Republicans Break the Ice

Do you hear the sound of an ice floe cracking? I think I did the past 10 days. In that time these things happened: Gov. Bobby Jindal went before the Republican National Committee to call the GOP “the stupid party.” Newly re-elected RNC chairman Reince Priebus admitted the party got smoked on vote technology, will […]

Lessons Conservatives Need to Learn

Two lessons on how conservatives and Republicans might approach the future, and a look at the meaning of Barack Obama. Lesson one: Golf star Phil Mickelson this week complained about taxes—”I happen to be in that zone that has been targeted both federally and by the state”—and suggested he may leave California. Before anyone could […]

His Terms Are Always Hostile Ones

Presidential inaugurations are rare and notable events, coming only once every four years since April 30, 1789, when George Washington raised his right hand and took the oath on the second-floor balcony of New York’s Federal Hall. It’s a big day with all its pomp and ceremony, and among its purposes is this: to encourage […]

Jack Lew’s Signature

I’ve been thinking about Jack Lew’s famous signature, which looks like the squiggles on the top of a Hostess cupcake. A series of O’s is an odd way to write the words Jack and Lew, and I actually hope some good-natured senator asks him about it, good-naturedly, at the end of his confirmation hearings. Maybe […]

It’s Pirate Time for the GOP

It’s official. Congress is now less popular than cockroaches and colonoscopies, though more popular than the ebola virus and gonorrhea. Really. The numbers came, this week, from a Public Policy Polling survey. The House and Senate have an approval rating of 9%. GOP governors are the party’s most esteemed leaders, but they’re not in Washington. […]

There’s No ‘I’ in ‘Kumbaya’

We’re all talking about Republicans on the Hill and their manifold failures. So here are some things President Obama didn’t do during the fiscal cliff impasse and some conjecture as to why. He won but he did not triumph. His victory didn’t resolve or ease anything and heralds nothing but more congressional war to come. […]

The Miracle of Technology

Here I will tell a story that I suppose is rather personal but what the heck, today’s not a bad day for the personal. Yesterday I went to St. Patrick’s for confession and mass, to start the year off on the right foot. Walking through the cathedral—it was jammed with tourists taking pictures of statues […]

Happy New Year

A great scholar of Yale’s history department writes to a friend this morning of the failure of the current generation of Washington political leaders to fully apprehend “how awful” America’s longer-term fiscal situation is. America would, he notes, be in an even worse mess if it weren’t for the problems we see in China, India […]

The New Dispensation

This week’s column was about the past year’s observations and predictions. The big story of 2013? Broadly: A Republican party that slowly, awkwardly, begins to come to terms with the changing facts of the nation it wishes to lead. A president set on a course – higher spending, higher taxes, a broader regulatory presence — […]

The New Dispensation

This week’s column was about the past year’s observations and predictions.  The big story of 2013?  Broadly: A Republican party that slowly, awkwardly, begins to come to terms with the changing facts of the nation it wishes to lead.  A president set on a course – higher spending, higher taxes, a broader regulatory presence — that will put […]