Brendan Nyhan

Month: June 2005

  • Never trust the Wall Street Journal editorial page

    You just cannot trust the Wall Street Journal editorial page. Here are two more reasons why: 1) Kevin Drum on the first column by the frequently deceptive pundit/activist Stephen Moore, who just joined the paper’s editorial board: Moore’s sermon today is about the wonders of supply side economics: In the 1980s, President Ronald Reagan chopped

    read more

  • What are Jeff Link and Ron Fournier talking about? (John McCain edition)

    There’s some strange analysis of the 2008 presidential race in a new AP story by Ron Fournier. First, a Democratic consultant I’ve never heard of claims that John McCain will be the “heavy favorite” in the Republican primaries — an implausible claim given how much he’s disliked by establishment conservatives: If you want to be

    read more

  • Botched soundbite watch: Gary Ackerman

    Gary Ackerman probably didn’t intend this statement to come out the way it did: “The reason our flag is different is because it stands for burning the flag,” Representative Gary L. Ackerman, Democrat of New York, said in a speech on the House floor, wearing a flag-print necktie. “The Constitution this week is being nibbled

    read more

  • The loathsome Washington Times

    Via Jim Romenesko, I see that that Washington Times editor Wes Pruden announced that he’s planning to step down in the next few years, so this seems like a good occasion to paw through a few of the skeletons in the closet of Washington’s influential conservative newspaper. First, there’s its owner, the cult leader Reverend

    read more

  • What are John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge talking about?

    John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge of The Economist have published an op-ed titled “Cheer Up, Conservatives!” in today’s Wall Street Journal that includes this disturbing paragraph: If the American dream means anything, it means finding a plot of land where you can shape your destiny and raise your children. Those pragmatic dreamers look ever more

    read more

  • John Leland and Jodi Wilgoren botch Social Security coverage

    Today’s long, anecdotal article on Social Security in the New York Times includes a passage reinforcing the canard that the program is a bad deal for blacks: Here as elsewhere, Social Security has paid back some more generously than others. Created to protect the most vulnerable, it redistributes money from rich people to poor people,

    read more

  • David Brooks notices that Bill Frist screwed up

    I’m not the only one to notice that Bill Frist is squandering his medical credibility: These days he seems not so much the leader of the Senate conservatives, but someone who is playing the role. And because he is behaving in ways that don’t seem entirely authentic, he is often trying just a bit too

    read more

  • Sheryl Gay Stolberg on George Allen’s anti-lynching resolution

    Writing in the New York Times Week in Review, Sheryl Gay Stolberg revisits the George Allen image makeover campaign, including describing the noose he hung from a tree in his law office as a “lasso”: One open question is what benefit a politician gets from apologizing. Senator George Allen, Republican of Virginia, for instance, has

    read more

  • Bush unpopularity starting to bite

    Let the flailing begin! With approval for President Bush down to the low- to mid-40s and private accounts doing even worse, the Bush White House and Congressional Republicans are finally starting to try to scramble to pick up the pieces. One idea being raised by Senate Republicans is to pay for private accounts with surplus

    read more

  • Tim Noah’s anti-editorial crusade

    Tim Noah is right — newspaper editorials are worthless: Almost every editorial I’ve ever read in my life has fallen into one of two categories: boring or irresponsible. Most are boring, because, in addition to the length problem, the opinions expressed in the editorials are usually either arrived at by committee, or arrived at by

    read more