOTLIGHT: Comments From The PunditGuy-llery

Today, the Blogometer talks to Bill Nienhuis, also known as the PunditGuy.

What is your full name?

Bill Nienhuis

What is your age?

40.

Where did you grow up?

Northwest Washington State.

Where do you live now?

Same.

What is your occupation?

Director for an electronic book publishing company.

Have you ever worked on a political campaign or for the mainstream media?

No.

When did you start blogging and why?

I started blogging in October of 2004 because I was interested in the '04 Presidential Election.

What has been your favorite post, or favorite story to write about, in that time?

2005 Tsunami, because I was one of only a couple of bloggers to post amateur video of the destruction as it happened.

Describe your typical blogging schedule.

I blog in the morning, then sporadically as stories develop during the day.

And what is your average output?

More or less, 4 to 6 posts per day.

Who is your favorite political blogger?

Michelle Malkin.

Favorite non-political blogger?

Guy Kawasaki.

Who is your favorite mainstream media columnist?

Charles Krauthammer.

What is your favorite television news program, either network or cable?

Meet the Press.

What MSM-produced websites (i.e. newspapers, magazines) do you visit on a daily basis?

The Washington Post and Yahoo! News.

What non-MSM websites (i.e. blogs) do you visit on a daily basis?

25 to 30 different blogs, mostly political or current event focused.

How often, or do you ever, read a newspaper in its dead-tree (i.e. print) form?

Only when I'm on a flight (USA Today).

How do you see the new media and old media affecting and influencing each other in the next five years?

Old media is learning to react to stories faster, and they're now browsing the blogosphere in order to gauge what the "buzz" is as news happens. Bloggers who are serious about what they write are trying to be as thorough and accurate as possible so they can gain recognition among the MSM. Some hope that they'll be picked by MSM sites to submit regular editorial pieces, etc.

MISCELLANY: Likud In Trouble?

Today's elections in Israel is expected to bring out two-thirds of registered voters -- a mark called low for average Israeli elections. Roger L. Simon is blogging from the U.S., while An Unsealed Room and IsraellyCool liveblog from Israel. So is The Guardian. Of note, Vital Perspective is reporting that ex-PM/Likud party head Benjamin Netanyahu is expressing concern about winning just 14 of the Knesset's 120 seats.

Mark Tapscott pays tribute to ex-Reagan aide Lyn Nofzinger, who died 3/27 at the age of 81: "It's just not possible to try to put into words at such a moment what Lyn represented, either to America or to hundreds of us who worked with and for him during the Reagan years. He was the truest and the toughest of the Reaganauts. And so much more. For many of us, Lyn was also father, confidante and friend and we would walk through fire for the man. Even now years later, tears are being shed all over America by those who knew and loved him." Tapscott includes links to obits from major papers.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: We're All Patriots

George Mason is one of the top searches at Technorati, proving perhaps that everyone in the blogosphere can rally around the underdog. Power Line breaks down the tournament and why he almost didn't watch. And The Volokh Conspiracy's writers -- most of whom are George Mason U. profs., are beside themselves at the "stunning, breathtaking results, and magical games."

LEST WE FORGET: Wallowing In Wealth

The New Editor links to an IL Daily Herald report, on Univ. of IL researchers who "may have learned how to turn pig manure into crude oil more efficiently by using a continuous reactor." Ace of Spades HQ reads on with interest, and provides this ironic twist of fate: "Let's see. Muslims have most of the oil. Muslims use the oil weapon against us. Muslims hate pigs, considering them 'unclean' because they root in their own feces. Pig feces can be used to make oil. I love it when God decides to get funny."

Ace also does a funny breakdown of the top 10 differences between Sen. John Kerry's and VP Cheney's riders. Number 3: "For exercise, John Kerry requires a yoga mat and aerobic "step" platforms; Dick Cheney requires a set of nunchucks and a kidnapped hobo."

Posted by at 12:44 PM

March 27, 2006

3/27: Ex Post Facto

So what is there to be learned from the Ben Domenech saga? For one, that you can't please all sides at the same time. WPNI was sensitive to complaints about the lack of a right-leaning view online, hired one, and then found itself inundated with complaints from those on the left who want an explicitly liberal view to counter it. In the process, plagiarism allegations surfaced, which leads to another lesson: Look before you jump. The MSM is trying to embrace online media for fear of being replaced entirely. We've seen some top bloggers picked, absorbed or heavily featured on MSM outlets, mostly with success. But as we see with Red America, "successful blogger" does not equal "successful journalist." The voices we feature in Blogometer are a mix of the expert who blogs part-time as an extra outlet, and the amateur whose blog is his/her only way of being heard. Some of the latter, perhaps, become successful beyond their ability, and while it's unfair to say Domenech was 'amateur,' his case shows there's a lot of vetting that should be done before a blogger is plucked from obscurity -- whether they're ready for prime time.

Clearly, the Domenech case was a focus this weekend, and reaction today is broken down in several categories. But as always, there's more to talk about, including the latest Scalia controversy, an update on the Abdul Rahman case, and talk on this weekend's immigration protests across the country.

DOMENECH I: (Less Than) A Week Performance

Just after 1 p.m. 3/24, WashingtonPost.com exec. ed. Jim Bradyannounced : "Domenech has resigned, effective immediately." He adds that the site was "not aware of any allegations that he had plagiarized any of his past writings. ... We appreciate the speed and thoroughness with which our readers and media outlets surfaced these allegations. Despite the turn this has taken, we believe this event, among other things, testifies to the positive and powerful role that the Internet can play in the the practice of journalism."

A sample of the comments: "Here's an idea for your next 'red america' hire: have someone google his clip file. And if you ever get around to hiring a 'blue america' blogger, you could do the same." "If you insist on having an additional right-wing voice on this site, here's hoping that you try to find someone with just a smidgen of integrity." "Mr. Brady's communication above is absolutely astounding. It reaches a height of irresponsibility that, in my opinion, disqualifies him from his position." "I think it's a powerful statement on the state of media in general that a journalistic institution with a repute for investigative reporting does not have the resources to do a simple background check on a new employee." There are many, many, many more.

Meanwhile, at Red State, Ben "Augistine" Domenech gives his side of the story. "I know that charges of plagiarism are serious. While I am not a journalist, I have, myself, written more than one thing that has been plagiarized in the past. But these charges have also served to create an atmosphere where no matter what is said on my Red America blog, leftists will focus on things with my byline from when I was a teenager." Among his explanations for alleged plagiarism: "The most recent accusation, is that I stole a music review from Crosswalk and passed it off at National Review Online. In fact, I wrote both lists myself; I was one of Crosswalk's music review contributors at the time. ... Virtually every other alleged instance of plagiarism that I've seen comes from a single semester's worth of pieces that were printed under my name at my college paper, The Flat Hat, when I was 17. ... The truth is, a more responsible teenager would've nipped this sort of thing in the bud. A less sloppy writer would have made sure that material copied from other places never made it into a published piece, and never necessitated apologies or explanations that will do nothing to stop the critics. I was wrong not to do so." He concludes: "To my friends: thank you for your support. To my enemies: I take enormous solace in the fact that you spent this week bashing me, instead of America."

Later, he offered an apology. Red State's Krempasky: "A young man took something and called it his own. He owes apologies to those writers, his editors, and especially his friends who have rushed to his defense in the past 48 hours. It is an embarrassing offense -- and one rightly criticized. All of the leadership of RedState has struggled mightily over the past few days, and have tried at every step to take the right course of action. Now that the story is complete, we can move on."

DOMENECH II: This Is Why Bloggers Aren't Armed

A sample of some of the reaction, first right, then left. Protein Wisdom: "[T]hose on the left who have been braying all day over Ben's downfall have two choices, as I see it: they can continue to gloat and carry around his scalp as a trophy to their own viciousness ... -- showing themselves to be the very fetishists of schadenfreude I accused them of being; or they can now explain to us why they don't hold their own to the same ethical standards." Sister Toldjah: "While Domenech did the right thing by resigning, and the conservative blogosphere has done their part in rightly condemning what Domenech has done and praising his resignation, one thing that should not be lost on this is that the people who viciously went after Domenech did not do so in order for the Washington Post to have an 'honest conservative blogger' at the Red America blog. ... The ultimate goal in all this after in all this was not just Domenech's resignation or firing, but the removal of the Red America blog from the Washington Post's website altogether." Decision '08: "Let's have none of this half-hearted grudging acknowledgment -- we were right with RatherGate, and they were right here. Furthermore, they did us a service, believe it or not, by finding these examples of 'idea theft' and bringing them to light. We don't want the conservative viewpoint, in such a high-profile outlet, to be represented by a plagiarist." The Unalienable Right: "It looks like the Washington Post simply hired the wrong guy. They did the right thing securing his resignation, there's just no excuse for plagiarism." UNCoRRELATED: "I feel bad for him, but frankly I wasn't all that pleased with the Washington Post's move--one of the most subtle but damaging things that can happen to any movement is having someone else pick your standard-bearer."

Talk Left: "Those on the right who have tried to justify's Domenech's alleged plagiarism by calling it an act of youthful indiscretion or somehow justifiable because they mostly pertained to movie reviews, are way off base. High school journalism students have had plagiarism drummed into them. He was writing for a college newspaper and a national publication. Matt Stoller's take: "It doesn't matter if it's hiring Ben Domenech or listening as Bush tries to convince you of the link between 9/11 and Saddam or that Iraq is now named 'flowers and candy land', journalists should no longer listen to the right-wing. ... When you do, and when you treat the conservative movement as if they are a legitimate source of information, you end up with WMDs in Iraq, 9/11 linked to Saddam, or on a small scale, an unethical racist trashing the brand of the Washington Post and the career of Jim Brady." Atrios: "[I]f the Post had announced a 'Blue America' along with 'Red America' Ben's plagiarism likely would've never been discovered. The outrage was over the fact that once again conservatives succeeding in mau-mauing a mainstream media outlet into balancing reporters with conservatives." Oliver Willis: "This prompts larger questions about conservative 'journalism'. This is a guy who - Wrote for National Review - Edited books for Regnery (Hugh Hewitt, Michelle Malkin) - Was a speechwriter for a U.S. Senator .. And consistently got kicked up the conservative food chain. Yet the minute he got work in the supposedly liberal mainstream media, that was the first time anyone scrutinized his past work (and the Post was asleep at the wheel, too) and it turns out he was a serial plagiarist."

From the "we're becoming mainstream" file, Markos Moulitsas of DailyKos appeared on CNN's "Reliable Sources" 3/26 and spoke to host Howard Kurtz about Domenech. Crooks and Liars has video and a partial transcript.

DOMENECH III: Picking Up The Pieces

The Woodchuck says that Brady's post.Blog info "does not indicate whether the Washington Post has learned any lessons from this debacle. Will its editors be more careful in the future? Will management think twice before trying to prove its bona fides to the howling harpies of the right wing?" Captain's Quarters disagrees: "The left-wing blogosphere came out in full attack mode from the moment this project was announced, and Jim stuck by his decision to hire Domenech and gave him a fair opportunity to prove himself. When the hysteria gave way to real problems ... Brady took the proper action in starting an investigation. If Domenech resigned on his own, or if the Post pushed it, the correct result has been achieved." FishBowlDC: "Even though dust hasn't settled yet, it's never too early to ask an all important question: Who would make a good author for the Red America blog? ... Before the plagiarism revelations surfaced, the best arguments against Domenech addressed the fact that Domenech's political philosophy/tone/comments didn't rise to a level commensurate with (what ought to be) the Post's standards." MY Vast Right Wing Conspiracy: "I hope they still plan to run a right-of-center blog, but you know that no matter who they hire, that person will be viciously attacked. Hopefully that person will be more well-known/more 'tested' by the public." At CBS' Public Eye, Vaughn Ververs writes: "Let's say another conservative is hired to take over for Domenech. Is the Web site obligated to launch a 'Blue State' blog? Most editorial pages contain a mixture of voices, some conservative, some liberal some sort of moderate. But is there any obligation to operate under some formula? They may alienate a large segment of their audience, but they are free to print whatever voices they choose." Riehl World View offers this suggestion: "Create a predetermined number of slots -- 3, 6, 8, or whatever -- and audition and screen a small team of conservative bloggers to blog for washingtonpost.com, or a washingtonpost.comRight? The model would also work for the Left, should the site decide to do both." TAPPED: "I believe this episode with Domenech clearly shows why members of the press, for their own good, need to understand, support, and strengthen the distinction between journalism and online partisan activism."

IMMIGRATION: Get On The Bus

Following rallies this weekend in L.A., where 500K people came out, as well as Denver, Phoenix, Atlanta, Reno and other cities over immigration bills pending in the Senate and House, the blogosphere is talking about a major '06 and '08 issue. Los Angeles Times and the AP report on the story. Slate's Mickey Kaus writes a wrapup of the L.A. march and an overview of immigration as it will effect the '06 midterms. Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds thinks the rallies hurt immigration proponents' cause: "Illegal immigrants as individuals just trying to make a better life are sympathetic. Illegal immigrants as a mass movement making demands on the polity are considerably less so." Leon Wolf of RedState opines on the matter under the header "In Case You Thought This Was Going Away." The Corner's Mark Krikorian agrees, but sees the positive on the world stage: "The shape of immigrant protest in Europe is a sign of how much more intracable their immigration problem is than ours, and for that we should be grateful." Believing that most who participated in the rallies are illegal immigrants themselves, righty JunkYardBlog is shocked: "The mind reels at the arrogance of these scofflaws." PA Pundits, Power Line, Blogs For Bush, American Digest and Bill Bradley at New West Notes agree. Conservative Don Suber has a different, more immigrant-friendly approach: "They yearn to breathe free? Come on in. The 11 million illegal aliens in the nation pose little threat to national security. The 19 hijackers on Sept. 11 all were here legally. None were Mexican." Marc Cooper agrees, reporting that the L.A. protest was the largest in the city's history: "It seems to me that when an entire population -- who, after all, cleans our offices, cuts our lawns, serves our food, makes our beds, tends to our children and pays taxes but gets no refunds -- is threatened with criminalization they have the right and necessity to politically mobilize." Noting the blowback from Prop 187 in CA in '94, after which Latinos flocked to register as Dems, Pensito Review notes: "I hope the GOP follows through on its plan to "nationalize" the immigration issue this year. Let them reap the whirlwind." Huffington Post's Max Blumenthal has a report on "the largest, most energized demonstration I have ever witnessed in my life."

Newsweek profiles Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO), his drive to keep immigration bills alive, and his own '08 ambitions. Lefty Pam, at Pam's House Blend, on Tancredo's '08 hopes: "That's got to make Karl and Kenny Mehlman feel queasy." Slublog makes an historical analogy: "Tancredo is the second coming of Joseph McCarthy." Another Progressive Voice agrees: "This guy does not deserve to be a Representative of our government with the kind of hate he breathes." Andrew West, though, is on Tancredo's side.

In other immigration gossip around the blogosphere, Nathan Newman at TPM Cafe notes recent polls on the matter and comes to a conclusion: "Those who think humane approaches to immigration are "political suicide" are ignoring public opinion." ReasonOnline's Hit & Run notes the WH '08 implications of pending legislation, and notes that Pres. Bush speaks on immigration this a.m. at DAR Constitution Hall in DC. Michelle Malkin focuses on Bush's weekend radio address, which dealt with immigration, and dispells a popular myth: "We are not a 'nation of immigrants.'" And anti-immigration advocates are noting that a Minuteman volunteer was pushed to the ground at a protest in IN. Freedom Folks and Miff's Chronicles have details. And DailyKos' Cafeoz profiles (satirically) those guarding our northern border.

IRAQ: Old Gray Lady Gets New White Papers

The New York Times reports on a 1/31/03 meeting between Pres. Bush and British PM Tony Blair, at which Bush "made clear" his intentions to go to war with or without a second U.N. resolution and set a 3/10/03 date for entering Iraq. The story is getting a lot of play. Many in the blogosphere see the report as proof that the infamous Downing Street Memo was accurate, including Truth or Consequences, The Peking Duck, DailyKos' Georgia10, Bark Bark Woof Woof and NewsHog, who notes that NYT is catching up to the British media, which reported the story in 2/06.

The left is up in arms over the story. Norwegianity asks: "Can we impeach him now? Not that that would represent any kind of justice. For that we'd need something more like the last fifteen minutes of Braveheart." Brilliant At Breakfast: "Now the rest of the country should know [that the war was fought on false pretenses]. The question is whether they will still choose not to know, because to know is to be obligated to get involved with the political processes necessary to do something about it." Jonathan Schwartz notes that, after this and the original Downing Street Memo, 9 other documents detailing planning of the war in Iraq far in advance of the second U.N. resolution have come to light thus far. Seeing The Forest, Kevin Drum, The Liberal Avenger, The Carpetbagger Report and others post long missives about the story. The Mahablog sums everyone's arguments up and fires back at a few.

Sister Toldjah reasons that Bush knew Saddam would mislead the UN, so of course war was inevitable. Her conclusion: "As usual, the NYT is all about sound and fury, signifying -- well, here I go repeating myself." Captain Ed agrees: "The Times presents us with a memo that shows the US and UK understanding that Saddam would not cooperate with the UN nor voluntarily disarm or step aside; history proved them correct on all those assertions." Confederate Yankee gives NYT credit for "a huge non-story."

SCOTUS: No Need For Argument

SCOTUSBlog, reporting a story that Newsweek has in this week's issue, discusses SCOTUS Justice Antonin Scalia's controversial comments at a 3/8 talk at the University of Freiburg, including everything from Bush v. Gore (Scalia: "Come on, get over it") and Guantanamo detainee rights ("Foreigners, in foreign countries, have no rights under the American Constitution"). The left wants Scalia to recuse himself from the forthcoming review of Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the detainee-rights case stemming from treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. Jonathan Singer at MyDD says "Antonin Scalia must recuse himself for prejudging the case." On the right, Captain Ed agrees: "Scalia is, without a doubt, one of the more brilliant legal minds on the bench at any level. However, when it comes to decorum and judicial temperament, it seems that Scalia has some room for improvement." Captain Ed and Singer both point out that Chief Justice Roberts, who wrote the opinion being reviewed while he served on the 4th circuit, has already recused himself. Lefty Big Brass Blog laments the lack of accountability on the court: "Because of the virtual blanket immunity of Supreme Court Justices to consequences from the decisions they render and the conditions of personal belief and professional conduct under which they render those decisions, Mr. Scalia will likely face no material sanction should he proceed with what is now his apparent intention to participate in the adjudication of Hamdan v. Rumsfeld." Righty Ed Whelan, at NRO's Bench Memos, doesn't think Scalia needs to step aside: "The mere fact that a justice has made public comments that would or might have some bearing on a case that comes before the Court has never been regarded as requiring recusal." Stop The ACLU and JunkYardBlog are on Scalia's side. AMERICABlog, Daffodil Lane and Raven's View want him gone. Lefty La'Ikoa offers some advice: "Maybe he should use that "no comment" thing more often." Matthew Franck at NRO's Bench Memos thinks SCOTUS shouldn't take the case to begin with.

AFGHANISTAN: Free At Last

While we briefly mentioned it on Friday, Afghan Abdul Rahman, the Muslim who converted to Christianity, was released this weekend. Captain Ed says the story isn't over: "His best bet is to apply for asylum to the West, preferably the US." Michelle Malkin agrees, and includes a roundup of world reaction to the story. Think Progress faults Sec/State Condoleezza Rice's explanation of why Rahman was release, and offers video of Rice on "Fox News Sunday." RJ Eskow also blames Rice at Huffington Post. Others discussing the situation: Below The Beltway, Jihad Watch, Blogs for Bush, PunditGuy, Power Line, A Blog For All, The Belmont Club and dozens of others.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Gettin' Better All The Time

There was also a lot of buzz this weekend about draft regulations for political blogging, to be voted on by the FEC this a.m. The rules are posted on the FEC's website [PDF]. Election Law's Rick Hasen calls the new rules "the product of thoughtful---and extended---deliberation," and is generally upbeat about them: "This is about everything that the Internet political community could hope for. ... These are very good rules in preserving robust political speech on the internet that takes place without much danger of the corruption of candidates." Hasen's only point of concern is that the FEC failed to require bloggers to post disclaimers when they receive payment from campaigns. Ex-FEC chair Brad Smith, Captain's Quarters, Everything I Know Is Wrong, Adam B at DailyKos, Bob Bauer and Allison Hayward all post interesting takes on the new rules.

LEST WE FORGET: The Secret's Out

Fans of NBC's "The West Wing" (there are some of you out there still, no?) caught a glimpse of the one and only Atrios in the 3/26 episode. Rep./Dem WH nominee Matthew Santos (D-TX) is in the midst of a Philly swing, and his camp arranged a Q&A with the well-read local blogger. It's not exactly the most flattering presentation, however. Coeruleus has a screen capture, and points out: "NBC tells us Atrios is 'not much of a people person.'" Atrios previewed: "Watch NBC make me look like an idiot. ... Ideally it would star me, as me, the dashing young blogger who smites evil, saves the world, and gets the girl, but in reality it's just a brief bit with an actor playing 'Atrios.'" He later jokes: "Not quite as bad as I thought -- Jon Bon Jovi did a really convincing Atrios."

Posted by at 02:20 PM

March 24, 2006

3/24: Roads? Where We're Going, We Don't Need Roads

The one-year anniversary of the Blogometer will arrive next Thursday, March 30, but I -- William Beutler, the guy who's hidden behind that annoying "editorial 'we'" for all this time -- won't be here to mark the occasion. Today is my last day compiling the Blogometer; I recently accepted a position with a different company doing something else blog-related -- and the catch is, they won't let me do that unless I give this up. It's a tough call, but an inevitable one -- this is a heck of a beat, but a hell of a grind.

Thanks go to Hotline editor Chuck Todd, who gave me the chance to create this thing last February, and then in June consented to publish it on the web for free. Definitely a big step -- you can have a Hotline subscription for a song... and by that I mean buying the rights to "Hey Jude." Thanks to my backup/assistant Blogometerers Mike Memoli, and now Reid Wilson. Thanks also to my tipsters; don't forget to tip my successors as well -- just direct them to the address above right. And thanks to the bloggers I've gotten to know or gotten to know better. I hope I've done a truthful job of tracking and telling of your travails, and I plan to keep watching this community develop -- brilliant and infuriating and everything else it may be. As a writer, I have to look at the blogosphere as a unique group -- or collection of groups -- on a new literary scene with a new literary scheme: It's certainly not the most eloquent, but it is perhaps the most honest and -- for communicating ideas -- certainly the most effective.

I won't be here anymore, but I won't be far; I'll be around in other endeavors. The decision to leave doesn't come lightly, but as Homer Simpson once said: Meh. I've had a good run. So let's do this one last time:


°    °   °   °   °

Today is nearly one big edition of our recurring category subhead "Blogs vs. the MSM." The controversy surrounding GOP activist/Post.com blogger Ben Domenech has gone from major blogswarm to critical mass since early last p.m., and we could have written this entire edition about him. But we also touch on comparatively minor controversies involving the New York Times and ABC News. Both cases are all about, or ultimately about, media bias to the bloggers concerned (and they are concerned). The right is reacting to reports that to them confirm MSM bias against Pres. Bush at the NYT and ABC. The left continues investigating Domenech and putting pressure on the Post; to their mind his hiring is an example of the MSM diminishing itself to quiet conservative critics. The Domenech debacle is in fact alarming to both sides, as both fear the negative attention it's getting will dissuade other media companies from making hires out of the blogosphere.

We also touch on recent days' events in Iraq and Afghanistan, and don't miss our coda proposing a grand unified theory of the political-media establishment. Plus, Hotline's poll editor takes a look at the latest Hotline/Diageo poll, which asked 600 GOPers to name their favorite blogs. The responses were very, very perplexing. Very. Try as we might, an adequate explanation of the results escape us. If you have a theory, well, as we said -- the e-mail address can be found in the sidebar just to the northeast of this entreaty.

DOMENECH I: Under Attack By Commie Nazis!

Update: Shortly after deadline, Domenech resigned from the Washington Post.

The saga of Ben Domenech, the Washington Post and their left-wing critics continues apace. What was a big story the morning his blog Red America launched quickly became fodder for politicians and the MSM. Rep. Pete Stark (D-CA) sent a letter to the Post in the p.m. on 3/22, as noted at Eschaton and dismissed at RedState. E&P has been on the case. Header: "New 'Wash Post' Blogger: OK, Coretta King Was Not a Communist, My Bad." The Post's Howard Kurtz covered it as well this a.m.

The controversy has already been inspiration for discussion as well, where at Real Clear Politics, Dave Mastio points out that MSM reporters often come from liberal magazines such as The New Republic, Washington Monthly, and American Prospect. He counts current NYTer Nicholas Confessore, Posties Katherine Boo and David Segal, and others. Then he shifts gears: "Can anyone name for me a current New York Times or Washington Post reporter who was previously on the staff of National Review, The Weekly Standard or The American Spectator? No? Maybe that's because there are none. And over time, this imbalance has consequences for the press."

The development that really sent it this into overdrive was the discovery that Domenech had posted at RedState as "Augustine." The left is on a mission, and so far they've been firing on all cylinders -- although the level of vitriol directed at Domenech could have undercut their claims about Domenech/Augustine's intemperate rhetoric, for which he apologized at his Post blog yesterday.

For using the descriptor "Communist" to describe Coretta Scott King, Media Matters' David Brock sent a letter to the entire Post management calling on them to fire this "bigoted blogger." OR-based film producer Jane Hamsher wrote a much harsher letter to Post.com's Jim Brady -- her 2nd this week -- calling on him to admit that Domenech is the author who writes as "Augustine." That can be found at her own Firedoglake as well as at Huffington Post.

Full disclosure: She also mentions us (although her insinuation that the Blogometer itself is a conservative publication is incorrect). As it happens, the Blogometer had an unwitting role in exposing Domenech's name. We've known for some time that Domenech was Augustine, and thought nothing of it when we described him as "Ben 'Augustine' Domenech" in our 1/26 edition. Not long after a diarist at Daily Kos noticed that he couldn't figure out where Domenech's RedState posts were, someone turned up the connection at Google. Here at the Blogometer we never like being part of a story -- but sometimes it's unavoidable. The meta can become the subject, especially in the blogosphere.

In RedState's Corner-esque RedHot, pseudynomous contributor Blanton -- himself recently accused of racism by MyDD's Matt Stoller -- called the appellation absurd: "The same people who have cheapened usage of the word 'nazi' will do the same for the word 'racist' and we will all be worse off because of it. In the meantime, people will start ignoring them because they seem too comfortable screaming racism every chance they get." Meanwhile, Augustine himself posted about the Cowboys picking up kicker Mike Vanderjagt.

DOMENECH II: Gimme A Lift?

All that became moot when the scrutiny applied to Domenech's past writings turned up something that had nothing to do with invective: a history of plagiarism. So far, lefty bloggers have turned up multiple instances stretching from '99 (when Domenech was about 17) to '01. The Kurtz story above mentions it, but apparently was put to bed before the extent of it became clear. Lefty bloggers had already made a project of finding the most damning passages of Domenech's past writings, but now they're zeroing in on this "damned" thing.

Here's an as-complete-as-we-can-manage list of alleged incidents:

As Daily Kos' Hunter described the shift: "We've moved on from Domenech's funeral-day assertion that Coretta Scott King was a communist, or his comparison of the Supreme Court to the Ku Klux Klan. Those are small things. Now it's getting bad." Hilzoy at Obsidian Wings expounds on the seriousness of plagiarism -- the "mortal sin" of the writing profession -- and says, "if these charges pan out" and the Post doesn't "fire him, they have no standards at all."

This a.m., The Flat Hat itself carries an editorial titled: "Poison of plagiarism."

All this breathes new life into Brendan Nyhan's suspicion that he fabricated a Tim Russert quote, which he'd originally written for Spinsanity in 6/02. Salon's Joe Conason covers this angle and the plagiarism, too. Nyhan himself asks at his personal blog: "Talk about a lack of due diligence by the Post. Will the newspaper investigate the plagiarism charges and the mysterious AP article? Or will they just fire Domenech and try to salvage what's left of their reputation?"

Unsurprisingly, the controversy has consumed the Domenech co-founded RedState this a.m. There, Erick Erickson writes under the header "We Must Defend": "It's true. Ben Domenech is Augustine. And I stand behind him 100%. He has said nothing filled with racism or hate, or bigotry. In fact, Ben has been a leader in keeping those he dubs the 'evilcons' off RedState." More: "Ben is accused of being a racist, gay, homophobe, an incestuous lover of his own mother, a partisan, evil, and now a plagiarist. ... Should these people succeed, how many bloggers from either side will ever again get so far? I would suspect none -- not when there are people closer to the media who would fit the bill. ... What media company would want to take the risk of a blogswarm?" Dem-leaning blogger Bob Brigham, sometimes of Swing State Project, shows up in the comments and agrees with this point, but that's about all. Hitting the same point, liberal Sadly, No! whips up a Photoshopped Washington Post cover featuring a photo of Domenech and the header "Plagiarism Threatens Credibility of 'Blogosphere'"

Erickson continues in the same post: "And now those opposed to Ben have googled prior writings that on the surface appear suspicious, but only because permissions obtained and judgments made offline were not reflected online by an outdated and out-of-business campus newspaper." From the conclusion: "Ben Domenech deserves our full advocacy and defense. He has done nothing wrong and does not deserve urban legends about his wrong doing solely because of the lies of those who are jealous of his success."

Scott Shields, MyDD: "RedState responds, foaming at the mouth. Apparently, we're either making up the plagiarism charge or we're misinformed about the fact that all of those writers actually gave Domenech permission to copy their work." Shields is "pretty sure" the claim "will be debunked by morning. Just a hunch."

Erickson was followed soon after by the anonymous RedStater Machiavel: "In 2006 in America, we see perfect replicas of Stalin's drones at work in response to about the only decent thing said about the Domenech affair on Daily Kos" -- a diary posted by a liberal friend of Domenech's titled "I Know Ben Domenech," saying: "tone of the comments I've seen here and around the blogosphere about Ben, by people who surely haven't met him is sad." The Kossacks vigorously object. Back to Machiavel: "Now is the time to close ranks, and not give in to the temptations of the circular firing squad. Chris Bowers tells us that Ben's hiring signifies the death of the right-blogosphere. To the contrary, the scurrilous attacks on Ben signal the demise and fall of the left-blogosphere as an authentic alternative voice. They are now shills for traditional media and no more. ... Michelle. Hugh. Rush. Glenn. This is the moment. Where will you stand?" Hewitt has said nothing so far, while Glenn -- that being Instapundit's Reynolds, hasn't either -- but does link to a story about plagiarism at Chinese universities. Of the ones named, by Machiavel, Michelle Malkin quotes Atrios commenters attacking home-schooling, and comes up with a new apothegm: "First, Bush Derangement Syndrome. Now: Ben Domenech Derangement Syndrome."

And all subsequent posts on the front page dealt with the issue: "We Must Continue" by Moe Lane, "Pathetic" by Clayton Wagar, "The midgets' fury, part 2: homeschooling" by Josh "Tacitus" Trevino, and "This is About Decency" again by Machiavel.

Otherwise, the right has pretty much stayed mum about it. But those who do are split between their objection to the invective leveled at Domenech and what appear to be the plain facts.

WV-based journo Don Surber was ready to throw him overboard even before the plagiarism: "[T]his is the sort of 'blogger' that Jeff Jarvis and Glenn Reynolds want to replace actual journalists like me -- guys who have covered a fire and who have withstood attacks from the left ([Dem Sen.] Bob Byrd big enough for you?) and know you don't go running into the fray screaming 'Bring it on!' at the top of your lungs. They will and how." More: "Blog revolution? Marketplace politics? Sure, this guy got the blog gig the old fashioned way: He had connections. Daddy. Republicans. Regenery press."

He certainly does -- or did -- have other defenders, though. Dan Riehl defended him against Media Matters -- but when the charges of plagiarism arose, declined to continue. Likewise, Confederate Yankee expended a great deal of time rebutting Brock's letter forcefully -- but when he learned of the new charges via Riehl, stood down, calling it a "strong argument for Domenech to resign." Late this a.m., Malkin joined them: "And, painfully, Domenech's detractors, are right. He should own up to it and step down. Then, the Left should cease its sick gloating and leave him and his family alone."

At press time, there was nothing further from Domenech, but watch Red America -- as well as the sites linked above -- to see what comes next.

BLOGS VS. THE MSM I: Amusing Himself To Death

On 3/23 Drudge Report splashed the all-caps headline "ABC NEWS EXEC: 'BUSH MAKES ME SICK'; E-MAIL REVEALED" underneath the scan of a 9/30/04 -- during the 1st debate between Bush and John Kerry -- Berry'd e-mail from ABC prod. John Green (now with "GMA"), to a person or persons unknown: "Are you watching this? Bush makes me sick. If he uses the 'mixed messages' line one more time, I'm going to puke." Subsequent updates note an e-mailed apology from Green to ABC News staff, and a friend of Green saying: "John feels so badly about this email. He is a straight shooter and great producer who is always fair." Hugh Hewitt hosted Instapundit's Reynolds and Kausfiles' Mickey Kaus on his 3/24 show; Radioblogger has the transcript. Kaus, often friendly to conservative arguments, writes later: "I tried not to agree with everything Hugh said." USS Neverdock notes that "GMA" itself noted that a viewer survey showed "the vast majority believed the media were biased in their Iraq coverage." Considering the Green revelations: "That's not surprising." At IMAO, Laurence Simon has fun coming up with fantastical, just-shy-of-impossible alternate explanations for the meaning of Green's e-mail. On last p.m.'s "Countdown," host Keith Olbermann appeared to pin the leaked e-mail on the WH. While left-leaners are mostly occupied with Domenech or other issues, new Huffington Post hire (from Media Bistro) Rachel Sklar pushes back: "This just in: a voter had opinions about a presidential candidate. ... He provides no examples and no further evidence of how Green or any other ABC staffer prepare reports that were biased or presented conclusions that were unsupported by fact." She adds: "For the record, Bush made reference to 'mixed' messages and/or signals 8 times during the debate, and Kerry made 4 in response." Right-trending Dem Roger L. Simon agrees in part, but arrives at a different conclusion: "Frankly, Green should not be so upset. This is his opinion and he's welcome to it in a free society. The idea that he would be impartial is simply a myth. Last I heard John Green was a human being. Only machines (so far) are impartial. In fact, it's good viewers of ABC are informed of the opinions of those producing the network's shows. It gives those viewers much more ability to evaluate what they are seeing."

Those linking to the story include Blogs for Bush, Weapons of Mass Discussion, Conservative Outpost, The Aurora, Misguided Roses, Bile, Snark and Sneer, Andi's World, Expose The Left and just about every other conservative blog on the planet.

BLOGS VS. THE MSM II: St. Nicholas The Confessore

A week after the New York Times erred in identifying the wrong man as the hooded detainee in the infamous Abu Ghraib photo (see 3/15 Blogometer), as of 3/23, New York Times' Confessore is re-reporting a 3/8 story on a Brooklyn woman who claimed to be a Katrina victim, but was not. She now faces charges of fraud. E&P reports on the latest controversy. The right never misses an opportunity to hit the Times, but some liberal bloggers jump in, too:

Conservative Power Line's John Hinderaker: "Now the Times has fallen for another fraud. And, curiously enough, it ties in with another of the Times' favorite opportunities to bash the Bush administration -- Hurricane Katrina!" Decision '08's Mark Coffey makes the same point, and calls this "a rather good argument for extending diversity beyond accidents of birth like race and gender towards items of choice like, oh, say, political preferences..." And Mary Katherine Ham adds: "And, they let the same reporter who goofed on the original story write the follow-up. That seems like a bad practice. So much for any disciplining."

On the left, Derek Smalls/Montgomery Burns/Waylon Smithers/Ned Flanders/Kent Brockman/Rev. Lovejoy/Principal Skinner/Dr. Hibbert/Rainer Wolfcastle Harry Shearer writes in his Eat the Press column at HuffPo: "Howell Raines is starting to look good in the rear-view mirror. Bill Keller's NYTimes is turning page two into a regular Sorry We Didn't Check That Department. ... But what, in fact, is going on at the Times? A (pardon me) rational organization, in the wake of the Judy Miller debacle, might have wanted to ratchet up its fact-checking." Penraker snarks: "Please, rehire Jayson Blair, it can only improve the quality of the paper at this point."

AFGHANISTAN: The Afghan Wig-Out

After buzzing around the blogosphere for several days, we have to make mention of Abdul Rahman, the Afghan Muslim who converted to Christianity and now faces the death penalty. New York Times has today's updated story, in which the presiding judge promises to resist foreign pressure. This story's been a swarm for days. A sampling of today's commentary: Mahablog says Rahman's death would "likely stir up more anti-Islamic feeling in Europe and cause the Christian Right to re-evaluate our military adventures in the Middle East, which would be a disaster for the Bush Administration." Sec/State Condoleezza Rice "is pulling every string she can pull to set Rahman free." Below the Beltway also applauds Rice. Donklephant asks: "Aren't these Taliban tactics?" The Jawa Report thinks we still don't understand Islam well enough: "Our liberation of Afghanistan and our hopes for it must be tempered by the reality of Islam as more than just a religion as understood in the West -- it is a political ideology." John McIntyre at Real Clear Politics wants to know, "Is democracy compatible with Islamic law?" California Conservative asks: "Where is the outrage from the Left?" He raises a good point. The liberal blogosphere hasn't weighed in on these pieces nearly as much as the right. Captain Ed thinks even the Bush admin isn't doing enough.

IRAQ: CPT Ain't Down With The USA

Christian Peacekeeper Teams announced the release of two Canadians and a Briton and once again mourned the death of American Tom Fox. AP and Wall Street Journal's Taranto write it up. Mostly happy ending, right? Not in the least. CPT's first release didn't mention their rescue by U.S., British and Canadian soldiers, and that got conservative bloggers swarming. Gina Cobb notes with discontent the absence of gratitude towards the rescuing troops. Michelle Malkin does too, but notes with smugness the CPT's revised release late last p.m. expressing thanks to the troops. Here's her post before the updated release came out. Hyscience, Relapsed Catholic, Big Pharaoh, Outside the Beltway, The Belmont Club and Stop The ACLU pile on. Blogs for Bush's Mark Noonan compares the CPT and other "peacemakers," which he puts in quotations, to isolationists pre-WWII. Jawa Report keeps an updated list of all U.S. hostages in Iraq.

Jeanne at Body and Soul wants to know how a suspect gave information to U.S. interrogators in such a short time: "Does a frightening implication -- You guess how we got information out of a captive in well under three hours -- hang in the air after that claim?"

Other insights into the operation: Murdoc Online first posted a simple news report, then criticized the CPT's reaction, then became skeptical of MSM reports of the rescue, noting differences in coverage. The Green Knight notes with interest the involvement of the top-secret Joint Task Force 2, a Canadian military team "so secret that the Canadian government doesn't generally even acknowledge their existence."

Well, He Is A Dreamboat ...

Special to the Blogometer [Update: Er, not quite. Also available at Hotline On Call], by Hotline poll editor Aoife McCarthy:

Raise your hand if you knew Anderson Cooper had a blog. Now raise your hand if that is your first stop for news on current events. Yeah -- didn't think so. But don't jump too quickly -- a couple of things need to be kept in mind when looking at this question.

Which Political Blogs Do You Read Regularly?
(multi. accepted, top 4 listed)  -Bush Approve-  -Evang- 
                             All Strg Smwht Dis  Yes  No
360 Blog/Anderson Cooper     21%  28%  15%  19%  23%  16%
AMERICABlog                   3    1    4    3    2    4
blogsforfox.blogspot.com      3    1    5    3    3    2
Daily Kos                     3    2    5    -    2    4

First of all this was only asked among those who said they read blogs (every day, few times a week, few times a month, or less often than that). The total of this sample is 197, placing the MoE above 6%. Of that 197, a plurality (74) could not name a specific blog or refused. Now that brings our total of blog-naming respondents down to 123 or 62% of all blog reader. This is just 20.5% of our original sample (think small).

The question was open-ended, and all responses were recorded verbatim. An exhaustive list of pre-coded options was given to interviewers that ran the full spectrum of ideology/partisanship. After the survey was completed, any pre-codes from the list that did not receive responses were deleted.

So how did Anderson Cooper come out on top? There are countless reasons this could have occurred, the most likely being name ID. First of all, CNN promotes their blogs -- a lot. Many of the blogs on the list were TV based. This could be a blog that they had heard of before, and subsequently were able to name. Keep in mind that respondents had to offer up responses for this question -- they were not offered a list to choose from. If they were, the results would vary drastically from what we see here. This is not the equivalent of asking "which newspaper do you read." That is a daily occurrence and an institution that readers grew up with, making them far less likely to forget a name or offer a skewed response. Blogs are a new medium, particularly among people outside the Beltway (i.e. our universe). This is a game of memory to offer a response that is appropriate.

To obtain complete poll results, go to www.diageohotlinepoll.com.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Notes Toward A Grand Unified Theory Of The Political-Media Complex

For some time we -- all right, let's ditch that "we" stuff -- I have entertained something of a grand unified theory to describe the current political-media landscape as well as explain institutional motivations and account for the political bias ascribed to them. This may strike one as obvious, or maybe too simplistic, but we do think it's a useful way to look at it. Here's a pared down version:

Within the Beltway and those outside who engage it, I count 3 discrete categories that can describe almost any media or influence-based organization. Let's take 3 examples among think tanks, one from each category: Brookings, AEI, and the Center for American Progress. Here are 3 more, from mixed media formats: Washington Post, Fox News, and Air America. Each fits into 1 of the 3 categories, respectively. We'll call these 3 categories the Inert Institutions, the Conservative Alternatives, and the Aggressive Progressives.

The Inert Institutions (IIs) -- Brookings and the Post -- comprise long-standing, major American establishments whose personnel and productions generally lean left, though they do not self-consciously think of themselves as such. They try to be fair, but fail often enough to be noticed, and targeted, by the... Conservative Alternatives (CAs), which is smaller and composed of groups younger than those in the 1st category. These groups are self-consciously conservative, if not always "movement." They are more popular in some ways (see: FNC's ratings) but not always respected across the spectrum. The Aggressive Progressives (APs) are a reaction to the CA's influence on the IIs -- part of the movement left, either quite recently founded or newly reinvigorated. More often than not, they self-describe as "progressive" instead of "liberal," and like the CAs, they are often viewed skeptically. Nor have they as large an audience yet as the CAs -- in large part because their natural audience is largely satisfied by the IIs. (Compare, in the same order: NPR, Rush Limbaugh and Pacifica.)

Where do bloggers fit? They're in all 3 categories, of course. Bloggers aligned with the CAs came to prominence in the aftermath of 9/11 (Instapundit), bloggers in the AP group sprang up during the WH'04 pre-primary season (Daily Kos), and only in the past year have the IIs gotten into the game (see: just about every single newspaper). Pressure groups and think tanks have been a bit slower, but they're getting in, too.

I actually think this is a rather even playing field -- though the GOP's current dominance may undercut this take -- even as it's balanced all wacky like a child's mobile. And just because it's evolved to this point doesn't mean it cannot evolve further. The APs category could become just as large as the CAs group. The IIs have been seeing its influence diminish. The safe bet is that those trends will continue, but you can never be sure.

Agree? Disagree? Agree to disagree? Drop me a line.

LEST WE FORGET: The Big Crunch

Like potato chips, we couldn't have just one:

  • Church sign generators are nothing new to the Internets, but Wuzza Dem makes it all seem new again.
  • At Words For My Enjoyment, Paul Davidson mourns the passing of the piggy-back ride.
  • Noting that Sen. Mike DeWine (R-OH) is proposing legislation prohibiting publication of stories about the NSA wiretap program, Fafblog! says DeWine doesn't go far enough: "It's one thing to ban journalists from talking about the NSA program, but what's truly needed is a law to prevent the public from thinking about it. ... The occupation of America's frontal lobes by the United States military may be long and costly, but the cause of freedom requires many a sacrifice."
  • And you already know whether you love Greg Gutfeld or whether you hate him.
  • Guess it's a good thing this is our final Blogometer -- apparently we humans are already marked for extinction.

NOTES AND ERRATA: Going Once... Going Twice...

Job Opening: The Hotline is seeking a staff writer to take over The Blogometer. Applicants must consider themselves regular consumers of political blogs (min. 2 years reading them, also must be a fan of blogs), be familiar with nationally read blogs from across the spectrum; know how to use blog search engines/aggregators (such as Technorati and Memeorandum); be able to quickly analyze and synthesize developments in the news as well as summarize ongoing blog activity with brevity, clarity and accuracy. Excellent writing and time-management skills are also a must. As with every Hotline position, we don't expect our writers to not have an opinion, we just expect them to keep it out of their work. Interested applicants should send their resumes to jvu@theatlantic.com.

Posted by at 01:02 PM

March 23, 2006

3/23: A Nice Blogouillabaisse, Served With Blogoulash And A Side of Blogumbo

Today's a weird day. There's not much news out there and not much debate about Beltway issues. The FEC has pushed back its vote on new rules affecting bloggers. The right-blogosphere is focusing on issues in Afghanistan and Iraq that do not directly affect U.S. politics. The biggest swarm is probably still the left-blogosphere's objection to the Washington Post's hiring of GOP blogger Ben Domenech, but that is diminished as well.

So today we cover a few interesting tidbits from the WH'08 race and '06 midterms, follow a few blog-based intellectual arguments partly carried out by DC-based political writers, and revisit the left's take on Domenech and the right's take on AP's Jennifer Loven. We also file a brief report of our own on a low-key but noteworthy blog network in Oregon, and our latest Blogger Spotlight features blog veteran Matt Welch.

But perhaps most important of all -- 3/22/06 will apparently go down in history as the 1st time a U.S. president used the word "blog."

IMMIGRATION: Dropping The F-Bomb

AP reports that Senate Min. Leader Harry Reid may filibuster Senate Maj. Leader Bill Frist's proposed immigration reform, providing fodder for the right. Hyscience says Reid "cares more about getting 11 million votes worth of illegal immigrants than about his nation's national security." Mark Noonan thinks Reid is "hand[ing] the immigration issue to GOP on a silver platter." Riehl World View: "I doubt we'll see an immigration bill without some accommodation for illegals already here and productive. But taking a stand against tighter borders is still playing political Russian roulette with an election coming up." The Strata-Sphere: Dems "are being two-faced opportunists after how they acted on the DPW disaster. At least Buchananites come by their dislike of all things foreign honestly."

WHITE HOUSE '08: Two Hot Seats

On 3/21, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) took calls on a Seattle radio station, and now TPM Muckraker shares part of the transcript. One caller asked about McCain's hiring of Pres. Bush adviser Terry Nelson: "For a reformer, I'm kind of curious why he would hire a guy like Terry Nelson as a senior advisor. Here's a guy who was actually in the indictment of DeLay on his money laundering charges. ... And he was also, this guy Nelson was also the supervisor of James Tobin, who was the guy convicted last year for helping jam the Democratic get-out-the-vote lines in New England a couple years ago." McCain denied the charges, the caller disagreed, and McCain said: "I will check it out. But I've never heard of such a thing. I know that he was a grassroots organizer for President Bush year 2000 and 2004 ... but the other charges I will go and look and see if any of them are true, but I've never heard of them before." At Talking Points Memo, Josh Marshall adds: "Needless to say, what the caller said was precisely true, as you can see demonstrated in this post about the DeLay case and this one about the phone-jamming case. I'm curious to learn what the senator's investigation turns up about his new right hand. "

Sen. George Allen (R-VA) attended a recent town meeting in Culpeper, VA, and there as well was Tullysatre, a gay 16-year-old who stood up and asked Allen about his opposition to adding "sexual orientation" to hate crimes statutes -- and sparred with him further on gay marriage. Tullysatre reports: "Senator Allen gave a response unlike any other I have received from anyone. His response was in agreement to my statement on history and majority rule -- contrasting his previous statement, but a continuation on support of un-constitutional legislation. ... Senator George Allen has every right to defend his views as he sees fit - however no man has the right to attempt to redefine a constitution established in order to protect the basic civil liberties of all citizens equally under the eyes of the law in our great country."

MIDTERMS I: What 06 Means For '06

Post-mortems on IL 06 are grim and contentious. At MyDD, IL 06 Dem House nominee Tammy Duckworth's narrow win has Chris Bowers "very worried" about '06: "I travel to DC often these days ... and from everyone I had talked to down there, I was told more or less the same thing: Duckworth will win this primary, and win it huge." More: "We can't win if we continue to operate like this. The netroots and grassroots can't win by themselves, and the Democratic electoral establishment is hardly any better. At some point, there is going to have to be a way for us to work together, or we are just going to keep losing and losing and losing. We can't go on like this. We can't win without them, and they can't win without us." Shakespeare's Sister agrees: "I'd turn up to vote, but I'd be damned if I'd contribute an ounce of my time or treasure helping a DCCC-approved candidate after the DCCC deliberately undermined a viable candidate for no good reason, except their usual, pathetic We know best. Stuff envelopes? Stuff dis. ... Now instead of what could have been a surge of momentum behind [Christine] Cegelis, they've got a disillusioned and disaffected group of people who are unlikely to expend a smidgeon of the effort they put toward the primary to the actual election. Way to go."

But for liberal Fact-esque, this doesn't add up: "Of course they are better and they most certainly can win without us. Where did Chris or anyone for that matter ever get the idea that the reverse was true? But the point of his post is a call for a truce in what he calls the activist class war in the Democratic Party and that's a great idea -- from our perspective. Who wouldn't like a seat at the grown-up's table? ... It's just not going to happen because giving up power willingly isn't the long suit of the Party leadership -- or of most human beings." At Swing State Project, DavidNYC doesn't buy the notion that Duckworth's "small margin" of victory should be taken as a "sign that the establishment powers are in weak shape": "I consider any 'blowout' talk to have been mostly bluster -- was any of it even on the record? -- and I always expected this one to be relatively close." Dem speechwriter Dan Conley, at Political Wire: "Chris Bowers of MyDD suggested last night that the Duckworth campaign pay for a primary recount as a way of buying off Cegelis's support, which has to rank as the wackiest political idea of the day."

Meanwhile at American Prospect's Midterm Madness, Alec Oveis notes Duckworth's too-narrow win was only part of a bad sign for the "Fighting Dems" -- '06 candidates who served in Iraq. In NC, "the highly touted Tim Dunn ended his bid for the seat currently held by Robin Hayes, citing problems with his personal finances. But from the looks of it, the real trouble was a shortage of donors; Dunn finished 2005 with just $47,000, while Hayes had $733,000 on hand. What happened to all the netroots support that Dunn was supposed to receive?"

MIDTERMS II: And I Would Have Gotten Away With It If It Wasn't For You Meddling Bloggers!

In the 3/19 Hartford Courant, radio talker/columnist Colin McEnroe criticized Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-CT) and indicated his preference for primary challenger Ned Lamont. On 3/22 Lieberman appeared on McEnroe's WTIC radio show. In the words of MyDD and others, Lieberman "flipped out" on the air, growing impatient with McEnroe's questions -- Firedoglake has a partial transcript. And Crooks and Liars has the exchange in MP3. At one point, Lieberman said: "This quote is totally out of context. You might have gotten it from the bloggers, who love to do this." FDL's Jane Hamsher: "I have to say I'm shocked. I thought we would be a lot further along in the campaign process before Holy Joe wigged out, but it seems we've gotten deep under his skin."

BLOGS VS. THE MSM I: That Loven Feelin'

The controversy surrounding AP reporter Jennifer Loven's report on Bush's use of "straw men" arguments (see 3/20 and 3/22 Blogometers) surges once more (see 3/20's Blogometer), this time owing to a report on said controversy by Editor & Publisher. As conservative Media Blog's Steven Spruiell puts it, the article "was so clearly one-sided, even liberal-friendly industry trade Editor & Publisher is taking another look." The E&P story notes Loven "cited the president's habit of using phrases such as 'some say' or 'some believe' when introducing a viewpoint that challenges his own." Spruiell: "You know, because reporters never use that device." In fact, as E&P continues: "Loven then contends that 'hardly anyone in mainstream political debate has made such assertions.'" Spruiell again: "Hardly anyone? I think that qualifies as a 'straw non-man' argument." E&P notes that one dimension to the controversy is that Loven's piece was not labeled either "analysis" or "commentary." TigerHawk thinks the MSM "would do well to abandon" the labels: "News and opinion flow seamlessly together in all media other than newspapers, wire services and tiny corners of broadcast journalism, the last bastions of the old idea that the press should at least aspire to objectivity. Why not just admit the obvious -- that the failure to label everything as 'opinion' or 'analysis' is itself a deceptive trade practice. Who are we kidding?" Don Surber quotes AP's official news standards, which he does not believe the Loven story met.

As others did earlier in the week, Ace of Spades HQ points out that "Loven is married to an environmental activist and major Kerry supporter in 2004."

Vital Center is on Loven's side. Jeff Gannon is not. Neither is a much more verbose Justin Cawley.

BLOGS VS. THE MSM II: Domenech-ing The Debate

Yesterday's top story isn't quite the rager it was before, but lefty bloggers are digging into Domenech's RedState posts for as much fodder as they can find. The site of the moment is clearly Your Logo Here, an established but low-traffic site that posted on the subject early, got a few links, and has kept on digging.

As noted by RedState's Moe Lane, Ben Domenech's Red America blog is down this a.m. -- in fact, so are other Washington Post blogs, though not all. Writes Lane: "I certainly hope that this is not a DOS attack" -- i.e. denial of service -- "If my above hope turns out to be dashed, my response is: monkeywrenching the WaPo won't help matters any, nitwits." A subsequent update relays info that the service interruption was not "nefarious."

Your Logo Here finds a comment on a RedState thread where Domenech, posting under his pseudonym, referred to Coretta Scott King as a "Communist." At Firedoglake, Pachacutec writes an snark-laden, link-heavy open-letter to Domenech -- and refers to him repeatedly as a racist. Among the more printable sections: "I really can't pity you because your 101st Fighting Keyboardist bravado is not just pathetic, its deadly, given your politics, war cheerleading and prime fighting age. Call of Duty II doesn't count." Confederate Yankee: "Predictably, the leftists making this charge" -- he links to Pachacutec -- "said far more offensive things then Domenech did when leveling their charge against him, but their hysteria basically boils down to one simple question: Whether or not Domenech was right about King's politics, when did communism become a race?"

Liberal Publius at Legal Fiction steps back and assesses the scene: "I think the Domenech lovefest has now officially graduated up to the status of 'significant cultural event' -- and one that needs to be explored. After all, when a reaction is that widespread and emotional, it probably means there are some larger, more interesting issues bubbling underneath." One conclusion: The bottom line is progressives are objecting not because he's conservative, but because of the merits of the individual writer and of his individual posts." Another: "I don't think that progressives got upset because they think the Post is 'biased' toward the GOP. If they do, they're wrong. What progressives think is that people like the Post editorial board are self-hating liberals." It's a lengthy post, with more conclusions.

At Tapped, Ezra Klein thinks the lefty bloggers have inadvertently done Domenech and Post.com a service: "Here's a game: Any idea who Emily Messner is? How about Joel Achenbach? William Arkin? Give up? They're all bloggers for WashingtonPost.com. And so far as the blogosphere is concerned, they toil away in obscurity." And so would have Domenech," except that "the left side of the blogosphere stood up and, in a rare show of unity, roared against the selection. Suddenly, WaPo was in the enviable position of courageously defending conservative expression on their site. Domenech became infinitely more valuable, instantly mutating from a Republican hack into a conservative symbol. He's their ideological protection now, proof that they value and protect Republicans in their midst. And he's visible, too, which gives his poorly formulated opinions a power and reach they shouldn't possess. In punditry, all publicity is good publicity, and the past few days gave Domenech and his employers the best publicity they could've hoped for."

GREAT DEBATES: Blockhead

As 1st reported in the Toronto Star this weekend and Drudged yesterday, a UC-Berkeley prof Jack Block's study published in the Journal of Research Into Personality claims that "whiny" children tend to grow up and be conservative, while "confident, resilient, self-reliant kids mostly grew up to be liberals." The Star notes the similar findings of another prof recently led to his being "excoriated on right-wing blogs" and the subject "of a a Congressional investigation into his research funding." Dr. Helen Reynolds: "What about people who change their political orientation over time -- were they really just whiny kids or self-reliant ones originally who fooled themselves?" Wizbang's Paul: "I don't even need to read the rest of the article to spot the obvious problem with this study. If there were any conservative kids in Berkley then everyone really was out to get them." Liberal John Aravosis thinks differently: "More than a kernel of truth in this study. What do Bill Frist, Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, Limbaugh, George Will, Dr. Laura, the Republican bloggers all have in common? Whiny insecure brats. And that, my friends, comes from growing up a bit of a twit." As Wonkette points out, "[c]hurning out scientific studies connecting personality traits with political views ... has turned into a veritable cottage industry." Both Wonkette and Matt Yglesias at Tapped recall another dubious study from '05, purporting to demonstrate that conservatives are better lovers. Michelle Malkin has the study (PDF). Earlier, one of her readers wrote: "In the end I wonder if the study doesn't merely reveal the fact that conservatives get the whining out of the way early and move on, while liberals never really get over it."

Picking up on 3/21's action, Matthew Yglesias takes up Andrew Sullivan's claim that Yglesias' goal is to discredit all conservatives -- and agrees: "Conservatism, as its currently understood in the United States and as Sullivan seems to understand it -- basically a dogmatic resistance to the idea of the federal government having revenue -- is basically a bankrupt ideology that's more than worthy of being discredited, notwithstanding the fact that many bright and engaging people embrace it." Mother Jones's Bradford Plumer piles on: "If a Republican ever came to power who was more willing to cut government programs than George W. Bush, it would be catastrophic." Sullivan takes the next step in the debate and wants his readers to email him spending savings ideas. Sullivan, getting back on message: "The main point of this is to cut spending -- on entitlements and discretionary spending, including parts of the defense budget, if needs be."

Washington Post columnist Harold Meyerson is worried about the state of the U.S. economy, thanks to "the threat of globalization and the reality of de-unionization." Hugh Hewitt takes on Meyerson with an advertising pitch made by WaPo itself. Hewitt evicerates Meyerson "gracefully and with calm understatement," per John Podhoretz. TNR's Jonathan Chait takes the conservatives on: Hewitt "can't be serious, can he? First of all Hewitt should note that those numbers are a 2008 projection. ... I could do a projection that in 2008 the United States will be an uninhabitable wasteland where a few desperate survivors are bartering sharpened sticks, but this would not, technically speaking, refute the Bush administration's economic policies." Those against Meyerson's column point out the benefits of globalization (including Blueberry Tofu). Those with him include Seeing The Forest's Dave Johnson and Stowe Boyd of /Message.

REPUBLICANS: Census Time Already? No Wonder Government Is Out Of Whack!

Valparaiso student/self-described moderate conservative Daniel Jarratt posts the text of a leading, "useless," insulting "census" he received from the RNC. He writes in a lengthy, snarky non-blog post to his website: "Apparently, I am among a select group of Republicans who have been chosen to take part in the official census of the Republican Party." My answers on this questionnaire represent the views of thousands of party members in my voting district, and without my answers, the Republican National Committee will 'not be able to help President Bush win passage of his reform agenda in Congress.' Well, if my answers to this academically worthless survey are critical to the President's agenda, we've elected the wrong party." One of the questions: "Do you think Congress should focus on cutting the federal budget deficit by reducing wasteful government spending?" Jarratt replies: "Why do you think I elected them there? I don't think Congress should focus on it, I think they should do it by nature and focus on getting our tax money to relevant and worthy services. Another question that begs a 'yes,' and another question that has little to no meaning in any sort of meaningful political discussion." Toward the end, he adds: "Even as I realize the 100%-politics nature of this document, I condemn you for pretending to give out a census, for pretending that you actually care about the opinions of the 'faithful' when the grade-school level and illegitimate surveying of many of the questions plead otherwise, for disguising fundraising as policy-making!"

NETROOTS: Network

The OR GOV primary is a few months off yet, but 1 group of bloggers cast its vote in the blogosphere nearly 6 months ago. It's called the Atkinson for Governor Blog Network -- in support of state Sen. Jason Atkinson (R) -- and while it's certainly not a new thing of itself, it is a new iteration of blogger activism. Like the liberal bloggers who came together in early '03 to support Howard Dean, bloggers selected the candidate prior to the campaign reaching out to them. Like the Blogs for Bush effort led by the still-operational namesake/flagship blog, bloggers have volunteered to associate themselves with the campaign. What's also notable is that this is happening at the state level. In '04 most blog activity was concentrated on the WH contest, but the rapid growth of the blogosphere has enabled parallel blogospheres (of varying size) in each state.

The genesis of the group dates to nearly 1 year ago, when Ted Piccolo, leader of the group blog NW Republican, heard rumors that Atkinson -- son of ex-state GOP chair Perry Atkinson -- was preparing a GOV bid. Piccolo declared his support in a 4/4 post. Piccolo subsequently noted Atkinson's 8/19 announcement, and less than a week later started compiling a list of bloggers who had made their support known. With the help of the more technologically astute David "Gullyborg" Gulliver of Resistance is futile!, this list was shared with the other bloggers and ported to the sidebar, where it remains.

Both the bloggers involved and the campaign tell us that communication between them has been minimal. Atkinson has made himself available to meet with bloggers in recent months, and some have taken him up on the offer. But even now, coordination between the campaign and the bloggers is minimal -- there is no weekly e-mail separate from the one Atkinson's team sends to all comers, although there is occasional one-to-one e-mail correspondence. Nor do the pro-Atkinson bloggers coordinate much among themselves.

On the Dem side, there is comparatively little Internet activity surrounding embattled Gov. Ted Kulongoski. Portland Dem consultant Kari Chisholm's Blue Oregon is a popular clearinghouse for info on OR Dem politics, and Kulongoski gets mixed attention. Chisholm compares the race to this week's IL 06 primary, where lefty bloggers backed the lefter-leaning underdog challenger while voters were content with the establishment's "moderate pick." Chisholm says, "the loudest voices are those against him -- since they're the most animated."

Atkinson spokesperson Matt Evans tells the Blogometer that the rise of political involvement by bloggers is interesting from a campaign perspective because they "occupy a middle ground between the traditional media and political activists." Of course, some of them may hail from both. Piccolo made a name for himself in the late '90s, sponsoring ballot measures aimed at curbing gov't projects and limiting politicians' power. And in January, he was quoted by the Portland Oregonian in his capacity as a blogger.

But to what effect? As Chisholm puts it, so far "the Atkinson kids are just blogging amongst themselves." Nobody can point (yet) to any major breaking news story or campaign development that owes a significant debt to the bloggers, but MSM outlets like the Oregonian have taken to quoting bloggers more and more. Evans thinks the site has been useful in generating buzz, and that's probably all it needs to do.

No one has made any great claims for the network. It's more of a virtual bumper sticker, where one can easily find out who else has the bumper sticker on their vehicle. A blogger network isn't going to change an election, but it is part of the intangibles that form the landscape for a political race. And in the next cycle, it's possible -- even probable -- that their involvement will grow.

BLOGGER SPOTLIGHT: Mattewan

Today the Blogometer talks to libertarian Matt Welch, who writes an eponymous blog, and was a recent contributor to Reason's Hit and Run.

What is your full name?

None of your business! But my pen name is Matt Welch.

What is your age?

37

Where did you grow up?

Long Beach, California.

Where do you live now?

Los Angeles, California, in the neighborhood of Silver Lake.

What is your occupation? Have you ever worked on a political campaign or for the mainstream media?

I'm the assistant editorial pages editor for the Los Angeles Times.

Yes to the latter. I have also covered campaigns, including Ralph Nader's 2000 presidential run (for WorkingForChange.com), and the 2004 major-party political conventions for Reason magazine.

When did you start blogging and why?

For my personal site, on Sept. 16, 2001, because I was pissed off about the massacre five days prior, and felt that I had things I wanted to both say and collect that my jobs at the time didn't really allow me to do. I had actually co-founded a group blog six months previous called LAexaminer.com, because I wanted there to be a site that paid attention to what Los Angeles media was saying and doing. (That mantle has been taken -- thank God -- by Kevin Roderick's LAobserved.com).

What has been your favorite post, or favorite story to write about, in that time?

I think my blogging for Reason.com from the Democratic Convention in 2004 was particularly good (for me), but it was hellaciously unpleasant to do.

I enjoy (even/especially though my readers don't) blogging in absurd depth about Angels baseball history; and I'll always treasure the emotional connections I made with readers and fellow bloggers in the first three or six months after Sept. 11.

Describe your typical blogging schedule. And what is your average output?

Don't have much of one, now that I'm working at the L.A. Times (Reason had a full-time blog to feed daily, though don't be surprised to see some stuff emanating from Spring Street sometime soon). For my personal site, I peck a few grafs away when I have the time and energy, which is to say, not so often. Maybe an hour or two on weekends, and 10 minutes here and there on weeknights.

Anymore, it's 3-6 posts a week, if that. When I was at Reason it was 3 posts a day.

Who is your favorite political blogger? Favorite non-political blogger?

That's an oxymoronic phrase. I guess these days it's whoever can write passionately about politics while still making me laugh, and one of the last people left who can do that with any regularity is "The Editors" of ThePoorman.net. Non-political: Dr. Frank.

Who is your favorite mainstream media columnist?

I'll recuse myself from those who write for the L.A. Times ... So, I like that Mike Zwerin weirdo for the International Herald Tribune

What is your favorite television news program, either network or cable?

"The Colbert Report."

What MSM-produced websites (i.e. newspapers, magazines) do you visit on a daily basis?

Again excepting my employer, probably the only one I visit every day is the blog of my *former* employer, Hit and Run.

What non-MSM websites (i.e. blogs) do you visit on a daily basis?

Sploid, Tony Pierce + Busblog, Emmanuelle Richard, Halo's Heaven, 6-4-2, L.A. Observed, Baseball Think Factory, Colby Cosh, Cathy Seipp, Atrios, Instapundit, Secrecy News, Chronicles of the Lads.

How often, or do you ever, read a newspaper in its dead-tree (i.e. print) form?

At least once a day.

How do you see the new media and old media affecting and influencing each other in the next five years?

To the extent that we won't really be distinguishing much between the two phrases anymore; maybe we'll use "legacy media" to talk about the big newspapers/broadcast networks. The whole End of Mass Media period will continue to produce fascinating paradoxes (such as: even while bleeding audience, Legacy Media companies will continue printing money) and conflicts with the upstarts. It will continue to be the best time for journalism and media in our history.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: The Reclamation Project

At Huffington Post, Liberal Oasis' Bill Scher explains "Why I Am Not A Progressive": "For better or for worse, 'liberal' and 'conservative' are part of the American political lexicon, and the mainstream media reflexively uses those terms to define our ideological spectrum," and "despite the pounding 'liberal' has taken from Republicans, the solution is not to run further away from the word. That only makes the problem worse. As much as we may dislike labels, we can't dismiss them." More: "By taking to the airwaves, the letters page and the blogs, we can take the lead in re-associating "liberal" with the values and beliefs that speak to Americans' struggles and desires in an insecure economy and a destabilized world: responsive government, sound management, shared responsibility, personal freedom and the spread of liberty and prosperity, not destruction and hypocrisy, across the globe."

LEST WE FORGET: But Which Internets Did This Appear On?

John Hawkins notes, "For the first time in American history, the President has mentioned blogs. I have a feeling it won't be the last time." Said Bush, in a WV meeting with military families: "One of the things that we have to value is that we do have a media... there's blogs, there's Internet, there's all kinds of way to communicate which is literally changing the way people get their information and so if you're concerned I would suggest that you reach out to some of the groups that are supporting the troops, that got internet sites and just keep the word moving." There's video at Expose The Left.

NOTES AND ERRATA: You Know You Want It

Job Opening: The Hotline is seeking a staff writer to take over The Blogometer. Applicants must consider themselves regular consumers of political blogs (min. 2 years reading them, also must be a fan of blogs), be familiar with nationally read blogs from across the spectrum; know how to use blog search engines/aggregators (such as Technorati and Memeorandum); be able to quickly analyze and synthesize developments in the news as well as summarize ongoing blog activity with brevity, clarity and accuracy. Excellent writing and time-management skills are also a must. As with every Hotline position, we don't expect our writers to not have an opinion, we just expect them to keep it out of their work. Interested applicants should send their resumes to jvu@theatlantic.com.

Posted by at 12:56 PM

March 22, 2006

3/22: Dawn Of The Red

With the week's events largely focused on multiple Pres. Bush pressers, the latest debates have been more blogocentric -- with the right either scoring a long-term victory and/or completely ceasing to matter, and the left either rising again to influence the media-political landscape, or just making themselves sound silly.

Thanks to the Washington Post's launch of a conservative blog, the paper and its dot com counterpart finds themselves re-fighting battles from late 1/06, when ombudsman Deborah Howell's error in favor of GOPers aroused the activist attention of liberal bloggers (see the 1/18, 1/23 and 1/26). The Dem analysis goes, a) the media gives into the conservatives' complaints, who b) continue complaining anyway, as they seek to subvert rather than improve the media. Not to mention, the Post has a Bush-sympathetic editorial this a.m., and it draws some fire from the left as well.

Meanwhile, conservative bloggers -- who focus on foreign issues much more than the left does -- are swarming on an anti-racism poster prepared by the U.N. Human Rights commis. which makes curious use of puzzle pieces and a Lego. The building block empire is based in Denmark, which leads many to think the U.N. is making a subtle allusion to the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoon controversy (see previous coverage). Many on the right, and some on the left, are also following the case of an Afghan man who faces possible execution for converting to Christianity -- a situation also recalling the cartoon furor. The Blogometer generally avoids issues that do not pertain to Beltway politics, but these debates are worth the summary.

Plus, we cover the IL primary coverage, a bold claim from the left about the right-blogosphere's importance (or lack thereof), and the intriguing results of Daily Kos' latest WH'08 straw poll. And check out the job listing while you're at it.

DOMENECH: The Republican Noise Machine, Washington Edition?

In yesterday's edition we noted the launch of the Washington Post's latest blog, Red America, written by ex-Bush appointee/ex-Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) speechwriter/RedState co-founder/Regnery editor Ben Domenech. We should have looked around for comment, as it didn't take long for the left-blogosphere to take note, and offense, and made it the story of the day. It's possible we've gone overboard with a story that naturally appeals to us as blog- and media-centric, but it's a genuine swarm and recalls the Post's troubled period in late 1/06. The Post has long been viewed by lefty bloggers as GOP-leaning, -sympathetic, or -cowed -- similar to conservatives' dislike of the New York Times -- and to them Domenech's hiring is proof positive that the Post has serious problems.

As many involved in the controversy linked back to Eschaton, we're pretty sure Duncan "Atrios" Black hit first, directing readers to ask Post reporter Tom Edsall (in that a.m.'s live chat) "if they have any plans to hire a 'Blue America' blogger." The very 1st question addressed was indeed about Domenech. Edsall replied: "The hiring of Ben Domenech of RedState has provoked a firestorm, if the volume of questions this morning is any measure. ... I am told that this is part of the Post's web operation's efforts to provide diverse views." Edsall notes that he has no hiring power; in fact, Edsall works for the Post, not Post.com. The distinction is easily lost to many if not most, particularly as the Post.com is how the vast majority of bloggers read the Post in the 1st place.

Crooks and Liars noted that the anti-Post.com columnist Dan Froomkin and anti-Post reporter Dana Milbank sentiment among conservatives, widely believed on the left to have precipitated Domenech's hiring, was voiced early on by ex-BC'04 blog guru/now-RNC eCampaign dir. Patrick Ruffini -- and that the Post's John Harris adopted this criticism "as his own." Tapped's Greg Sargent cites Domenech's assertion that the MSM treats conservatives as an "alien and off-kilter group," responding: "Domenech's MSM-bashing, of course, is belied by his own apparent hiring. ... Indeed, one way to think about the right's 'media-is-liberal' campaign is as a kind of crude protection racket." NRO's Steven Spruiell disagrees with Sargent "Domenech didn't 'bash' the media for being liberal. He simply pointed out" what an '04 Pew poll showed, that nat'l journalists describe themselves as liberal more often than conservative. Sargent colleague Garance Franke-Ruta makes the point that Domenech is more of an "operative," unlike Froomkin, who has a reportorial background. She says the liberal blogger equivalent of Domenech would be AMERICAblog's John Aravosis; the conservative equivalent of Froomkin would be The Atlantic's Ross Douthat. In addition to the bloggers, Media Matters' David Brock wrote a letter to Post.com's Jim Brady, which was covered by Editor & Publisher. Firedoglake's Jane Hamsher writes a "letter" to Brady as well, although much heavier on the insults: "Oh, lordy Jim. I have to tell you, if I'd been writing a send-up of a right wing blogger I could not have done a better job. You went straight to the Red State racist woodpile and extracted a full-on jingoistic feces flinger to feature on the Post web site, an unrepentant GOP operative without a shred of journalistic credibility. Nice touch. Because he balances out what, Froomkin's IQ?"

Sargent also e-mailed the Post with a few questions, and Post.com's Hal Strauss replied via spokesperson Eric Easter. A Sargent question: "Was the hiring of Ben Domenech motivated by a desire to placate right-wing critics upset with Dan Froomkin's frequent criticism of George Bush or upset with the recent Dana Milbank appearance poking fun at the shooting episode involving the vice president?" Straus: "When WP.com launched Opinions we said we wanted this new area to be about a variety of voices across a broad spectrum of political and cultural thought. Ben Domenech's Red America is simply another reflection of that effort. ... Subsequently we returned to spokesman Easter and asked him if WashingtonPost.com intended to hire a liberal blogger to act as a counterpart to Domenech. In response, he referred us back" to Straus' answer.

Most of the early conservative reaction was little more than welcoming the Domenech blog, including Jeff Goldstein and Ed Lasky at The American Thinker, who wrote: "I am tempted to quote Bob Dylan and note that 'the times, they are a changin'.' But the New York Times, often abbreviated as 'the Times' isn't changing. However the Post is." But MRC's NewsBusters was 1 of the early responders to the liberal complaints, and noted that a couple participants of Post humor columnist Gene Weingarten's live chat also complained about the hiring: "The devoutly liberal Weingarten's perfectly reasonable response: 'One solution -- this is crazy, I know -- might be not to read it.'" T. Longren wrote: "The launch of this new blog has apparently upset some liberals. Not sure why, I thought these types were all about 'letting people choose' and providing un-biased information. I guess that only applies to media outlets they deem to be 'conservative.'" Don Singleton, on the distinction between reporting and opinion: "We would rather have some conservative editors and reporters. ... WaPo is filled with Left Wing editors and reporters. Try for a Fair and Balanced news room, and you can have [back] your token right wing blogger."

Some on the left have moved on to focus on Domenech's previous writings, specific views and even his upbringing. Your Logo Here collects a number of links to and excerpts from Domenech's mostly-retired personal blog, Ben Domenech Online. and Pharyngula, which tags him a "creationist" and makes an issue of his home-schooling -- 1st noted by Atrios, who located a CNN transcript from '97 featuring the Domenech family. Lefty economist Max Sawicky doesn't defend Domenech, but does defend home-schooling. Also lefty economist Brad DeLong was among several to take issue with DeLong's referencing of "Red Dawn" -- a cult classic among conservatives, but not regarded by anyone else as a great movie. With tongue-perhaps-in-cheek, DeLong offers an alternate theory -- that the Post is making the right look bad by hiring Domenech, whom he describes as "an unarmed man in a battle of wits." As for "Red Dawn," at Domenech's own RedState the comment thread on the post about his debut contains a small debate about the film's merits (or lack thereof).

Meanwhile, Jack Abramoff-minded reporter-blogger Josh Marshall brings in a whole new angle: "[I]t turns out the Domenech family came in for a number of Bush administration appointments. Not only Ben, but Ben's dad, Doug, who was White House liaison to the Department of Interior. Or to put it more colloquially, White House guy to make sure Jack Abramoff got what he wanted with the Indians and the Pacific Island stuff." Markos Moulitsas adds: "I wonder if the Post thought their lame efforts at "balance" would result in such tragic hilarity. I wonder how the paper's staff are feeling about their paper's credibility right now." Brendan Nyhan, former co-editor of non-partisan spin-unspinning blog Spinsanity, recalls debunking a Domenech claim in 6/02 that Bush had earlier said he'd hit the "trifecta" for running deficits.

Donklephant's centrist Justin Gardner had been looking forward to the blog as a "meditation on what it means to be a red-stater," but was dismayed at what he actually found the 1st post to be a "very partisan shot at the MSM." He writes: [T]his is the trap that so many in the blogosphere fall into. They think just because the extreme left brands red staters as crazy, it must also mean that the media does too. Because after all, many reporters self-identify with liberal values so they must be extreme too." More: "Ben, that horse is dead. Quit beating it or else you're going to become very uninteresting in very short order." In part of a longer post, moderate Joe Gandelman tries to sort out the competing interests, going back and forth between lefty and righty perceptions of bias.

This a.m. at Red America, Domenech ironically acknowledges his critics at Red America: "I'm happy that no one's engaged in any ridiculous hyperbole, unfounded accusations or unintentionally hilarious name-calling. We can all agree that such things lower the quality of debate on the Internet, play to the worst side of our knee-jerk partisan nature and have no place in the modern public square. I look forward to engaging you in a serious, respectful discussion on the issues that matter most to the future of our nation." Some have noticed that Red America has no comments, only a link to e-mail the Post. Referencing the flood of allegedly abusive e-mails the Post received following the Howell controversy, he writes, the site "is sure to spark responses from a few fringe members of this Internet political community, who might be motivated to deluge comment systems with offtopic concerns (or perhaps go after other members of the Washington Post family, who have nothing to do with this blog -- silly, I know, but I'm told it happens)."

BUSH: Hardcore Encore

On 3/21, Bush took unscripted questions for the 2nd time in 2 days -- 1st at a Cleveland hotel, and yesterday from reporters in the WH press briefing. It's certainly one of the bigger topics, and also one both the left and right are following about equally.

The Washington Post has an editorial on Bush's pressers, stating in the 1st graf that Bush "should hold more news conferences. In his hour-long exchange with reporters at the White House yesterday, he was considerably more effective in explaining and defending his commitment to the war in Iraq than in the three carefully worded speeches he has delivered in the past week," also praising his "sometimes blunt, sometimes joking and sometimes unpolished way," which "sounded authentic." Although the editorial is unsigned, John Aravosis assumes it was written by Fred Hiatt -- lefty bloggers consider him a stealth right-winger at the paper. He writes: "More editorials from the conservative establishment media lavishing raspberries on Bush and his Iraq policy. I guess 2,000 American dead and a civil war isn't enough of a disaster for the Post. Then again, they own this war as much as Bush does, and they know it ... The war is over. We lost." Conservative Betsy Newmark agrees with the Post, adding: "And he should call on Helen Thomas every single time. The sight of her sparring with him and interrupting him before he could get a couple of words out of his mouth did more to remind people of what they like about Bush than any of those speeches that he gives around the country that few people hear about because the media will only show a couple of seconds. But they all wanted to show that interchange with Helen Thomas. It was great." Bark Bark Woof Woof cites Bush's exchange with Thomas on pre-war intel, asking: "So the question comes down to this: is the president deliberately lying and hoping that the American public has such a short-term memory that they won't remember what was going on three years ago, is he so thick in terms of his knowledge of international politics that he conflates religious fanatics in Afghanistan with a secular Iraqi dicatorship ... or is he just delusional? I would prefer to find out that he is just lying. That would mean that at least he is aware of the facts of the case and chooses, for his own political fortunes, to prevaricate."

Foreign policy hawk OxBlog's David Adesnik notes his prior criticism of the rhetoric from Rumsfeld and Cheney on Iraq, but thinks Bush's take is "[m]uch, much better": "He did not speak about the insurgents' "desperation" or invoke unhelpful analogies between Iraq and Nazi Germany. Instead, he made the case for how Americans and Iraqis working together can beat the insurgents." Although he hedges his praise a bit: "I agree that the new strategy represents a significant improvement. But it is also interesting to note the President's assertion that the old strategy was still in place -- and failing -- in November 2004. The same month Bush was re-elected. I don't recall from that time much talk of a failed strategy. Interestingly, public approval of the President's strategy was much greater back in November 2004." Kevin Drum writes of Bush's word choice: "The phrase 'open-ended commitment' is the right one to use. It's the logical equivalent of refusing to set benchmarks for withdrawal, and it's not something the American public is very comfortable with. An open-ended commitment during the Cold War was one thing, but Iraq is quite another. An open-ended commitment there sounds way too much like Vietnam."

On a tangent -- As we noted on 3/20, AP's Jennifer Loven wrote an influential (and controversial) report citing instances of Bush using "straw man" arguments in speeches. To the left, it was commendable reporting. To the right, it sounded like a "DNC memo."

Liberal The Carpetbagger Report notes Bush attributing a belief that people in other countries don't deserve the same rights as Americans to "people," and adds: "Yes, Bush gave those rights-denying enemies of freedom a lashing of a lifetime. If this reflected reality in even a tangential way, it'd really be impressive." Conservative Captain's Quarters also references the Loven piece, noting, if Bush uses "strawmen, then apparently the practice isn't limited to Bush. A few of Loven's colleagues use them as well, as evident in the President's press conference this morning" -- he quotes a few from the transcript, including one reporter who opens a question: "There are some in Washington who say..."

UNITED NATIONS: The Poster Service

As mentioned above, this Internet-posted advert/poster U.N. Human Rights commis. poster has caused a lot of commotion on conservative blogs.

Conservative Steven Taylor disagrees with the general thrust of arguments: "First, I would note that the Lego is the one being left out. If the goal was to attack the Danes, surely a bunch of Legos would be shunning a black puzzle piece. That would make more sense if the Legos are supposedly represenitng Danish intolerance, yes?" == Michelle Malkin disagrees completely: "With all due respect, those giving the U.N. the benefit of the doubt and advocating this benign interpretation are looking at the graphic bass-ackwards. The puzzle pieces represent unity and tolerance; the red LEGO represents a blaring, non-conformist, and unacceptable 'shape of racism.'"

JunkYardBlog's Bryan Preston sides with Malkin: "Unity is such a buzzword these days that you can't escape it. ... Unity for its own sake, not unity toward any worthwhile goal like stamping out the likes of bin Laden and Zarqawi, but unity in a non-judgemental let's-all-hold-hands-and-sing-kumbayah context." == So does Jan Haugland: "The UN denies it had any such intentions. I doubt it had anything to do with the LEGO Company, but it is hard to believe this is anything but a dig at Denmark, using its most famous international symbol." == Liberal No More Mr. Nice Blog does not, and provides a reason for Haugland to doubt: Malkin thinks we should all buy Danish products to prove we don't stand with the cartoon rioters (OK, fine so far). Beyond that, however, she says that the use of a Lego in this ad makes this a 'vile poster portraying Denmark's most famous company as racist.' Michelle, you're nuts. Just so you know, Michelle -- Legos have been part of UNHCR anti-racism ads since at least 1994."

Elephants in Academia has a novel take: "I don't think this is the Commission's intention, but their ludicrous picture actually makes a good point. There is a dark and deadly subculture of racial discrimination spreading thought the world, and that LEGO is not part of it. It is completely out of place in such company."

Agora gives more reason for suspicion of the U.N.'s human rights body re: Denmark -- namely, a U.N. official recently criticized the cartoons' publication, or in Eugene Volokh's words, "demanding speech restrictions." == In the Bullpen ties the 2 together: "The United Nations should be against censorship, but instead they are promoting the very self-censorship the cartoons were supposed to help eliminate. The UN should be promoting Democracy whose core values are a free press, free speech and free expression. Throwing in a Danish company, Lego, by suggesting that it is Lego that is racist forgets the entire free press, free speech and free expression ideas of a Democracy."

AFGHANISTAN: High Infidelity

A case touching on the same themes as the Jyllands-Posten is the case of Afghan man Abdul Rahman, a Christian convert who faces death because of it -- as per sharia law. Conservatives are leading the way in getting word of this story out, and not a few criticize the Bush admin., although not in the full-throated manner as would the left.

Conservative-columnist-recently-turned-blogger Debbie Schlussel: "Yup, that Afghanistan. The one where our mostly Christian taxpayers sent a boatload of money and soldiers to install democracy and freedom. Clearly, nothing has changed from the days of the Taliban." Like the U.N. story, it's right up Malkin's alley, and she covers it in multiple posts, 1st on 3/19, and more yesterday here and here. Heritage's Mark Tapscott asks, "President Bush said nothing about Rahman during his news conference this morning. But then none of the mainstream media reporters there asked him about it, either. Where is Bush? Where are the mainstream media? Where are the men and women of faith in Congress? Where is Secretary of State Rice?"

There may be a way out, as Jihad Watch reports via AP and comments -- Hamid Karzai's advisers are "floating this idea" of declaring the man mentally unfit to stand trial "to extricate the Karzai government from the tight place this case has put it in. It is a common view among Muslims that only someone who is insane, corrupt or under immense pressure would convert from Islam to Christianity, so this angle will make sense to those in Afghanistan who want Abdul Rahman's blood."

Liberal Booman Tribune finds strange bedfellows: "The right-wing blogs are flogging the story of Abdul Rahman for all its worth. This time, they have a point. ... At a minimum Rahman should be offered exile and a comfortable life anywhere it is still legal for him to be alive. No government should take away freedom of conscience for its citizens. I don't care what the Koran says."

BLOGGERS VS. BLOGGERS: Tales From The Crypt

MyDD's resident blog analyst Chris Bowers declares in a provocative header: "There Is No Right-Wing Blogosphere Anymore." He argues: "There is almost nothing in the way of an independent right-wing blogosphere operating outside of existing, established news media outlets." He says most major right-wing bloggers "have now been incorporated into the established news media apparatus," most recently Domenech joining the Washington Post. Most "A-List" "progressive bloggers," on the other hand, "are working with other emerging progressive institutions: MoveOn, Air America, Media Matters, etc. While conservative bloggers are looking to be absorbed within established institutions, progressive bloggers continue to build new ones. ... The right-wing blogosphere is dead. Long live the progressive blogosphere."

It meets a bit of disagreement in the comment section, but most concur. One commenter: "I think it's the nature of the right wing blogs that they would die out. I think blogs and the communities they create are a viral event. This by definition would favor those who think with a more flexible thought process." Another writes, "sure hope you are wrong about this elegy, for that would make the Web so much less interesting."

Perhaps not surprisingly, it does get significant pushback from the right -- Sigmund, Carl and Alfred: "Apparently, the 'progressives' have slain the right- because conservative bloggers have made a big enough impact on the MSM, who, like most Americans, have found their message compelling." RedState's Trevino says Bowers is "apparently unaware that his thesis is more or less one of crushing defeat for his side." Hugh Hewitt has precisely the opposite take: "In fact the blogging movement remains vibrant and far more productive on the right than on the left, where the leading blogs continue to spread venom and habits of expression and thought that are ruinous to the short-, medium- and long-term interests of the Democratic Party. Not only is the center-right blogosphere stronger and deeper than it was even a year ago, its counterpart is falling deeper and deeper into an abyss wherein very little in the way of logic or fact penetrate." Mick Stockinger at UNCoRRELATED: "If the left took time out from patting themselves on the back for their prodigious comment streams, they might recognize something ominously important about their conservative brethren--we don't comment, we link. Its such a subtle difference but with enormous importance."

WHITE HOUSE '08: Fein And Dandy Like Sour Candy

This week Daily Kos held its latest WH'08 straw poll; voting has closed and Moulitsas has posted final results. Sen. Russ Feingold's (D-WI) censure resolution has clearly paid off in terms of liberal netroots support -- in a wide-open field, he nearly pulls down a majority of the 11K+ voters, with 48%. Runners-up were ret. Gen. Wesley Clark and ex-VA Gov. Mark Warner, far behind at 15% and 11%, respectively. NY Sen. Hillary Clinton finished with just 2% a few more places back. At the top, the order is unchanged from the 1/05 poll, but Feingold's lead was considerably slimmer at the time. Feingold, Clark and Warner then picked up 30, 22 and 12. HRC actually had 1 point more at that time, down from a high of 10% in the summer of '05.

DEMOCRATS: With Numbers Like These, Why Don't We Hear More Pelosi-Bashing?

There were 3 other concurrent polls, asking readers to rate the job performances of DNC chair Howard Dean, Senate Min. Leader Harry Reid, and House Min. Leader Nancy Pelosi. Dean clearly has lost none of the appeal he held as a WH candidate, and perhaps has seen his stature rise among the activist left more generally since taking over -- his job approval was 89% yes, 9% no -- and 16K+ voters participated, more than any other. Reid received an adequate 50% to 32%, but Pelosi performed dismally, with 19% approving and 67% disapproving. About 13.5K voted in each of their polls.

ILLINOIS PRIMARIES: Point By Point

Hotline On Call has the latest results. Some highlights:

Lefties are upset with Iraq war vet Tammy Duckworth's (D) narrow victory in the IL 06 primaries over '04 nom. Christine Cegelis. Like the TX 28 primary see 3/8 Blogometer), Bowers provides a big chunk of the coverage at MyDD. He learns from the loss:

  • The Dem "establishment is weak. I haven't seen this much establishment support line up against someone [Cegelis] since" DNC chair Howard Dean. "Considering the massive amount of fundraising, big name support, advocacy group support, free media, and direct DCCC contributions, Duckworth will finish way, way under 50%. The Democratic and progressive establishment, even the vaunted Chicago machine, is clearly losing the ability to control and influence its own base."
  • Noting that Cegelis concentrated on turnout: "Strong ground games in primaries and other low turnout elections work." Ex-Rep. Ciro Rodriguez's (D) "ground game in TX-28 was weak." Iraq war vet Paul Hackett's (D) "in OH-02 was strong." Businessman Ned Lamont's (D) "ground game in CT [against Sen. Joe Lieberman (D)] could result in an enormous surprise."

The Almighty Ajax agrees with Bowers' frustration at the DCCC: "Maybe I'm a parochial clod with dung on my shoes, but I flatly resent the DCCC airlifting in a gimmick candidate." Philosopher's Armchair's Steve, who supported college prof. Lindy Scott (D), doesn't like that his candidate wasn't ever considered by the MSM: "Being ignored is the worst form of insult, worse than hatred." We The People and Bowers want the DCCC to pay $75K for a recount, just to "make nice." Musing's Musing is over the loss: "I just hope the district will unite behind the eventual winner, because this would be a huge pickup."

The Republic of Biloxi is mad about the GOP Gov primary: "With Judy Baar Topinka's primary victory over conservatives Jim Oberweis, Bill Brady, and fiscal conservative/social moderate Ron Gidwitz, we are assured a spirited race of business as usual versus more of the same." American Moderate Party's Peter sees it differently and likes the result, "particularly because Baar-Topinka is a moderate Republican - so she resonates with voters. Incredible, really, that the IL GOP has found a candidate for a high profile race after the debacle that was Alan Keyes for Senate." Dan Conley, on the Dem primary: Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D), "are you listening yet? Some guy off the street just picked up 30 percent against you in the" Dem primary. "Okay, he had some experience. But no one who voted for Edwin Eisendrath took him seriously. His ads were terrible. His resume is thin. The one thing he had going for him is that he isn't you."

There's not much buzz on the IL 08 GOP primary, where banker David McSweeney (R) beat out atty Kathy Salvi 42%-33%, or on the IL 03 Dem primary, where Rep. Dan Lipinski (D) shrugged off two challenges, netting a majority.

:LCRR_KHS is just peeved about how backward IL is: "That 'new' system of voting where you expect me to fill ovals and WRITE on my ballot? Could it be any more stone age?"

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: The Singularity Is Over Here

Not one, but many -- there's a lot of interesting stuff in Mickey Kaus' stream-of-consciousness review of Glenn Reynolds new book, "An Army of Davids." Here's one especially happy thought: "I'm especially not persuaded, for example, that when technology puts greater and greater destructive power into the hands of smaller and smaller numbers of individuals it won't ultimately lead to some sort of doom. Imagine a rowboat with ten people, of varying religious beliefs, all of whom have their fingers on the trigger of a personal nuclear device. They try to get along and run a little society. How many times will this scenario result in a big explosion? More often than not, I suspect."

LEST WE FORGET: Have It Your Way

Let's see what's on the menu today:

  • The meat-and-Steelers-loving folks at A Hamburger Today claim victory in their quest to create a -- wait for it -- Roethlis-Burger, and they have video to prove it.
  • Wuzza Dem depicts Chris Matthews interviewing actor/conspiracy buff Richard Belzer and actor/apparent 9/11 revisionistCharlie Sheen .
  • Fafblog commits "six counts of treason in this article alone."
  • Steve from The Sneeze thinks his wife may have cheated on him with "Hot Dog Eating Champion Takeru Kobayashi," but possibly Augustus Gloop.
  • Spoiler alert! Tony Soprano dies. Kind of.

This one's on us.

NOTES AND ERRATA: While Supplies Last

Job Opening: The Hotline is seeking a staff writer to take over The Blogometer. Applicants must consider themselves regular consumers of political blogs (min. 2 years reading them, also must be a fan of blogs), be familiar with nationally read blogs from across the spectrum; know how to use blog search engines/aggregators (such as Technorati and Memeorandum); be able to quickly analyze and synthesize developments in the news as well as summarize ongoing blog activity with brevity, clarity and accuracy. Excellent writing and time-management skills are also a must. As with every Hotline position, we don't expect our writers to not have an opinion, we just expect them to keep it out of their work. Interested applicants should send their resumes to jvu@theatlantic.com.

Posted by at 12:45 PM

March 21, 2006

3/21: Apocalypse Now?

While there still isn't a great deal happening out there, Pres. Bush is certainly at the center of what debates are going on. His speech/Q&A session in Cleveland got lots of attention, due to the pointed and wacky Q&A session. Fred Barnes' WSJ piece proposing a massive reshuffling of the exec branch is the launching point for many discussions, and liberal bloggers are again debating the pros and cons of Sen. Russ Feingold's (D-WI) censure resolution. The Iraq war itself remains a huge topic, in part due to increased conservative criticism, but also because of a new report that U.S. soldiers may have committed a crime in a firefight that left 15 Iraqis -- including children -- dead. On a less newsworthy but more cerebral note, there's a small debate going on between lefty and righty bloggers about the present realities and possible future of fiscal conservatism. Plus, our latest Blogger Spotlight.

BUSH I: It's Be The End Of The World As We Know It, And Bush Feels Fine

On 3/20, Bush delivered a speech on Iraq in Cleveland, OH. Afterward, he took unscripted, at times hostile, questions from the crowd. Perhaps the most memorable question was also the very 1st. Quoting ex-conservative/"American Theocracy" author Kevin Phillips alleging the Bush admin. has "reached out to prophetic Christians who see the War in Iraq and the rise of terrorism as signs of the apocalypse," the audience member asked: "Do you believe this: that the War in Iraq and the rise of terrorism are signs of the apocalypse and if not, why not?" Expose the Left has video.

Since Bush didn't actually answer the question, RightWinged expects "lefties will go nuts with the fact that he didn't say 'I don't believe that.'" More: "Whether this was an honest question (possibly), or a moonbat plant (likely), it was pretty funny. To hear the POTUS asked that question directly was really weird." A few on the right linked to this Photoshop job from Outside Normal. Stop the ACLU: "One reason that the question stuck in my mind is not because it was so nutty, but because there is a major player in all of this that believes just that. Mr. Ahmadinejad is devoutly motivated by apocalyptic religious beliefs that is driving much of his motivation." Lefty John Amato at Crooks and Liars also has video, and also zeroes in on Iran: "He didn't answer the question, but rather went into a long rant about 9/11 and his most important talking point. The one that paves the way for the U.S. to attack Iran -- 'pre-emptive strikes.' He threw in the word diplomacy to make believe that was on his mind, but the whole neocon game is to change the face of the Middle East and I don't think diplomacy is part of that equation." A Daily Kos contributor has some fun with the question, asking: "I have been dying to ask: Where does FEMA stand in relation to the Rapture? What is the federal government's plan for Rapture response? ... Will Abramoff get his job back? Will Dominos still deliver?"

The very next questioner asked Bush about the admin's 3 main rationales for war -- WMD, Iraqi involvement in 9/11, and the Iraq-Niger yellowcake connection: "All three of those turned out to be false. My question is, how do we restore confidence that Americans may have in their leaders and to be sure that the information they are getting now is correct?" In the course of his response, Bush denied tying Saddam to 9/11.

Liberal News Hounds disagrees, quoting Bush's 3/21/03 letter to Congress, which describes using "armed force against Iraq" in the same sentence as saying he would "take necessary actions against international terrorists," including those who "planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001.'" Blogs for Bush's Mark Noonan was impressed, and in no small part amused: "Here we a large part of the leftwing litany against the President, each one of them an actual lie, asked directly to the President most certainly by a member of the left. You got your dream, lefties, you got to ask the President about your absurd views on the war." More: "This is just great -- perhaps President Bush should have met [Cindy] Sheehan... but only live on prime time television."

Flopping Aces was more than impressed with Bush's Q&A, posting several exchanges, adding: "The man is on fire! He needs to be doing this EVERY day." But The Carpetbagger Report doesn't think that's likely: "One got the impression that Bush didn't exactly enjoy pointed-but-polite questions when he eventually asked, 'Anybody work here in this town?' ... At this point, it's safe to assume we may not see the president in an uncontrolled public discussion again for a while."

BUSH II: Third Term's A Charm?

In the 1/20 Wall Street Journal, Weekly Standard's Fred Barnes -- author of the recent pro-Bush bio "Rebel in Chief" -- proposes Bush shake up his cabinet by having VP Cheney step down, replace him with Sec/State Condoleezza Rice (who would then be the standard-bearer for WH'08), replace her with Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-CT), perhaps move Cheney to the Pentagon, have Karl Rove and Ken Mehlman trade places, and make a few other lower-profile cabinet-level changes. Headline: "A 'Third Term' For Bush?" It gets a lot of attention from both sides, but mostly from the right, where many are intrigued by the idea but few think it should actually go forward.

At NRO, ex-Bush speechwriter David Frum finds the idea "fascinating," but warns: "Installing one candidate who has never run for office in the vice presidency overtop all the party's other leadership contenders cuts short a necessary process of renewal, reinvention, and regeneration. It will buy a few days of positive publicity at the price of longer-term stagnation and ultimate failure and defeat. Worse, it will confirm a destructive internal tendency toward royalism in party affairs. The 2008 presidential nomination is not George Bush's prize to bestow." L.A.-based Joe Scott sees a different future for Rice. He doesn't think she'll be chosen to replace retiring NFL commish Paul Tagliabue; instead, "I see her as owner of the new NFL Los Angeles Bulldogs when the 1940s' era Pacific Coast League franchise is reborn on the Coliseum gridiron in 2010." Mark Coffey admits to being "the choir" on this, adding: "I'm all a-tingle... it'll never happen, of course, but it's a nice dream, isn't it?"

Poliblog's Steven Taylor is skeptical about the Rice move as well, and adds: "Cheney has been even more hawkish than Rumsfeld, first on Iraq, now on Iran -- so I am not certain how Cheney to the Pentagon constitutes new blood." Repentant Iraq hawk Belgravia Dispatch: "For Christ's sake, if Fred Barnes is pushing for Rummy to step down, who else is left (save uber-apologists like Hugh Hewitt or sad, rabid nutters like Charles Johnson?)." James Joyner: "While getting rid of unpopular figures like Don Rumsfeld might help a little, it strikes me as highly unlikely that this would achieve the desired reaction. Indeed, it might be seen as further sign of collapse." He notes that contra Barnes' claim, Gerald Ford's reshuffle did not "work," insofar as he lost the WH.

Bring it On!: "The governance of this country is a matter only of political importance to Barnes. In recognizing that the administration is adrift in failures and ineptitude, in large part brought on by the policy advice he has received from his cabinet and staff, Barnes proposes 'smoke and mirrors.'" NDN Blog agrees: "Regardless, I can think of more than a few Democrats who'd agree with the article's sub-head: 'Condi Rice, Dick Cheney and Karl Rove need new jobs' (the headline on the other hand may just send them running for the hills)."

CENSURE: It's Just Plain Common ... Okay, We're Out Of Puns

Jane Hamsher notes that as more polls emerge showing substantial, if not majority, support for a censure resolution, more in the media are waking up to what the lefty blogopshere was saying a week ago: "While there were a few in the blogosphere who decided to sit this one out, the people who took a stand to back Feingold came out looking pretty good. ... I guess we're not so fringe after all." Cokie Roberts, with a commentary on NPR, is the latest; Digby adds: "She has spent her life in Washington DC and is as much a part of the firmament as the Arlington cemetary. When she speaks, the poobahs have issued an verdict." As for the poll-delayed commentary, he adds: "Apparently the establishment needed some numbers in order to know what to think."

Finding that liberal Newsweek columnists Eleanor Clift and Jonathan Alter criticising the wisdom of the censure resolution, Matt Yglesias responds at TAPPED with a challenge: "I find the idea that this gambit will influence the midterms significantly one way or the other to be a bit daft -- it's just not that big a deal. So how about a column by someone -- anyone -- trying to explain why the president does not, in fact, deserve to be censured for his lawbreaking ways? If no members of the Washington Generals faction of American liberalism has a viable argument to that effect, then why not maybe a column or two explaining to readers why they should change their mind and support Feingold?" Washington Monthly's Kevin Drum takes him up on the offer, arguing that the censure push is "not increasing public awareness of the NSA's domestic spying program. All it's doing is increasing awareness of Russ Feingold's censure motion." All the stories he's seen are about "Feingold the maverick" and his WH'08 chances, "the disarray his motion has caused" among Dems, "whether the censure motion was politically smart," or the GOP's "glee that Feingold has shifted attention away" from their problems. More: "Is this really helping convince the public that Bush deliberately and repeatedly violated the law when he approved the NSA program? I'm not seeing it." At Pandagon, Jedmunds responds to Drum point-by-point, and asks: "What is with this subset of liberals who have completely internalized the notion that any scrap for the so called 'base' is dangerous? ... Good God, Go read some f---ing white papers. That's what you're good at.

IRAQ: So We Have Some Bad News, And We Have ... No, Wait, Just Bad News

ABC News' Jonathan Karl reports, upon the release of an Iraqi-shot video alleging that U.S. troops shot and killed 15 Iraqis in the city of Haditha, the U.S. military is opening an investigation into the incident.

At The Washington Note, Steve Clemons asks: "When will Rumsfeld be held accountable and fired? ... One question is why is the Pentagon investigating? Why not the FBI or Attorney General, or prosecutors empowered by Congress? The Pentagon is proving to be an incapable investigator of its own offenses." The 1st commenter replies: "Steve, you just answered your own question." Confederate Yankee finds Clemons' response prima facie evidence that he doesn't support the troops: "There is the possibility that the Marines did gun down innocent civilians as local Iraqis claim. But it is equally as possible that one or more people inside the house opened fire upon the Marines in an ambush after the IED went off. It has happened that way frequently ... A crime has not even been established, and yet Clemons and his nauseous ilk have already deemed our Marines guilty, and presume to pass sentence."

Richard at liberal The Peking Duck remains cautious: "If this story is true -- and it sure sounds like it is -- we may have another Abu Ghraib brewing. US Marines are being accused of the wholesale slaughter of 15 innocent Iraqis, for virtually no reason at all. Kids, too. Parents and their children. ... If so, brace yourself for the next big Iraq scandal." Juxtaposing reports without commentary, Needlenose's Fubar compares Haditha to My Lai.

At Democracy Arsenal, Heather Hurlburt argues, "three years on, Americans across the political spectrum, including quite a few 'experts' and 'influentials' are done with Iraq" -- and notes that a bipartisan poll by Bill McInturff and Peter Hart find 52% say we've done "all we can there," and 62% want to reduce troop levels. More: "There's a critical need ... to think hard about what the public mood tells us about the limits of the possible. Note, I said nothing about smart, just or fair here. These are ugly, sad calculations. We have to make them because of the failures and hubris of this Administration. But someone is going to have to make them."

In recent weeks, war opponents have satisfactorily noted the conversion of several conservatives and other war supporters to criticism of the war and the Bush admin. Middle Earth Journal lists George Will and points to Running Scared's recounting of the transformation of Independent columnist Johann Hari from supporter to opponent. MEJ: "But fear not, the moronic Fred Barnes has a plan; rearrange the deck chairs on the sinking ship of state."

Meanwhile, Trent Telenko at pro-war Winds of Change writes, "It is a wonder that the Blogosphere hasn't picked up on the latest media 'Frame' on the war in Iraq -- that Iraq is in purportedly in the middle of a civil war -- and taken it apart like the propaganda it is. ... If the civil strife in post-liberation Iraq matched that of real civil war in Bosnia ten years ago, there would be 650,000 Iraqi fatalities per year -- say 1800 dead Iraqis a day from 'sectarian strife.'"

SPENDING: Pile On!

Starting last p.m., Political Animal Kevin Drum and Time's Andrew Sullivan are debating the meanings of fiscal conservatism. Drum argues for cutting $400B from the budget, noting: "[I]f you support the tax cuts, and you don't want to cut defense spending, and you want a balanced budget, you need to slice about" that much "out of the" $500B "that's left. ... Cutting a few agricultural subsidies and eliminating Amtrak isn't going to do the trick. Even taking an axe to social welfare programs wouldn't do it. You'd need to eliminate about 80% of the federal government outside the" DoD. Sullivan responds, offering what he calls a "back-of-the-envelope wish-list" -- which turns out to be pretty long. Noting that he's made just about everyone mad, Sullivan concludes: "I look forward to conservatives continuing to insist I'm a lefty. I also look forward to ferocious opposition from the left. But the bottom line is that the middle class and the prosperous elderly are far too pampered by government in this country. They need to get rid of their debilitating and unaffordable dependency."

Atrios piled on in the beginning, with Angry Bear calling for tax increases, Preemptive Karma's Carla calling for an audit of the DoD, while Gryphmon's Patrick, posts a comment at Gay Patriot in Sullivan's defense. Left Coaster's CA Political Junkie offers nice tables with FY 2005 CBO data to assist in accusing Sullivan of indulging the "classic 'If I were king' fantasy, where one does not need to conform to reality."

BLOGS VS. THE FEC: Freepers And Kossacks Have Too Agreed Before

While the Online Freedom of Speech Act is on hold until after the cong. recess, the FEC may take up the issue of how to bring the Internet into compliance with McCain-Feingold/BCRA, and there is even some interest outside the Beltway. One report getting some commentary this a.m. is from the Minneapolis Star Tribune [note: seems the Strib moves its stories after 24 hours; it did work earlier]. It notes the infamous case of the bloggers paid by now-Sen. John Thune (R-SD) in '04, prompting Danny "Jack Lewis" Carlton to comment: "I can see a requirement that bloggers reveal their funding, but then again, when the government is allowed an inch into regulating a group, they come back quickly demanding a mile. So far the Blogosphere has done a pretty good job of policing itself, by exposing those that would do thing that make their message questionable. Congress can't even boast of that, so who are they to demand we come under rules they won't adhere to themselves." Norwegianity: "I'm impressed by the Strib's John Reinan who had enough insight into blogging to begin his article with, 'This might be the first time Freepers and Kossacks have agreed on anything.'"

Meanwhile, RJ Eskow at Skippy the Bush Kangaroo objects to bloggers' disdain for "reformer" groups like Democracy21: "I think Kos and Atrios are absolutely right, and that regulating Internet political speech is a very bad idea. But I'm getting very tired of hearing progressives who disagree being called nasty names like stupid goo-gooers. An otherwise stalwart ally becomes an object of contempt overnight. That's not good politics, and it leaves out the self-examination part. The right question may be: Have I explained myself clearly enough?"

INTRODUCING: RGB Monitor ... i.e. Red, Greenwald And Blue

Washingtonpost.com rolls out its latest blog this a.m., which happens to be its 1st avowedly conservative blog -- Red America, written by RedState co-founder Ben Domenech. He writes in his inaugural post: This is a blog for the majority of Americans. Since the election of 1992, the extreme political left has fought a losing battle. Their views on the economy, marriage, abortion, guns, the death penalty, health care, welfare, taxes, and a dozen other major domestic policy issues have been exposed as unpopular, unmarketable and unquestioned losers at the ballot box. ... Yet even in a climate where Republicans hold command of every branch of government, and advocate views shared by a majority of voters, the mainstream media continues to treat red state Americans as pachyderms in the mist - an alien and off-kilter group of suburbanite churchgoers about which little is known, and whose natural habitat is a discomforting place for even the most hardened reporter from the New York Times. ... Red America's citizens are the political majority. They're here to stay. It's time to start paying attention to what they believe and why."

And Firedoglake, which made its debut in late '04 and rose to prominence during the intense Plamegate scrutiny during the summer of '05, has made official its move from Blogspot to its own TLD, with the blog powered by WordPress.

1st Amendment atty/blogger on the move Glenn Greenwald has been hinting for awhile that he would soon announce a big project, and in a lengthy post last a.m., he did just that: "Roughly six weeks ago, I was approached by an editor with a proposal to publish a book based on the ideas and arguments which have been the subject of this blog for the last several months. ... I have been writing the book for the last five weeks and am about 80% done. The book is entitled 'How Would a Patriot Act? Defending American Values from a President Run Amok.'" The book will be available in about another 6 weeks from Chelsea Green; the editor he mentions is Jennifer Nix, who is also behind George Lakoff's "Don't Think of an Elephant" and the Markos Moulitsas/Jerome Armstrong book "Crashing the Gate." Greenwald posts a JPG of what the cover will look like, and explains his main thesis: "At its core, this scandal is not and has never been about the scope of eavesdropping powers which the Government ought to have. It is much more significant than that. We face a genuine and profound crisis as a country because we have a President who has continuously exploited the threat of terrorism and engaged in rank fear-mongering in order to expressly claim the power to act without any checks or limits at all -- including, literally, the power to break the law."

Also on the book front, mistercritter.com has launched to support an e-book and coloring book version of the inside-the-Beltway children's book "George Washington Beaver and the Cherry Tree." Full disclosure -- the book's author, Mister Critter, is actually our National Journal colleague Danny Glover, author of Beltway Blogroll.

BLOGGER SPOTLIGHT: Roggios Gallery

Today the Blogometer talks to milblogger Bill Roggio, who writes The Fourth Rail and previously contributed to Winds of Change and ThreatsWatch. He was also the subject of a 12/26 Washington Post article about his blogging from Iraq.

What is your full name?

William Frank Roggio

What is your age?

36

Where did you grow up?

Blackwood, New Jersey

Where do you live now?

Medford, New Jersey

What is your occupation? Have you ever worked on a political campaign or for the mainstream media?

Mainframe Software Analyst.

I have not worked for a political campaign. I have had articles published, but I don't think this counts as working for the mainstream media.

When did you start blogging and why?

I started blogging in March of 2004. The coverage of the war was (and still is) sub-par in my opinion, and lacked context, particularly in the area of military operations and the fight against al-Qaeda. I decided to write to help sort out my own thoughts, and for friends and family to see what I have to say. Since I am prior military, they tend to ask me questions.

What has been your favorite post, or favorite story to write about, in that time?

My favorite post (or series of posts) was the "The Anbar Campaign," which described the joint Iraqi and Coalition effort to disrupt and uproot al-Qaeda and the insurgency in western Iraq, and establish a permanent presence in each of the major towns and cities along the Euphrates River. The was a story the media was missing. By closely tracking the operations over time, I was able to predict the order and timing of future operations in the region. I also created a Flash presentation to give a visual on the operation. The reporting and analysis gained the attention of the Marines fighting in Anbar. I subsequently was invited to embed with the Marines by Colonel Stephen Davis, the commanding officer of Regimental Combat Team 2, and took him up on the offer. I embedded in Anbar province for one month, witnessed the historic December 15, 2005 election and was able to see the progress made in the region I covered from afar. The embed reports from Iraq are also some of my favorite posts.

Describe your typical blogging schedule. And what is your average output?

Writing is the easy part which typically only takes a few hours a day. It is the reading, research and gathering of links which occupies the most time. I am constantly monitoring the news for information, as well as reading military blogs and military press releases. As I work a full time job, this often mean late nights reading and writing.

I typically post once or twice a day, depending on the day's developments, and the posts are typically 600-800 words in length, with hyperlinks footnoting all of the articles or posts I have read that pertain to the post.

Who is your favorite political blogger? Favorite non-political blogger?

I'm not sure this is a blog, but I'd say James Taranto at The Wall Street Journal's "Best of the Web" is my favorite political blog. Non-political: The Counterterrorism Blog

Who is your favorite mainstream media columnist?

Who is your favorite mainstream media columnist? I have several: Charles Krauthammer, Jack Kelly, Christopher Hitchens, Victor Davis Hanson, Mark Steyn, for starters.

What is your favorite television news program, either network or cable?

I never watch the network or cable news. I have found they are often days behind what is available on the web.

What MSM-produced websites (i.e. newspapers, magazines) do you visit on a daily basis?

What MSM-produced websites (i.e. newspapers, magazines) do you visit on a daily basis? Wall Street Journal , Weekly Standard,National Review Online , New York Times, Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, Associated Press, Reuters, Daily Times (Pakistan), Asharq Alawsat... and a bunch more. The RSS news reader is a great tool...

What non-MSM websites (i.e. blogs) do you visit on a daily basis?

What non-MSM websites (i.e. blogs) do you visit on a daily basis? The Counterterrorism Blog , Instapundit, Belmont Club, The Adventures of Chester, Rantburg, Regnum Crucis, Security Watchtower, Best of the Web, Blackfive, Mudville Gazette, Real Clear Politics, Irish Pennants, Terrorism Unveiled, Thomas Joscelyn, Soldier's Dad.

How often, or do you ever, read a newspaper in its dead-tree (i.e. print) form?

Only if I forget my laptop when going to an office visit and have to pick up a Time or Newsweek (cellular wireless Internet is another wonderful creation). Most of the papers publish their stories online, and I would rather read articles on the computer. No ink, no folding papers, and no place for the cats to sit while reading. Plus, since I save the links I will use in future posts, it would be additional work to actually look up that article I read.

How do you see the new media and old media affecting and influencing each other in the next five years?

There is certainly a lot of hostility between the two parties. I feel that both parties have much to offer each other, and there will be some form of intersection between the two groups. The good blogs are focused and provided a unique perspective, expert analysis and unique content often missing from the media sites. The old media has a vast amount of resources bloggers can only dream of having. The more creative news and media organizations are starting their own blogs and some are even inviting outside bloggers to join. I believe there will be further a co-opting of blogs and integration of blogs into the media websites. But many blogs will continue to scorn the media, and vise versa. I do not believe the blogs will overtake the media, or the media will collapse, or the blogs will fade away.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: When Is A Blog Not A Blog?

When it's a blog post. As blogs become more popular and garner more coverage, the more that reporters and others among the uninitiated will be commenting on them. And the more they do so, the more terminology that bloggers and blog readers will be misused. This struck us particularly during the recent argle-bargle over George Clooney's manufactured contribution to Huffington Post. Most of the reports we saw failed to make a distinction between a "blog" and a "blog post" (or "blog entry"). Needless to say, a blog is made up of many posts or entries. One post does not a blog make. Does this really matter? We'd say it's always worth preserving meaningful distinctions between words -- lest soon enough educated people won't know the difference, just as many can't identify the difference between "jealousy" and "envy." But tell that to the New York Times, which reported on 3/20, "Mr. Clooney dropped a bomb, asserting that although the sentiments in the post were his, they were cobbled together from past interviews with Larry King of CNN and The Guardian, a British newspaper. And more important, the blog was not written by him." Is this not redundant? Or did Clooney have "a blog" on Huffington Post by the very fact of posting there? Well, actually... that does seem to be the case -- here's the page where you can find all of Rep. John Conyers' (D-MI) posts in a traditional blog column. But it's unlikely the Times meant this. It's a mistake Arianna Huffington also made in her mea maxima culpa on 3/18: "I now realize that I made a big mistake in posting a blog without clearly identifying that the material in it didn't originate as a blog post but was pieced together from previous interviews." In fact, she seems to be using "blog" and "blog post" interchangably. So what is the Huffington Post, exactly? It is clearly not a blog in the classic sense -- there's no single column on the front page. So is it a collection of blogs? Perhaps. And all of those posts are also united on one single blog? That much is certain. But there's also Drudge Report-like news on the front page, as well as a separate blog, The Newswire, which many would not call a blog. Of course, it has always been clear that HuffPo is something more than a typical blog. LAT's Elizabeth Snead made the same blog/post error in her report that started all the fuss, but then she also used another term that maybe should become more prevalent in describing similar in the future -- "blog site." The Blogometer is of the opinion that a blog is merely a content delivery system, that all something needs to do to be described as a blog is utilize software roughly consistent with a an organizational model. Of course, a particular blog may not necessarily be part of the blogosphere in the sense that it does not link to other blogs or otherwise interact with them. And we think that in the future this will be all the more true. More websites begin to integrate blogs into their pages, such that blogs will simply become a tool on these blog sites. While the blogosphere as a social and political entity will probably continue to exist, much as it will change, for many the definition of what a blog is and is not will cease to matter. Before long, everything will become a blog -- at least, it will seem like it. And at that point, who knows if there will be a meaningful distinction left to be made?

LEST WE FORGET: We Laugh Now, But Just Wait Until This Generation Takes Over ...

At Huffington Post, DC-based novelist Danielle Crittenden publishes a transcript between George "Kickass43" Bush, Karen "IheartUSA" Hughes and Karl "Wonderboy" Rove. Sounding more than a little like a presidential Herbert Kornfeld, a clearly upset Bush complains about his poor ratings despite positive economic figures:

Kickass43: approvl ratins: DOWN
Kickass43: supprt 4 iraq: DOWN
Kickass43: congreshunal approvl: DOWN
Kickass43: "direcshun of country": DOWN
Kickass43: direcshun of effin UNIVRS: DOWN!!
Kickass43: merikans r drivin, eatin, shoppin, drinkin...
Kickass43: pimpin ther rides...
Kickass43: trickin out ther cribs...
Kickass43: takkin ther frikkin mistresses 2 vegas...
Kickass43: & I get NOOOOO credit!!

Crittenden also makes public Bush's iChat Buddy List (who has been known as a Mac user), including such friends as "Ladeezman42," "Hot_Librarian," "LaGrandeFromage," "Supremegrrl" and "Sexybritguy10."

NOTES AND ERRATA: Wanna Get Paid To Read Blogs*?

Job Opening: The Hotline is seeking a staff writer to take over The Blogometer. Applicants must consider themselves regular consumers of political blogs (min. 2 years reading them, also must be a fan of blogs), be familiar with nationally read blogs from across the spectrum; know how to use blog search engines/aggregators (such as Technorati and Memeorandum); be able to quickly analyze and synthesize developments in the news as well as summarize ongoing blog activity with brevity, clarity and accuracy. Excellent writing and time-management skills are also a must. As with every Hotline position, we don't expect our writers to not have an opinion, we just expect them to keep it out of their work. Interested applicants should send their resumes to jvu@theatlantic.com.

*The catch is that you have to write about them, too.

Posted by at 12:23 PM

March 20, 2006

3/20: The Third Degree

Friday was a busy day, but the weekend was actually rather slow. The top story this morning is the 3-year anniversary of the Iraq invasion, and a few of the other blog swarms we're covering are Iraq-based as well. Meanwhile, bloggers debate the GOP and Dems' competing strategies -- or lack of them -- for the midterms, conservative bloggers tear into AP's coverage of Pres. Bush, and Arianna Huffington comes to a blogospheric epiphany.

IRAQ I: Are We There Yet?

AP's Nedra Pickler points out that Bush's 3/19 speech marking the anniversary didn't mention the "the daily violence that rages" in Iraq, nor did he use the word "war." Liberal Taylor Marsh: "The president is so weak he thinks by changing the subject and leaving out one word his problems and ours will all go away." Centrist Joe Gandelman: "Did they think that no one would notice? Just what do they think Americans think is going on over there?" Conservative Dan Riehl: "Heavens!! Not only that, but the wire story goes on tell us that Bush didn't walk everyone through every last car bombing, or mosque attack which has taken place. But then, why should he have?" Cheat Seeking Missiles writes, "Is AP saying that the President copped out and tried to pretend that there wasn't a war going on? If it was a long, detailed speech without the word 'war' in it, AP might have a point," but the speech was only 252 words long.

Conservative Gateway Pundit assembles a timeline of the war, including off-base predictions by Dems and foreign leaders, along with the "reality." Liberal Think Progress posts a timeline of the war, one that's certainly less positive, but is sans commentary.

Antiwar protests got relatively little attention; none from the left that we could find, and just a few on the right noting their small size with some approval. USS Neverdock: "Well, at least a few in the media are reporting" on the "disastrous" antiwar protests; MSNBC describes them as "micro-protests." More: "Of course, major MSM don't want to report on the Left's failure to attract people to their cause. Seems like people have wised up to the fact that these protests are organized by Communists." Dumbshit of the Week: "Too bad, so sad. Earned media is so hard to get these days, huh?"

Reason posted short Q&A's with libertarian-minded writers and leaders, asking for their takes on the war. At Crooked Timber, Belle Waring singles out Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds, Christopher Hitchens and Wired founder Louis Rosetto, all of whom continue to support the war. Borrowing from Atrios, she asks readers to vote for the biggest "wanker." Steve Gilliard: "These people want to relive World War II and that is fantasy. ... I swear to God, I'd like to teach these people real history, so they can stop with this Islamofascism bullshit."

More takes on the war from around the blogosphere:

  • War supporter Gregory Djerejian, who has become increasingly critical of the U.S. handling of the war, writes: "By the way, it's no secret that U.S. commanders in Iraq are under tremendous pressure to keep U.S. casualties down. Our force posture in country has become more and more conservative of late, and, yes, this has helped save coalition lives. But let's not kid ourselves about the result."
  • TBogg: "I won't live to see the United States finish cleaning up the mess that they have made of the world."
  • Conservative TigerHawk: "Jack Murtha's absurd ranting on "Meet the Press" this morning is symptomatic of the problem -- one can think of all sorts of criticisms of the war in Iraq, but when the most prominent public critics incessantly analogize to a flawed conception of the alleged lessons of Vietnam it is almost impossible to promote a dispassionate discussion of the state of play and the best policy for the future."
  • Liberal Rob Schumacher: "Where does it stop? How many dead before the mistake of this war is acknowledged? And before the mistake of leadership, the lack of leadership, is recognized and corrected?"
  • Libertarian radio talker Neal Boortz: "No, Iraq is not in the grips of a civil war. In fact, the majority of the country is at peace. And yes, the country is vastly better off than they were under Saddam Hussein. ... Right now is a critical time in Iraq, as a new government is formed. Things could have been done differently and better after the invasion. ... I believe, though, that America is safer because George Bush invaded Iraq and overthrew Saddam Hussein."
  • The Left Coaster quotes Bush's 3/18 letter to Speaker Denny Hastert on the war: "The fact that this letter was riddled with lies has never been in much dispute in the center-left blogosphere. But you would hardly know about this certification from listening to our Democratic leaders these last three years, as they have never brought this falsehood out in the open and shown it to the American people for the impeachable offense that it is."
  • Jim Lindgren at the Volokh Conspiracy: "According to the website ICasualties.org, which tracks U.S. military deaths in Iraq, the total U.S. military deaths in Iraq since March 20, 2003 is 2,317 lives, one more than the worst month in Vietnam."
  • GOP Bloggers: "America spent many years pursuing a strategy of "stability" that only offered superficial and illusory, not to mention imperfect, quiet while a violent undercurrent of Islamic radicalism grew. That 'status quo' strategy had five decades to prove itself and was clearly a failure, but the Scowcroftian realpolitik adherents still have the nerve to declare the Bush Doctrine as dead after only three years."
  • Billmon: "After three-and-a-half years and three elections, this is what "democracy" has achieved in Iraq: a chronic case of deja vu. And, of course, approximately 100,000 to 150,000 casualties. And the death squads. Shouldn't forget about them. I just wonder: Does Zalmay Khalilzad wake up every morning, like the Bill Murray character in Groundhog Day, wondering why he's been condemned to live the same day over and over again?"
  • Instapundit: "I think that attitudes on the war have more to do with attitudes on Bush than with realities on the ground, among a lot of people on both left and right. As Bush's popularity has sunk -- largely for non-war reasons -- it has pushed the war's popularity down, too."

IRAQ II: Rumsfeld's War

On 3/19, Defense Sec. Donald Rumsfeld had an op-ed in the Washington Post, and it got a lot of attention from both sides.

Sister Toldjah, quoting Rumsfeld's closing bit about how his points are "well worth remembering on this anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom": "Amen. Many thanks to our fine men and women serving, who have served, and/or who will be serving again." Conservative Tom Maguire takes some issue with the op-ed: "The 'tough love' timetable strategy -- announce a withdrawal plan and challenge the Iraqis to form a government and train the heck out of their security forces -- looks like a proposition that will become increasingly popular in the US. ... I have no problem with [Rumsfeld's] re-statement of the urgency of the mission, but 'retreat now' is not exactly what is meant by 'set a concrete timetable.'"

AMERICAblog advises, "Given Rummy's failed leadership, it's hard to take his nasty op-ed seriously anyway. But it's even worse after reading the op-ed" by ret. Army Gen. Paul Eaton in the New York Times, "who castigates Rumsfeld." At his Bull Moose Blog, Marshall Wittmann also recommends the Eaton op-ed, which ends by calling on Rumsfeld to "step down": "Firing Rumsfeld, of course, will by no means guarantee that Iraq will improve. That is not the point. It is imperative that President Bush take concrete steps to demonstrate to the American people that there is a genuine change in course and that from now on he will require accountability. Republican leaders must go to the President and demand this change."

CNN.com later ran a report quoting Henry Kissinger and Zbigniew Brzezinski from "Late Edition" as disagreeing with Rumsfeld's WWII analogy. Elephants in Academia points out that CNN truncated Kissinger's quote, excising his elaboration upon Rumsfeld's point: "This is hardly a condemnation of what Mr. Rumsfeld said -- it is a sophisticated and nuanced interpretation of his op-ed and, more to the point, an expression of agreement." Solomonia: "It's an analogy. It either works for you or it doesn't. For me it does." Wizbang's Kim Priestap agrees with Rumsfeld's analogy, in another way, recalling an old Saturday Evening Post article calling German rebuilding a failure in '46: "The 1946 perspective of post war Germany was that it was going so miserably that even American military in Germany were complaining, yet decades later, the rebuilding of Europe in general and Germany in particular is seen as one of the greatest achievements in American history."

IRAQ III: Getting Swarmer ...

Op. Swarmer took a good deal of criticism, particularly with the Time article explaining how it "fizzled." At Back to Iraq, ex-AP reporter Christopher Albritton writes, "'Operation Swarmer' is really a media show. It was designed to show off the new Iraqi Army - although there was no enemy for them to fight. Every American official I've heard has emphasized the role of the Iraqi forces just days before the third anniversary of the start of the war. That said, one Iraqi role the military will start highlighting in the next few days, I imagine, is that of Iraqi intelligence."

On the left, there is little surprise -- Daily Kos' Georgia10: "Today, we learn that eight civilians, including a child, were killed in clashes between U.S. troops and gunmen in Duluiyah, part of the area targeted in the air assault campaign. It's unclear what exactly is transpiring; there is a media blackout. However, what little information is trickling out from the operation reveals the true cost of this PR campaign." David Anderson, at In Search of Utopia: "I don't blame 'em though. I mean with Bush getting his ass handed to him on the issue of Iraq, and the fact that after three years we still don't have a plan. ... Not to mention the hundreds of Iraqis that have died in the last couple of weeks..."

Meanwhile, some conservatives are arguing that it was the media who mischaracterized the point of Swarmer -- Captain's Quarters: "Sometimes the press demonstrates such incompetence as to be actually dangerous. The coverage of the latest effort in Samarra in clearing out the terrorists is just the latest example. ... Since its beginning, however, the press has both hyped the operation and attempted to tear it down as a publicity stunt by the White House. Described as the biggest air assault in three years, the press completely misunderstood this as the biggest air strike since the beginning of the war." Dafydd Ab Hugh explains: "Time complains that planes and helicopters didn't come screaming in like a World War II strafing run. But this operation was never supposed to be an airstrike; it was an air assault," and yet Time itself "already knew that we weren't planning a huge, Clintonian barrage of missiles," and in the article noted that air assault "is a military term that refers specifically to transporting troops into an area."

MIDTERMS: Unification Theories

Washington Post reports on the GOP's inability to come up with a unified message for the midterms. ConservativeBetsy Newmark: "I suspect that this will become yet another election when people are more likely to vote against the other party than for their own party. ... That is why the Feingold censure resolution was such a gift to the Republicans, because it was a reminder to disgruntled Republican voters of what they would face if the Democrats took control of Congress." Outside the Beltway: "Parties in power tend not to have a lot of new ideas beyond 'stay the course.' They have either done, failed at, or abandoned the policies that carried them to power. The Democrats' failure to assemble a unified message is more of a head scratcher." At MyDD, Jonathan Singer argues, "the inability to create a cohesive strategy is not a strategy. If the Republicans can't come up with a positive agenda, they are not devilishly smart for localizing the election -- they just can't come up with a positive agenda." Liberal Prairie Weather notes that the story suggests "dangerous incompetence" as the Dems' best theme against the GOP, adding, "The right wing has been successful in the past when it groups concepts together: Kerry's "flip-flopping" became linked to "cowardice" in Vietnam. ... Most Republicans are uneasy about their recent alliance with religious extremists. When the incompetence and extremism are linked in their minds to those extremists, it's a short step to separating the Republican Party from evangelicals. ... All we need to do is group the words and concepts which so aptly describe the Republican Party's performance in Congress and the White House during the past five to fifteen years."

Newsweek's Jonathan Alter reports that DCCC chair Rahm Emanuel plans to portray GOPers as the "rubber stamp congress," similar to how GOPers portrayed Dems in '94 as the "do-nothing congress." Kevin Drum adds: "That all sounds good, but I still think we need a stronger focus on Iraq (i.e., withdrawal from) and national security (i.e., what we'd do if we're not up for invading Iran). I hope we're not planning to ignore that stuff again, like we did in our famously winning efforts of 2002 and 2004." Alter writes, "In 1994, the big issue powering the Gingrich Revolution was widespread dislike of Clinton." California Conservative disagrees: "That played a part in the revolution but it was hardly the thing. More than anything else, 1994's revolution was spurred by Newt's vision, something that the Democrats sorely lacked."

BLOGS VS. THE MSM: I'm Loven It

The Pickler story above was not the only AP report on Bush to draw conservatives' ire -- previously, AP's Jennifer Loven wrote an article titled "Bush Using Straw-Man Arguments in Speeches." Loven quotes Bush as saying, "Some look at the challenges in Iraq and conclude that the war is lost and not worth another dime or another day," and "There are some really decent people who believe that the federal government ought to be the decider of health care ... for all people," and adding: "Of course, hardly anyone in mainstream political debate has made such assertions." Conservatives disagree vehemently -- Power Line: "Apparently Ms. Loven hasn't been reading the prominent Democrats and influential columnists who have said repeatedly that "the war is lost." And maybe she hasn't read John Murtha's resolution, with its recitations of purported failure in Iraq and its demand that the war be 'hereby terminated.'" The Unalienable Right: "Of course, many people believe the U.S. ought to implement a nationalized, single-payer health care system ... The Clinton Administration actually tried to implement it." Brainster's Blog: "Note that there is no effort to provide balance in the article; nobody is cited who mentions that the Democrats do the same thing frequently. Nobody notes John Kerry's straw-man arguments."

Dinocrat's Jack Risko analyzes the New York Times' acquisition of About.com 1 year hence, amidst news that Moody's may downgrade the Times company's rating: "Not only have the Times' editorial and news policies come under criticism, not only have the sufficiency and clarity of its SEC disclosures been criticized, but now the Times' business judgment in keeping the corporation on a sound financial footing has been questioned." Thomas Lifson: "The Times is already cutting back in the newsrooms of its papers. Newspapers and television stations (the biggest assets of the NYTCo) are not pulling down top dollars any more, so selling these are not attractive options for generating cash. Keep an eye on that dividend." Roger L. Simon writes, the NYT's "decline is not really a decline -- the newspaper was always as it is, more or less -- but rather a symptom of changing times and access. The Times is no longer able to function ex cathedra as it was during the era of Walter Duranty ... Jayson Blair, whose fairy tales were far less significant than Duranty's, was discovered relatively quickly ... History has been replayed as farce."

TORTURE: Sponsored By Mazda?

New York Times reports on a secret U.S. interrogation squad at Camp Nama in Iraq called Task Force 6-26, where there were "no rules" on detainee treatment, and a sign read "No Blood, No Foul."

Obsidian Wings' Hilzoy notes that 6-26 was formerly known as 121, "which also seems to have had chronic problems with prisoner abuse," and tracks down an '03 Washington Post story about it. Body and Soul: "Consider: American soldiers treated prisoners so viciously that even the CIA blanched, and prohibited its officers from taking part in interrogations at the prison. A knee-jerk response awaits: How bad does abuse have to be before the CIA would object?" Andrew Sullivan compares this to the official line on Abu Ghraib: "The troops doing the abuse and torturing were not reservists on the night shift. They were an elite group either doing what their civilian masters wanted; or beyond their civilian masters' control. Fire Rumsfeld."

Disturbing the Comfortable: "We know that right after 9/11, there were some instances of physical abuse happening to people arrested here in the States. We know that Gitmo has documented physical abuse of prisoners. We know the Secret Police have been tapping phones and putting people under surveillance and even arresting them without bothering about legal baggage. So when does this stuff begin here? Or has it?"

BLOGGERS VS. BLOGGERS: The Whipping Post

On 3/16 we covered the dispute between actor George Clooney and Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington about whether she had permission to run interview answers as a blog post. Aside from that, a number of bloggers objected simply to the fact that Huffington had committed a deception that rendered all HuffPo contributions suspect, and even devalued other bloggers' work. This a.m., the New York Times has a story about the dustup.

A prominent critic was Jeff Jarvis, who called her the "unrepentent Dr. Frankenstein of celebrity blog posts": "I believe this betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the meaning of the medium: Blogs are people and the blogosphere is a conversation. If you're not really writing your blog, if you're having or allowing someone to do it for you, then you're gaming me, lying to me, insulting me." By 3/18, Huffington changed her mind: "I now realize that I made a big mistake in posting a blog without clearly identifying that the material in it didn't originate as a blog post but was pieced together from previous interviews." Huffington promised to acknowledge source material if there is any, to not coach contributors, adding: "When I read something or hear something in an interview or have something said to me in person that I think is really important and should have as wide an audience as possible, I will put it in my own blog, becoming Boswell to all the Dr. Johnsons out there just as I did once with Arthur Schlesinger." She concludes: "We've been doing this for ten months, and the learning curve has been enormous. Consider this a major lesson learned. I get it and have taken it to heart."

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: The Coming Hurricanosphere?

Confederate Yankee writes, "By now, the importance of the information provided by bloggers before, during, and after a major disaster such as a hurricane, earthquake or a tsunami is well-established," and in "up-coming hurricane seasons selected bloggers will have even more front-line access." He links to the O.E.S. Project Web Log, which notes that bloggers were recently admitted entry to the former USNS San Diego to cover Hurricane Beryl. CY asks: "Who among us wouldn't like to see someone like hurricane blogger Brendan Loy on board these ships, blogging in real-time as events unfold, or crisp, riveting post-landfall reporting from someone like Michael Yon?" At

LEST WE FORGET: Still Not Clear On The "Web" Concept ... And What Is This "Log" You Speak Of?

It would appear that our prediction from the 1st paragraph of the Blogometer's '05 year-in-review edition has not yet come to pass. Then again, we're not doing so hot in our NCAA brackets, either. Perhaps we've been wasting too much time with this.

NOTES AND ERRATA: Think You Can Do This Job?

Job Opening: The Hotline is seeking a staff writer to take over The Blogometer. Applicants must consider themselves regular consumers of political blogs (min. 2 years reading them, also must be a fan of blogs), be familiar with nationally read blogs from across the spectrum; know how to use blog search engines/aggregators (such as Technorati and Memeorandum); be able to quickly analyze and synthesize developments in the news as well as summarize ongoing blog activity with brevity, clarity and accuracy. Excellent writing and time-management skills are also a must. As with every Hotline position, we don't expect our writers to not have an opinion, we just expect them to keep it out of their work. Interested applicants should send their resumes to jvu@theatlantic.com.

Posted by at 01:00 PM

March 17, 2006

3/17: The Threatdown

In this too-busy-for-a-Friday edition: Under pressure from conservatives, the Pentagon has released the 1st of what should be many documents the U.S. seized from the Saddam regime, and some pro-war bloggers already think they've found what they were looking for; meanwhile there's a major military offensive happening in Iraq, and the U.S. and Iran have agreed to hold direct talks on how to quell sectarian violence in Iraq; an ARG poll finds that a plurality of registered voters actually support Sen. Russ Feingold's (D-WI) move to censure Pres. Bush -- and while bloggers are certainly paying attention, the MSM so far has not; on the terrorism beat, port security comes up again in the form of a House amendment to search all incoming containers, and lefty bloggers are hitting GOPers hard for voting it down -- and did we add that the so-called al Qaeda "chatter" is apparently at pre-9/11 levels?; H.R. 1606, a bill that bloggers on both sides of the partisan divide see as protecting them against campaign finance regulations, is on hold until after next week's recess -- and now some Dem-leaning bloggers are pressuring House Min. Leader Nancy Pelosi to back off her opposition. There's also an erroneous report that is still floating around the blogosphere which has not yet been properly debunked -- so we might as well be the ones do it. All that and more:

IRAQ I: The New Pentagon Papers

Ex-Hotliner Steve Hayes' 3/20 Weekly Standard report on DNI John Negroponte's reticence to make documents seized from Saddam's regime publicly available has paid off -- in the last 24 hours, the 1st batch has been posted to a Pentagon website. And conservative bloggers -- some of whom argue still that Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda had more extensive ties than has become the CW -- are diving right in. The MSM is picking it up too, albeit carefully -- ABC News posts document summaries to its site, with little editor's notes after each paragraph, generally tamping down expectations. One goes: "The controversial claim that Osama bin Laden was cooperating with Saddam Hussein is an ongoing matter of intense debate. While the assertions contained in this document clearly support the claim, the sourcing is questionable ... without further corroboration, this document is of limited evidentiary value."

Power Line's John Hinderaker quotes from 1 document: "So Iraqi intelligence conducted 'covert offensive operations' involving 'poisons' as well as explosives, carried out 'sabotage and assassination' outside of Iraq, and trained agents in 'the use of terror techniques' abroad. Not bad for a single eight-page document." He had initially thought the document was a translation; he updated after readers pointed out it was actually summary -- but he notes that Investors Business Daily made the same error.

The Politburo Ditkat is one of a few sites to quote the following section from the Iraqi docs: "Our source in Afghanistan No 11002 (for information about him see attachment 1) provided us with information that that Afghani Consul Ahmad Dahestani (for information about him see attachment 2) told him the following: 1. That Osama Bin Laden and the Taliban in Afghanistan are in contact with Iraq and it that previously a group from Taliban and Osama Bin Laden group visited Iraq. 2. That America has proof that the government of Iraq and Osama Bin Laden group have shown cooperation to hit target within America." Beth at MY Vast Right Wing Conspiracy reacts: "OK, am I reading that right? Have I just gotten used to expecting nothing? " Ed Morrissey: "What this doesn't suggest -- and we can bet we will see this spin -- is that Saddam Hussein was complicit in either effort. If the Mukhabarat had to go investigate AQ's penetration and recruiting in Iraq, it suggests that the Iraqi intelligence structure was unaware of the situation. It really doesn't much matter. ... What Saddam doesn't do -- and which would have gained him a great deal of clout at the UNSC -- is turn the AQ cells over to a third party. It would be impossible to imagine the US invading Iraq after Saddam had surrendered the AQ terrorists."

The Anchoress: "The WaPo puts the most boring headline on the story" -- "First Declassified Iraq Documents Released" -- "which indicates to me that the documents do not hurt, and may actually help, the president. If they could hurt him, the headline would reflect that. ... My prediction: we'll be out of Iraq sooner than anyone thinks, and the press has been sort of rope-a-doped today. Instead of reporting on Iraqi documents, his commitment and the air assault, they are fixating on... polls. He's making the press look very, very bad." Linking to that same Post story, AJStrata sums it up: "Consider this the final nail in the coffin of the liberal fantasy about Al Qaeda [not having] ties to Iraq." Having sifted through the documents a bit, he adds later: "As I am glancing through the newly released documents it is hard to believe this is a Iraq stash and not an Al Qaeda stash. Either someone in Iraq was on the distribution list for a lot of operations reports or Iraq had someone inside Al Qaeda sending these back for intelligence purposes."

Bluto at The Jawa Report posts a photo taken from the Iraqi files -- it's Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. It's an interesting find, and gets a few links from other blogger. However, one is The Mahablog's Barbara O'Brien, who rejoins: "OF COURSE Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was in Iraq before the invasion. And he was running terrorist training camps in Iraq before the invasion. This is not a secret. Everybody knows this. ... But here is the part the bleepheads of the Right never get through their impenetrable skulls: Zarqawi was operating in Iraqi KURDISTAN, an area of northern Iraq that had become a safe haven for Kurds. He was in a part of Iraq over which Saddam Hussein had no control. He was, in fact, in part of Iraq controlled by our buddies, the Kurds."

Abu Aardvark's Marc Lynch writes that while he and Hayes don't see eye to eye on Iraq's possible al Qaeda connections, he gives him credit for getting the documents out. But he adds, their "value depends entirely on their comprehensiveness, and that they are vetted on a nonpartisan and scholarly basis. If all the released documents support the administration's case for war ... then the release becomes worse than useless." More: "The only prediction I'm confident making: a lot of people are going to dive into these things, and find what they're looking for. ... Here's one that proves, proves, that Saddam had nukes! Here's one that proves, proves, that Saddam didn't have nukes! I'd advise people on both sides of the issue not to get too excited over individual documents..."

IRAQ II: Bloggers Know A Thing Or Two About Swarms ...

Op. Swarmer in Iraq, planned by the U.S. military but led by Iraqi forces, is getting perhaps less commentary than we might have thought. It is getting plenty of links, primarily from bloggers on the right, but from those we saw, most just noted with approval that it was going on. What we found a bit more of was press criticism:

Bill Roggio counters pundits who claim Swarmer is just "theater": "If the Iraqi Army and Coalition wished to conduct a show of strength, there are easier, safer and cheaper ways to do so. An armored assault immediately comes to mind, and the Iraqi Army possesses their own armored units, which would be an impressive and accurate show of the Iraqi flag as opposed to riding shotgun on U.S. Blackhawks. But claims the dog was wagged makes for far more entertaining reporting, and far shallower reporting, too." Stop the ACLU is very cynical about press coverage of Swarmer, noting "this little jab" from the Washington Post: "But the crackdowns have failed to ease a raging guerrilla campaign that has killed thousands of U.S. soldiers, Iraqi security forces and civilians." And adding: "Good luck to our troops. We can already see who the MSM are rooting for. I'm sure the MSM will try to wrap this into their ever hopeful civil war talk."

With all the latest developments, conservative Macsmind exults about Swarmer: "This on top of Rumsfeld INCREASING troop strength. ADD to this, Iran is next on the chopping block. Not to leave out those 'pesky documents' that show Saddam DID have contact with Al Qaeda, prior to our invasion in 2003 -- AS WE HAVE BEEN TELLING PEOPLE ALL ALONG. I can hear the leftist MSM now ... 'But, what? We had him on the run!! Doesn't he know his poll numbers??' 'He can't possibly be talking about attacking Iran!!!'"

IRAN: Just Coffee Talk, No Big Whoop

Iran and the U.S. will soon open negotiations on Iraq; there's some optimism on both sides of the Iraq debate, although not everyone agrees what this exactly means:

Juan Cole, an Iraq war opponent and generally a pessimist on the situation, is rather encouraged: "Such talks have been sought by US ambassador in Baghdad Zalmay Khalilzad, who is the first Bush administration official in Iraq who seems to know what he is doing, and some important part of whose activities are likely to bear positive results. Note that the Neocons would never have agreed to talk to the Iranian government, which they just want to bomb."

War supporter/Bush admin. critic Andrew Sullivan: "It is not in Iran's interests to see Iraq descend into civil war, and for the conflict there to broaden into a regional Shiite-Sunni conflict. And so, as I put it the other day, 'sometimes the darkest days are inevitable -- even necessary -- before the sky ultimately clears.' Here's hoping -- but still not confidently expecting -- that those skies may be clearing."

Conservative QandO isn't thrilled, but can go along with it: "It appears a little tit-for-tat negotiation might be in the offing. Why would the "chief nuclear negotiator" be interested in discussing ways to halt sectarian violence in Iraq? Seems to me he'd only be interested if he thought he'd somehow be successful in wringing an agreement out of Washington to back off a bit on the present policy of confrontation over nukes. Frankly (and pragmatically) this is probably something we should seriously consider. If estimates are correct, Iran is quite a way off in terms of nuclear weapons whereas our need to dampen the sectarian strife in Iraq is pretty immediate." Alexandra von Maltzan: "Iran wants to talk about Iraq. Ask yourself, why? Could it be that Iran has realized that it has overplayed its hand? That it has just needled the Great Satan one too many times by blowing up the shrine and hoping to throw Iraq into civil war? We don't know, but we do know, that something major is up and that Iran knows it."

At Donklephant, Denise Best notes that a U.S.-Iran standoff "has been in place for more than a quarter of a century," and in fact: "History is brimming full of seemingly hopeless standoffs among warring factions that took centuries to resolve into more peaceful coexistence i.e. France, England, Spain, and the Holy Roman Empire." More: One has to wonder, is there a place for technology to speed along the process of marrying interests to create ties that strengthen, rather than choke, relationships among today’s world power brokers?

Liberal Edward Copeland: "Maybe that will be the U.S. exit strategy -- just give up and give Iraq over to Iran." Fellow liberal Tristero at Hullabaloo has a different take: "Hooyah! Iran is now the new Iraq."

TERRORISM: Chatterbox

Header at Gateway Pundit: "Al Qaeda Chatter at Pre-9-11 Levels." Wizbang, which noes the bomb scare prior to the Marquette-Alabama game yesterday, carries a similar header. Ex-Washington Post reporter Douglas Farah adds at The Counterterrorism Blog, "the question in many parts of the U.S. and European intelligence communities is not if al Qaeda will strike again, but when. Much of the thinking centers on the near-term. This is also reflected in current corporate security alerts being circulated among elite business establishments."

Instapundit, on the "pre-9/11 level" chatter: "I'm not sure what that means, but unless they're saying "this whole terror thing sucks, let's quit," it's probably bad news." Rusty Shackleford guesses, "in light of today's offensive against Samarra, perhaps the AQ gang got wind of something?"

EAVESDROPPING: Censure-ational!

An ARG poll finds registered voters favor "passing a resolution censuring President George W. Bush for authorizing wiretaps of Americans within the United States without obtaining court orders" by a margin of 48% to 43%. For the left, which wants Dems to back Sen. Russ Feingold's (D-WI) censure proposal, this is verifiable evidence that the Dems are making a big mistake by not signing on. While the poll has so far gotten plenty of attention from bloggers, the MSM has barely reported on it at all.

Matt Singer: "Keep in mind, that for the most part, the drum beat hasn't even begun. For Clinton's entire Presidency, there was a drum beat for impeachment and they only got the support of roughly a third of the nation. Without any help, 2/5 of voters have decided that this President deserves equal treatment." Matthew Gross: "The public is way ahead of their representatives on this one. Imagine what the numbers would be if Democrats stood together ... on the issue, and actual surrogates went out on the air to make the case on behalf of Feingold."

But that's not happening, and it leaves liberal bloggers simply asking where the Dems are on this one. State of the Day: "The key number here is that 70% of Democrats are in favor of censure. Not to mention 48% of voters overall. ... C'mon Dems, jump on board the censure train. The American people are already going for the ride; why don't you join them?" The Carpetbagger Report: "Will this affect the debate on the Hill? Will Dems start warming up to the resolution once they see the numbers? Do nearly one-in-three Republicans really support censure, or is this just considered a less-severe option than impeachment? Will news networks start conducting some additional polling on this?" Daily Kos' Georgia10 points out: "There are no polls to support the contention that censuring the President for his lawlessness would negatively affect Democrats."

At MyDD, Chris Bowers compares Google News searches for "Feingold censure" and "'American Research Group' censure" -- the former has 1000+ results, while the second has only a few hits. When we followed the links this a.m., Google News showed bloggers linking to the story but only 1 MSM source -- an opinion column by David Sarasohn of The Oregonian.

Hotline On Call reported early last p.m., just as Rightwing Nuthouse predicted, Senate Maj. Leader Bill Frist will "will force a floor vote on Sen. Russ Feingold's censure resolution after Congress returns from its next recess ... to put Dems on record." Frist "believes that the best tactic for Republicans heading into a midterm where the environment favors Dems is to heighten the contrast on issues where Americans perceive Dems to be weak." Marshall Wittmann: "Here is the bottom line -- the American people are not going to penalize the President for being overly zealous in preventing a destruction of an American city. That is what the Republicans know and they are gleeful about a debate on this issue. And they are co-dependent on the Democratic left to keep this issue alive." The Moderate Voice: "So it hasn't reached critical mass in the country yet. But those who've supported Feingold's resolution feel a sweet sense of vindication."

PORT SECURITY: Seriously!

As Think Progress reports, the House GOP voted down an amendment by Rep. Martin Sabo (D-MN) to provide $1.25B in desperately needed funding for port security and disaster preparedness.

Washington Monthly's Kevin Drum ties the issue of port security to a nuclear Iran, arguing, "if you were truly concerned about" the chance Iran could ship a weapon to the U.S., "you would support more than preemptive action against Iran. You would also support funding to increase security at American ports." Noting the GOP "almost unanimously" rejected the amendment, he writes: "I think this tells you just how seriously they take the actual threat of a nuclear Iran." He advises reporters, the "next time a Republican politician tells you that a nuclear Iran is intolerable, the first question you should ask is whether said politician supports funding for serious port security." Ed Kilgore, Seeing The Forest, AMERICAblog, and others concur. Oliver Willis heads a post: "They Were For It, Before They Were..."

Having read Drum's take, Marc "Armed Liberal" Danziger writes, "I was kinda concerned when I read" about it -- "Then I looked at the bill itself -- which would require 100% of cargo to be "scanned using the best-available technology" by American personnel and more. Danziger continues: "Come on Kevin -- you know that's not a serious security proposal, it's a trial balloon. You can't implement this proposal without shutting down global trade."

BLOGS VS. THE BELTWAY: 1606 Blocks

Campaign finance bill H.R. 1606, backed by a bipartisan group of campaign-focused bloggers, has stalled for the moment, as its rival bill, H.R. 4900 will get a further airing. No action will be taken until recess is over Mary Katherine Ham explains: "Reformers still want their substitute to be offered on the floor, too, despite the fact it hasn't been through committee, so 1606 was pushed back until after recess because reformers and freedom-lovers couldn't come to a compromise." Election Law's Rick Hasen gives a rundown of the facts with links to bloggers involved, adding: "I would link to posts by those opposing 1606 and supporting the CDT alternative, 4900, but I haven't found any such posts or press releases yet."

RedState's Blanton quotes Rep. Tom Allen (D-ME) in The Hill saying large blogs "might well have to file ... but that's the point. If the Internet becomes more important, the types of financial abuses that occurred within the campaign-finance system in general [are more prone to occurring]." Blanton adds: "That my friends would be bad for free speech. What this would do is say the more popular a blog becomes the more it's speech must be regulated. So don't get tired of us beating this drum. It's important and we need your help." A commenter writes: "I'll tell you what I am tired of. When I call my congresscritter's office, that sweet little staffer who answers the phone absolutely blows me off. There is absolutely no question in my mind that not only does she not pass on my message, she doesn't give a flying rat's @$$ if I like it or not." Another RedStater inquired who the person's "critter" was -- House Maj. Whip Roy Blunt, not a popular figure on the site.

At Daily Kos, Markos Moulitsas responds to the same Allen statement, and points out that House Min. Leader Nancy Pelosi is among those "fighting hard" to defeat 1606: "For all the talk about 'protecting bloggers,' we now have proof that their agenda is none of that sort. This is intended to squash citizen media. Pelosi and company are complicit, no matter how much they lie about their intentions. ... When they can point to an example of this undermining of the entire campaign-finance-reform legislation -- an undermining so drastic that the blogosphere's freedom must be compromised -- then we'll talk." Matt Stoller has a "Simple and Non-Legal Explanation" that ends up being actually quite long, and requiring an update. But bottom line, he asks readers to contact Pelosi's office as well: "Bother Nancy Pelosi." Atrios endorses Stoller's explanation, and adds: "The legal discussions get a bit complex, but basically there are people who think the Daily Kos should be treated differently the Slate.com or TNR.com. I have no idea why."

REPUBLICANS: Some Politicians Don't Get Blogging -- And Names Will Be Named

At Human Events' Right Angle blog, Robert Bluey reports, "I've been to plenty of Capitol Hill events over the past four years, and today's quasi-presser for bloggers -- staged by the Senate Republican Conference -- was by far the most bizarre. As I attempted to live blog the event -- I gave up on after the first senator spoke -- it struck me that Senate Republicans (with the exception of Majority Leader Bill Frist and Sen. John Cornyn) really have no idea about blogging." For example: "Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO) looked befuddled, saying, 'Someone ask a question.' Bond quickly recovered when a staffer handed him a script that had been prepared for the event. It may have been a savior for Bond, but it was an instant turnoff for me."

Wary that his criticisms could be taken too harshly, he adds: "With that being said, I'm sorry if the SRC staff perceives this as unfair badgering, but I hope my criticism is viewed constructively, not as a cheap shot toward their boss, [PA Sen. Rick] Santorum. I also hope they don't exclude me from future events."

And he closes out by offering advice: "What's the best lesson Hill staffers can learn from today's event? Involve bloggers in the planning of your events. Unlike the herd of Capitol Hill reporters who travel in packs, bloggers don't think the same way. Engaging them -- as Rep. Jack Kingston's staff did for the March 3 blog workshop -- will make everyone happier, and probably result in better coverage for your congressman or senator."

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: The Self-Corrections

We revisit a point we raised briefly on 3/16, namely that primarily lefty bloggers mistakenly believe, and keep repeating the claim, that Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) has already come out in support of Feingold's censure resolution. Problem is, Hotline hasn't seen a single press release or news report to back this up. Meanwhile, the Bergen Record today quotes Menendez saying: "I think we've got to get the facts first. One of the challenges is getting the oversight necessary so the facts can become public. ... If the facts rise to that the president has violated the law, then [censure] may be an appropriate action of the Congress." Considering there are Dem sens. who have expressed more confidence in the notion that Bush's actions violated the law but still don't back censure, Menendez is clearly not one of the chief backers of the proposal -- not yet, at any rate.

The erroneous claim originated with a post by Jane Hamsher, where she mentioned (with link citations) that Sens. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Tom Harkin (D-IA) are behind the censure resolution, then added (without a link citation) "and so has Menendez." But we could find nothing to buttress this claim. As we noted yesterday, Blue Jersey expressed some skepticism, but hasn't addressed it since, and as yet remains the only blog to do so.

Yet numerous bloggers, including some influential ones, still attaching Menendez's name to the list of censure supporters. Among them: Chris Bowers at MyDD, Blue Mass. Group, Booman Tribune, State of the Day, Preemptive Karma, Dependable Renegade, and probably others Technorati hasn't picked up.

As Glenn Greenwald asked in Feb. when conservative bloggers kept repeating an erroneous report claiming Cindy Sheehan broke the law when she was removed from the SOTU, "when does the 'self-correcting' blogosphere start to self-correct?" If it happens, we'll be sure note that in an update (though we should make it clear, we're not trying to harp on anyone here, and we aren't e-mailing those who slipped up; it's about the phenomenon, not the individuals).

First correction: State of the Day. Second: Blue Mass Group.

LEST WE FORGET: The Truth Behind The Lies That Are Behind The Truth

Still on the comics kick, we'd like to add that Bad Reporter, by Don Asmussen of the San Francisco Chronicle, is brilliant pretty much week in and week out.

Posted by at 12:20 PM

March 16, 2006

3/16: Russ Is No Wuss, But His Fuss Makes Some Cuss

Less than a week after Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) proposed his resolution to censure Pres. Bush, the measure is now splitting the liberal blogosphere. Some say it will likely have -- and already has had -- a deleterious effect on Dems' strength. Others argue this view assumes public opinion cannot be changed, and in any case the substantive (i.e. Bush broke the law, they argue) should outweigh the political. Meanwhile, it may also help the GOP overcome its recent divisions and rally behind the president.

Speaking of Bush, there is now yet another poll finding him at his lowest levels recorded, and while there's no silver lining for him there, a few center-left bloggers are asking whether the way those polls are reported might actually be distorting the results. Meanwhile, bloggers react to news that Rep. Katherine Harris (R-FL) is not dropping out of the SEN race, MSNBC's Chris Matthews is under fire from bloggers again, a House bill that would protect bloggers from campaign finance regulations is delayed once more, and George Clooney says he never blogged for Arianna Huffington. Plus, we present our latest Blogger Spotlight.

EAVESDROPPING: Democrats' Reasons Why Not

The Carpetbagger Report's Steve Benen talked to some friends on the Hill about why the Dems acted as they did -- and calls the reasons "more compelling than I expected": "Dems were bothered by the fact that Feingold took the party off-message"; "there's a sense that Feingold helped bring Republicans together"; "there was not even a hint of party strategy on this"; "Dems saw that Bush was starting another series of Iraq speeches, and the party was ready to pivot from ports to the war"; and lastly, he quotes a Senate staffer saying Dems should hold a "hearing with a panel of experts discussing whether Bush's behavior deserves censure. Wouldn't that be much better as a first step then a rushed vote in which we lose and R's declare victory and say we were silly?" Conservative QandO arrived at one of these conclusions independently, writing: "I'm not sure what he expected, quite honestly. Most politicians, regardless of party, hate surprises." Hullabaloo's Digby feels differently: "None of these reasons hold up for me. They do not denote timidity, so much as a kind of political blindness" -- he goes through them, rebutting each one by one. And he warns: "If Democratic pols don't understand that they are flirting with terrible grassroots defeatism, then they are going to lose ... demoralized Democrats are not going to bother with them. Come on. Speak for us. If not now, when?" At Interesting Times, Chris Andersen concurs: "Many in the party leadership don't seem to realize just how precarious is the coalition of interests backing the Democrats this Fall."

Lefty economist PGL at Angry Bear: "The good news is that Senator Harkin has a spine. As for the lack of support from other Democratic Senators, see the debate between" Kevin Drum and Glenn Greenwald -- Drum argues this is not "good political theater," while Greenwald calls that "baseless" CW that discounts picking up more support. PGL: "I'm with Glenn on this one." Uggabugga sides with Drum: "At this blog, we have one and only one standard for behavior in this election year: 'Will it increase the chance that Democrats gain control of one of the chambers of Congress?' That's it. Nothing else matters. If anti-abortion Bob Casey becomes the senator from Pennsylvania, fine. If Feingold's censure motion diminishes whatever political standing the Democrats have, then that's not fine." Though not directly responding to this debate, Legal Fiction's Publius proposes a 3rd way: "[S]ometimes your goal must be to move the polls, not merely react to them. My argument, then, is that the Feingold censure resolution is not a good way to go about moving the polls, not that Dems shouldn't try to move them on this issue. It's not a question of whether, but one of how." Liberty Street is "disappointed" with both Drum and Publius: "We don't need bloggers to act like the Democrats, who are such jellyfish that they measure everything by whether it will open them to Republican charges of being 'soft on terror.'"

Meanwhile, New York Times' David Kirkpatrick reports, GOPers, "worried that their conservative base lacks motivation to turn out for the fall elections, have found a new rallying cry in the dreams of liberals about censuring or impeaching" Bush. Liberal Brendan Nyhan sees the story as one in a continuing series of "impeachment hype" reports floated by GOPers including Paul Weyrich, talking up the possibility although no one inside the Beltway has endorsed the idea. Conservative Brainster's Blog agrees in part: "What Nyhan is essentially saying here is that while the netkooks may holler for impeachment, the grownups in the party -- the elected representatives -- are not that stupid. I suspect he's pretty close. Of course, Conyers will hold impeachment hearings, and the New York Times will pretend that every day produces new revelations, so there's no room for Republicans to be complacent." Liberal Yale law prof Jack Balkin is more cynical: "So children, here's the moral of the story: If you are the President, feel free to violate the law, early and often. Just make sure you do it when your party controls all three branches of government. Because just as blood is thicker than water, party is thicker than law." Conservative Rick Moran predicts the fate of the censure move: "Expect the motion to be voted down in Committee but brought to the floor by Bill Frist himself who, like Speaker [Denny] Hastert's ploy of bringing Representative [Jack] Murtha's cut and run resolution on Iraq to an immediate vote, will seek to hold Democratic Senator's feet to the fire and dare them to vote to punish the President for running a program they want to see continued."

BUSH: The Pony Express

Now Pew Research finds Bush at a new low in their poll -- 33% approval overall:

Liberal Mustang Bobby at Bark Bark Woof Woof: "As much as we'd like to, the progressives and the blogosphere can't take credit for finally getting the word out to the electorate just how badly Mr. Bush is doing; if we had that much impact, John Kerry would be president. No, he's pretty much done this all on his own, and quite effectively, I might add." The Left Coaster: "Are the Democrats going to step up to the plateful of opportunity, or will they swing and miss the ball again? What of the opportunists in the GOP? Will one of them see fit to fill Jeffords' shoes?" Pastordan at Street Prophets: "Bush at 33%! Cripes, when do the Four Horsemen appear?" Atrios quotes from the Pew report, including this bit: "The single word most frequently associated with George W. Bush today is 'incompetent,' and close behind are two other increasingly mentioned descriptors: 'idiot' and 'liar.' All three are mentioned far more often today than a year ago." Referring to what he and many others on the left see as a Bush-compliant press, he adds: "It's enough to give our press corps the vapors." Noting a Reuters report that singer/actress Jessica Simpson has cancelled an appearance at a GOP fundraiser over concerns about "politicizing her favorite charity," TBogg asks: "How low do you have to sink that someone who starred in a movie with Seann William Scott and Johnny Knoxville doesn't want to be seen in the room with you?" Header at Hippie Librarian: "Even Jessica Simpson gets it."

Conservative Flopping Aces takes a close look at the methodology: "Oh no! What are we gonna do? But wait, lets take a look at the bias once more in the polling organization ... once again they over sample Democrats by 6% this time, and guess what? We're these registered likely voters? Nope, just adults." More: "Will these MSM outlets EVER do a poll again where they poll registered likely voters and keep the sample within one point? I doubt it. They want to be able to make news instead of report it and what better way then to print a headline that say's Bush's approval rating is at a all time low?"

POLLING: Is This Something Like Steve Carell Not Being Able To Mention Which Network His Show Is On When He Drops By Letterman?

Speaking of Bush's bad polls, Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz wrote earlier this week, each separate poll has been finding Bush at new lows in their own separate polls, "but they give the collective impression that Bush is sinking week to week" and never compare other polls "to their own past surveys, when they're fully aware of the others." Mickey Kaus adds: "The drumbeat of separate, self-referencing 'new low' polls may become a factor driving poll numbers even further down. ... If these outfits polled every week, maybe this wouldn't be a distorting factor. Any turnaround would be quickly picked up and acknowledged." Mystery Pollster Mark Blumenthal adds a lot more, including a chart showing all the polls' trendlines for Bush's ratings. He writes: "Why does each intra-pollster comparison herald a new 'new low' headline, when the more accurate read (for now) would be to treat each new survey as confirming the same drop since February recorded by all? Such an approach does not require a snazzy graphic like the one above (though it couldn't hurt). It could be done in a sentence: 'Our results are consistent with those last week by ...'"

MIDTERMS: 2 Legit 2 Quit

Ex-FL Sec/State/FL SEN candidate/Rep. Katherine Harris (R) appeared on "Hannity & Colmes" last p.m. to quash rumors that she would drop out of the race, and to announce she would put $10M of her own money behind her campaign. Ian Schwartz at Expose the Left has video of Harris' announcement. At MyDD's Breaking Blue, Taegan Goddard notes that Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) now "will get to trigger the 'millionaires amendment' to McCain-Feingold and raise money in $12,000 chunks."

Centrist Joe Gandelman asks: "You have to wonder what Harris is thinking. Her poll numbers are down, this will likely be a tough Republican year, and members of her own party have tried to get her to drop out. It's not just a question about where the winning voters will come from -- but where needed unfettered and enthusiastic party support will come from. She can't expect many Democrats to vote for her. What -- and where -- is her constituency?"

Liberal News Hounds: "Hannity asked about" ex-MZM pres. Mitchell Wade, who "bribed" ex-Rep./convict Duke Cunningham "and admitted funelling" $32K of "illegal campaign contributions to her. Harris said, 'The authorities say that I could not have known. I did not know.' But, as Think Progress reports, a review of the facts makes her story lose credibility."

Conservative Lorie Byrd: "I am not crazy about Harris staying in the race because I think she has far too many negatives, but when I read stuff like this calling Harris 'Cruella' it makes me want to stick up for her. Maybe if Democrats attack her like those in the moonbat blogosphere do, she will actually get some sympathy votes and win the seat after all."

BLOGS VS. THE MSM I: And Sometimes You Can't Make Anybody Happy Any Of The Time

AP's Laurie Kellman reported on 3/15: "Feingold introduced censure legislation Monday in the Senate, but not a single Democrat has embraced it." Header at Firedoglake: "Why Can't The AP Count?" Jane Hamsher, on Kellman: "What a lazy, dishonest hack job. John Kerry has been saying right out of the gate he would support the resolution, [CA Sen. Barbara] Boxer's office has been confirming that she would and so has" Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ). We'll add here that Kellman's article was filed hours earlier, none of those sens. had committed by Hotline's publication on 3/15, and what Kerry actually said was less decisive: "I'm interested in it. ... The president ought to be held accountable, and I think he broke the law." But Hamsher also identifies Kellman as having covered Cindy Sheehan's SOTU ejection, where Kellman described support of the troops as "just the opposite" of Sheehan's protest message, and posts an e-mail address for readers to contact AP with complaints. Blue Jersey is skeptical of Menendez's part, adding that if he does, "It doesn't quite offset the Patriot Act vote, but together with his cloture vote on Alito it shows he is willing to stand strong against the national Republicans."

On the other side of the aisle, MRC's Newsbusters complains that the Washington Post is helping to "publicize" Feingold's proposal: "The front page of the Washington Post blows the hot air of publicity on Feingold's leftist crusade, but the headline is "A Senate Maverick Acts to Force an Issue." Why are the "mavericks" always to the left of the party mainstream? ... Don't let the Washington Post ever argue they don't cover legislative proposals that don't stand a snowball's chance in Hell. And what is this censure resolution if not a Wisconsin snowball aimed at President Bush's head?"

BLOGS VS. THE MSM II: Another Hardball

Think Progress claims an exclusive, reporting that MSNBC's Chris Matthews "has received tens of thousands of dollars in exchange for delivering speeches to corporate interest groups," which appears to be "in direct violation" of NBC policy. Three trade assns -- The Nat'l Venture Capital Assn, The Nat'l Assn. of Chain Drug Stores, and the American Hospital Assn. -- independently confirmed to TP "that Matthews spoke for hefty fees on several occasions, as recently as last year." MSNBC pres. Rick Kaplan said the info was, "Totally untrue ... totally," but he "provided no evidence to support his claim." AMERICABlog: "Now, before Mr. Kaplan starts saying that the groups Matthews spoke to are not 'interest groups,' let's see how the first group ... describes itself: 'The venture capital community's leading source for information, networking, advocacy, professional development and industry statistics.' Advocacy. They're the lobbyists for the industry. That's what trade associations are. They're lobbyists. Or to use Mr. Kaplan's phrase: interest groups." Anti-Matthews blog Open Letter To Chris Matthews: "Rick Kaplan isn't looking too great right now. He's either a liar, he doesn't know his own ethics policy, or he has no idea, nor interest in, what his stars are doing in clear violation of his own network's ban on accepting speaking fees from interest groups." The site adds that Tim Russert is "also listed as being available for speaking fees, potentially also in violation of NBC policy." Philly Daily News' Attytood: "Many observers think that Matthews, a former Democratic aide, has been veering to the right in recent years. We doubt he'd change his political tune just to line up big speaking fees. But that's why these things are banned -- the appearance is not good." And a commenter adds: "Speaking fees may be only part of what he's receiving from the right. Two words: Armstrong Williams." Taylor Marsh: "I think he's helping his brother run for office in Pennsylvania instead of doing his job." [Matthews' brother is the presumptive GOP nominee for PA LG].

BLOGS VS. THE BELTWAY: 1606 Oz. To Freedom

A vote on H.R. 1606 (see 3/9 and 3/10 Blogometers), aka the Online Freedom of Speech act, aka the Blogger Protection Act, was scheduled for 3/15, only to be delayed until 3/16. But now the vote has been delayed yet again, by a week.

Earlier in the week, Daily Kos' Adam Bonin challenged 1606 opponents Democracy21, the Campaign Legal Center and GWU prof/IPDI dir. Carol Darr -- who support the rival H.R. 4900 -- to answer questions such as: "Do you pledge that you would not file a complaint with the FEC or in any other venue against Daily Kos seeking to restrict its current activities if HR 4900 passes?" When it seemed the bill was headed to the 3/16 vote, RedState's Mike Krempasky implored readers to call Hill offices making points such as "you can support BCRA and still believe that this little tiny section of American politics ought to be free." MyDD's Matt Stoller, on the old reform groups: "Common Cause was founded in the 1970s, and today we have a government that is more corrupt and money-dominated than it has ever been. In other words, I think new strategies other than 'restrict! restrict! restrict!' are in order." Later that p.m., the bill was pushed back again.

This a.m., ex-FEC commish Brad Smith posts to RedState: "The good news is this. The speech regulators are on the defensive. They've been able to hold this bill off only with a series of half-truths and lies, and their hypocrisy is being steadily exposed. ... We want to win, to be sure. But at least we are fighting on our battlefield. This is an issue on which popular opinion is against them." And he adds, at the very least 4900 "is a better bill (from the freedom point of view) than what the reformers trotted out as an 'alternative' last fall."

BUSH ADMIN: Fun With Doppelgangers!

At Chris Nolan's Spot On, Josh Trevino notes that MD "has had a 'three strikes' criminal sentencing law since 1994. Might" ex-WH adviser Claude Allen be taking the rap to save" twin brother Floyd Allen "from his third strike? This, unlike the shoplifting, would be eminently in keeping with Claude's public character." Trevino isn't quite sure what to make of this, but adds: "Don't underestimate the strength of family ties. And don't discount the weird."

BLOGGERS VS. BLOGGERS: Are You Now, Or Have You Ever Been A Blogger?

We mentioned on 3/13 that actor George Clooney had written a blog entry for the Huffington Post, but on 3/15 Elizabeth Snead at the LAT's Styles and Scenes blog reported that Clooney's post (now removed) was not written by him, and was instead cobbled together from a couple different interviews. Soon after, HuffPo proprietor Arianna Huffington posted an explanation, saying she was told she had permission to run the interview excerpts as a blog post: "This was an honest misunderstanding. But any misunderstanding that occurred, occurred between Clooney and the publicist. We based our decision to post on the unambiguous approval we received in writing. There was no room for misunderstanding in that." Wonkette imparts that Huffington and Clooney's relevant meeting occured the "same night that our boss, Nick Denton, threw Arianna a party at his stylish-but-tasteful SoHo loft. And we happen to know, having attended said party, that there was a shitload of free champagne ('free' = 'in lieu of actual benefits'). Which explains just how Arianna could've so completely misunderstood George -- she was wasted!" At The Corner, John Podhoretz apologized to Clooney "for calling him 'illiterate' for a work of ghost-writing he did not approve."

Conservative PunditGuy: "This calls into question EVERY post on Arianna's 'blog.' How many of the articles were written by the people their attributed to? How many were written with the permission of the people attributed? How many blog posts were written just like Clooney's? Arianna calls this an 'honest misunderstanding.' I call it fraud." Huffington added in an update to the above post that "99% of our bloggers blog directly onto the site." TalkLeft's Jeralyn Merritt: "The important aspect, if there is one, is that Clooney stands by the statements in the post. What he says is that is we should take pride in being liberals. That's the part we should focus on, not whether he intended it to be a quote as opposed to a blog post."

Clooney spoke to New York Daily News' "Lowdown" saying: "I feel abused ... Nobody has ever written an op-ed piece for me. If I say I've written something, I've written it. When I go to the Oscars, I write everything I say... I stand by what I do, but I'm very cautious not to take giant steps onto soapboxes because I think they're polarizing."

BLOGGER SPOTLIGHT: Bloggin' And Hobbs

Today the Blogometer talks to TN-based conservative Bill Hobbs, who writes BillHobbs.com, which is on temporary hiatus.

What is your full name?

William Howard Hobbs

What is your age?

41

Where did you grow up?

Delaware County, PA, a suburb of Philadelphia.

Where do you live now?

Franklin, TN, a suburb of Nashville.

What is your occupation? Have you ever worked on a political campaign or for the mainstream media?

I currently work in the public relations office of a private university in Nashville. I served as a press assistant for mayoral candidate Jay West during the final four months of the 1999 Nashville mayoral campaign until the primary. He came in third. My first career was as a newspaper journalist -- I have worked for, in order, the Abilene (Texas) Reporter-News, The Lubbock (Texas) Avalanche-Journal, the Clarksville (Tenn.) Leaf-Chronicle, the Nashville Business Journal, and the Nashville Tennessean, all of that as a reporter covering crime and courts, general assignments, and a variety of business beats. From 1994-1997 I worked as a writer and then managing editor of a monthly country music magazine, and from 1993-2000 I also freelanced for a variety of publications including industrial trades, daily newspapers and business magazines. For a few months in 2001 I worked for a now-defunct Tennessee policy think tank.

I wrote a weekly column from January 2001 to May 2002 on business, public policy and economic issues for Nashville City Paper, and made numerous radio and television appearances in connection with the column. I currently do freelance corporate blog consulting for several blue-chip clients, and have edited two business books.

When did you start blogging and why?

November 2000. I started my blog as an adjunct to my City Paper column, where I could provide my column readers with more information, links to documents I mentioned in the column, longer analysis, etc. After the column ended in May 2002, I simple kept writing the blog. Also, from March through May of 2002 I wrote a satirical blog, Osama's Bin Bloggin.

What has been your favorite post, or favorite story to write about, in that time?

I've done extensive original journalism and research-based commentary on Tennessee's tax and budget situation that has helped influence MSM coverage in a more accurate direction, and also helped put the Taxpayers Bill of Rights firmly on the political radar screen in Tennessee, so that would have to be my favorite overall focus on my blog. I also write about religion, the war, the media and much more. Being an ex-journalist, or should I say a reformed journalist, I love examining media bias and doing media crit. In that vein, my favorite post would be this one, in which I took a Maureen Dowd column and added a few helpful hyperlinks to help Ms. Dowd make her points more effectively.

Describe your typical blogging schedule. And what is your average output?

Until a couple months ago, I would post 8-12 times per day, ranging from short items to longer, in-depth pieces that took a lot of time to research and compile. Late in 2005 I scaled back somewhat, doing fewer long pieces and more simple linking to things in the press and the blogosphere that I think my readers should read. On Jan. 10 I put my blog on hiatus thanks to a crushing work and freelance load and an ongoing medical-crisis situation in my family, and also to reevaluate where I go from here. I do expect to resume blogging at some point, and am in the beginning stages of launching a multi-author site, TennesseeVoices.com, focused on Tennessee politics, and perhaps a couple other sites. There is a very healthy Tennessee political blogosphere now with several other bloggers now also doing the same kind of work that I had done and, as my goal is to have a large number of skilled volunteer blog-journalists doing the kind of in-depth reporting and analysis that the Tennessee MSM does less and less of, I'm happy to see others doing the kind of daily blogging that I had been doing.

Who is your favorite political blogger? Favorite non-political blogger?

Captain's Quarters is awesome, as are the Powerline guys. At the Tennessee level, it would be Bob Krumm and Blake Wylie of the Nashville Files blog, and Jeff Cornwall of The Entrepreneurial Mind. My favorite non-political blogger would be Tod Bolsinger of It Takes a Church and Terry Heaton's Pomo Blog, where he writes about post-modern media.

Who is your favorite mainstream media columnist?

It used to be George Will, but I rarely read him any more. Now it's Krauthammer. And Ledeen. And Mark Steyn. And David Warren. And Victor Davis Hanson.

What is your favorite television news program, either network or cable?

I don't watch TV news very much. Too shallow and repetitive. Plus, my son is usually watching "Barney" or "Jay Jay the Jet Plane."

What MSM-produced websites (i.e. newspapers, magazines) do you visit on a daily basis?

Tennessean.com, NYTimes.com, NashvilleCityPaper.com, WashingtonPost.com, Google News (which leads me to all kinds of sources from all over the world).

What non-MSM websites (i.e. blogs) do you visit on a daily basis?

Instapundit, Powerline, Captains Quarters, Nashville Is Talking, Donald Sensing , Thunder 6 and Dr. Jeff Cornwall's The Entrepreneurial Mind, which I helped him start.

How often, or do you ever, read a newspaper in its dead-tree (i.e. print) form?

It's part of my job to scan the local papers every day, but most of my "newspaper" reading is online.

How do you see the new media and old media affecting and influencing each other in the next five years?

Newspapers and old media will become more blogcentric, and independent bloggers acting as journalists will increasingly impact MSM coverage. I write often about the interplay of blogs and media, and the rise of what I call "collaborative peer-reviewed journalism." Some of those posts are here, here and here.

My interest in the interplay of blogs and media is what led me to help organize the May 2005 BlogNashville conference at Belmont University in Nashville. ( www.blognashville.org ). About 300 bloggers and new-media people came, including Glenn Reynolds, Dan Gillmor, J.D. Lasica, Hoder, Rebecca McKinnon, Ed Cone, Mark Tapscott, Henry Copeland, Robin Burk, Dave Winer, LaShawn Barber, Robert Cox, Linda Seebach, Mark Glaser and many more.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Podcast People

Our colleague Danny Glover writes at Beltway Blogroll: "Politics in the information age increasingly is marked by efforts to best one's opponents in the technology arena, and the smart losers in those innovation battles are quick to study the successes of their political enemies." He notes the work of MyDD founder Jerome Armstrong on the Dem side and Rep. Jack Kingston (R-GA) aide David All on the GOP side in blog organization and outreach. The number of politicians who maintain an official blog is growing, and some are getting into podcasting: "Republicans appear to have taken more of an interest in podcasting, particularly Senate Republicans, but lawmakers from both parties are using the technology." Glover compiles a list of members of Congress with their own podcasts -- 18 of them, mostly sens. And if he's missing any, Glover wants to know.

LEST WE FORGET: More Cartoon Violence

If there's one thing the Blogometer likes, it's bad old comics rendered incomprehensible and hilarious by means of Photoshopic intervention. Lucky for us, Jim Treacher is back in the game.

NOTES AND ERRATA: Why You Frontin'?

In our 3/15 edition, we mistakenly gave the impression that it was standard practice for Daily Kos-posted diaries by pols to me bumped up to the front page. We had in mind an exception, as reported in the 9/30 Blogometer, where Sen. Barack Obama's (D-IL) message to the dKos community was placed on the front page. Click here to return to the corrected text.

Posted by at 12:06 PM

March 15, 2006

3/15: Censure And Sensibility

In this relatively slow week, Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) and his lonely but much-discussed censure resolution are the only topics to engage the full spectrum of the blogosphere. Not much has changed since yesterday; liberals continue to support Feingold and criticize the GOPers who attack him, plus the Dems who haven't followed him, but they didn't expect much better. Conservatives, used to the left having field day after field day with the troubles of Pres. Bush and the cong. GOP, are finally getting out of class themselves (and taking the left to school, if you can stand the metaphor reversal.) Perhaps the biggest development is the report that Sen. Wayne Allard (R-CO) accused Feingold of "siding with terrorists" in a FNC radio interview, and lefty bloggers are now circulating a petition asking him to apologize.

As we said, it isn't a very busy week -- but there are some interesting things going on: A new GOP straw poll for WH'08 is one, another is VA SEN Dem candidate Jim Webb participation in the comments at Daily Kos, underreported anti-conservative comments by ex-SCOTUS justice Sandra Day O'Connor, the New York Times' apparently botched Abu Ghraib reporting, and -- in a rare Blogometer scoop -- we have excerpts of Daily Kos founder Markos Moulitsas' revealing interview in next week's New York Times Magazine.

EAVESDROPPING: Spinning Feingold Into Hay

While not much has changed re: Feingold's proposal since our last edition, it's still getting plenty of commentary:

Ex-Spinsanity co-editor Brendan Nyhan finds GOPers responding to Feingold with "attacks on dissent" and "absurd straw men." In one example, he criticizes a claim from WH spokesperson Scott McClellan, which GOPers "have repeated before, [and] bears no resemblance to reality": "No major Democrat has said that 'we shouldn't be listening to al Qaeda communications,' and censuring the President for breaking the law governing wiretaps certainly doesn't indicate opposition to such wiretaps." Liberal Watertiger writes a post as an open letter to the "DLC, DNC and Senate idiots": "I'm going to say this very, very slowly so you can understand. Bush is an unpopular president who is administering a highly unpopular war and who admitted to committing a crime. What part of this don't you get?" Slartibartfast at Obsidian Wings doesn't think much of Senate Maj. Leader Bill Frist's assessment that the Dems' rejection of the censure resolution proves it was a "shameful political stunt": "Bill, here's a possible alternative: perhaps Democrats want to see this resolution subjected to some debate ... I'd suggest that your capacity to diagnose illness at long distance without an involved sit-down with the patient...well, it hasn't been good. Your credibility in diagnosing this as a political stunt, while nonzero, is far too low for me to give your opinion much weight." Glenn Greenwald writes, "at bottom, what this whole episode illustrates, yet again, is that if Democrats want to be perceived as strong, and if they want to lose the albatross of being perceived as weak, what they have to do is extremely simple and clear -- stop being weak and be strong."

Centrist Joe Gandelman adds running commentary to excerpts of reports from the AP and Dana Milbank on Dems and the censure move, and comments: "The problem is: until Feingold presented his proposal Bush was under fire from attack dogs from the GOP's base. A censure resolution could send them back to Bush's support if it comes to a vote, particularly if top Democrats are forced to take a stand. If the measure comes up and they vote for it, they could lose the support of some of the party's liberal base. It is a political monkey wrench -- one thrown, this time, from within the Democratic party's own political tent."

Dave Wissing at The Hedgehog Report notices that the Milbank column makes light of Dems' reax to Feingold's proposal, and considers: "I initially thought this would at least help Feingold among the extreme left, but I am beginning to wonder whether this single incident managed to turn Feingold into a national joke on the same level with Howard Dean." Conservative Mark Coffey thinks it more likely is a political stunt, after Feingold told FNC: "I'm amazed at Democrats, cowering with this president's numbers so low." Coffey replies: "The numbers so low? What do numbers have to do with it? It's not a stunt, is it? I mean, it's the principle of the thing, right, Russ?... Russ?" Captain's Quarters: "Feingold has discovered the key difference between leadership and grandstanding. The former involves motivating a group of people to follow your lead by engaging the group's enthusiasm for your direction. The latter involves making decisions for others without bothering to consult them." Conservative AJ Strata, on the Dems: "They can't run for from their base. They are trapped in a trap of their own making. And it will get worse. The new litmus test is impeaching Bush." Right-leaning Steven Taylor does think the motion deals with a legitimate issue: "I would like to see a full investigation of the President's action on this matter to determine if he did, in fact, violate the law. If he did, I would actually like to see a censure resolution voted out. If a President misbehaves, a President ought to be called on it by the Congress." However, he also realizes "that partisan and electoral politics so infuse this issue that true and an honest communication from the Congress to the President is not going to happen." Tom Maguire summarizes, "Feingold positioned himself nicely for 2008 by staking out a position only a certain segment of the left could love -- 'Hey, gang, let's censure the President for trying too hard to protect us!' NO, that's not what Feingold said! But its what polls say people are hearing..."

Meanwhile, 1 GOP sen. and 1 Dem sen. are getting hit from the left over their opposition to Feingold -- although it's certainly the GOPer getting hit harder -- According to some liberal bloggers, Sen. Wayne Allard (R-CO) accused Feingold of "siding with terrorists" in a 3/13 interview on FNC radio.Senate Majority Project points to the audio on Boulder's "progressive talk" station here [WAV file]. Otherwise, w've seen no press releases or MSM reports about it -- but plenty on the blogs. CO-based ProgressNow Action has posted a petition calling on him to apologize. Many pick up word of this from Matt Stoller at MyDD pronounces: "Senator Feingold, you are a man of integrity and a real Democrat. I'm proud of your strength and your leadership. Senator Allard, your weak, cowardly nature means that you don't know what it means to fight the fear that terrorists seek to spread. You and conservatives like you enable terrorists with your weakness and posturing." The Agonist, on Allard: "Scoundrel? Last refuge? How about plain ol' pathetic." David Sirota actually welcomes Allard's response: "That's the kind of over-the-top, wildly-out-of-control response Democrats should want from Feingold's move, because it shows the GOP to be so maniacal, so desperate to hold onto power that they will say absolutely anything, no matter how ridiculous." A commenter to Stoller's post adds: "I just spoke to a staffer in Allard's office. I asked if Allard was saying that Feingold is 'traitor,' or that he is guilty of 'treason.' I was told the senator had not made that remark. I then quoted the senator's actual remarks to the staffer, and the staffer suggested the senator would be issuing a clarification of his statement later today."

Busy Busy Busy locates the censure resolution promoted by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) in '99. A commenter "suggests that Sen. Feinstein's proposed censure resolution against President Clinton should not be held against her because it was offered as an alternative to impeachment. Alas, this was not the case. A completely different censure resolution proposed by House Judiciary Committee Democrats in early December 1998 was, in fact, intended to substitute for impeachment." Liberal Oasis follows up: "But why just pick on Feinstein? She had many co-sponsors. In fact, there were 24 other sponsors who are still in the Senate -- 19 Dems, 4 GOPers and 1 GOPers turned Dem-friendly Independent. ... The question for all of them is: why would you censure a president for an office affair but not for illegal wiretaps?"

WHITE HOUSE '08: Turkeys In The Straw

GOP Bloggers is hosting a straw poll for the WH'08 primary, featuring all GOPers currently seeking the nod plus ex-NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani (and thereby eliminating Sec/State Condoleezza Rice, to one commenter's complaint). The poll asks readers who they "would like to see" as well as who they "would not like to see" get the nod. These answers have been averaged together, and with 4700+ ballots cast, only 4 are in positive territory: VA Sen. George Allen by a healthy margin, Giuliani is not far back, MA Gov. Mitt Romney trails by a bit more, and ex-Speaker Newt Gingrich is just barely above the line. Candidates with the biggest negatives are NE Sen. Chuck Hagel, NY Gov. George Pataki, Frist and AZ Sen. John McCain.

MIDTERMS: Naturally, You Would Expect A Candidate Named "Webb" To Get The Blogging Thing

From 7-8:00 p.m. on 3/14, ex-Reagan Navy Sec./VA SEN candidate Jim Webb (D) appeared live in the comment threads of a diary posted to Daily Kos. It didn't get the front-page treatment other pols often get that Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) got last year, as is the general rule not to, but it nevertheless picked up 128 comments -- more than most diary entries on the site, but not a blockbuster. The site uses a moderated comment system allowing participants to grade up or grade down a particular comment; Webb contributed 14 comments, and all were graded highly by readers (who don't always bother to use the system). Only one comment received a single demerit -- that was Webb, on censure: "I'm not sure I would support a censure over the NSA surveillance issue, but I do believe that people need to keep connecting the dots on the widespread abuse of power in this Presidency. Too many people in the Congress want to 'kiss that issue' as it goes by." That comment otherwise received votes up like his others. Netroots figure Bob Brigham asked which current sen. Webb would "most like to have dinner with and why?" Webb replied: "Well, right now I'd love to have dinner with Harry Reid, and ask him to endorse me. That would make my life a lot simpler..."

At The Corner, K.J. Lopez spies -- and posts a screen shot of -- Sen. Debbie Stabenow's (D-MI) "Anti-Photo Op": "Senator Stabenow is on the Senate floor right now speaking next to a sign that says 'dangerously incompetent.' Will make for a cheap commercial later this election year." GOP and College has started a Photoshop contest based on the image. Ed Driscoll: "Now this is how a Karl Rove sting operation works, when it all comes together!"

At The Next Hurrah, DemFromCT cites a Gallup report carrying the header "Democratic Congressional Lead Among Registered Voters Largest Since '82" and suggesting a "fairly competitive election." DemFromCT: "That's assuming that Republican turnout is like it was in 2002 and 2004. And that's where you figure in the current state of nervous Republicans, already making excuses for the losers in power." More: "2006 is all about Bush's disastrous decision to invade Iraq instead of finishing the job in Afghanistan. ... Americans aren't going to vote Republican because they're afraid of Hillary. They know who rubber stamped the Bush agenda, and they'll vote for anyone who represents change."

NETROOTS: Crashing Into Kos

Next weekend's "Questions for" column by Deborah Solomon in the New York Times Magazine will feature Markos Moulitsas, founder of Daily Kos and co-author of "Crashing the Gate" (see previous coverage). A few noteworthy excerpts -- Kos, on his WH'08 preferences: "I like Mark Warner. I like Russ Feingold. I don't hate Hillary, but I don't like anyone who is declared by fiat to be the front-runner." On his military service: "Joining the Army was the best decision I ever made, and leaving the Army was the second-best decision I ever made. I went into the Army weighing 111 pounds, at 5 foot 7, and I had no self-confidence. I came out thinking that I could conquer the world." On whether the site earns him enough to "be able to eat": "Last year, I probably earned somewhere between $70,000 and $80,000. I live comfortably." On meeting John Kerry: "I was in a bathroom stall next to him at the Democratic National Convention. I didn't say hello. It was a private moment for him."

"Crashing the Gate" has been receiving mostly positive notices from the MSM and their fellow lefty bloggers, but one with a different take is Lindsay Beyerstein of Majikthise. Some excerpts from her lengthy post: "'Crashing the Gate' says surprisingly little about blogs. I was expecting a crash course on the theory and practice of netroots democracy written by two pioneers of the movement. ... However it is ironic these self-proclaimed populists' main suggestion for improving the electoral fortunes of the Democrats is to revitalize its consultant class." More: ""The authors' all out attack on the party's corrupt and antiquated electoral machine is by far the strongest part of the book. Unfortunately, it often seems as if they regard the netroots primarily as a means to end the Democratic establishment's stranglehold on campaigns rather than as an engine for social change in its own right. ... The authors don't seriously discuss the blogosphere as a source of ideas or as a nexus for activism. They seem more interested in the blogosphere as a medium for placing targeted ads than as a new engine for independent news or as a novel brake on the power of the mainstream media and politicians."

BLOGS VS. THE MSM: Abu-Boo

New York Times ran an item 3/14 noting that Salon challenged the ID of a person profiled in the newspaper "who says he is the iconic hooded figure" in the Abu Ghraib photo. Army Criminal Investigation Command spokesperson "confirmed" to the Times: "Our investigation indicates that the person you have is not the detainee who was depicted in the photograph released in connection with the Abu Ghraib investigation." Mediacrity: "In addition to questioning whether the fellow interviewed by the Times was the one in the photo, Salon also found that other details in the ex-prisoner's story were apparently wrong. ... Too bad the Times didn't mention that. I guess saving the paper from embarrassment is a lot more important than admitting that it ran a piece that is looking more and more like a lot of hooey from start to finish." Bill Millan: "This has the same ideological basis as 'Rathergate.' They were so eager to smear the administration that they went with a 'fake but accurate' story." Little Green Footballs, noting that the clarification says the paper "spoke with representatives of Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International" who believed the man in the photo was the person ID'd by the Times: "Interesting. When the Times wants to check a story about Abu Ghraib, they don't call anyone in the US government. They call Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, two of the most politicized left-wing NGOs in the world."

Objecting to the characterization of Bush criticism as coming solely from the Dems' "liberal base" by Shaiglagh Murray in the Washington Post, AMERICAblog's John Aravosis aims to explain succinctly "why liberal blogs are constantly berating the traditional media": "Because the traditional media is made up of a growing number of increasingly sloppy children. And their sloppiness is now jeopardizing our democracy. It's gotten us into a war that's a disaster, and it's helped re-elect a president who isn't capable of managing our country. All because the traditional media let themselves be emasculated and lobotomized rather than simply doing their job."

JUDGES: Sandra's Day Out

One story going around the blogs but not much by the MSM concerns a 3/9 speech by ex-SCOTUS justice Sandra Day O'Connor at Georgetown. As reported by NPR, O'Connor "took on conservative Republican critics of the courts," saying that GOP "proposals, and their sometimes uncivil tone, pose a danger to the independence of the judiciary, and the freedoms of all Americans." So far it's been picked up by The Huffington Post, a diarist at Daily Kos, Philly Daily News' Attytood

One of the few MSM types to pick up on the story was lefty blog favorite Keith Olbermann; on 3/13 Crooks and Liars made the video available. Eric Alterman, at his MSNBC-hosted Altercation: "The only reporter present was NPR's Nina Totenberg. Nobody else covered the speech, but here's what she said: attacks on the judiciary by some Republican leaders pose a direct threat to our constitutional freedoms. No really. And while she didn't name Tom Delay, you could not mistake her target. She quoted his attacks on the courts at a meeting of the conservative Christian group Justice Sunday last year when DeLay took out after the courts for rulings on abortions, prayer and the Terri Schiavo case."

Among the few conservatives to pick up the report was The American Princess, who heads her post: "No Wonder Democrats Loved Her." Center-right law prof Ann Althouse ended up writing about it only after people kept asking why she hadn't commented, explaining: "I agree with O'Connor's points ... but it felt like a report from last year, too stale to address. Cornyn and DeLay haven't continued with that idiocy, and a lot of things have happened since then. Why not address those things? Why not say something about how the push-back against Cornyn and DeLay changed their behavior?"

IN THE STATES: The Bell Hop

TX-based Dem blogger Charles Kuffner comments on receiving an e-mail about a local fundraiser for MO SEN candidate Claire McCaskill: "I could whine about Texas being everybody's donor state, but this happens all the time around the country. Besides, McCaskill is a strong candidate with a real shot ... What does bug me is seeing the names Ben and Melanie Barnes at the top of the host list. If you search for the Barneses on the TEC contributions page, you'll see that they've given a lot of money to fellow Democrats over the past several years. They've also contributed" $7OK+ to ex-GOPer/indie GOV candidate Carole Keeton Strayhorn since 12/02: "Which makes me ask why, in a year where the incumbent Republican Governor is polling at 40% and less everywhere you look, are they not supporting [TX Dem GOV nominee] Chris Bell?"

Commonwealth Conservative gives props to Gov. Tim Kaine (D-VA), one of several govs. paying a visit to Iraq: "Kudos to Governor Kaine for visiting Virginia National Guard troops serving in Iraq. It's possible he may also make a stop in Afghanistan before returning home on Friday."

ETHICS: Follow The Oregon Trail?

Via The Oregonian, Gerik at Left in the West: "The word out in Oregon is a bipartisan proposal to create an independent ethics commission," sponsored by Reps. Greg Walden (R-OR) and Earl Blumenauer (D-OR). The bill would create a commis. "made up of former members of Congress, to replace the current House ethics committee." As Walden puts it, "we simply don't have the time or, frankly, the objectivity to provide the necessary oversight over our colleagues." "have put together the latest in a series of attempts to reform the way Congress passes or does not pass the smell test. Now I can admit to not being up on the latest good, bad, and ugly attempts at reform following the wrath of Jack Abramoff and the Republican Culture of Corruption but this one looks half decent. Decent in a 'this stands a chance of passing' kind of way.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: What Do You Call 1,000 Lawyers Blogging? A Joke That No One Understands

Hugh Hewitt quotes from an '03 Joseph Epstein essay on attys' low perceived low stature in the U.S., "Why I Am Not A Lawyer": "How did lawyers go from Americans natural aristocrats, from an almost priestly cast, to figures an increasingly large share of the population look upon as, chiefly, disastrously expensive to do business with, hopelessly pugnacious, and people for whom life is much better when they play no part in it." Hewitt, a law prof himself and organizer of an upcoming panel on blogging and the law at Chapman Univ.: "I think the reason lawyers have flocked to blogging is because of the very decline Epstein pointed to, and that among the country's hundreds of thousands of lawyers -- approximately 600,000 all told -- are those who are attempting to redeem their careers via the public engagement that blogging allows while fulfilling the deep desire to write in the manner that briefs and law review articles will not permit because of their rules."

LEST WE FORGET: The Butterfly Effect

The Oscars are over a week past us now, but this only just came across our virtual transom, and it's worth sharing -- Nick Starr discovers the very Florida-like shenanigans which may explain this year's upset in the Best Picture category.

Posted by at 12:28 PM

March 14, 2006

3/14: Places, Everyone!

If anyone thought the failure of the Dubai ports deal marked a paradigm shift in the natl security debate, yesterday's developments in the Senate set up the left-moderate-right script we've seen in similar debates. Liberals reacted with great satisfaction at an officeholder having the courage of his convictions. Conservatives are disgusted with the obstructionism and even treasonous tactics that "give comfort to our enemies." And skittish Dems/mods wonder if those to their left aren't playing right into the hands of their enem ... er, rivals. Today, the role of leading Dem is played by Sen. Russ Feingold (WI). Supporting cast: Senate Maj. Leader Bill Frist, VP Cheney, Sens. Joe Lieberman (D-CT) and Arlen Specter (R-PA), with a few thousand bloggers as extras.

Otherwise, one of the lighter days of late. As his poll numbers continue to slide, Bush lays out a timetable (or ... does he?); Lieberman's primary opponent makes his debut in CT. And, a new twist on the TPS report.

EAVESDROPPING: (Cen)Sure This Was A Good Idea?

Shortly after 4 pm, Feingold introduced a resolution to censure Pres. Bush over the wiretap issue. The GOP leadership quickly tried to force a vote, but Dems used procedural tactics to block one. Before he made the motion, Feingold wrote at Daily Kos: "Censuring the President is not something that should be taken lightly. But the President has BROKEN the law and there needs to be action and accountability."

Today's coverage, mostly from AP via the Drudge-favored Breitbart, seemed to indicate that other Dems tried to distance themselves from Feingold. A frustrated Creature: "Senator Feingold's censure resolution is not even a day old and the debate has already been framed. The Democrats are overreaching. The Democrats are weak on national security. Will anybody mention that the president broke the law?" Daily Kos' Georgia10: "The press is once again manufacturing a self-fulfilling prophecy to make this scandal go away. It hasn't even been 48 hours since Feingold announced his motion. We're in for the long haul." Carpetbagger Report: "It's one thing for a maverick Dem to stick his neck out, but couldn't the party approach this in a slightly more organized fashion?" California Conservative starts a post: "Just when Democrats looked like they were sorta getting their stuff together ..." Flopping Aces calls his post "The Gift's [sic] Keep Coming." He updates: "I have to say the more I think about it the more I'm amazed that two pretty weak leaders (Specter & Frist) on the Republican side stood up without hesitation and showed the country that they actually have a pair." Hugh Hewitt thanks Arlen Specter for "deftly exposing the poser for what he is."

Mark Noonan is among those on the right trying to rally like-minded individuals behind a "Censure Russ Feingold" movement. Noonan writes: "What Feingold did was to damage the unity of the United States in face of armed enemies merely to curry personal political favor. This is a despicable act." Skippy, for one, is tired of hearing the "wartime president" argument from conservatives, and lays out why it's not valid in Bush's case. American Street agrees: "Properly chastened, a wartime president might become more effective. There's no evidence at all that censure would harm the war effort or the country. And the irony is that if the people protecting Bush put the same energy out to protect the country, the war would likely already be over."

Differing views of Feingold's motiviation. The Political Pit Bull: "I give Feingold some credit -- not because I think Bush broke the law, I certainly don't -- but because this resolution is to some extent, anyway, a matter of principle for Feingold and he is willing to fight for it." Protein Wisdom: "I'd write more about this, but why bother? It is self-important grandstanding meant to drive the news cycle and help Feingold among the liberal left Democrats as he prepares a run for the presidency."

So how will this play out? Iowa Voice: "Dems like to complain that Republicans can't govern, and they have a point. It's nearly impossible for Republicans to run the country on important matters because, quite simply, the Dems have done nothing in the last five years but thrown up roadblocks." Democratic Daily Blog: "It seems that the Republicans who were quick to decry Bush over the Dubai port deal are not ready to go the full measure and admit that he's a miserable failure as some Republicans have recently." Busy Busy Busy cites Sen. Dianne Feinstein's (D-CA) censure resolution against then-Pres. Clinton, and calls on her to support Feingold's. Anonymous Liberal: "When was the last time the Republican party let fear of appearing 'extreme' stop them from doing anything? And they now control every branch of government. GOP strategists long ago realized that, in politics, the only difference between an 'extreme' idea and a "reasonable" one is the number of politicians willing to endorse it." Rowhouse Logic: "At one point or another today, seemingly every elected Democrat, with a national profile, said something along the lines of 'Russ Feingold? Never heard of him. Censure? You speak with a forked tongue crazy journalist,' to the national press." James Joyner notes: "One gathers from the coverage that Hillary Clinton remained silent on the matter, as her name is not mentioned. She has been remarkably canny in guaging the mood of the public on issues, even as she alienates the netroots." Captain's Quarters: "If anyone expected the Democrats to make significant gains against the GOP, which has seen its popularity buffeted by scandals the past few weeks, that analysis obviously excluded the capacity for Democrats to shoot themselves in the foot. Only an idiot would attempt to make a president the enemy during wartime, especially for an action that he performed in defense of the country." Jeremy Dibbell at The Moderate Voice: Lieberman "got it about right this afternoon; he told the AP: 'I'd prefer to see us solve the problem,' rather than simply slapping the president on the wrist with a politicized censure resolution. A nasty debate over a censure resolution will not solve any problems, nor will it change the way the president does business; it will only make things worse." More on Lieberman's reaction in the In the States section.

Left Wing = Hate praises Cheney for his remarks in Feingold's home state. The veep said: "Do they support the extreme and counterproductive antics of a few or do they support a lawful program vital to the security of this nation? The American people already made their decision. They agree with the president."

BUSH: Down. To The Ground. To Get Out Of The Rain.

The latest CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll shows Bush with a 36% approval rating, tying his lowest previous mark in that poll. Dems have a 16-point generic Congressional ballot lead. And, according to the poll, 51% of Americans now see Bush as a "weak" pres. Carpetbagger Report: "'Weak' is perhaps the one word Karl Rove fears most. The Bush gang can live with 'unpopular.' They're only mildly troubled by 'incompetent.' But when a majority of the country believes the president is 'weak,' it suggests Bush really has given up every advantage he's enjoyed for over four years." Conservative PunditGuy: "It seems that CNN feels it's necessary to do a story every time a CNN/USATODAY/Gallup poll comes out showing Bush's approval rating going lower than the previous poll. Yet, when his rating goes up, they take a pass." Lefty Pam Spaulding, on GOPers spinning the poll: "The Kool-Aid is s-t-r-o-n-g." Democratic Daily's Ron Chusid spins left: "Yet another poll shows what all the others are showing -- this time reported by that notorious left wing publication, The Wall Street Journal." Below The Beltway: "There is one issue, and one issue alone, that appears to be responsible for the current political climate. Iraq. ... The Right can complain that the media is biased. They can complain that that the true story of what's happening in Iraq isn't being portrayed. They can complain, but it doesn't matter. In politics, perception is reality and, for the moment at least, the public clearly perceives the current conditions in Iraq to be abysmal."

IRAQ: What Are You Benching?

Washington Post reports that Bush "set a specific benchmark" for withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. It was the first in a "series of speeches intended to lay out his strategy for victory." Gene Cowan: "Does anyone buy this transparent ploy? With elections in November, he's claiming that he'll be 'transitioning' Iraq just after the vote? And does the White House think that malleable American minds will think that 'transition' means the same thing as 'withdrawl?'" Carpetbagger Report: "Benchmarks and target dates have been a Bush anathema for years now. Did the president suddenly join the cut-and-run caucus?" But Penraker calls the Post account "an exercise in twisting words so they can be thrown back at the President."

BUSH ADMIN: Confessions Of A Target Addict

The New York Times and Washington Post each follow up on ex-WH advisor Claude Allen's arrest and (according to WaPo) confession (see 3/13 Blogometer). TPM Cafe's Josh Marshall notes that Allen has an identical twin brother. Marshall: "I have to tell you this new story seems so insane and ridiculous that I have suspect it's actually true." Lefty/non-FNC exec. Roger Ailes notes reaction to the story: "The most amusing part of the story is all the wingnuts, from Bush down to the idiot bloggers, moaning about how sad the Allen story is. Apparently Claude is the archetypal 'good man who did a bad thing.' If you're a bad person who does a bad thing, you deserve prosecution, ridicule and hellfire. However, if you espouse righteousness and damn others for their moral failings, it's merely a bummer if you don't act accordingly."

WHITE HOUSE '08: Don't Call It A Comeback

After reading the New York Times Magazine profile of ex-VA Gov. Mark Warner (D), DLCer Marshall Wittmann writes in support of ex-VP Al Gore: "There is a huge vacuum in the Democratic Party and only the former Veep can fill it. The donkey has a big itch and only Al can scratch it." Warner is an "able politician who could probably do quite well" in the general, but he's "admirably repelled by knee-jerk liberalism. That positive trait is likely a show stopper for the hard core donor and activist class of the party who yearns for the real deal." Gore "opposed both the war from the start and the Patriot Act. Yes, Feingold took the same stances, but he never won a Presidential popular vote."

MIDTERMS: Meet Joe's Foe

Jane Hamsher posted often about Lieberman 3/13, and, noting the timing of his reaction to Feingold's censure resolution with Telecom Exec Ned Lamont's entry to the SEN primary, urges donations on Lamont's behalf. DownWithTyranny! reviews the Lamont event, and closes with this take: "Lieberman is too dial-up and culturally, too pre-9-11 for a progressive, educated state like Connecticut. I wish there were Ned Lamonts willing to get involved in politics all over the country!"

New Republic's Crowley blogs at The Plank about persistent speculation that Rep. Katherine Harris' (R-FL) is dropping out of the SEN race: "My advice is not to leap to conclusions. The woman is strangely driven."

THOUGHT OF THE DAY: Straight From The Source's Mouth

When speculating on the impact of the blogosphere in '08, it's often a good idea to head straight to the source. Extreme Mortman asks Peter Glenshaw of Democracy for New Hampshire which candidates will have best netroots support: "Feingold will go over well. ... If he runs, Gore will, too. Maybe Warner. I don't see [NM Gov. Bill] Richardson, Clinton, or [DE Sen. Joe] Biden breaking thru to this constituency." On the GOP: "[Sen. John] McCain, just because his brand says 'maverick.' Forget Frist, [NY Gov. George] Pataki, or [MA Gov. Mitt] Romney. They will have their thing, but it will be empty. Wildcard: [Sen.] Chuck H[a]gel of Nebraska."

LEST WE FORGET: I Believe You Have My Stapler

It isn't quite as smooth as some of the others we've seen, but Gorilla Mask provides the latest in the series of trailer spoofs. Today's offering: "Office Space" as a thriller.

Posted by at 12:40 PM

March 13, 2006

3/13: Raise Your Hand If You're For Censure

This was a more eventful weekend than most. Friday evening was full of intrigue, as news broke about the arrest of recently departed WH adviser Claude Allen on "refund fraud." Simultaneously and through the weekend there was speculation about the Hotline-conducted SRLC GOP straw poll, the 1st such test of the coming cycle and Sen. John McCain's late maneuver, and then MA Gov. Mitt Romney's strong showing. And then on Sunday morning Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) announced his intention to introduce a motion to censure Pres. Bush. We'll take them in reverse order. There's also plenty of other WH'08 discussion, as well as about the '06 midterms (including 1 pair of duelling parody sites), and scattered attention to the volatile situation in Iraq. Plus, George Clooney enters the blogosphere.

EAVESDROPPING: Sounds Like A Great Wedge Issue ... But For Which Side?

The censure resolution (PDF) is available at Feingold's Senate page. Crooks and Liars has video; Raw Story posts the relevant sections of transcript from "This Week."

Daily Kos' Georgia10: "The mere fact the media is now discussing censuring the President of the United States is a huge f---ing deal. Sure, the debate will center around "political stunts" and "partisan politics," as Frist alleged. But hey, if it takes a "stunt" to bring attention to one of the most egregious violations of privacy and due process perpetrated by the Executive, then bring on the stunts." More: "The beauty of Feingold's move is that it also forces Democrats to go beyond mere rhetoric. I think it goes without saying though that there better damn well be 44 co-sponsors on Feingold's resolution." Shakespeare's Sister: "How long do you think it will take for other Dems to go running in the other direction? *sigh*"

Feingold regularly finishes at the top of '08 straw polls hosted on sites like dKos and MyDD; he has credibility with and support from activist-minded bloggers on the left, and already some are organizing to pressure other sens. to sign on -- Firedoglake's ReddHedd called it a "gutsy move, not without risk in the polarized environment that is Washington these days and with the hatchet squad that Rove and his ilk generally deploy when their actions are questioned," and implores readers to "call both your Senators first thing in the morning and ask if they support Russ Feingold's censure proposal. If they don't, ask what their position is on the issue -- and why. ... We're going to keep track of it here on Firedoglake, so once you've called, please report back to us -- either through e-mail or in the comments -- and we'll put up a tracking list of yes, no and no comment." Blue Jersey posts info for NJ Dem Sens. Frank Lautenberg and Bob Menendez: "We have to FLOOD their offices with phone calls, faxes, emails! They did not join Feingold in voting against the Patriot Act in the final vote, so they are obviously susceptible to GOP pressure or posturing for the next election."

Corrente recaps Feingold's appearance: "Some dialogue is swapped over whether censure is itself in the Constitution, it was noted it has been used on presidents including Andrew Johnson and B. Clinton, so it has precedent and meaning. And would avoid putting the nation through a Constitutional crisis, while still allowing those Congresspersons who were tired of serving as the Preznit's personal roll of toilet paper to register their desire to cease this function. And stand up for the Constitution and the Rule of Law too." TalkLeft's Jeralyn Merritt applauds: "My view: Great move by Feingold. I'm against wasting time and energy on a doomed impeachment mission. The censure motion will continue to heap bad press on Bush and his autocratical presidency. More and more Republicans will fear being aligned with him in 2006. It might even sway some voters."

The right-blogosphere doesn't sound all that concerned about the development, and in fact a few speculate it could redound to their benefit -- Mark Noonan at Blogs for Bush: "Given that the only possible beneficiaries of such an action are the terrorist enemies of the United States, I believe that we should urge the Senate to censure Senator Feingold for giving aid and comfort to the enemy." WI resident Uncle Jimbo from Blackfive quotes Feingold saying: "The President must be held accountable for authorizing a program that clearly violates the law and then misleading the country about its existence and its legality." And responds: "Senator, you ought not make factual statements that are not factual. It is not clear by any stretch of the imagination that the President violated the law. It is hyperbolic and prejudges a program that has never been adjudicated, you see Senator, that is when an action is clearly in violation of a law." More: "I will always enjoy watching the extremely infrequent instances of principle prevailing in Congress, even as it ensures its actor will suffer defeat for doing so." Right Wing News' John Hawkins observes, "it seems to me that we have a pretty clear split between both parties that needs to become an issue in the 2006 elections. Republicans believe that we need to act aggressively to defend Americans from terrorists who want to harm us and Democrats believe that the President should be impeached for acting aggressively to defend America from terrorists." And he argues: "That's why all Democrats running for reelection in 2006 need to be asked, for the record, if they support the impeachment of President Bush. In other words, do they support the partisan attempt to undercut the Commander-in-Chief, in a time of war, for purely political purposes or are they concerned about defending America?" Betsy Newmark: "The so-called liberal netroots might get all upset at candidates who refuse to sign on to Feingold's measure, but is that necessarily a move that would play well among the general public where presidential elections are waged and won? I sincerely doubt it."

SRLC STRAW POLL: The Peabody Awards

This weekend The Hotline oversaw the GOP WH'08 straw poll at the SRLC in Memphis, where Senate Maj. Leader Bill Frist (TN) finished 1st as expected, MA Gov. Mitt Romney placed a surprising 2nd, followed by VA Sen. George Allen. But as of 3/10 p.m. all the talk was about how AZ Sen. John McCain had called upon SRLCers to show their support for Bush by writing in Bush's name in place of McCain's own.

Perhaps the 1st hint of this strategy came from Pat Hynes of Ankle Biting Pundits, who wrote that "more that a couple friends of mine on hand in Memphis are considering using the straw poll as a device to show consistent and strong support for President George W. Bush. If just enough people write in the name of George W. Bush on their straw poll ballots, their thinking goes, maybe they can show the snarky media that Republicans are unfazed by its relentless and dishonest negative assaults on the President and his administration. I think this is a fine idea, and I hope it catches on in Memphis."

Decision '08's Mark Coffey was impressed with the idea: "I like the cut of that man's jib... let's see George Allen top that." His readers seemed to agree. Over at the much, much-more widely-read Drudge Report, Matt Drudge put a negative spin on it, with the header: "MCCAIN IN REPUBLICAN STRAW POLL EMBARRASSMENT." As Drudge "reported": "One activist said, 'McCain voted against all the Bush tax cuts... maybe he should have voted for the president then, instead of waiting for a political stunt to try and distract.'" In the end, Bush actually tied Allen for 3rd, and McCain finished 5th. Radio talker Hugh Hewitt : "McCain's transparent dodge only reinforced the undeniable reality that he cannot be considered a frontrunner to win a GOP nomination after his primary meltdown in 2000, McCain-Feingold, and the Gang of 14. ... But now there's a second storyline as well, which will trumpet Romney's second place finish. True, it isn't a huge sample, but it is in the south and it is in the Majority Leader's back yard." Hotline On Call asked Frist if he thought McCain's "gambit ... backfired, Frist observed that the delegates did want to support their President, but noted that many of them had "driven 6 to 8 hours" to participate and wanted to take part in choosing their party's next WH nominee."

Nashville Tennessean reports on how Romney worked quietly to move supporters into the SRLC, but a commenter at Hotline On Call points out the organizers say it was "pure grassroots." A contributor to RedState's RedHot: "All the same, the Romney supporters were brilliant -- possibly more brilliant than the McCain's 'Write in Bush' strategem. ... As we've seen, the blogosphere is not very good at swarming a Congressional district from the outside and making things go their way. But quietly getting a couple of frat houses to a straw poll -- and scoring a small media coup -- is eminently doable." Alexander McClure, at Polipundit: "While I would not object to Romney as the nominee, I think he would be best served considering a bid for the Senate when Kerry decides to call it quits in 2008. If John McCain were the GOP nominee, recent polling shows he would easily defeat Hillary Clinton in the Bay State. That could bode well for a Republican pick-up opportunity in Massachusetts of all states!"

Frist gave an interview to bloggers present; AlphaPatriot summarizes: "Even if I didn't like all of his answers, talking to the Senator was a very pleasurable experience and his staff was unbelievably nice." Mick Wright posts photos from around the SRLC event. Rob Huddleston of VOLuntarily Conservative wrote, ex-Rep. J.C. Watts "delivered what many on Blogger Row feel was the best speech of the event. Of course, Watts has always delivered fantastic speeches, and (unfortunately) he isn't running for any elected office at this time."

Reaction to the vote from a few on the left -- Scott Shields: "Earlier, I'd said I was really looking forward to finding out the results of the 2008 straw poll being held at the Southern Republican Leadership Conference this weekend in Memphis. I take it back. It seems that Republican infighting has likely rendered the results largely useless." Reed Hundt, for TPMCafe: "It is unlikely that their nominee will be from outside this group. Only Sen. Frist would be relatively easy to run against. The other two pose big challenges for any D. What should the DNC do now about them?" Duncan "Atrios" Black thinks the write-in Bush move was a mistake, now that the "post-Bush age is upon us," the GOP "faithful are basically done with Bush, disappointed with what he's failed to provide them with and at least vaguely aware of his detached incompetence."

WHITE HOUSE '08: Start Your Own "Anybody But" Movement!

Scott Lemieux of Lawyers, Guns and Money considers George Allen's abortion stance, as per his appearance on "Meet the Press": "Russert asked about overturning Roe, and Allen talked about how Roe has been 'interpreted' to prohibit parental notification statutes. (I assume most of you know this, but ... sadly, no!)" He sums up the GOP on this issue as: "Q: Do you think first-trimester abortions should be banned? A: We need parental notification laws!" And adds: "Unless we assume that the Republicans are irrationally keeping an extremely popular position under wraps, and that every public opinion survey is wrong, we should make knowledge of the Republicans' actual position on the issue as clear as possible, as often as possible." A contributor to conservative Daily Pundit notes Allen's "whiffs" and "ducked questions on immigration, judges and Dubai: "Speaking for myself, this pattern of politics-before-principle has shifted George Allen onto the wrong side of my opinion. In six months he's gone from me wanting him to be our candidate to him having to prove he deserves to be. If he tacks the wrong way on open borders/amnesty, he's irredeemable. If he treads water like he did on Miers and Dubai I'll figure him for another double-talking fake who lacks a conservative compass."

The GOP activity spurs a look in the mirror for Dems. Crooks and Liars sizes up the field as it matters to the liberal netroots: "New faces to be the Anyone But Hillary (ABH) candidate from the left: Feingold. New faces to be the ABH candidate from the center-right: Warner. If you don't ascribe to the "new faces are needed" school: Edwards, Clark, Kerry. The 800-pound gorilla ABH: Gore."

Noting that a profile of ex-Gov. Mark Warner (D-VA) in the New York Times Magazine refers to Feingold as a "protest candidate," Jeanne D'Arc of Body and Soul: "There are advantages to being a protest candidate, though. You get to protest." As for Warner, she writes in sotto voce (or whatever the written equivalent would be) "[O]only possible alternative to Hillary my royal..." Health care wonk Ezra Klein writes, Warner is "taking a more hardheaded and business-oriented approach to selling universal health care. And I think it's the right one."

MIDTERMS: Will Harris N' Ford Shoot Greedo First?

The directors of RedState are calling on Rep. Katherine Harris (R) to drop out of the FL SEN race: "A contingent among the left is backing an election year strategy of having a Democrat run in every congressional district across the country regardless of their chances of winning. This strategy will consume resources that could better be spent elsewhere on viable candidates. Some people have no chance of winning. Katherine Harris is the Republican version of this strategy. ... It is time for Katherine Harris to drop out. A hero in 2000, she seems to have mistaken thanks for a fan club. Even this far from the election, it is painfully obvious that Katherine Harris is not going to win. She will, however, drain valuable resources from winners -- both in her race and others." Polipundit's McClure concurs: "While Harris has been a loyal Republican, this is just not her year, and this is too important a race for Republicans to miss. If Harris does indeed drop out this week, then my hope is that one of four Republicans will jump into the race - Chief Financial Officer Tom Gallagher, former General Tommy Franks, Governor Jeb Bush, or Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart. Any one of these four would send Nelson to an early retirement."

On 3/10 ex-DNCer Jesse Berney called attention to the NRSC site FancyFord.com, which portrays Rep. Harold Ford (D-TN) as enjoying "the good life... perhaps a little too much ... all on his campaign contributors' dime." Berney's header: "[NRSC chair] Elizabeth Dole is a racist." He argued: "What's the message behind this site? The line of white women on the front page, the fact that it highlights his attendance at NBA All Star events featuring Biz Markie, the emphasis on opulence all combine to portray Ford as a pimp. The site tries to be subtle in its racism, but it fails." Before the afternoon was out, the DSCC had responded with VeryFancyFrist.com, looking almost identical to the anti-Ford site, and highlighting a different set of foibles, such as "Investment schemes with the family fortune." Ford himself writes at TPMCafe, "The 'facts' of the site are the most mundane imaginable. I know they are mundane, because they all come from my own campaign finance disclosures. ... frankly don't know what their site is trying to say. Many of you have speculated here and elsewhere what the Republican point is. I do know this much: Our nation is experiencing record budget deficits under their watch and their site says nothing about that. Our nation has nearly 50 million people with no healthcare and their site says nothing about that," and so on.

OH SEN-focused Plunderbund points out a new Suffolk Univ. poll (PDF) showing Rep. Sherrod Brown (D) trailing Sen. Mike DeWine (R): "The good news? Most in Ohio are leaning away from Republicans, both statewide and nationally. The bad news? Sherrod Brown is getting pounded!" Sheds more light on the Hackett/Brown poll that talked about what voters thought once their messages got out... and that didn't include I's and U's. Wow. Game over in the Senate race."

At Daily Kos, Ed in Montana posts a bit of what he acknowledges may be scurrilous gossip: "I don't like posting flyby-night rumor diaries, but this is too juicy to pass up. The Montana political rumor mill is saying that Senator Conrad Burns (R-MT) will announce in the next ten days that he will retire from his senate seat and not run for re-election in November. What makes this rumor so juicy are some signs that it may be true."

BUSH ADMIN: Claude, You Clod!

Slate, not a breaking news outlet by any means, was 1 of the 1st news outlets to report the arrest of ex-WH adviser Claude Allen -- at least 1 of the 1st that came to the attention of bloggers. CAP's Think Progress got there fast as well, and kept updating as new info and reax were available.

Among the 1st to weigh in was John Podhoretz at The Corner: "I wrote a book about the Bush White House. I know the names of many people who worked in the Bush White House. I've read every story there is to read about the Bush White House. I've been a political journalist for almost a quarter century, worked in a Republican administration, and gone to many right-wing parties. So let me say this about accused thief and former White House policy bigshot Claude Allen: WHO?" Atrios quickly followed up: "Uh, Jpod, he was deputy HHS Secretary, Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy and was nominated by Bush to be a federal judge, and his name has made a few appearances at The Corner."

Josh Trevino, an ex-speechwriter under Allen at HHS: "Claude Allen's fall from