Ch 14: Voting, Campaigns, & Elections (RSS)

State of the Union 2007 -- 1/24/07

Last night was President Bush’s State of the Union address and that seems to be the focus of all the papers today.  President Bush’s  2007 State of the Union Address, 1/23/07 

The general consensus seems to be that he didn’t say much new, made some domestic policy proposals, but saved his real energy for rallying Congress to get behind him on the escalation in Iraq, though he intends to go ahead (and in fact has gone ahead) with or without them.  You can read some analysis here (Dan Balz, “The State of the President: Beleaguered,  Washington Post, 1/24/07), and here (Kate Zernike, A Shift in Power, Starting with ‘Madam Speaker,’” The New York Times, 1/23/07.) 

Freshman Senator Jim Webb from Virginia gave the Democrats' response with some economic overtones, but mostly focused on a war he thinks is wrong.  As Reagan’s Secretary of the Navy and a former Marine himself whose son is serving in Iraq right now, Webb’s credentials make it hard for the Republicans to paint him as soft on terror or as lacking support for the armed forces. (Michael D. Shear, “Va’s Webb Offers a Blunt Challenge to Bush,” Washington Post, 1/24/07) 

Bush gave this speech with approval ratings matching his lowest (for a sum of recent polls, see this), and facing a Democratic Congress for the first time.  But on the issue that is causing almost all his trouble, he and his administration are unrepentant.  See, for example, not only his speech, but this Wolf Blizter interview with the Vice-President from this afternoon.   

In the last post I asked what is at stake in the issue of the war.  With more and more Republicans starting to side with the Democrats (John Holushna, Senate Panel Opposes Troop Increase in Iraq, 12-9,” Washington Post, 1/24/07)   the war is taking up all the air left in Bush’s presidency, and setting the agenda for the 2008 presidential race.

That race is starting to shape up, with two new Democrats (Clinton and Richardson) in this weekend, and John Kerry out as of this afternoon, and another Republican (Sam Brownback) joining in as well.  More on all that soon.

posted Wednesday, January 24, 2007 4:55 PM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Is There a Speaker in the House? 10/21/06

No time to write much, but a pair of articles from the Washington Post to bring to your attention on the current Speaker of the House  Micheal Grunwald and Jim VandeHei, Hastert’s Team Mentality to be Tested as Foley Scandal Unfolds, 10/16/06)  and the woman who would like to replace him (Lois Romano, The Woman Who Would be Speaker, 10/21/06) .   Nice analyses of their respective leadership styles.

Also, see this fun one on the origin and  scope of “October surprises.”  (Linton Weeks, Boo! An Inevitable October Surprise, 10/21/06)

posted Saturday, October 21, 2006 7:42 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Terror Bills and Party Splits -- 10/18/06

Yesterday President Bush signed the terror investigation bill that Congress passed nearly a month ago.  According to the Washington Post (Michael A. Fletcher, Bush Signs Terrorism Measure, 10/18/06), here’s what the bill does in a nutshell: “The new law imposes tight limits on defendants' traditional courtroom rights, including restrictions on their ability to examine the evidence against them, to challenge their incarceration and to exclude evidence gained through witness coercion.” That alone is enough to dramatically change the traditional guarantees of procedural justice that the founders put in place to ensure that people could not be jailed and sentenced in the United States on purely political grounds.  The Bush administration says it will use the new powers only to prosecute terrorists, but the trouble with altering the fundamental protection of rights is that, once you’ve done it, you can’t control how it will be used in the future. What might be the “unintended consequences” of this law?

Also in the news, but not “news” per se, is an article in the Los Angeles Times (Johanna Neuman, Some See “Pink Purge” in the GOP, 10/18/06) about the internal schism in the Republican Party between social conservatives who want the party to stay strictly to its anti-gay agenda, and the party policy of reaching out to moderate voters, some of whom are gay themselves or favor gay rights.  Remember the discussion in Chapter 2 of KTR on the difficulties the Republicans have in holding together a collation that includes those with a substantive position on the role of government in establishing the social order and those with a more procedural position.  The tension between the two sides, exacerbated by recent events like the Foley scandal and a new book that claims that the administration had privately mocked the evangelicals whose votes it has come to depend on, is likely to have repercussions in the upcoming election.  The GOP is counting on its fabled GOTV (get-out-the-vote) machinery, but if social conservatives stay home in large numbers on Election Day, the Republicans will probably lose control of one or both houses of Congress.

posted Wednesday, October 18, 2006 4:56 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Government by Which People? 10/15/06

Congressional elections are just over three weeks away, and much of the coverage in the papers focuses on last minute strategy, polls, and expenditures.  A couple of interesting articles in the Sunday papers are this one in the NYT (Robin Toner, Democrats Have Intensity but G.O.P. Has its Machine, 10/14/06) on the edge Republicans believe they have on get-out-the-vote efforts  despite intense Democrat anger against the Bush adminstration and this similar piece in the Post on the White House confidence that they will prevail on November 7 because of their superior vote mobilizing machinery (Michael Abramowitz, White House Upbeat About GOP Prospects, 10/15/06).  They plan to spend the next three weeks hammering the theme that Democrats are soft of national security and urging conservative voters to get to the polls.

With polls showing widespread discontent with the Republican Party among the electorate, these articles raise interesting questions.  What is it elections really measure – popular opinion generally or the opinion of those who can be scared, or excited, or angered enough to get themselves to the polls?  What does “government by the people” translate into when most of the people themselves do not vote to register their sentiments and when leaders confidently believe they can motivate sufficient numbers to keep them in power despite the fact that they have lost the confidence of a majority of the public? 

Also on elections more generally, see this piece (David Kirkpatrick, Voters' Allegiances, Ripe for the Picking, 10/15/06) in the NYT on voter identification, the increase of those who say they are political independents, and the prospects for a realignment of the electorate.  Some interesting updates there to the discussion in KTR, Chapter 12.

posted Sunday, October 15, 2006 6:55 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

All Foley, All the Time -- 10/8/06

Most of the news in the last week has been consumed with the latest developments concerning former congressman Mark Foley’s inappropriate and possibly criminal behavior toward the high school-aged congressional pages who come to DC each year to work in Congress, and debates about how much Republican leaders of Congress knew about his behavior and when they knew it. 

The coverage of the scandal has been a classic case of a media “feeding frenzy” (see KTR, p. 663) and rather than giving a minute by minute report of events as they have unfolded, I have delayed posting about this until we could see something of what the political fallout would be.

The short answer seems to be that, unlike the Abramoff scandal which involved fairly complex financial and lobbying improprieties, the Foley scandal resonates with the public.  Sex scandals make for good gossip and the question of whether the House Republicans violated the public trust in failing to care for kids in their custody is one that strikes at the heart of the family values that the Republicans base much of their electoral appeal on.  Since there are already issues of Republican competency in this election, this scandal has what news people call “legs”  -- it won’t go away quickly.

Today’s Washington Post has a good piece (Michael Grunwald and Chris Cillizza, Foley Consuming GOP as Elections Draw Near, 10/8/06) on what this scandal means politically for the Republicans, especially on the chances that it will disillusion the party’s value-concerned base and keep them home on election day.  

The Foley scandal has hindered Republican efforts to control the agenda in the days leading up to the election and the war news (casualties in Iraq are at a two year high ) will make that difficult even when the scandal begins to recede. That events are taking a measurable toll on Republicans is apparent as the first wave of post-Foley polls come in (See for example, Marcus Mabry, A Political Limbo, Newsweek, 10/7/06.) 

posted Sunday, October 08, 2006 5:54 PM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Bush Wins Terror Bill and the Campaign Continues -- 9/29/06

Both Houses of Congress have now passed the terror interrogation bill. The WaPo does a good job of setting out what it entails. (R. Jeffrey Smith, Many Rights in U.S. Legal System Absent in New Bill, 9/29/06).  The NYT explains why 32 Democrats in the Senate opposed the bill even though Republicans have vowed to use their vote against them in the upcoming election. (Carl Hulse, Democrats See Strength in Bucking Bush, 9/28/06)   Bush is already accusing the Democrats of soft on terrorism and weak on repulsing the enemy,  signaling the theme that his campaigning can be expected to take over the next month or so. (Michael A. Fletcher, Bush Attacks ‘Party of Cut and Run,” WaPo, 9/29/06)  

The war will be an issue both sides will seek to exploit.  That Bush will not have it all his own way was apparent with early reports on the Bob Woodward book that will be released on Monday. (Bob Woodward was one of the two Washington Post reporters who uncovered the Watergate scandal through painstaking investigative reporting in the 1970s, leading to Nixon’s resignation.  He has written a number of books about Washington since.) Though his previous two books on the Bush administration have painted a generally positive picture of Bush and the war effort, this one is much more damning (David E. Sanger, Book Says Bush Ignored Urgent Warning on Iraq, NYT, 9/29/06.)   Woodward also has an appearance scheduled on 60 Minutes this Sunday.  Advance reports of the interview indicate that it will be troublesome for Bush as well since he claims that the administration is concealing the worst news about Iraqi violence and the power of the insurgency from the American public. (Reuters, Woodward: Bush Concealing Level of Iraq Violence, WaPo, 9/28/06)

posted Friday, September 29, 2006 5:35 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

The Costs of War -- 9/28/06

A couple of things to note with regard to the Iraq war.

First, as I noted below in discussing the compromise between the White House and the Senate on the interrogation bill, it looks like Pres. Bush is getting much of what he wants, including quick passage of the bill so that he can sign it before Republican congresspeople go home to campaign against any Democrats who vote against it.  The House voted on the bill yesterday and the Senate, having voted down Democratic amendments to beef up detainee rights, is set to do so today. (Charles Babbington, House Approves Bill on Detainees, 9/28/06)  

An editorial in the more liberal New York Times is solidly against the bill but so is one in the usually-supportive-of-the-Iraqi-war Washington Post

Andrew Sullivan, a conservative libertarian critic of a war he once supported, has a link on his blog to a YouTube of military, religious, and intelligence experts testifying before Congress on the harmful effects of the behavior that this bill will allow the military and the CIA to engage in.  Sullivan’s blog is kind of eccentric since he covers a variety of issues, but it is the go-to place for anti-torture links and debate on the subject.  He often gives a hearing to his critics, so it is not just one-sided (though there is no doubt about where he stands.)

Jonah Goldberg, in the conservative National Review Online, is one of Sullivan’s critics, claiming that he fails to consider some of the reasons why we engage in coercive interrogation techniques and thinks we are too quick to call them torture. (When Push Comes to Torture, NRO, 9/27/06) 

As you read this stuff, think about the issues raised in Chapter 5 of KTR (p. 157) on the trade-offs between security and freedom.  Thomas Hobbes showed what kind of government fearful people would choose – a Leviathan that protects them but demands all their rights in exchange.  Anything short of that demands debate about how much freedom, how much security.  By urging the quick passage of this bill as an election ploy and threatening to stop all interrogations if it isn’t passed, Bush is silencing the debate that should accompany any decision to reduce the liberties America values.  Even Goldberg concludes his essay with these words:

“In the recent debate over torture, everybody decided to kick the can down the road on what torture is and isn’t. This argument will be forced on us again, no matter how much we try to avoid it. We’ll be sorry we didn’t take the debate more seriously when we had the chance.”

~~~

Another issue to follow today is the partial release by Pres. Bush, yesterday, of the NIE (National Intelligence Estimate), a report prepared by the US intelligence community that basically says that the Iraq war has had a negative effect on US safety.  (Mark Mazzetti, Backing Policy, President Issues Terror Estimate, 9/26/06)

The report, issued in April, was leaked to the New York Times last weekend. Amid calls from Democrats that the report should be made public, Bush declassified a few pages of it, and now the two parties are both trying to spin the results their way.  Most analysis seems to support the Democratic contention that the report paints a grim picture of the war and the impact it has had in breeding new supporters of terror.  Here is the New York Times’ take, but you can find similar views in the rest of the mainstream media: David Sanger, Study Doesn’t Share Bush’s Optimism on Terror Fight, 9/26/06) 

 If Republican members of Congress plan to go home and campaign on Democrats softness on terrorism, the Democrats are headed home to complain that the Republicans’ policies are increasing it.  Hold on to your hats and get ready for a wild ride to Election Day.  The NYT has a nice piece on the increasingly negative campaign commercials that candidates are airing this season: Adam Nagourney, Theme of Campaign Ads: Don’t Be Nice, 9/26/06 

posted Thursday, September 28, 2006 6:13 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Let's Make a Deal -- 9/22/06

One of the great blessings of politics is that it allows us to negotiate solutions to intractable problems, to cooperate, to make deals, to compromise so that all sides of a dispute can get something of what they want, even if they lose something in the process.

In the deal cut by Senate Republicans and the White House over the president’s interrogation bill, it’s difficult to see what the White House lost.  Despite changes in the language, President Bush will still be allowed to redefine the terms of the Geneva Conventions for all practical purposes when he orders the CIA to interrogate prisoners, and classified information can still be kept from prisoners facing trial based on that evidence.  On a first reading of the deal, what chiefly seems to have been gained by the Senate is deniability.  They are not officially giving the president approval to redefine the Geneva Conventions, but he can effectively do so at his discretion.

I’ll post more on this as analysis comes in, but read the coverage in the Times (Kate Zernike, Republicans Reach a Deal on Detainee Bill, 9/22/06), the WaPo (R. Jeffrey Smith and Charles Babbington, White House, Senators Near Pact on Interrogation Rules, 9/22/06) and the LAT (Julian Barnes and Richard Simon, Bush Bows to Senators on Detainees, 9/22/06) whose headline, at least, sees Bush as capitulating more than the other papers do. Editorials in the Times and the WaPo are both strongly critical of the compromise.   

What this deal appears to do is clear the way for approval of Bush’s bill before members of Congress go home to campaign.  If Democrats vote with them, Republicans can claim a bipartisan victory for Bush.  If Democrats vote against the bill, they can be cast as soft on terror and weak on defense – precisely the outcome Bush and Rove had hoped for in bringing up this issue now. Public opinion polls show that their effort to change the subject to national defense has shown some success as Republican fortunes have improved somewhat (at least, depending on which polls you read.)

Stay tuned….

posted Friday, September 22, 2006 7:06 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Sunday Follow Up

The Sunday papers are often a chance to get follow-ups on the week's news, or longer pieces analysing events.  A good piece this a.m. from the Sunday Washington Post on the continuing battle to set the agenda in the days before the election: Jonathan Weisman, Tribunal Dispute Could Ruin GOP Strategy, WaPo, 9/17/06.

posted Sunday, September 17, 2006 11:14 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

9/11 and Electoral Politics 9/14/06

With September 11 coming less than two months before Election Day every year, and immediately after the Labor Day launch of the campaign,  it may be too much to hope that politicians would refrain from using it as a rallying cry to get voter support.  Sure enough, on the fifth year anniversary of the bombing of the World Trade Center, Election Day politics got intertwined with memorials and remembrances and warnings against terrorists.

Tuesday morning, Dan Balz and Michael Abramowitz of the Washington Post summed it up: “President Bush's Oval Office speech last night was the culmination of two weeks of efforts to rally the nation behind his policies and presidency by summoning the memory of Sept. 11, 2001.” (President Tries to Win Over a War-Weary Nation, 9/12/06)

Bush’s efforts were about rallying support for the war, as the Post points out, but they were also an attempt to set the agenda for the election campaign. The Republicans would much rather have people talking about the September 11 attacks and national security, issues on which they poll relatively well, than about a war that headlines remind us daily is not going as promised.

Last week, for instance, Bush gave a speech in which he dramatically tried to change the terms of debate by turning some of the most damaging criticisms of his administration into positives. (R. Jeffrey Smith and Michael Fletcher, Bush Says Detainees Will Be Tried, Washington Post 9/7/06)  He has been criticized in the past by both Democrats and Republicans for overreaching his powers as an executive by setting up military tribunals to try terror suspects, for ignoring the Geneva Conventions, for incarcerating prisoners in Guantanamo bay, Cuba, without due process, for allowing the CIA to operate clandestine prisons around the world, for condoning the torture of prisoners of war and for permitting the NSA to eavesdrop on the conversations of Americans. 

In his speech last week he tried to turn those negatives into positives by declaring that his actions were necessary to keep American safe.  He admitted that the US had had held terror suspects secretly and subjected them to controversial interrogation techniques (Bush doesn’t call it torture.) He defended his administration’s actions and said he was transferring 14 prisoners accused of perpetrating the 9/11 attacks to Guantanamo Bay and was asking Congress to give him the authority to order military trials of the sort the Supreme Court had called a halt to in June.  Following his speech, Republicans said they intended to bring his proposals to a vote as soon as possible, hoping to force Democrats into either voting to support Bush or casting a vote against prosecution of the terror suspects, which would help to brand them weak on national security. 

Debate on that vote is currently going on in Congress.  Today (Thursday) Colin Powell, Bush’s former Secretary of State opposed the creation of military commissions for the purpose of trying prisoners, saying that “"The world is beginning to doubt the moral basis of our fight against terrorism." (William Branigin, Powell Opposes Effort to ‘Redefine’ Geneva Provision, Washington Post, 9/14/06.)   At the same time, despite Bush’s personal visit to Capitol Hill to lobby for the passage of his bill, the Senate Armed Services Committee rejected Bush’s proposal that would deny some key rights to prisoners in favor of one that grants them more protections. (David Stout, Senate Panel Defies Bush on Detainee Bill. New York Times, 9/14/06)    Four Republican senators (McCain, Warner, Graham and Collins) joined with all of the Democrats on the committee to reject the president’s version of the bill.

If the Republican strategy is to drive a wedge between the two parties, it may not work if a bipartisan group continues to oppose Bush’s bill.  At issue are whether prisoners have a right to see the evidence that is being used against them and whether statements obtained through torture can be sued as evidence.  Part of the wider debate is whether the U.S. engages in torture, and what actually constitutes torture.  See this video for Bush’s views as expressed to journalist Matt Lauer.  

Although we do not address the issue of torture directly, we discuss the conflicts involved in protecting civil liberties and national security on pp. 157-158 of KTR.  How do you respond to the criticism that if we torture prisoners and deny them their rights, we have become little better than the people we seek to protect ourselves against?

posted Thursday, September 14, 2006 5:19 PM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Playing Catch Up After A Busy Week 9/12/06

I am working on a post that will attempt to make some sense of the flurry of speeches given recently by White House personnel, including President Bush.  These speeches, which aim to remind Americans of the horrors of the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center are also designed to be the opening salvos in the electoral battle for the control of Congress.  I’ll get that post up as soon as I can.  In the meantime, here are some important articles to keep up with.

Dan Balz and Michael Abramowitz , President Tries to Win Over a War-Weary Nation, Washington Post, 9/12/06

R. Jeffrey Smith and Michael Fletcher, Bush Says Detainees Will Be Tried, Washington Post 9/7/06)  

Jim VandeHei and Chris Cillizza, In a Pivotal Year, GOP Plans to Get Personal Millions to Go to Digging Up Dirt on Democrats

Washington Post, 9/10/06.

Dana Priest and Ann Scott Tyson, FIVE YEARS LATER: An Elusive Target Bin Laden Trail 'Stone Cold': U.S. Steps Up Efforts, But Good Intelligence On Ground is Lacking, Washington Post, 9/10/06.

Charles Babbington and R. Jeffrey Smith, Bush's Detainee Plan Assailed Military Lawyers and Senators Call Proposed Rules Unfair, Washington Post, 9/10/06.

David E. Sanger and Eric Schmitt, Cheney’s Power No Longer Goes Unquestioned, New York Times, 9/10/06
Jeffrey Rosen, A Terror Trial, With or Without Due Process, New York Times, 9/10/06
Michael Abramowitz, Cheney: Domestic Iraq Debate Encouraging Adversaries, Washington Post, 9/10/06 

posted Tuesday, September 12, 2006 8:42 PM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Let the Games Begin 9/4/06

I mentioned last week that the midterm elections are upon us (see KTR, p. 286) and as Labor Day is the official kick off of the election season, several papers run articles assessing the stakes in the election and the chances that the Democrats will take back control of one or both houses.  Four pieces are especially worth taking a look at.

  • The New York Times is all over the subject this slow news weekend.  Adam Nagourney and Jim Rutenberg have a piece on the high stakes for Karl Rove, the president’s political advisor and the mastermind of Bush’s two successful presidential campaigns (Rove’s Word Is No Longer G.O.P. Gospel, 9/2/06.)  The legacy of the man that some people call “Bush’s Brain” will be seriously damaged if the Republicans fail to hang on to Congress.

As you read these analyses, and the ones we will see in the future, remember that this election is not over until it’s over. Many pundits and reporters have made up their mind that the Republicans will lose control of the House of Representatives come November.  That may well happen, but these folks are basing their predictions on factors that can change between now and then.  Keep an open and critical mind as you read!

posted Monday, September 04, 2006 8:57 PM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Katrina -- 8/29/06

Greetings, Everyone!  Welcome back to a new semester.

Lots in the news but as relates to American government, the biggest story seems to be all the political posturing around the first year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. There are a couple of different threads to that story.

First is the real assessment of where the gulf area recovery efforts are after one year.  The answer seems to be – they are limping along.  A Wall Street Journal article (subscription only) says that the recovery is only patchy and much remains to be done (Christopher Cooper, In New Orleans, Recovery is Sporadic) and a Washington Post piece on Mississippi says the same thing (Peter Whoriskey, In Miss., Hope of Going Home Dwindles)   The poignant story of one family’s post-storm travails in Slate gives a personal perspective – and this from an educated and articulate writer well able to navigate the bureaucratic nightmares storm survivors face.  (Blake Bailey, My Year of Hurricanes) The plight of poorer, less well educated citizens is much tougher.

A second thread of the story that is receiving lots of coverage is the political aspect of the whole thing.  Democrats are convinced that Katrina is a weak spot for the Republicans as the midterm congressional elections approach this November.  Many analysts expect major Republican losses (not abnormal for a midterm election – see KTR p. 286) and believe that the Republicans could lose control of the House of Representatives in that election, and possibly the Senate as well, though that is a longer shot for the Dems.  The Democrats think the Republicans are especially vulnerable over the issue of governmental competence as demonstrated by the response to Katrina and the waging of the Iraq war, and so they are playing up the Katrina anniversary to keep the issue alive.  See the Washington Post, Michael Abramowitz, Bush, Top Democrats Flock to Coast.

Meanwhile the Bush administration, believing that the President lost valuable standing with the public over Katrina, sees this anniversary as an opportunity for him to tout the rebuilding efforts down there and to regain some stature. The result is that New Orleans, still the scene of massive destruction, has become a political stage. (New York Times, Anne Kornblutt, Bush Visits Gulf Coast, Stressing Progress) 

A president is only as strong as his approval ratings (KTR, pp. 343-344 and below here) because he needs public approval to give him weight with Congress to get his agenda passed.  Since Bush’s ratings have been so low this year, many Republicans not only are not supporting him in Congress but are not even mentioning him in their reelection campaigns.  It is important for him to try to regain popularity.  But as Frank Newport of the Gallup organization argues (Little Impact of Katrina on Bush’s Overall Job Ratings), while the public evaluation of Bush declined after Katrina, the lasting damage seems to taken place this year, and owes as much to public disapproval of the war and rising gas prices as to a negative image of him as a strong and effective leader after Katrina. It's not clear that returning to New Orleans and hailing the reconstruction efforts that have been achieved will give him the boost he needs.

posted Tuesday, August 29, 2006 3:19 PM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Immigration and Presidential Leaking – 4/10/06

Yesterday and today, thousands of Hispanics are marching in major cities around the country to encourage Congress to loosen restrictions on immigration. Members of Congress, however, stalled out last week on their effort to get a bill passed, and have gone home for spring recess. (Robert D. McFadden, Across the U.S., Growing Rallies for Immigration, NYT, 4/10/06.) At issue in the debate over the immigration bill is whether the U.S. should have a guest worker program allowing people form other countries to come here to work, and whether people who have already crossed the border illegally should be given some sort of amnesty. Democrats generally want a more expansive policy making citizenship easier to obtain, Republicans want more restrictive laws, especially when it comes to what they see as condoning illegal immigration.

As Republicans try harder to get the Hispanic vote, this becomes a divisive issue. Moderates or those who are more tactical (President Bush and Arizona Senator and presidential candidate John McCain, for instance) are willing to relax restrictions in order to court that growing voter base, but core conservatives like Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist fight hard against it, making it a wedge issue for the party. Agreement right now is made more difficult because Democrats want to deprive Republicans of a victory so that they can point to their inability to get a law passed in the November election.

As we explain in Chapter 2, what is often at stake in immigration issues is the question of what vision of America we hold: crazy salad or melting pot. That is partly what is going on now, but there is also a real reluctance on the part of some conservatives to approve what they see as violations of law and order, and there are clearly also considerations that are less ideological and more political.

The bill being crafted in the Senate was more generous than the harsher House bill but it stalled out at the last minute at the end of last week. There are different takes on the politics involved. The Wall Street Journal says this is due to lack of leadership on the Republican side (Frist) and cunning politics on the part of Democratic leadership (Harry Reid) as Reid seeks to ensure that Republicans do not have an immigration victory to run on. (David Rogers, Dual Display of Politics Delays Senate Vote on Immigration Bill, 4/8/06, subscription required.) The LAT argues that each side is suspicious of the other, leading to deadlock. (Ron Brownstein, Immigration Bill Snared in Web of Suspicion, 4/8/06.)

An enormously interesting segment on All Things Considered on Thursday (National Public Radio) suggested that all the focus on Mexico is misplaced. As relatively highly paid workers at home, Mexicans won’t be the chief beneficiary of a guest worker program but rather Arabs and Asians, which would have the effect of making the U.S. more like Europe, with a large number of poor Islamic immigrants. The commentator, Mark Kirkorian, did a nice job of outlining the economic, assimilation, and security issues that would be likely to follow. (The Guest Worker Idea, A Non-starter in Debate, 4/6/06.)

Meanwhile, Hispanic activists hope to parlay this issue into a coherent civil rights movement (N.C. Aizenman, From Latino’s Rally, Hopes for a Movement, WaPo 4/9/06), hence the coordinated marches today. As we discuss in Ch. 5, characteristics like diversity, low socio-economic status, etc., have kept Hispanics from converting their considerable and growing numbers into political power.

***

The second major issue in the news over the weekend is the revelation in the testimony of Lewis Libby that Bush gave Cheney the go-ahead to reveal classified info to counter claims that he sent the U.S. to war on faulty grounds. Bush on record against leakers (see, for one compilation of the administration’s remarks on leaking, andrewsullivan.com) but the White House position now is that it is not leaking if the president does it since he has the power to declassify anything he wants and this was done in the public interest. (Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten, White House Does Not Deny Leak Claims, LAT, 4/9/06.)

Critics counter that even if the leaking was not illegal it is hypocritical and unethical to use classified info for political purposes. Although Bush is already low in polls (Richard Morin, Bush’s Job Approval Rating Continues to Swoon, WaPo, 4/10/06), the most stalwart conservatives are not likely to abandon him on this one so it is not clear it will send him down much lower. But as revelations continue to emerge from Libby pretrial process, it will make it hard for the White House to recover its equilibrium and get moving on its agenda. (E.g., Barton Gellman and Dafna Linzer, A 'Concerted Effort' to Discredit Bush Critic Prosecutor Describes Cheney, Libby as Key Voices Pitching Iraq-Niger Story, WaPo, 4/9/06.)

***

A few other things worth reading in the Sunday Papers.

The LAT puts leaking into context with a piece on how it is used in Washington – when and how it works. (Richard T. Cooper and Faye Fiore, In Politics, Leaking Stories is a Fine Art,  4/9/06.)

Also, a good summary piece on the Republicans’ falling fortunes. (Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Washington’s First and Last Lesson: Power is Fleeting, NYT 4/9/06.)

posted Monday, April 10, 2006 10:05 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Sorry for the DeLay -- 4/6/06

I apologize to all for my recent absence from this site. As the editorial note posted tells you, I have been on the road a bit (I am on leave this semester to do some research for a book), but we have also been dealing with the loss of one beloved pet and the critical illness of another. Sometimes life just trips you up.

There are a couple of issues I’d like to discuss here, but I am going to divide them up over the next couple of days. Look for upcoming posts on immigration and the Massachusetts health care bill. Today we’ll talk about the announcement on Tuesday that Tom DeLay, the former House Majority Leader who resigned that post when he was indicted last year, will resign from Congress and not seek reelection in November.

The news about DeLay came in a Time Magazine exclusive interview with Mike Allen, quickly followed by an announcement by the man himself and nonstop interviews and media coverage everywhere. DeLay says he is quitting to spare the Republican Party the possible loss of his seat and because the upcoming campaign would be incredibly nasty. But DeLay has survived and even flourished in nasty campaigns before. What else is going on here?

The crash in DeLay’s career has been sudden. Just last year he was universally hailed or hated as the most powerful man in the U.S. House, a person who had almost single-handedly changed the way Congress does business (see the discussion of the K Street project below, for example) and who was largely instrumental in fostering the strong partisanship that has characterized American legislative politics since the Clinton years (DeLay was a powerful force behind the Clinton impeachment, for instance). But his tribulations quickly piled up. First he himself was indicted on money laundering charges, for which he still faces a trial. Then two close friends and former staffers have been indicted as part of the investigation into Jack Abramoff, and some believe that investigators are closing in on DeLay as well. (Jonathan Weisman and Chris Cillizza, DeLay to Resign from Congress, WaPo, 4/4/06.) With polls showing him running 50/50 in his district, the possibility that the once invincible “Hammer,” as he was called, could lose the election became very real, prompting his decision to quit (though he says he still believes he could have won).

He says his future plans are still uncertain, though he speaks of becoming a national leader of the conservative movement. The future of the Republicans he leaves behind in Congress is unclear as well. With Bush’s approval ratings too low to provide cohesion, and the man who kept them in line for so long on his way out, Republicans are beginning to show divisions in what once seemed like an unshakable party bloc (Carl Hulse, Republicans Are Finding Their House Now Divided, NYT, 4/6/06) and Democrats are delighted to see their once formidable foes on the ropes. (Howard Kurtz, Three Cheers for DeLay, WaPo, 4/5/06.)

During the DeLay years, the Republicans were remarkably successful at changing the rules of American politics to advantage their party – from the K Street Project to the Texas redistricting that bolstered their majority in the 2004 elections. The Democrats are now starting to think that they may have a chance to take back the majority (though it is a long shot still - see for example this map), at which time, of course, they would try to change the rules back to benefit their party. If you remember the theme of KTR,  that politics is about who gets what and how they get it, and that controlling the rules of the game helps you determine who will win and who will lose, much of this battle for control of Congress makes sense. If you remember the old adage that power corrupts, then the fate of Tom Delay begins to make some sense too. The Democrats, who faced corruption in their own ranks during their majority, would do well to remember it too.

More to come in a day or so on immigration and health care.

posted Thursday, April 06, 2006 5:23 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)

Religious Protests, Congressional Elections, and Presidential Power -- 2/6/06

Good morning. No big events over the weekend but a couple of good pieces to think about.

One, from Sunday's NY Times, (Craig Smith, Adding Newsprint to the Fire, 2/5/06) does a fine job of outlining some of the issues at stake in the demonstrations by Muslims against a Danish newspaper's printing of cartoonists' images of the Prophet Muhammed (Islamic law forbids any imagery of him whatsoever). Consider the issues involved from the point of view of the political culture discussion in Chapter 2 (especially along the procedural/substantive political dimension) and the discussion of religious freedom and toleration in Chapter 5.

This morning's Washington Post has an article about the upcoming congressional elections in November (Dan Balz and Chris Cillizza, Handful of Races May Tip Control of Congress, 2/6/06). While it is way too early to make predictions (and the article doesn’t, in fact, make any) it does do a good job of laying out what are the electoral stakes in the 2006 midterm elections (which seats are vulnerable, what it will take to switch party control in each house, etc.) and putting them into recent historical context. For a close examination of the issues involved in the upcoming elections, (and a spiffy elections map) see CQPolitics.com.

Finally, see the LA Times for a good discussion of what's at stake in Bush's claim to inherent powers to act during wartime as the Senate begins hearings into the latest concrete instance of that claim -- Bush's order authorizing the NSA to eavesdrop on domestic phone calls (David G. Savage, The Power of the President, 2/6/06).  I've posted on the issues involved here, here, and here several times in the last month or so. Remember to refer to the What's at Stake in Chapter 8, and to consider how Bush's views of presidential power affect the checks and balances in the Constitution.

posted Monday, February 06, 2006 8:06 AM by cbarbour (Comments Off)