Editors’ Blog - 2007
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07.23.07 | 6:14 pm
CNN/YouTube Debate Highlight Reel

Watching the debate? Us too. If you’re watching at home, tell us what you think the highlight moments are. We’ll be putting together a highlight reel to run Tuesday morning. Send us an email to “highlight reel” with the time, your time zone and brief description of the clip you’re describing. We’ll put it in the mix.

07.23.07 | 6:15 pm
A new NYT poll

A new NYT poll finds that less than one in five think surge is working. That and other political news of the day in today’s Election Central Happy Hour Roundup.

07.23.07 | 7:44 pm
Edwards Video From Youtube Debate

Most campaign videos are pretty lame. But this one from Edwards on the Youtube debate tonight was pretty good.

07.23.07 | 8:14 pm
The Questions

Here are the video questions for tonight’s debate, in case you missed one or wanted to see one again.

07.23.07 | 8:16 pm
Blow or No?

I missed the first half hour of the debate (the crack TPM team was on duty). And I prepared to find this debate was pretty lame — not because I don’t appreciate the concept, but because I had my doubts that they could effectively combine distributed questions with fixed time and place answers.

That said, I think it’s actually been a lot more revealing so far than a lot of conventional debates. A lot of the questions are more outside the box and less canned than most moderator questions and I think the candidates are a bit less willing to stiff the questioner with a non-answer. So I’d give it a thumbs up so far.

Wasn’t crazy about the head-banging education question that just ran at 8:18 PM. But beside that, I think it’s working out fairly well.

Late Update: Maybe it’s just me, but a bit too many cutesy videos.

07.23.07 | 8:28 pm
Gravel: Sort of Whacked

Gravel just endorsed the ‘Fair Tax’, saying that it’s great because it taxes what people spend rather than what they earn. I guess that’s the kind of thing that sounds great if you a) don’t know anything about tax policy or b) don’t care about progressive taxation. Really rich people spend a low proportion of their money; poor and middle income people spend a lot. It’s a really stupid idea.

Late Update: TPM Reader TD says …

Consumption taxes are not stupid.

If we all started from no wealth, it consumption and earnings taxes would be equivalent. Gravel drew the wrong distinction. Consumption taxes are efficient
because they do not distort savings/consumption choice, which is a big problem with our income tax.

The benefit of our income tax is that it allows wealth taxation, since we are not starting from equal endowments. But I think most liberal economists would say cut taxes on savings, raise taxes on estates/inheritances, since some bequests are accidental.
Most important, it is not at all true that consumption taxes can’t be progressive. Just pay a progressive tax on income – qualified savings and you’re all set. Not so easy — how to treat housing, e.g. but probably a big improvement over what we have. If sufficiently simple, possibly more progressive than what we have.

I didn’t say that consumption taxes were stupid. I’m saying having a consumption tax be the primary mode of raising revenue is a really bad idea. And that’s what Gravel’s saying he’s for.

07.23.07 | 9:04 pm
A Few More Thoughts About the Debate

As I said below, I think this debate turned out pretty well — but perhaps a little less well than I thought an hour ago. At some level I think CNN/Youtube still treated this as a novelty. I’d say 2/3 of the questions were pretty good — in as much as ‘good’ means questions that are off the beaten path and yield productive answers. I agree with a lot of viewers who have said that having actual voters posing the questions made it harder for the candidates to duck the questions. Perhaps a third or maybe a quarter, though, were just silly. I don’t know how else to put it — songs, corny jokes, etc. That can be fun for viral video. But I thought it cheapened the exercise a bit.

The real problem is that there was no follow-up from the questioners, though Cooper did a decent job playing that role. But conventional debates almost never allow for real follow-up, even though the questioner is live and in person.

Ideally, you’d have two candidates actually debate, as in really have a structured argument for an hour. But you’re never going to have that. So I thought this was fairly good.

Late Update: I always try to get my thoughts down in a post before seeing what other commenters and bloggers said. Having done so now, it seems others were even more positive than I was about how this went. As I look back on some of the Youtube questions, I guess it’s perhaps growing on me too. But I still think it would have been better still without a few of the more antic and over-the-top vids. Call me old-fashioned.

07.24.07 | 9:22 am
Today’s Must Read

The great Karl Rove “informational briefing” scheme spreads to our foreign policy apparatus. And why shouldn’t the Peace Corps know which Republicans are in danger of losing reelection?

07.24.07 | 9:26 am
A Question for the Attorney General

Here’s a good question for Alberto Gonzales at today’s hearing.

We already know that some 15 federal agencies and departments were subjected, at various times during the Bush Presidency, to briefings from Karl Rove’s White House political shop on the key battleground races facing the GOP. In today’s front page story in the Washington Post, we learn that even U.S. diplomats have been given Rovian briefings on GOP electoral priorities, as recently as January of this year.

What we don’t know is whether Rove or his crew gave similar briefings to DOJ officials.

Will someone press the Attorney General on this point today? And if he doesn’t know whether it happened, does he think it would have been appropriate if it did?

07.24.07 | 9:37 am
The List

Here are the federal departments and agencies that have been confirmed as having received political briefings on U.S. domestic politics from Karl Rove’s shop, courtesy of the Washington Post:

State Department

Treasury Department

Agriculture Department

Interior Department

Labor Department

Department of Education

Energy Department

Commerce Department

Department of Veterans Affairs

Transportation Department

Department of Health and Human Services

Department of Housing and Urban Development

General Services Administration

Environmental Protection Agency

NASA

Small Business Administration

Office of Science and Technology Policy

Office of National Drug Control Policy

U.S. Agency for International Development

Peace Corps

The Department of Homeland Security should probably be on the list, too, but DHS has been vague about what kind of briefing it received.

If you’ve seen reporting that suggests additions to the list, let us know. And if you have first-hand knowledge of unreported briefings, we’d certainly like to hear from you, too.