Editors’ Blog - 2007
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08.14.07 | 9:46 am
A new report details

A new report details Mitt Romney’s $250 million in assets. That and other political news of the day in today’s Election Central Morning Roundup.

08.14.07 | 9:50 am
Meme of the Day

Karl Rove, martyr to Democratic partisanship.

08.14.07 | 9:54 am
Ames Straw Poll, the Shocking Truth

As we get deeper into the election cycle this year, we’re going to be involving readers more and more in TPMtv. We’re going to be up in New Hampshire in a few months reporting from on location about the primary. We’ll be at the conventions. And we’ll probably make a few other trips too. But we’re a tiny operation. So there’s just no way we’re going to be able to be in all the places where events are happening.

As I noted a while back, we’re particularly interested in verite footage of campaign events on the ground. How do the candidates look, what’s their presentation when the national TV cameras aren’t rolling. Of course, if you get footage of Tom Tancredo slipping and calling for summary execution of illegal aliens caught on American soil, yeah, we’d like that video. But that’s not mainly what we’re interested in. We want to bring readers a sense of the retail politics of how the campaign is unfolding around the country. So take your handcams, keep them running and send us in the results.

Today, we have a short video that TPM Reader Greg Hauenstein shot at this weekend’s Ames Straw Poll. I didn’t have much of a sense of what the event was actually like until I watched …

08.14.07 | 11:54 am
Decider

Does President Bush need a primer on the US Constitution from Gen. Petraeus?

From the Times

His view, he says, is that he is “on a very important mission that derives from a policy made by folks at one end of Pennsylvania Avenue, with the advice and consent and resources provided by folks at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue. And in September, that’s how I’m going to approach it.” Whether to fight on here, he says, is a “big, big decision, a national decision,” one that belongs to elected officials, not a field general.

08.14.07 | 12:09 pm
Thank God!

Alberto Gonzales given special new powers over imposition of the death penalty.

08.14.07 | 12:24 pm
Frum on Rovism

David Frum, conservative writer and one-time Bush speech writer, has a column the New York Times evaluating the legacy of Rovism. The verdict, which I hinted at in my post last night, is that Rovism was not only a disaster in terms of public policy and governance. It was also a disaster in political terms — the latter fact just took longer to reveal itself.

The only specific point of disagreement I have with David is that he says that strictly speaking the only wedge issue Rove ever used was immigration. Even by the somewhat narrow definition he employs, I don’t see how this can be true. Gays were clearly Rove’s wedge issue of choice when the going got rough in recent years. And the biggest wedge issue may not appear to be one at first glance because it wasn’t a social issue, at least not in the old-fashioned sense: namely, the War on Terror. There are of course numerous other examples of lesser magnitude one could cite. The difference with the 1980s variant, Lee Atwater wedge issue menagerie is that Rove did not so often or as explicitly target African-Americans as a wedge issue. Attention to them was reserved for keeping them away from the polls.

The point on which I think Frum is correct is when he says that Rove reminded him “of a miner extracting the last nuggets from an exhausted seam.” That is right on the mark and it suggests that people should go back to re-reading Judis and Teixeira’s The Emerging Democratic Majority, a book which seems now not to have been dead but only asleep.

Having said all this, I think there is one other issue about Rove that could use a little more saying. Everyone knows that Rove’s popularity in the Republican party has dropped dramatically as President Bush’s popularity went into free fall and took much of the GOP with him. But it’s more than just that and more than just Iraq, which of course the congressional Republican party supported more or less to a man. There’s a distinct and additional level of unpopularity tied to the fact that even as the president’s popularity has dropped — which obviously he and Rove didn’t plan or want — they’ve basically been indifferent to the fate of the congressional GOP, even the future of the GOP as a whole. Again and again over the last year the White House has had chances to take some of the heat off congressional Republicans — to ease back on Iraq, to can Alberto Gonzales, to let go or punish this or that crook. And they haven’t done one. And that’s spawned a level of rage — though seldom openly expressed — that in some respects almost rivals that felt by Democrats.

As with the country going back seven years now, they’ve shown little interest in the future fate of the GOP after they leave or even at present unless it bears directly on their ability to protect themselves.

In other words, they are now treating the Republican party much as they’ve treated the country for the last six years.

08.14.07 | 6:12 pm
Hillary says shes struck

Hillary says she’s “struck a nerve” in the White House with her Iowa ad blasting the President. That and other political news of the day in today’s Election Central Happy Hour Roundup.

08.14.07 | 7:46 pm
Giuliani: Catastrophe Waiting to Happen, pt. II

As I noted yesterday, beyond all the high-button issues about Rudy Giuliani’s record as Mayor, colorful personality and open-minded approach to marriage, what doesn’t get discussed very often is that a Giuliani presidency would be a foreign policy catastrophe from which the nation might simply not recover. As Eric Kleefeld explains in this post, Giuliani’s new ghost-written article in Foreign Affairs shows that a Giuliani foreign policy would best be described as Bush-plus and premised on the idea that President Bush has not pursued his terrible ideas aggressively enough.

What seems apparent about Giuliani is that he’s not kidding when he says that being Mayor of New York City is a lot like being president and running American foreign policy. And reading through not just his emphasis on the War on Terror but the particular way he describes it shows that he believes that being on the receiving end of a mass casualty terrorist attack — even though his record of preparing for it is at best mixed — gives him a unique understanding of how to combat the threat. And into this general ignorance is poured a group of extremist advisors who would likely have us blowing up various other countries in no time.

In other words, he’s the Bush pattern all over again — only this time starting not from a period of relatively high American standing in the world but into the mess Bush has already gotten us.

As with Bush, the agenda Giuliani sets forth is covered with a patina of enlightened foreign policy internationalism, with emphases on nation-building, investing money in helping destabilized countries build rule-of-law based societies. But just as with Bush even a cursory look at the people slated to implement the policies shows a cadre rooted in militarism and ideological escapism.

Republicans looking for a non-insane candidate and Democrats interested in preventing the Rudy disaster should really look into this stuff.

08.14.07 | 8:45 pm
Summa Brownnosica

Jon Chait finds the one remaining member of the Rove personality cult: Fred Barnes.

Barnes on Rove: “Rove is the greatest political mind of his generation and probably of any generation.”

Actually the whole quote is even better: “Rove is the greatest political mind of his generation and probably of any generation. He not only is a breathtakingly smart strategist but also a clever tactician. He knows history, understands the moods of the public, and is a visionary on matters of public policy. But he is not a magician.”

In other words, celebrate him as an intellectual giant among men. Don’t fault him for not being God. Is it not enough that he walked among us?

Sadder than reading this stuff is realizing that Barnes probably means every word of it.