Your Abbreviated Pundit Round-up
by DemFromCT
Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 04:58:54 AM PDT
Despite the pundits, we will not lose sight of the 45th anniversary of MLK's "I have a dream" speech:
Alec MacGillis (straight news): Black Lawmakers Celebrate the History Obama Is Making
And now for the pundits:
"No one has been more gracious and more forthcoming and more helpful to me," Michelle said at a joint appearance with Hillary on Tuesday.
Do we believe this? People, it doesn’t matter a whit. The Clintons did everything they were supposed to do here and in politics, like so much of life, feelings are irrelevant to everyone except the persons doing the feeling.
We’re ready to move on.
The difference from 2004 is that the country is deep into economic plight, deeper into two wars, and weary of Republican fear-mongering. It may even be ready for what Mark Greenwood, a lawyer from Dickinson, N.D., called "someone who knows how to speak the English language."
Ain’t no question Obama can do that.
Ruth Marcus: "I didn't know FDR but he knew me."
George Will: Stop being an elitist, Barack. And don't be so eloquent. I understand you, of course, but the unwashed masses don't.
Charles Krauthammer: Have I lost my mind? Is the Pope Catholic?
At the heart of the desire for Lieberman as running mate is a basic strategic disagreement between the Bush and McCain high commands.
McCain's top strategists argue that the Bush coalition that won the last two presidential elections is dead and must be replaced by a new one that extends to the left, as Lieberman would. Bush strategists disagree, asserting that McCain is getting around 90 percent of the old Bush vote and can win the election with a few moderates added in.
Jay Cost: I do not think Tuesday night accomplished much for Barack Obama. How does this help Obama? I don't get it. Check tomorrow... maybe I figure it out and maybe I don't. (To be fair, most of the Republican talking heads agree with me.)
Obama’s nomination over Clinton represents more than a personal rejection of her and her husband by the party they brought out of the presidential wilderness in 1992.
It is a repudiation of how Bill Clinton remade the Democratic Party.
Clinton's a two time winner. And Obama's William Jennings Bryan, a three time loser. I figure the implications are pretty clear, about as clear as my own impartiality.
So, as Pennsylvania Senator Bob Casey declared, McCain isn't a maverick--he's Bush's sidekick. And, as Ohio Governor Ted Strickland explained: "You know, it was once said of the first George Bush that he was born on third base and thought he'd hit a triple. Well, with the 22 million new jobs and the budget surplus Bill Clinton left behind, George W. Bush came into office on third base, and then he stole second. And John McCain cheered him every step of the way." Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer--the surprise star of the evening--said that the nation couldn't meet its energy needs just by drilling for oil, even if we drilled in every one of John McCain's back yards.





