Monthly Archives: February 2009

You Oughta Be in Speeches

Heart-tugging anecdotes are the mother’s milk of political speechwriting. If you’re a Democrat, you love talking about Susan, who can’t get health care and had to give up shoeing her children to buy groceries. (Preferably she lives in the Rust Belt and her husband, Jack, had an assembly-line job until an OSHA-worthy accident left him permanently […]

Cartoonish Reactionaries

We have the new Attorney-General, Eric Holder, to thank for calling us a “nation of cowards” when it comes to candid discussions of race.  On the same day, The New York Post was denounced for an editorial cartoon that depicted Connecticut’s rampaging chimpanzee as the putative author of the stimulus package. “The drawing,” huffs Sam Stein […]

Eric the Brave

Attorney General Eric Holder, speaking today to Department of Justice employees, said, “Though this nation has proudly thought of itself as an ethnic melting pot, in things racial we have always been and I believe continue to be, in too many ways, essentially a nation of cowards.” Score one for civility. Can Holder really be […]

Oh, Are My Ears Bleeding?

Does any federal government office produce less engaging rhetoric than that of Chairman of the Federal Reserve? Alan Greenspan was famous for his inscrutable public statements. Ben Bernanke, who comes across (to me) as much more personable than Greenspan, employs a workmanlike approach to his speeches that defies listeners to stay tuned for more than a couple of […]

Responsibility on the Horizon?

President Obama is unveiling his housing rescue plan at a high school in Mesa, Arizona. (Not sure about that venue. If you’re a high-school homeowner you are either very successful or very deceptive. But anyway…) The details of the plan are complicated and the impact likely won’t be known for some time. But the messages […]

Frum the Right

Over at NewMajority, my former (more senior) colleague David Frum explains why, despite the general glee on the right, Republicans likely fumbled a real opportunity on stimulus.

A Petty Caption

In today’s Politico Playbook, Mike Allen mentions a new White House slideshow of behind-the-scenes photos from the stimulus negotiating process. The general theme of the pics is of a president vigorously doing the public’s work. Then there’s slide #4, which is a picture of the president meeting with Republican members of Congress. The caption notes this, then says: […]

Berns on Lincoln

Walter Berns — always thoughtful, eloquent, and worth the read — reflects in today’s Wall Street Journal on why Lincoln is our greatest public hero. He reminds us that history was not always (or even mostly) moving in Lincoln’s direction at the time he led the country, and that, time and again, Lincoln stood alone. […]

Speaking in Tongues

Worth Reading:  This thoughtful piece by novelist Zadie Smith in the New York Review of Books, exploring President Obama’s ability to speak in the “many-colored voice, the multiple sensibility” that we celebrate in our artists but have not typically prized in our politicians. Here’s Jack Shafer’s summary of the Smith piece in Slate. And if […]

Bush Speaks (The Other One) (No, the Other One)

What better family to hear from on Presidents Day than the Bushes? (OK, maybe the Roosevelts, but I don’t see any of them stepping up.) Fred Barnes’s interview with Jeb Bush in this weekend’s Wall Street Journal offers a glimpse of how Republicans could be packaging themselves as a novel-thinking, reform-minded, fully modern — dare […]

Uniquely Qualified to Celebrate Presidents Day

Happy Presidents Day to presidents old and new. It seems unfair that the president always ends up working on Presidents Day. You’d think he’d qualify for a day off if millions of people around America who have nothing to do with the presidency get to spend the day catching up on “Law and Order” reruns […]

Love and Chocolate (and Ham)

It’s Friday the 13th, the second-scariest day this week, right behind Valentine’s Day (or St. Valentine’s Day, as my digital-cable guide insists on calling it). Still looking for a way to communicate your love to that special someone? Take a piece of advice from our commander in chief. According to People.com, President Obama ordered his […]

Coming Soon to a Town Near You: The Big Inflation

This chart (hat tip, Power Line) shows the deficit as a percentage of GDP, with a projection for 2009 that includes expenditures under TARP I, TARP II and the Stimulator Pork Package. The most obvious thing is that we’re headed for a deficit over twice as large as under Ronald Reagan, but we hear nary […]

Great Speeches from a Dying World

It’s not the kind of movie likely to grace the multiplex at the mall, but indie film fans with an interest in oratory might be tempted by “Great Speeches from a Dying World,” a documentary exploring the lives of nine homeless men and women in Seattle.  Evidently, each subject’s life is framed by the recitation […]

Watch for the Payback

Senator Gregg’s withdrawal from consideration as Commerce Secretary was principled and gracious. It was also smart, in at least two ways. This stimulus is a tar baby for any Republican who might be tempted to be associated with it. Gregg was wise to step away. The second smart thing was declaring up front that this […]