Brendan Nyhan

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  • More Bush budget trickery

    As with his various “plans” to cut the federal budget deficit in half, President Bush’s budget makes a series of implausible assumptions in order to project a return to surplus by 2012, as the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities notes: * The budget implicitly includes the assumption that the Alternative Minimum Tax will be

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  • Giuliani’s in for 2008

    Rudy Giuliani has reportedly filed a “statement of candidacy” with the Federal Election Commission, meaning that he is joining John McCain among the contenders for the GOP nomination. So what do all the people who hyped the two of them as third party candidates say now? Obviously, if McCain and Giuliani thought they had a

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  • Mooney and Sokal on reality-based science

    The tag team of NYU physicist Alan Sokal and my friend Chris Mooney have an excellent op-ed in the Los Angeles Times today on attacks on science from the left and right: As these cases suggest, attacks on science by ideologues and special interests have a long history in this country. A stance of postmodernist

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  • Defining bipartisanship down

    Here’s the saddest commentary I’ve seen recently on the state of bipartisanship in Washington. In a NPR report on President Bush’s visit to a House Democratic retreat, reporter Andrea Seabrook said this: The President brought a very cordial tone to his relations. As I said, he extended all of these olive branches and some that

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  • SI’s Rick Reilly turns against the war

    Is Rick Reilly the Walter Cronkite of the war in Iraq? The popular Sports Illustrated columnist departed from the scrupulously non-political tone of his magazine to write about former athletes who died in Iraq recently, concluding with a question about whether the war is doomed to failure: Athletes love teams, and when they run out

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  • Economist: Equality everywhere

    The Economist’s Democracy for America blog gets this exactly right: A NEW Harris poll shows that 55% of Americans believe gays and lesbians should be able to serve openly in the military, the Wall Street Journal reports. Support for "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" is waning, even among Republicans, who have long been the policy's biggest

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  • How soft is Giuliani’s GOP support?

    Even as “Team Rudy” touts his national poll numbers, Pollster.com’s Mark Blumenthal notes that Republicans know nothing about him, quoting USA Today: Barely one in five Republicans knew that he supports abortion rights and civil unions for same-sex couples, the USA TODAY poll found. Nearly as many thought he was “pro-life” as said he was

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  • CNN jumps on treason bandwagon

    Not content to let the GOP attack dissent as treasonous, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer has apparently decided to jump on the bandwagon. Media Matters reports that Blitzer asked Democratic senator Carl Levin the following question: On the right, though, a lot of your critics are saying, ‘You know what you’re doing, Senator? You’re giving aid and

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  • Bodman dissembles on US emissions

    Here’s an example of some appropriate fact-checking. Samuel Bodman, the current Secretary of Energy, is quoted in today’s New York Times making the absurd claim that the United States is “a small contributor” to the overall global warming problem. But as Elizabeth Rosenthal and Andrew C. Revkin point out, we actually account for a quarter

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  • It’s easy to be a conservative “economist”

    Today, the Wall Street Journal editorial board refers to the “economist Michael Darda.” Typically, the phrase “economist” means someone with a Ph.D. (or at least a master’s degree) in economics, but it turns out that Darda’s academic credentials consist of a degree in economics, journalism and public relations from the University of Wisconsin at Whitewater.

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