Brendan Nyhan

Month: December 2006

  • Rush Limbaugh attacks Obama as “Odumbo”

    Via Drudge, Rush Limbaugh is running tape from Barack Obama’s appearance in New Hampshire in which Obama apparently complains to Maureen Dowd about a reference to his ears. Limbaugh’s response was as constructive as you’d expect (Windows Media Player audio): Obama up in New Hampshire being treated like a god making a speech. Now, apparently

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  • Eric Alterman on a Bloomberg run

    Eric Alterman appropriately sums up the prospects for a Bloomberg presidential run in 2008: My buddy John Heilemann skillfully spun 6,617 words, here, out of a story that has no significant possibility of happening, as Bloomberg himself asks: “What chance does a five-foot-seven billionaire Jew who’s divorced really have of becoming president?” The answer is

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  • Duke lacrosse: More evidence against Nifong

    New evidence has emerged that casts even more doubt on the rape case against the Duke lacrosse players: DNA testing conducted by a private lab in the Duke lacrosse rape case found genetic material from several males in the accuser’s body and her underwear — but none from any team member, including the three charged

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  • Michael Crichton slurs a critic

    Try to believe this really happened. In retaliation for negative coverage, Michael Crichton, the bestselling author of Jurassic Park, depicts a thinly-veiled version of The New Republic’s Michael Crowley as a pedophile who rapes his two-year-old nephew in his new book. Crowley explains in a TNR column that runs under the apt header “Michael Crichton,

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  • The Economist’s 20/20 hindsight on Dole

    Talk about post-hoc storytelling — The Economist’s Lexington column refers to Bob Dole’s 1996 presidential campaign as “obviously doomed” during the GOP primaries: And whereas the Democrats usually engage in mud-wrestling to see who will get their party’s nomination, the Republicans are generally disciplined. They like to rally around a top dog as early as

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  • Silly “neo-” foreign policies

    Writing on Tapped, Robert Farley points out the problem with trying to make foreign policy based on vague analogies to the views of past and manages to work in an amusing reference to a “Neo-Polkish Foreign Policy” — the pundit equivalent of a triple axel: Like Atrios, I wish that people would stop naming foreign

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  • The price of Iraq in ’08?

    Writing on Hotline on Call, Hotline editor Chuck Todd articulates the risk that GOP presidential candidates are facing in ’08 from what has become an extremely unpopular war: There are many GOP strategists who worry that if Iraq is still the major issue in ’08 and Iraq is still viewed as Bush’s war (translation: the

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  • Trent Lott’s “character”

    Senator Gordon Smith of Oregon praised Trent Lott’s character in a speech before the whip election: Inside the Republican senators’ November 15 closed-door meeting to pick their leaders for the next Congress, minority whip candidate Lamar Alexander had reason to feel good. His nominators had given enthusiastic pitches, and he had been campaigning hard for

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  • The delusions of Unity ’08

    More silly third party hype from Unity ’08 co-founder Jerry Rafshoon in an insider interview on National Journal (sub. required): Rafshoon: Our No. 1 goal is to elect [our ticket]. …Twenty percent of the vote is our minimum goal. It’s our minimum. We’ll take it, certainly, if that’s what we get. But think about this:

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  • Jon Chait on patronizing Bush

    Jon Chait’s Los Angeles Times column, which is always worth reading, contains a particularly disturbing anecdote this week: Bush is the president of the United States, which therefore gives him enormous power, but he is treated by everybody around him as if he were a child. Consider a story in the latest Time magazine, recounting

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