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November 11, 2006

SO MANY PEOPLE HAVE EMAILED to thank me for linking Bill Stuntz's piece on what we should be doing in Iraq that I'm going to link it again, since it's scrolled down a lot and could easily be missed in the post-election buzz.

I also recommend this post by Armed Liberal. ("Elections are sexy and easy. Infrastructure, institutions and laws are boring and hard.") And read this by Westhawk, too, on the wider war-on-terror situation.

UPDATE: Greg Djerejian and Andrew Sullivan (who are sounding more alike in general these days) are both charging me with a change in positions on troop numbers. It seems to me that neither Greg nor Andrew should be casting the first stones regarding changed positions, but here's the post that they claim shows "scorn" for the more-troops argument. Here's what I wrote:

Greg thinks we need enough American troops to physically protect all the polling places in a country the size of California. That strikes me as a very unwise allocation of military assets. McCain and Hagel think we need a bigger army, and they may be right. But as I noted, the way you get a bigger army is to create one, and if McCain and Hagel think the need is that screaming why haven't they introduced legislation to do that, instead of simply calling for Rumsfeld's resignation? I don't think that getting rid of Rumsfeld is likely to yield any additional troops.

So where are they going to come from? The "more boots on the ground" folks don't seem to be doing much talking about that. (This post from The Belmont Club notes that it's not as easy as it sounds.) We could enlarge the Army (probably a good idea, but it won't produce any new combat formations for a year or more, probably more if the new formations are to be any good), or we could send troops from somewhere else. Where? Korea? Europe?

I remain unconvinced that we need more troops in Iraq. Afghanistan saw successful elections with far fewer U.S. troops. I'm not convinced that we don't, but we'd need a million troops to blanket all the polling places,and we're not going to have that. So what's the mission? Just as one seldom wins a war by slapping armor on everything (and no army in history has armored all its soldiers and transport vehicles), one seldom wins a war by dispersing forces to lots of locations in a "prevent" defense. That seems to be what the "more troops" crowd has in mind, but it strikes me as a poor idea.

It's quite hard for me to judge Rumsfeld's performance, but it's not so hard for me to see that a lot of the attacks on Rumsfeld seem to be opportunistic and dishonest (something that Greg freely admits). That has no doubt colored my evaluation of the case for his resignation, but I'd welcome some explanation of why, say, a Secretary McCain would do a better job. Tom Maguire sides with Greg, tentatively, but there are some interesting arguments in both posts' comment sections.

This is "scorn?" (And see the update at the bottom!) It seems rather temperate to me, particularly compared to the kinds of things that Andrew and Greg are writing today -- or, for that matter, the kinds of things they were writing in the other direction, a few years ago. I don't really think that my link to Stuntz's post is exactly "breathless," either.

This pattern of misrepresenting posts is the sort of thing that I've come to expect from certain lefty bloggers, but it's too bad to see it from Andrew and Greg.

MORE: Greg Djerejian emails to note that it's Andrew Sullivan who says I was "scornful," while it was Greg who said that I was "carrying water" for Rumsfeld.

JONAH GOLDBERG notes that it's back to the future in American politics.

The "new direction" seems to point toward the old folks' home . . . .

PAINTING THE SOUTH BLUE?

FOR VETERANS' DAY WEEKEND, consider donating to Project Valour IT. Yes, I know I've suggested this before.

LASHAWN BARBER and Jeralyn Merritt will be on MSNBC today at 5:30, talking about whether it's time to start the 2008 campaign.

UPDATE: Thanks to Hot Air, you can see video here.

A VETERANS' DAY ROUNDUP at Pajamas Media.

HEH: Apostles, indeed.

POST ELECTION COMFORT FOOD: DailyPundit's weekend cooking thread is up.

And don't miss the Carnival of Cars!

HAPPY VETERAN'S DAY!

HOWARD DEAN CRITICIZES DEMOCRATS for being too white.

Some people are amused.

TECH-ADVICE BLEG: I'VE FINALLY FORCED MY OWN HAND on the big flat-screen TV upgrade, by giving the old TV in my basement to my brother. My friend Doug Weinstein researched things exhaustively and bought this JVC model. I went over and looked at it and thought the picture was terrific, and if it supports the bewildering array of hookups he uses (multiple Tivos, multiple tuners, even a venerable Sony VCR) I'm sure it will fit my needs. Any reason why this is a bad idea?

HYBRIDS DOWN, SUV SALES UP -- but what's interesting is that lots of hybrid owners own SUVs, too.

That's not really a surprise. People like SUVs because they're good at carrying kids and stuff over distances and in bad weather. People like hybrids because they're efficient at commuting and they're cool. Commuting in your hybrid, while using an SUV for family trips or to take kids to football practice, makes sense. (Of course, my own compromise was to buy a hybrid SUV, but . . . ). I notice more and more people have multiple cars, a trend that's likely to expand as Americans get richer. Perhaps the notion of a one-size-fits-all car will become passe as a result.

ANN ALTHOUSE FINDS A REASON TO LOVE THE DEMOCRATS -- TAX CUTS! "Those damned Republicans only want to help the super-rich, while the Democrats' beneficence concentrates on the humble folk in the $100,000 to $500,000 range. Finally, someone's looking out for the working man."

MICKEY KAUS:

Just a reminder: Rep. Henry Waxman, the aggressive incoming liberal chair of the House Government Reform committee--who is chiding his Republican predecessors for not investigating (in AP's words) "the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal, the controversy over the leak of CIA operative Valerie Plame's name, and the pre-Iraq war use of intelligence"--voted for the war. ... All future beat-sweeteners about Waxman should be required to (unlike AP) mention this fact before reporting Waxman's righteous indignation.

Any bets on how often that will happen?

A LOOK AT HOWARD DEAN, and the ongoing blog wars on the left.

Plus, Chris Bowers more or less calls James Carville a traitor.

JAMES WEBB'S SUPPORTERS, stunned by his classy behavior. I suspect this is the beginning of a series of surprises from Webb.

JAMES OBERG SAYS THAT OVERWROUGHT PRESS COVERAGE is producing a Russia/U.S. war of words over outer space, even though there's really no there, there:

International frictions over space policy took a rising turn this week, with Russian President Vladimir Putin accusing unnamed countries — clearly meaning the United States and perhaps Israel — of "seeking to untie their hands in order to take weapons to outer space, including nuclear weapons."

Speaking Wednesday at a anniversary celebration at the headquarters of the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence service, Putin continued: "Great harm to stability is caused by unilateral, illegitimate actions by some powers." In a separate newspaper interview, GRU Chief Valentin Korabelnikov echoed Putin’s specific warning: "Our attention is focused on the threats associated with the appearance of destabilizing weapons, including plans to launch weapons, including nuclear weapons, into space." . . .

Far more frightening than the purported U.S. deployment of space-based weapons — an eventuality that space experts generally consider remote — is the knee-jerk reaction in Moscow, fueled by cultural Russian paranoia, to the widely published press predictions of such weapons.

Thinking themselves justified by such rumors, Russian leaders could instinctively respond by fielding dusted-off and refurbished space weapons from the Soviet era, along with militarized versions of dual-use modern space technologies. But if they did so, they would be sparring with a phantom — and might realize that too late.

It almost happened once before. In the early 1980s, some hysterical Western press reports about NASA’s new space shuttle and its supposedly secret role as a space combat ship, bomb carrier and laser weapons platform apparently worried Kremlin chief Yuri Andropov enough to initiate responses. By the mid-1980s, Moscow was gearing up for a shooting war in orbit, using space combat stations to forbid astronauts the right of overflight of Soviet territory. . . .

Amid what is starting to look like a 21st-century reprise of the original Moscow miscalculations, it’s too much to hope for the appearance of another Gorbachev. The Russians must be told, and told quickly and credibly, that the press accounts are inaccurate and unworthy of belief — and undeserving of counteraction.

Unfortunately, alarmist news stories are all too often the ‘spin of choice’ in general, and the preferred strategy in the case of domestic political infighting. But the threat of falsely sparking a genuine space weapons race through the cynical or just careless promulgation of myths of such an "arms race" is too high for business as usual, on Earth or in space.

As Oberg notes, U.S. military space policy remains essentially unchanged since the Clinton Administration. You'd think that the Kremlin would have sources it trusts more than the U.S. media, though.

A LOOK AT DEVELOPMENTS IN ALTERNATIVE ENERGY, plus the opening of more Canadian oil sands production. In the same vein, here's more on switching to fluorescent bulbs at home, and a look at other home energy-saving tips.

November 10, 2006

HARVARD LAW PROFESSOR BILL STUNTZ has thoughts on what we should be doing in Iraq.

IRAQPUNDIT: "Speak up, Democrats!"

Doesn't it behoove the Democrats to correct the claim that their ascension to power is good news for the enemies of the U.S.? . . . Democrats don't have a party position on what to do in Iraq. But surely they have a party position on whether they want to be embraced by the likes of Al Qaeda and Iran. Don't they? Speak up, Democrats, or Al Qaeda and the Iranian mullahs will find your silence only too eloquent.

Ann Althouse says something similar.

UPDATE: Martin Peretz: "Friday, according to an article by John Hemming from Reuters, Khameini that the defeat of the Republicans on Tuesday was a victory for Iran Let's hope that the Democrats don't make it so. One way to prevent this from seeming to be objectively true would be to have Nancy Pelosi end her ugly and personal vendetta against Jane Harman as the chair of the House Intelligene Committee. But, let's face it, it will take more than that. Much more."

MESSAGE TO THE GENERALS: So long, and thanks for all the fish.

THOMAS EDSALL thinks that gun-loving libertarians can save the Democratic Party. I'm skeptical. And so, judging by his final paragraph, is Edsall: "If the only upshot of Democratic gains this week is to revive the internecine warfare that has plagued the party since 1968, then it will be a Pyrrhic victory indeed. To avoid this, someone is going to have to persuade the party's activists to spend less energy fighting one another and more energy fighting Republicans. That won't be an easy task. But the Western Democrats probably have the best shot."

STEM CELL GOOD NEWS at FightAging.org.

AIRBRUSHING at Duke.

FOR VETERANS' DAY WEEKEND, consider donating to Project Valour IT.

WELL, THERE'S AT LEAST ONE WAR KOS SUPPORTS: A war against James Carville!

DEAN BARNETT: "I’m very concerned about the ascendancy of Bush 41 apparatchiks in the current administration. If I wanted a second Bush 41 administration, I would have voted for G.H.W. Bush in ’92. . . . Any breathing room we give our enemies will be used to develop greater destructive powers. And whether I’m eager for war or not, it’s upon us. Donald Rumsfeld realized that as far back as the 1990’s. The Scowcroftian Realists still don’t realize it today."

TERROR IN THE UK: ". What I can say is that today, my officers and the police are working to contend with some 200 groupings or networks, totalling over 1600 identified individuals (and there will be many we don’t know) who are actively engaged in plotting, or facilitating, terrorist acts here and overseas. The extremists are motivated by a sense of grievance and injustice driven by their interpretation of the history between the West and the Muslim world. This view is shared, in some degree, by a far wider constituency. If the opinion polls conducted in the UK since July 2005 are only broadly accurate, over 100,000 of our citizens consider that the July 2005 attacks in London were justified."

Kind of makes it hard to argue that the threat is "overblown."

UPDATE: More:

Prime Minister Tony Blair said today that the threat from home-grown Islamic terrorism would last “a generation,” reinforcing a highly unusual warning by the head of the MI5 domestic intelligence agency that some 1,600 suspects in 200 terrorist conspiracies were under surveillance.

Overblown?

TPM MUCKRAKER LOOKS AT ethically-challenged Democrats in ascendancy:

The Democrats swept into the majority in Congress vowing to fight the culture of corruption. Bad news for the muckraking biz, right? Thankfully, less-than-squeaky pasts don't appear to be a factor in the Dems' reasoning as they divvy up leadership posts and committee chairs.

There's a list of members and their ethical problems.

HOWARD DEAN'S OFFICE SHOOTS BACK:

After the Republicans have admitted to a thumping, why is it that the only one complaining on the Democratic side is James Carville, who today in addition to trashing Howard Dean, praised the RNC, the outfit that brought us the racist ad that defeated Harold Ford, James' supposed candidate for Chair?

I think it would be kind of cool to have Harold Ford, Jr. and Michael Steele as their respective party chairs.

TIM MONTGOMERIE: "The Republican Party needs to wake up to the power of the BBC as a media player in America. Its online services, in particular, are widely read in the US and BBC foreign coverage informs how many US journalists see the world. I sat in the White House three years ago and recommended that the GOP develops a strategy to work with London-based media. I met other GOP officials with the same message earlier this year but nothing GOP appears to have been done."

OVER AT HOT AIR, a Veterans' Day weekend interview with one of Jimmy Doolittle's raiders: "We're at war. We ought to get on a war footing and get the job done."

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL says that "The House GOP needs a new generation of leaders."

JON STEWART: Democratic majority kingmaker?

TIM BLAIR: "This site formally withdraws any previous criticism of Presbyterians."

GENERAL RICHARD MYERS talks about Donald Rumsfeld.

Meanwhile, Laura Lee Donoho emails: "My son emails me from Iraq that he and his fellow troops are in a funk about the resignation of Don Rumsfeld. This is the first time in a long time that President Bush has really pissed me off."

And she's posted some further thoughts here.

UPDATE: Newt Gingrich: "'If the president had decided to replace Secretary Rumsfeld he should have told us two weeks ago." Tom Bevan agrees.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Will Rumsfeld's departure hurt reeinlistment rates?

When all is said and done in connection with the Pentagon management shakeup, the Baker commission report and the Dems actively taking control of the legislative branch, I for one will be watching the reenlistment rate among the troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. I suspect many troops will opt to return to civilian life if they feel that they no longer have support from the policymakers, rather than be jerked around by people who think like John Kerry. And if the re-up rate goes down, original enlistments will probably decrease, too. Nobody wants to fight in a war that the movers and shakers don't want to win. That was true in Korea and Vietnam, and it's true now.

Any new trends should be apparent by March or so, if they are to happen. I guarantee you that any such change will be spun by the lamestream media as Bush's fault, probably accompanied by NYT and WaPo opinion pieces bemoaning what a dumb thing it was to get rid of Rumsfeld.

It sure would be interesting if Charlie Rangel's (D-NY) idea of reinstating the draft had to be implemented by a Democratic congress in order to maintain military force levels. I wonder what the political fallout from that would be in '08.

As an aside, I also think that diminished capacity of our conventional forces, especially the Army and Marines, tends to make nuclear war more likely, because weakness encourages the enemy to attack, and when you must fight, you fight with what you have.

Nothing promotes war like weakness.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Okay, here's a theory: Rumsfeld's out. Gates is supposed to succeed him. Dems try to block Gates out of sheer obstructionist behavior. Gates is withdrawn and in comes . . . Joe Lieberman as SecDef! With his seat going to an appointee of the GOP governor.

Nah, if they were that smart they'd still control Congress.

ME, ERIC UMANSKY, AND AUSTIN BAY: On the post-election edition of Blog Week in Review.

HOW THE REPUBLICANS CAN LOSE IN 2008: Just have Bush go wobbly now.

THE REVOLUTION DEVOURS ITS CHILDREN:

Some big name Democrats want to oust DNC Chairman Howard Dean, arguing that his stubborn commitment to the 50-state strategy and his stinginess with funds for House races cost the Democrats several pickup opportunities.

The candidate being floated to replace Dean? Harold Ford.

A "Jesus-loving gun-supporting" chair of the DNC? I say, bring it on! It'll be fun to watch the reaction at Firedoglake.

Plus, it'll free up Dean to run for President in 2008. Yeearrrgh!

UPDATE: More on Ford here: "He's clearly a smart, talented guy who, like Steele in Maryland, acquitted himself very well in this year's campaign but came up short." I think that's right. Steele was a Republican running in a state that leans Dem; Ford a Dem running in a state that leans GOP.

IN THE MAIL: A book that argues that the danger of terrrorism is overblown.

I hope that's right, but, er, isn't that what Larry Johnson was arguing in the summer of 2001?

RADLEY BALKO:

Mollahan is, to say the least, "ethically challenged." There's no sensible reason for him to retain his seat on the most powerful committee in the House of Representatives. If Nancy Pelosi is serious about "draining the swamp," she'll kick Mollohan off the appropriations committee before she pounds her first gavel.

As for Byrd, his history of earmarking excesses makes Ted Stevens look like Ron Paul. Earmarking is little more than legalized corruption. It's buying votes. Not only did Robert Byrd perfect the practice, he's the one who put a "secret hold" on a bill that wouldn't have even eliminated the practice, but would merely have added a bit of transparency to it. Democrats who rightly railed against the "Bridge to Nowhere" can't be taken seriously if they sit back and let Byrd resume diverting millions of taxpayer dollars to wasteful pork projects in West Virginia. Harry Reid should remove him from the Senate Appropriations Committee.

It won't be easy -- Byrd in particular is likely to raise holy hell. But if you're going to change the culture of corruption in Washington, you'd go a long way toward demonstrating your seriousness by starting with your own party.

It would also be nice to see the lefty blogs pick up on this, and give Pelosi and Reid the cover they need to do the right thing.

UPDATE: Several readers have written to point out that Pelosi is set to pass over Rep. Jane Harman to make Rep. Alcee Hastings chair of the Intelligence Committee. Hastings is of course a formal federal judge who was impeached and removed from the bench by a Democratic Congress in 1989 for taking bribes. Apparently, the Congressional Black Caucus is demanding a chairmanship for Hastings to compensate for the loss of influence caused by Rep. William Jefferson's removal from the Appropriations Committee -- also due to corruption.

This, within 72 hours of the election. Meet the new boss...

Not the only libertarian to be suffering buyer's remorse. . . .

AN EXAMINER EDITORIAL on the Republican leadership:

The GOP majority’s electoral fate was sealed by the corrupt political culture embodied in the Bridge to Nowhere and the congressional leadership’s inability or unwillingness to put a stop to anonymous earmarking.

So what now? The first order of business is fresh leadership. Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., has announced for House Minority Leader. Pence is a charismatic Reaganaut who has often led the conservative majority of the GOP in opposition to the Bush administration’s Big Government Republicanism on issues like spending and entitlements.

Pence clearly understands the GOP’s problem. . . .

On the Senate side, nothing would better demonstrate a new GOP commitment to its conservative principles than the promotion of Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., who more than anybody else in the Senate in recent years demonstrated an unswerving devotion to advancing conservative principles and programs.

Coburn particularly makes sense when it is understood that the Senate minority leader is not so much a legislative position as it is first and foremost a bully pulpit for articulating the case for reducing federal spending and intrusiveness, shining more light in the dark corners of Washington’s entrenched bureaucratic corruption and projecting creative ways of expanding individual choice and freedom for all Americans. Coburn has some rough edges, to be sure, and Old Bulls like Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and Trent Lott, R-Mo., have fought him at every turn. But listening to Old Bulls in great part is what got the GOP in its present straits.

Old bulls spouting old bull . . . .

HAPPY BIRTHDAY to the Marines!

I NOTED EARLIER that Ann Althouse is depressed about the elections, and looking around it seems that a lot of people feel that way. Well, I understand that, God knows. But one iron rule of elections is that you win some and you lose some. And people tend to exaggerate their importance and, if they're on the losing side, catastrophize.

I remember lots of gloom-and-doom and catastrophization in the gun rights community ten or twelve years ago. Defeat seemed inexorable, the media were all on the other side, the politicians who were supposed to be on the right side of the issue couldnt' be trusted, the electorate seemed easily manipulated, and --- well, enough. Sound familiar?

Ten years later the Democrats won't touch the gun issue, right-to-carry laws are passing in state after state, and the "assault weapons ban" -- once seen as the camel's nose in the tent -- has expired. How did that happen? Not because of gloom and doom, but because people worked to make it happen: worked politically, worked in terms of communications and media, worked in terms of not getting discouraged but just plugging away. Want the electorate to come around to your views? You've got to persuade them. Over the years, I've seen this hold true for one issue after another.

Is this a "detached and academic" perspective? Well, I am an academic, after all, and I'd probably be detached about the end of the world, which this isn't. Maybe I "lack fire," but I think it's a realistic perspective, borne of experience. It's okay to feel bad for a while. Maybe it's even therapeutic. But ultimately, things happen because people want to make them happen, and work to make it so.

Meanwhile I note that Rush Limbaugh, who was complaining about my pre-mortem before, now says he feels "liberated" because he's able to say things like . . . what I said back before the election. Well, better late than never, but one problem with the GOP is that it lost touch with the things it was supposed to stand for, and a little more tough love from Limbaugh before the election might have done some good.

AMERICAN TROOPS fear the loss of Rumsfeld. "Indeed, some members of the 101st Airborne Division and other troops approached by The Times as they prepared to fly home from Baghdad airport yesterday expressed concern that Robert Gates, Mr Rumsfeld’s successor, and the Democrat-controlled Congress, might seek to wind down their mission before it was finished."

CLAUDIA ROSETT wonders why the U.N. is meddling in U.S. politics by trying to block the Bolton nomination. " It’s the job of those wearing the hats of UN staffers to serve the member states, not advise them on choosing their ambassadors. Would Kofi Annan and his deputy, Mark Malloch Brown (who as the UN’s #2 has done plenty of his own opining about U.S. domestic politics), care to tell us whether anyone else carrying a UN calling card has been making the rounds of U.S. senators to offer opinions on Bolton’s confirmation?"

ANN ALTHOUSE IS DEPRESSED: "It's the failure of Americans to support the war. It's the folding and crumpling because things didn't go well enough and the way we conspicuously displayed that to our enemies. They're going to use that information. For how long? Forever."

It's okay to be depressed. It's just not OK to give up.

Austin Bay takes a less negative view.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED at The New York Times!

JOHN TAMMES ROUNDS UP news from Afghanistan.

WELL, IT WAS A "NEW DIRECTION" IN 1972: Democrats seek war advice from George McGovern.

FOREIGN ENTITIES TRYING TO END-RUN THE FIRST AMENDMENT?

A federal appellate court heard arguments yesterday in the case of a New York-based counterterrorism researcher who was ordered by a British court to pay and apologize to a Saudi billionaire she accused of funding terrorism.

One judge on the three-judge panel yesterday expressed reservations about the British court order. Still the questions from the judges of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals suggested that they had significant doubts that the court has jurisdiction to toss out the British court's judgment in the libel case.

Publishers and news organizations are bound to read the American court's forthcoming decision in the case. The case comes at a time of raised interest in "libel tourism"— the phenomenon of foreigners filing libel suits in British courts based on claims that American judges would quickly toss out on First Amendment grounds. Whether American courts can block those judgments, or at least certain of their provisions, is a question none of the judges yesterday appeared especially eager to tackle. And the court expressed little interest in the First Amendment concerns that legal observers say are present in the case.

This deserves more attention than it gets.

My advice to Saudis who don't want to be accused of supporting terrorism: Get your country to stop being a major source of funds for terrorists. That's better than engaging in legal terrorism against a free press of the sort that isn't allowed in your own benighted country.

November 09, 2006

DEMOCRATS: STILL TRYING TO WIN OVER THE SOUTH!

A Democratic congressman from New York says he wasn't trying to insult Mississippi in published remarks Thursday, but a Republican colleague from Mississippi says Rep. Charles Rangel should apologize to the state.

Rangel, D-N.Y., was quoted in a Thursday article in The New York Times, saying: "Mississippi gets more than their fair share back in federal money, but who the hell wants to live in Mississippi?"

I saw Dennis Kucinich holding forth on Cavuto today, too, about how he's now at the political center or something like that. Hey, maybe he'll finally be able to pass his bill banning space-based mind control weapons!

Say what you will about the elections, but I think the Democratic Congress is going to bring us a lot of comic relief.

UPDATE: I'm not the only one who sees it this way!

N.Z. BEAR ON THE REPUBLICAN LEADERSHIP ELECTIONS: Don't rush things!

The Grand Olde Party got its head handed to it last night. Any other interpretations are deluded, foolish, or otherwise stupid.

So, the obvious course of action is for the GOP to spend a few days --- oh, a week at most --- performing a perfunctory survey of the warm bodies closest to their leadership seats, and immediately anoint one of them to be the new face of the Republican Party. That's the great thing about leadership elections, you know --- no need to actually consult anyone resembling the actual rank-and-file of the Party. No need to actually consult the people who give the money, who work the campaigns, who actually, 'ya know, cast the votes to keep a party in power. Or --- who don't.

Wrong. Very wrong. Amazingly, stupendously, staggeringly and absurdly wrong.

The reality of November 8, 2006 is that the Republican party no longer has control of the agenda in Congress. And yes, that includes the Senate --- it's over. The GOP doesn't get to decide what bills will come to the floor. The GOP won't control committees; it won't control legislation. There is one, and only one, major decision that the Republicans have to make right now to influence how the next two years go --- and that is who the party will choose to be their leaders.

This is a huge decision, and it is not one that should be rushed.

Hugh Hewitt agrees: "It is simply astonishing that a party in desperate need of its base's time, talent and treasure over the next two years would hustle back to home base to consult each other on who should lead the comeback. In no other company or organization would a leadership change take place on such a schedule and with so little input from key constituencies. . . . The House doesn't exist as an island independent from the party, but the rush to engineer a succession communicates an unwillingness to recognize the significance of the set-back yesterday."

UPDATE: Establishing a "constituency of expectations."

JIM TREACHER: "Does this mean Bush is still Hitler? I'm pretty sure Hitler never let his opponents win an election, did he? Unless... this is all part of Rove's plan. "

BILL ROGGIO looks at changes in Iraq policy and wonders if they're really changes, or if they're things that have been in the works for a while.

I should mention, by the way, that Bill will be (self) embedding in Iraq again and could use any support you'd care to give him.

FROM TODAY'S SPEECH BY DONALD RUMSFELD: "As we look back on those critical years during the Cold War, so too our grandchildren will one day look back on this time as a defining moment in America’s history. History will judge whether we did all we could to defeat a vicious extremist enemy that threatened our security, our freedom, our very way of life. Or, if we left it to the next generations to try to fight an enemy strengthened by our weakness, and emboldened by our lack of resolve."

Follow the link for the whole text.

UPDATE: Dean Barnett has further thoughts on Rumsfeld's departure.

OK, I WROTE EARLIER that I liked PJM's coverage of the elections, especially the video. Virginia Postrel thought it was too video-heavy, but breaking the tie is Michael Malone of ABC News' Silicon Insider:

This week, in what may prove to be a landmark in the story of the blogosphere, the blog aggregator Pajamas Media handed out a pile of inexpensive digital cameras to its contributors and asked them to document their experiences on Election Day.

It was a glimpse of the future. And if I was Sony or Canon or Nikon, I'd be looking at that 57 million number and planning a whole marketing campaign around my new Budget Blog camera line.

I do think that this is the future. I spoke today (one reason blogging has been so light) at a conference of journalism and PR folks at UT, and demonstrated some of the digital-camera web video. They were very impressed at what cheap cameras could do, and they should have been.

"DEAN DEMANDS RECOUNT, as Dems capture Senate."

HEH: "Two days after the mid-terms, the New York Times discovers that Democrats can be corrupt, too. Who knew?"

POST-RUMSFELD: A look at four policy battles that could shape the military.

THE DEMOCRATS MAY HAVE RUN THE TABLE, but look who's topping the charts! Apparently, it's still hip to be square.

DONALD RUMSFELD TELLS ALL: Heh.

THE DEMOCRATS WIN, AND THE SUN STARTS TO SHINE! "Poll: Afghans express confidence in country's direction, security."

Who knows what else will suddenly get better this week?

BILL QUICK:

Remember: what happened last Tuesday wasn't a disaster. It was Democracy. It was a disaster only for those who believe that there should be one permanent ruling party, no matter how decadent, treacherous, and sleazy that party is.

Be of good cheer. The Republicans will be back in 2008, and much better for what happened to them in 2006.

Bill's not usually the optimist in the room, but I think he's right.

DANIEL GLOVER SAYS IT WAS A BLOODBATH FOR THE "FIGHTING DEMS:"

After Iraq war veteran Paul Hackett, a Democrat, nearly scored a special-election upset in Ohio's strongly Republican 2nd District last summer, bloggers and other Democrats began touting war veterans as candidates for 2006. They touted dozens of such candidates as the antidote for the Democratic Party's long-running electoral ailments on the defense and security fronts.

But if Democrats have the same low tolerance for political casualties as they have shown for battlefield casualties in Iraq, their push to recruit and elect to Congress military veterans who run as Democrats will be short-lived.

Two words: John Kerry.

BUT THEN WHERE WILL THEY PUT THE RED-LIGHT CAMERAS? "Most traffic lights should be torn up as they make roads less safe, one of Europe's leading road engineers said yesterday." But read the whole thing, which is really interesting.

Meanwhile, in Ohio voters overwhelmingly rejected red-light cameras. They generally do, if allowed to vote on the subject, which is why cities do their best not to give them the opportunity. . . .

HEH: "Me, if I were in med school I'd be going into piercing-hole-reconstructive-surgery, along with tattoo removal. There's going to be a lot of work in the future."

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON writes on Rumsfeld, James Webb, and being careful what you wish for.

UPDATE: Ann Althouse: "What do I think about the Democrats taking over both houses of Congress? I don't have much feeling one way or the other. I mistrust both parties. I'm hopeful that the kinds of candidates the Democrats relied on to win -- people like Webb -- will transform the party and make it into something I can support."

COULDN'T IT HAVE WAITED A DAY OR TWO LONGER? "Campaigning for 2008 begins —now."

UPDATE: Ed Morrissey makes the case for waiting a bit.

I think he's right. As Russell Friedman says in a different context, I think that Republicans -- and Democrats -- might want to spend some time processing past events before jumping into the next stage.

VIRGINIA POSTREL: "How about a loophole-closing, rate-flattening 1986-style tax reform from the new Congress? It would be a lobbyist nightmare, and a repudiation of the Clinton administration's zillions of tax credits for good behavior (extended by the Bushies). But if I squint really hard I can see it happening. Charles Schumer is talking the right way." Another interesting test of whether the Democrats have learned anything during their years in the wilderness.

INTELLIGENCE FAILURE: A look at Nancy Pelosi, Jane Harman, and Alcee Hastings.

If, instead of the respectable Jane Harman, the Democrats put a man who was impeached for corruption in charge of the Intelligence Committee, I think that it will prove that they've learned nothing in the past few years.

A LOOK AT Robert Gates and the "new approach" in Iraq, from The Mudville Gazette.

BILL WHITTLE EMAILS:

Over in Tim Blair's comment section, a guy named Dave S. said this:

"The Republicans lost and the Democrats won for the same reason -- they distanced themselves from their base. "

That's the sentence of the year, in my opinion.

Heh. Indeed.

UPDATE: George Will: "At least Republicans now know where the 'Bridge to Nowhere' leads: to the political wilderness. "

November 08, 2006

JIM WEBB is claiming victory in Virginia. Looks like he's got it, too.

Meanwhile, Allah has comments on the Pelosi ascension: "‘Fess up, righty bloggers: as bummed as you are about last night’s washout, you’re kind of enjoying the thought of how much easier your job’s about to get. I know. I am too."

Hmm. Sounds kind of like a Robert Ludlum novel: The Pelosi Ascension. Thrills and chills await!

The Glenn and Helen Show: Austin Bay and Jim Dunnigan on Rumsfeld, the Elections, and the War on Terror

The Democrats have taken the House and, it appears, the Senate. Donald Rumsfeld has resigned, to be replaced by Robert Gates. What's next for the War on Terror and U.S. national security?

We talk to Jim Dunnigan, publisher of StrategyPage.com and author of numerous books on war, intelligence and security, and Austin Bay, who blogs at AustinBay.net, and who is the author of both novels and nonfiction works on war and military matters. They describe Rumsfeld's legacy of military reform and warfighting, and talk about what's coming next. Sounds like it's not quite time to get fitted for a burka just yet. Plus: Now that the Democrats are in charge, will Charles Rangel bring back his proposal to reinstate the draft?

You can listen to this podcast -- no downloading needed -- by going here and clicking on the gray Flash player. Or you can download the program by clicking right here. A lo-fi version suitable for dialup is available by going here and selecting the "lo fi" version. And you can always subscribe via iTunes, which is what all the cool kids do, by clicking right here. Show archives are here.

This podcast is brought to you by Volvo Cars US -- if you buy a Volvo, tell 'em it's all because of The Glenn And Helen Show.

UPDATE: The Mudville Gazette: "Listen twice."

TODD ZYWICKI: "Did anyone else notice that the Libertarian Party in Montana (Stan Jones, who received 3%) provided far more than the margin of victory between Tester and Burns?"

Dave Kopel notices that it wasn't a bad election for gun rights, either. And ten states passed anti-Kelo property rights initiatives.

MARK TAPSCOTT EXPLAINS THE ELECTIONS in one sentence: "When Republicans worry more about staying in government than about limiting government, they get thrown out of government."

Heh. Indeed.

JAMES TARANTO: "This column is scrupulously nonpartisan, but we will bend the rules for a moment and acknowledge that last night's outcome was not what we were hoping for."

A LOOK AT THE AIRBUS MESS, from Popular Mechanics.

JOHN BOEHNER will seek the Republican leadership in the House. The Hotline blog still calls it "Majority Leader," but of course it'll be the Minority Leader in the next Congress. Old habits die hard!

Here's the PorkBusters podcast interview with Boehner.

MICHAEL SILENCE EMAILS that the Knoxville News-Sentinel has started running Chris Muir's Day by Day cartoon in its print edition. I'm happy about that, and I'm not the only one!

AUSTIN BAY HAS SOME THOUGHTS ON RUMSFELD'S RESIGNATION, plus this more general observation:

The big race in 2006 was Lamont versus Lieberman. Joe Lieberman won. That’s a warning to Nancy Pelosi and Co. If they go “nutsroots-Lamont Left” they will squander their victory. Ed Driscoll suggests 2006 is a race-to-the center. Lieberman has carved out one the strongest personal political positions in America. For Joe, November lemonade from the lemons of August.

Joe Lieberman is this man. Nancy Pelosi had better pay attention.

But will she?

MAKING PROGRESS ALREADY: Hastert's out of the GOP leadership race.

THE ECONOMIST: Libertarians emerge as a force. "Libertarians are a generally Republican-leaning constituency, but over the last few years, their discontent has grown plain. It isn't just the war, which some libertarians supported, but the corruption and insider dealing, and particularly the massive expansion of spending. Mr Bush's much-vaunted prescription drug benefit for seniors, they fume, has opened up another gaping hole in America's fiscal situation, while the only issue that really seemed to energise congress was passing special laws to keep a brain-damaged woman on life support."

Gee, where have I heard this stuff before?

I caught a bit of Limbaugh talking about how this loss was the Republicans' own fault, too. And, you know, his analysis sounded kind of familiar, as well. And for an idea of just how out-of-touch the GOP leadership has been, listen to this interview with Ken Mehlman from back in May, when there was still time to do something.

UPDATE: Read this post by Dean Barnett, too.

TOM COBURN'S OFFICE sends his statement on the elections. Big line: "This election does not show that voters have abandoned their belief in limited government; it shows that the Republican Party has abandoned them. In fact, these results represent the total failure of big government Republicanism."

Click "read more" for the full statement.

Read More ?


ONE FREE KOREA writes:

On Korea policy, I tend to agree with Gordon Flake: I really don’t think it will make much of a difference. Nobody in Congress really seems to love either of the Koreas anymore. My impression from my various field trips to Congress was that some of the Dems were more hawkish than some of the Republicans, although the Republican staff made a far better impression for the depth of their knowledge and concern. If International Relations goes to Tom Lantos, I certainly won’t cry in my beer.

Plus some historical perspective on midterm elections.

BILL WHITTLE HAS SOME THOUGHTS on what to do next.

BUSH: Rumsfeld's resigning, to be replaced by former CIA Director Robert Gates.

We're going to try to do a podcast interview with Austin Bay and Jim Dunnigan about the impact this is likely to have later today.

UPDATE: The Belmont Club: Is America turning into Israel?

CHANGES AHEAD FOR LABOR LAW? One of my colleagues thinks so, and I'd say the elections make that more likely.

NEAL BOORTZ: "The voters gave the Republicans a well-earned kick in the gut yesterday. . . . This is good news .. and bad news. Good news because of the message it sends to Republicans. Bad news because of the message it sends to Islamic jihadists who are dedicated to the destruction of our culture. One thing is certain. The Republicans worked very hard for this defeat."

ONE THING THAT WENT WELL YESTERDAY, at least in my opinion, was the election coverage from Pajamas Media. In particular, I thought the marriage of cheap digital cameras that shoot good video -- all the PJ video, except for my clip, was done with this inexpensive Canon Powershot -- with lots of people having access to YouTube really worked out well. I hope we'll see a lot more of that kind of thing, which I've been pushing for years. The video capabilities of digital still cameras, as I've noted in the past, are underappreciated, but terrific for the Web.

A ROUNDUP OF ELECTRONIC-VOTING GLITCHES at CIO Insight.

UPDATE: Ouch: "As the line was shifting I heard a woman say 'This is what it's going to be like with government health care.'"

BOB CORKER: "Looks like I might be the freshman class of one on the Republican side."

GRAND ROUNDS IS UP: Actually, it was up yesterday, but nobody paid any attention because of the election.

JOHN FUND LOOKS AT ACORN in Missouri.

AUSTIN BAY LOOKS AT Saddam's conviction in this week's column.

ANN ALTHOUSE recaps the CNN blogger party and observes: "It was actually surprising how un-socially-awkward most bloggers are."

Nor was her judgment distorted: "To answer your question: I had only two small glasses of red wine."

ED DRISCOLL SAYS we're galloping toward the center.

A BIG WINNER: Taegan Goddard, who's got a whole new market now.

BRIAN MALONEY DECLARES A "NO-SULK ZONE:" Of course, as he notes the election results will be good for conservative talk radio, which thrives in opposition.

MIKE PENCE:

Some will argue that we lost our majority because of scandals at home and challenges abroad. I say, we did not just lose our majority, we lost our way.

While the scandals of the 109th Congress harmed our cause, the greatest scandal in Washington, D.C. is runaway federal spending.

After 1994, we were a majority committed to balanced federal budgets, entitlement reform and advancing the principles of limited government. In recent years, our majority voted to expand the federal government's role in education, entitlements and pursued spending policies that created record deficits and national debt.

This was not in the Contract with America and Republican voters said, 'enough is enough.

Our opponents will say that the American people rejected our Republican vision. I say the American people didn't quit on the Contract with America, we did. And in so doing, we severed the bonds of trust between our party and millions of our most ardent supporters.

As the 110th Congress convenes next year, Republicans must cordially accept defeat and dedicate ourselves to advancing our cause as the loyal opposition knowing that the only way to retake our natural, governing majority, is to renew our commitment to limited government, national defense, traditional values and reform.

In 2004, the advice to the Republicans was "Great election, kid. Don't get cocky." They did.

THE DAY AFTER: A roundup, from Pajamas Media.

"I, FOR ONE, welcome our new Democratic overlords."

NICK SCHULZ VOTED ELECTRONICALLY YESTERDAY, and has some thoughts.

COMMENTS ON LAMONT/LIEBERMAN from Ron Silver.

ELECTION ANALYSIS from Christopher Hitchens. James Webb "may not be the Scoop Jackson that the Democrats need, but he's the next best thing." I think that's right.

ARIZONA'S GAY MARRIAGE BAN seems to have been rejected by the voters. Good for them. Too bad it's the only place where that happened.

MICHIGAN VOTES DOWN AFFIRMATIVE ACTION: "Michigan voters on Tuesday approved a ban on affirmative action at the state’s public colleges and in government contracting. The vote came despite opposition to the ban from most academic and business leaders in the state — and the history in which the University of Michigan played a key role in preserving the right of colleges to consider race as a factor in admissions."

IF YOU CAN'T MAKE IT THERE, CAN YOU MAKE IT ANYWHERE? South Dakota's abortion ban was rejected by the voters.

AN ENDANGERED SPECIES REBOUNDS: There will be a lot more Blue Dog Democrats, a formerly shrinking breed, in the new Congress.

A PREDICTION:

I wonder what will happen in the next two years... other than that lots of folks will run for President... and we'll all look on and criticize. No one can possibly do that much in the new set up. The Democrats will be expected to do something -- a new direction! -- but what can they really do?

It's likely to be gridlock, which is what I think a lot of voters wanted.

BLOGGING KNOXVILLE STATE REPRESENTATIVE Stacey Campfield won reelection handily despite a rather vigorous effort to unseat him, as his blogging upset the powers-that-be in both parties. All hail the power of the blog!

BOB CORKER WON, but it was closer than the polls suggested. This suggests that Mickey Kaus was right, and that Tennesseans were more embarrassed to tell pollsters that they were voting for a Democrat, as opposed to the conventional wisdom that people lie about their willingness to vote against a black candidate.

A.C. Kleinheider credits Ford with a gracious concession speech and notes that Ford ran a great campaign until his stumbles at the end. I have to agree. I suspect we'll be hearing from Harold Ford, Jr. again.

DEMOCRATS HAVE THE HOUSE, with a gain of about two dozen seats, and look likely to take the Senate when all the counting is done.

Looks like my pre-mortem was merely a bit ahead of schedule. And I think that this defeat really was the result of a series of unnecessary Republican errors. The GOP leadership needs an overhaul, and I think it will get one.

The Democrats now have a chance to govern, not just carp, and how well they do over the next couple of years will have a lot to do with whether they have a shot at the White House in 2008. Perhaps getting back into power will also encourage a bit of responsibility. We'll see. If nothing else, the bitterness that comes with losing, and being out of power, is likely to recede a bit. Republicans would be wise not to succumb to a similar bitterness, especially as this defeat could have been avoided if they'd stuck to their principles. Maybe they'll pay more attention to libertarians, too.

Upside for the GOP: The economy is probably peaking, with record low unemployment, record high Dow averages, and low interest rates. If (when) things go downhill, there's somebody else to share the blame!

BILL BRADLEY interviews Schwarzenegger strategist Matthew Dowd. Is Schwarzenegger a model for Republican success?

CHARGES OF VOTER INTIMIDATION IN CONNECTICUT, reported by Solomonia.

November 07, 2006

ELECTION LAW BLOGGER RICK HASEN looks at the prospects for a recount in Virginia.

GAY MARRIAGE BAN passes in Wisconsin.

A GOOD OBSERVATION:

Happy or suicidal with tonight's results, something colossal and profoundly important has happened in the United States beginning in 2000 — the re-engagement of the American people with politics. We have had four enormously consequential elections in a row now in which voters have cast their ballots in numbers that we were told we'd never see in our lifetimes. I don't see how you can view this as anything but a wondrous development for the United States.

Indeed.

JIM LINDGREN HAS BEEN CRUNCHING THE NUMBERS and projects a Webb victory -- by 550 votes. He predicts: "A recount is almost certain."

FOX REPORTS THAT THE WASHINGTON POST has withdrawn its projection of a Cardin victory. Fox is still projecting Cardin.

STEVE COHEN HAS WON Harold Ford Jr.'s old House seat, defeating Harold's brother Jake who ran as an Independent after losing the primary.

TOM REYNOLDS (R-NY, NO RELATION) is projected to win.

ANOTHER VICTORY FOR CONSERVATIVE DEMOCRATS: Heath Shuler wins.

ELECTION-ORIENTED PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT? IF SO, IT WORKED: Nifong reelected.

RAMESH PONNURU NOTES that Libertarian candidates are costing Republican seats: "So far, losing because of libertarians hasn't caused Republicans to move toward the libertarians ideologically. But maybe things will change this time." Let's hope.

UPDATE: Reader Joel Mackey emails:

As a Republican with libertarian leanings my attitude walking into the polling booth was as follows:

Rep, Dem, Lib, other....on ballot....vote Lib
Rep, Dem....on ballot......vote Rep
Rep....unopposed...... no vote

Basically a Libertarian straight ticket while denying Democrats any votes as well as denying Republicans any votes that would not put a Democrat into office, that is not to say that a local democrat was not deserving, but I would not vote for a beltway Democrat.

I am still of two minds regarding Democrats taking any power in Washington, on the one hand I detest it, but if thier hold on power only lasts two years, I think it could be constructive.

My main impression from this election season is that voting for national office is like trying to execute brain surgery with a 10 pound sledge hammer.

How well that works depends on the desired result. . . .

CELEBRATING VICTORY at Lieberman HQ.

THE STEELE CAMPAIGN is not conceding.

OVER AT MILBLOGS, Greyhawk is blogging the Iraq-war record of candidates as elections are called in their favor. He emails: "Looks like if this election was a 'referendum on Iraq' then Bush might be a big winner. (If you believe what the candidates themselves say...)"

DAN RIEHL IS CALLING VIRGINIA FOR GEORGE ALLEN, which is more than the TV networks are willing to do.

UPDATE: Michael Barone was just saying that the Virginia race is so close that it may lead to a recount.

MARK STEYN is liveblogging the elections. Excerpt: "Hugh made another sharp point, noting that in Florida the Republicans in effect gave away a Senate seat. Given the way the GOP have held the Governor's mansion, and Katherine Harris' House seat, and Foley's seat, it seems clear that almost any credible Senate candidate could have swiped that seat out from under the Dems."

As I said before, "unforced errors."

NO MATTER WHO WINS TONIGHT, Nick Gillespie tells Richard Miniter that Americans will probably lose.

JUST SAW MCCAIN TALKING ABOUT THE GOP'S PROBLEMS, and he sounded a lot like my "pre-mortem."

THE TV COMMENTATORS have all but written Harold Ford, Jr. off. A.C. Kleinheider looks at the early returns and says not so fast.

FOX SAYS CHAFEE HAS LOST TO WHITEHOUSE, giving the Dems another Senate pickup.

Huh. Pro-war Lieberman -- targeted by antiwar types on that issue -- wins. Chafee -- who was much more anti-war -- loses.

A ROUNDUP OF BLOGGER PREDICTIONS, from Wizbang. Even most righty bloggers expect a big Dem win.

FOX JUST CALLED MARYLAND FOR CARDIN, even though Steele has 55% at the moment, with 1% in.

glennwebcam.JPGWELL, I CAN'T MATCH ANN ALTHOUSE'S PHOTOBLOGGING from the CNN Blogger party -- since I'm not there, and since the network problems have drastically inhibited my virtual presence.

But this picture from the CNN Situation Room blog is kind of cool. Appropriately enough, they put me in front of the bar. . . .

UPDATE: Haven't been able to watch the coverage on CNN's pipeline. Testing my connection shows 3mbps, so I think the problem's on their end. Dang, and I put in my credit card, too.

CNN HAS JUST CALLED CONNECTICUT FOR JOE LIEBERMAN: The Netroots will be unhappy now, no matter what else happens. And it's a consolation prize for the righties, no matter what else happens. In the grand Althouse plan, keeping everybody humble . . . .

Greenfield is speculating on whether Lieberman might switch.

ON CNN, they're noting that the Dems seem to be doing better with conservative candidates, and noting the similarity between the views of Casey and Santorum on many social issues.

BILL KRISTOL'S John Madden-style diagrams on Fox really don't work.

MALKIN ON FOX on the blogosphere.

LOADS OF STUFF at RealClearPolitics.

DEAD HEAT IN VIRGINIA, Allen 50/Webb 49. Stay tuned.

UPDATE: Steady at 50/49 with 65% of the vote in.

FOX JUST CALLED PENNSYLVANIA FOR CASEY, and New Jersey for Menendez, for a net Democratic gain of 1.

READER R. KRAUTH EMAILS: "Does the lack of an Osama election tape lend credence to the earlier reports of his death?"

HARRY REID GETS smacked by some Kossacks.

TENNESSEE'S ANTI-GAY MARRIAGE AMENDMENT appears to be winning overwhelmingly -- with, as the folks on CNN are noting, the support of Harold Ford, Jr. With nobody running against it, that's no surprise -- it had no opposition to speak of among Tennessee's political class, Democratic or Republican. Of course, that's how these things have gone in most states.

UPDATE: That was Fox, not CNN. My mistake.

HEH: Unfortunately, bandwidth problems have kept me mostly out of virtual presence -- and apparently have kept some bloggers offline intermittently, too. Bandwidth is at a premium in the YouTube age. . . .

UPDATE: Just tried again, but "network issues" stood in the way.

EVAN COYNE MALONEY interviews Lamont supporters in Connecticut.

BILL KRISTOL ON FOX JUST NOW: "George Allen would be winning this race if it weren't for the blogs and YouTube."

That's right. Allen helped himself recover by hiring blogger Jon Henke -- but he'd have helped himself a lot more if he'd hired him before he was in deep macaca.

IF YOU'RE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING INSTAPUNDIT TO LOAD, try loading the printer-friendly page, which has less overhead.

MARK BLUMENTHAL: "we all need to remember that in 2004, the exit polls had an average error favoring the Democrats of about 5 or 6 points on the margin. In other words, if 2006 turns out like 2004, a 6 point lead may not be a lead."

Related thoughts from Jim Geraghty.

CATHY SEIPP: "Despite being an evil Republican, I suppose I voted mostly like a Democrat on the California state propositions and Los Angeles city measures today."

LIVEBLOGGING THE ELECTIONS at U.S. News.

FIRST RESULTS -- A REPUBLICAN VICTORY. In Guam. Hey, the GOP will take what it can get today.

UPDATE: Michael Ubaldi emails: "Remember: As goes Guam, so goes Guam."

BILL BRADLEY REPORTS FROM SCHWARZENEGGER HEADQUARTERS: “It could be a very good night for California conservatives.”

I guess both of them will win!

IN A WAY, IT DOESN'T MATTER HOW IT TURNS OUT: The message for the Republicans -- and the Democrats -- is that they need to do much better. The GOP, as I noted before, made a number of "unforced errors" that took them from a strong to a weak position -- not because they spent political capital, but because they squandered it. They were too busy stuffing their pockets and taking their base for granted, and -- whether or not they lose big or lose small -- they could have done beter, without sacrificing any of their principles, if they'd had a bit more self-restraint.

Meanwhile, the Democrats, even if they take both houses, will have to actually discover some governing principles -- and if they'd had those on display, they'd be running away with this election right now.

I've written before that technology, diminishing voter loyalty, and new media make a third party a lot more feasible than it used to be. The two big parties are depressingly inept, each arguing that the other is worse, and both make a strong case. . . .

HEAVY TURNOUT IN MISSOURI -- dirty tricks in New Jersey.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (free link) is rounding up blog reports on the elections.

ANN ALTHOUSE IS photoblogging from the CNN bloggers' party. I was talking to people via webcam for a while, but with dozens of bloggers there and online they're having bandwidth problems and now I'm disconnected. D'oh!

LOTS OF READERS ARE EMAILING that turnout at their polling places was very heavy. Don't know how representative this is, but it squares with my impression -- and with what the pollworkers told me at my own early-voting location -- that this is more like a Presidential year than a midterm election in terms of turnout. I suspect that makes the polling models less reliable, but I don't know in which direction.

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER CASTS HIS VOTE: Roger Simon and Bill Bradley were there, and witnessed one of the dumbest press questions ever recorded.

CHEATMANIA: Both sides declaring elections "bogus unless they win." Jeez.

BAD NEWS FOR REPUBLICANS? Just saw them saying on CNN that "Corruption" was the number one issue mentioned by voters in exit polls. If -- and it's a big "if" -- this is an accurate reflection I think the GOP will wish it had passed all those promised ethics reforms that it didn't deliver.

SIXTY SECOND PUNDITRY: Mary Matalin prognosticates to Richard Miniter.

KAUS on the Democrats: "What does it tell you about a political party if in a year of epic disaster for their opponents the best they can hope for is a 51-49 majority in the Senate?"

ecmjoe.jpg
ANDREW MARCUS has a video interview from Lieberman headquarters.

UPDATE: Evan Coyne Maloney is there, too, covering things for Pajamas Media and sends this snap from his Macbook.

ADAM NAGOURNEY observes that for Democrats, even a win may feel like failure.

Ann Althouse comments: "Hey, I kind of like the idea of everyone feeling like they lost! Keep everyone humble."

Both parties have a lot to be humble about.

YES, I WAS INVITED TO THE CNN BLOG PARTY in Washington, DC and I would have really liked to have been able to make it, but family issues made that impossible. But they fedexed me a Mac-mini-based webcam setup and I'll be participating that way. Not as good as being present in the flesh, but kind of cool.

JOHN FUND OFFERS an hour-by-hour guide to tonight's election results.

KNOWLEDGE AT A GLANCE: N.Z. Bear has set up an election results tracking page that's very cool.

JUST A REMINDER that there's loads of election coverage over at Pajamas Media.

POLITICS ON THE STREET: I ran across some Corker supporters on a streetcorner in Knoxville, the kind of thing you don't usually see in a midterm election. So I stopped and chatted with them.

THE HOTLINE BLOG REPORTS: "We've checked in with the national parties, and aside from minor, sporadic tangles and anecdotal evidence of high turnout, there are no major national voting problems."

IS THERE A CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO LETHAL SELF-DEFENSE? Eugene Volokh takes a look.

DANIEL GLOVER LOOKS AT who bloggers are donating to.

MY NEPHEW TURNED TWO YESTERDAY, and I sent him this train set. I was a little afraid of inflicting too much assembly-work on my brother, but it didn't look too bad. He reports: "Hey... got the train set together quick & easy. I was a bit daunted at first, but it was nowhere near as complex or as large as I first thought. William took to it immediately, and, much to my amazement, was saying 'toot toot, all aboard' as soon as he started it going. Beats me where he learned that!"

My guess: From television. As Homer Simpson has observed, it teaches us so much . . . .

UPDATE: Wow, lots of InstaPundit readers like those trains. I've gotten many, many emails like this one from reader Neal Alcott:

The GeoTrax train sets are great for younger kids. We purchased one for our son when he was 3 (he's now 5). Since they are relatively easy to assemble, he can take them apart and reconfigure. I help him with the layouts sometimes to keep everything in a "confined" area! Every Christmas and birthday he receives add-on kits, so you may start receiving "requests" for particular kits!

See, I had never heard of this -- I just went by the Amazon recommendations. It's the wisdom of crowds!

THOUGHTS ON RATIONALITY AND VOTING, from Greg Mankiw.

A.C. KLEINHEIDER on those who would play the race card on a Harold Ford defeat:

Yes, Harold Ford would be the first black senator from this state since Reconstruction.

How many black senators have there been total elected in this county? Do you know?

There's only one now -- Barack Obama. He was victorious against another African American, a conservative ideologue carpetbagger who was essentially a pinch hitter for disgraced candidate, Jack Ryan. Obama may be a fine Senator but his electoral achievement was no great feat.

Before Obama?

Two.

There have been five black U.S. Senators in this country. Two were appointed. So, if Tennessee is racist for not having electing a black senator so is every fudging state in the Union save Massachusetts and Illinois.

The national media will ignore this, of course.

Of course. But if Ford loses, I think it will be because he overplayed his hand. I was talking to a trainer at my gym the other day who's very Christian -- Church of the Nazarene, and constrained in her dating life by the need to find a boyfriend who loves Jesus as much as she does. But she was totally turned off by the church commercial.

And yesterday I heard a negative radio ad about Bob Corker, saying that he wasn't a true conservative and concluding that "He's not one of us." Wow, I thought -- has the Tennessee Conservative Union come out against Corker? But then came Harold Ford's voice, telling me that he had approved that message. Now Ford can run plausibly as a fairly conservative Democrat, but he's not really credible enough as a conservative to run that kind of ad. My reaction was along the lines of "good grief, what a stretch," and I suspect most other listeners thought the same.

Meanwhile, if Michael Steele loses, will it be proof that Marylanders are racist? Of course not -- he's a Republican!

UPDATE: More trying too hard: The camo cap just doesn't fit.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Democratic blogger Sean Braisted comments:

As for Ford and Corker...unless all the likely voter models created by pollsters are wrong, Ford is going to lose. Some Liberals will say it was "racism" that did him in, but I think Ford was his own best friend and worst enemy. He tried the ultra-religious angle, which might have worked, had it not been for the fact that he is a 36 year old Single man who you know gets a lot of action. Sorry, preaching the gospel about Marriage and Family works a lot better if you have both of those. For a single man who like "Football and Girls" to go out and put the 10 Commandments on his cards, film ads in church, and use God's name in every other sentence; it just comes off as disingenuous.

Overplayed, as I said.

"ARE YOU A JEW?" A report from an anti-war rally in Canada.

HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH CONDEMNS violence against women in the Palestinian territories.

Shrinkwrapped is pleased: "Perhaps we are seeing the beginning of accountability for the Palestinians; if so, it may yet prove once again that only with responsibility is growth possible."

SADDAM IS CALLING FOR IRAQIS TO RECONCILE: Austin Bay approves of the sentiment, but has doubts about Saddam's credibility: "Start with the corpses. He’s now on trial for the deaths of 185,000 Kurdish men, women, and children slain in the 1987-88 Anfal operation. (The AP report says 180,000. An Iraqi report I read a couple of weeks ago said 185,000. Ballpark figures for mass murder are bitter math.) Tony Blair’s opinion on capital punishment, the Pope’s opinion, the opinion of the NY Times editiorial board — none of these mean squat. The opinion of the Iraqi people matters and I strongly suspect they favor hanging him high."

OH JOY: Rick Hasen looks at the prospects for election litigation this year.

DAN RATHER defends his TANG story as "absolutely true," notwithstanding the forged documents. Boy, they're really pulling out all the stops for election day.

IT'S ANOTHER STATE-OF-THE-BLOGOSPHERE REPORT from Dave Sifry, and judging by this chart, InstaPundit should be somewhere between CBS News and NPR in terms of importance. I can live with that. I'm not sure I agree with it, but I can live with it. . . .

Hey, maybe this guy is onto something!

THAT DIDN'T TAKE LONG: "Voting machines began wreaking havoc the minute the polls opened Tuesday, delaying voters in dozens of Indiana and Ohio precincts and leaving some in Florida with little choice but turn to paper ballots instead."

Should've just started with the paper ballots and saved themselves the trouble.

MARK BLUMENTHAL WRITES on what you should know about exit polls.

My prediction: If they're bad for the GOP they'll leak early. If they're good for the GOP, they won't.

MERYL YOURISH WRITES THAT ANDREW SULLIVAN HAS nearly persuaded her to vote for George Allen. Which is no small feat considering that she's a candidate herself. She's even attracting attack ads!

AN ELECTION NEWS ROUNDUP over at Pajamas Media.

MORE ON VOTE FRAUD: My TCS Daily column is up.

MICHAEL KINSLEY looks at the Democratic Platform:

For national security in general, the Democrats' plan is so according-to-type that you cringe with embarrassment: It's mostly about new cash benefits for veterans. Regarding Iraq specifically, the Democrats' plan has two parts. First, they want Iraqis to "assum[e] primary responsibility for securing and governing their country." Then they want "responsible redeployment" (great euphemism) of American forces.

Older readers may recognize this formula. It's Vietnamization—the Nixon-Kissinger plan for extracting us from a previous mistake. But Vietnamization was not a plan for victory. It was a plan for what was called "peace with honor" and is now known as "defeat."

Read the whole thing, and don't miss Capt. Ed's comments. "In fact, as Kinsley notes, the Democrats have no plans for anything other than their normal asset redistributions to special-interest groups and selected victim classes."

A PREDICTION that shortly after the election fuss is over, we'll be hearing about the War on Christmas again.

November 06, 2006

PAJAMAS MEDIA will be providing lots of election coverage tomorrow, including video (follow the link for a sample). Description:

We’ll have video crews at the Lieberman and Schwarzenegger headquarters in Connecticut and Los Angeles. Look for frequent updates that you won’t find, in style or substance, anywhere else.

Pajamas Washington, DC editor Richard Miniter will be our inside man in Foggy Bottom.

We’ll have constant updates on critical races from our editors around the globe and across the country starting before the polls open and wrapping up long after they close.

I'm supposed to be on PJM, and on CNN, via webcam.

REMEMBER WHEN OPRAH WAS PRO-WAR? Some people do.

NOW THAT'S JUST SAD: "From the country that brought us the Boy Scouts." A war on scout knives?

But there's danger of blowback. "Justice department officials have been told of a possible influx of illegal firearms into the country a result of the high-profile campaign to get knives off the streets."

If you're unwilling to crack down on criminals, cracking down on weapons will never reduce crime.

MARK STEYN: "It's worth contrasting the fawning media admiration for Kerry's truncated tour of duty with their total lack of interest in Bob Dole's years of service two presidential campaigns earlier."

UPDATE: The Absolute Moral Authority Card -- don't leave home without it.

ANOTHER UPDATE: More moral authority blind spots.

"The most sophisticated right-wing reactionary to run on a Democratic ticket since Grover Cleveland." Hey, Grover wasn't a bad President.

$35.1 MILLION FOR INSTAPUNDIT? Let me just say that any offers in that range will be very seriously entertained. Very seriously. . . .

SEEING THE UNSEEN: A new essay from Bill Whittle.

DONALD SENSING says that he's a single-issue voter: "There are a lot of serious issues facing this country, but compared to the Islamist threat, they are not close enough even to be seen as in second place."

A LOOK AT WHAT'S GOING ON in the Chinese real estate markets, from Greg Stein.

MORE ON aging, longevity, and resveratrol.

WILLIAM BEUTLER looks at how much campaign bloggers are being paid.

My prediction -- it'll be a lot more in 2008.

A FIFTY-FIFTY SENATE? Actually, if that happens Cheney will break the tie. But if it's anything like that, as Political Wire notes, "There would also be severe pressure on certain moderate senators to switch parties."

Like those who have had their own party activists trying to beat them?

THE NATIONAL JOURNAL unveils a new blog, Tech Daily Dose.

ED DRISCOLL notices something odd in Newsweek.

RICHARD ARMITAGE CRITICIZES THE GOP for showing an angry face after 9/11. But check out the picture of Armitage.

I seem to remember hearing that Armitage reacted angrily to some Chinese journalists who were cheering the 9/11 attacks. He must have cooled his anger -- on that subject at least -- sometime between then and when he leaked the Plame information.

UPDATE: Less angry, but more deadly -- compare these pictures. Armitage appears to be attempting the "Mirror Swan Palm," but his form is less than ideal.

MORE ON VOTING PROBLEMS IN MEMPHIS: I like the Zombie cartoon, too.

It always seems to come back to zombies, doesn't it? But I don't remember anything about voting in the book.

OPENING ARGUMENT is a new web publication from the Yale Law School.

NEW DEVELOPMENT IN BRITAIN: We don't like your charity, so we'll close it.

Via Perry DeHavilland, who notes: "The destruction of civil society continues to gather speed."

SAME OLD-FASHIONED QUALITY, BUT AT A SHINY NEW URL: Crescat Sententia is now at CrescatSententia.net. It used to be .org but, well, see the explanation.

EUROPE HAS ITS WORST BLACKOUT IN THREE DECADES: I blame Enron and the American culture of greed.

UPDATE: Reader Daniel Harrison emails:

Are you being sarcastic blaming Enron and the American culture of greed for Europe's blackout? I hope so: because this has nothing to do with energy derivatives trading or for that matter the financial interests of anyone in the energy business. It actually has to do with inefficient German buraucracy which can't keep it's infrastructure in order - quite the opposite thing.

Er yes, I was being sarcastic. I was just recalling some comments after the New York blackout a couple of years ago. German blogger David Kaspar at Medienkritik revisits that history:

Remember when the lights went out in New York? The reaction at "Der Spiegel" was outrageous yet predictable. The outage was described as evidence that America was a faltering superpower with a third rate power grid.

The New York outage was simply further evidence for German media elites that America was in decline and Raubtier capitalism and privatization were all to blame. German media consumers were assured that such a massive failure could never happen in statist Europe.

In fact, the lights did go out just a few weeks later in Italy and Switzerland and Scandinavia, but the reaction in German media was neither sensationalist nor alarmist. There were no scandalous covers deriding the failures of the European economic model or way of life.

Now the lights have gone out again in Europe. This time Germany is in the midst of the outage. . . . But how could that be possible in the wonderful land of social-democratic Oz? How could a nation that has rejected brutal capitalism and amerikanische Verhaeltnisse suffer such an outage? Where are our beautiful windmills when we need them? It just isn't fair. Oh yeah, by the way: Could Bush be to blame? Maybe this is CIA sabotage...

It's Karl Rove's October November Surprise!

RASMUSSEN: "On the day before Election Day, 45% of Americans approve of the way that George W. Bush is performing his role as President. This is the President's highest approval rating in a little over a month." Not exactly brilliant, but consistent with the trend that some people see. Of course, if it were over 50% it would mean a lot more.

UPDATE: On the other hand: "President Bush's popularity has dipped to 35 percent, according to a new CNN poll, with 41 percent of likely voters saying their disapproval of his performance will affect their vote in Tuesday's elections for control of Congress." Who's right? Who knows?

MORE: Thoughts on why the polls are often wrong, including this observation: "In short, we really don't know what will happen tomorrow. The election will be decided by those who show up, and somewhere up to a third of those who claim they are going to vote--and always do!--won't."

HUGH HEWITT is warning Republicans against excessive optimism.

A HUGE ROUNDUP OF ELECTION PREDICTIONS from Andrew Roth.

TOM MAGUIRE ON THE FOLEY SCANDAL: "Ancient history now, apparently - it is the story that Times forgot."

SO I MANAGED TO WATCH SEVERAL EPISODES of The Addams Family and F Troop on DVD over the weekend. Both shows held up better than I feared -- I hadn't watched them in decades. In particular, The Addams Family shows really good ensemble acting. One of my readers wrote that "The Addams Family was the *only* show I remember on TV when I was growing up in which there was much in the way of open display of affection between a married couple." That's pretty right, and although it's subtle it's much more grown-up than I had remembered, since when I was a kid I missed some of that stuff.

On F Troop, I noticed that Forrest Tucker seemed more realistic than the other characters in that not-at-all-realistic show, and on looking at his IMDB biography discovered that he had actually served in the U.S. Cavalry before he became an actor. He must have been one of the very last guys to appear in any kind of a western who could say that.

Anyway, I certainly enjoyed both shows a lot more than "The Celebrity Paranormal Project," Mariel Hemingway notwithstanding.

UPDATE: Reader Jim Allan emails:

Just an odd thought when I read your post.

I went to Washington-Lee HS in the 50s and the person who was most responsible for Forrest Tucker's success, his answer, was an English teacher and mentor by the name of Marie Mallot. She taught at W-L for about 30 years. I was fortunate to have her as a teacher. One afternoon a large man appeared in the classroom and Ms Mallot, Mother Mallot to us, absolutely broke down as Forrest Tucker gave her a big hug.

It was quite a moment. She actually would go to his house and see to it that he came to school.

I can imagine that he needed that treatment. It's nice that he got it. A good English teacher can do a lot for you. Two of mine -- Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Ferguson -- certainly did, though they never showed up at my doorstep. But they might have, if it had been called for.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Reader Christopher Fountain emails:

Had to laugh, Glenn. My father, who refused to permit a TV in the house until I was 10 (1963? 1964?) did occasionally watch bits of F Troop with us - he was in F Troop, Squadron A (NYC) cavalry unit in the years before WWII and seemed to get a kick from the antics on TV. Other than that, don't remember him watching the damn machine, ever.

Your father was a wise man, Chris. I'm guessing he wouldn't have made an exception for the celebrity paranormal show, either . . . .

HAROLD FORD: God is on my side.

JAMES Q. WILSON on the press at war:

But the war coverage does not reflect merely an interest in conflict. People who oppose the entire war on terror run much of the national press, and they go to great lengths to make waging it difficult. Thus the New York Times ran a front-page story about President Bush's allowing, without court warrants, electronic monitoring of phone calls between overseas terrorists and people inside the U.S. On the heels of this, the Times reported that the FBI had been conducting a top-secret program to monitor radiation levels around U.S. Muslim sites, including mosques. And then both the New York Times and Los Angeles Times ran stories about America's effort to monitor foreign banking transactions in order to frustrate terrorist plans. The revelation of this secret effort followed five years after the New York Times urged, in an editorial, that precisely such a program be started. . . .

This change in the media is not a transitory one that will give way to a return to the support of our military when it fights. Journalism, like so much scholarship, now dwells in a postmodern age in which truth is hard to find and statements merely serve someone's interests.

The mainstream media's adversarial stance, both here and abroad, means that whenever a foreign enemy challenges us, he will know that his objective will be to win the battle not on some faraway bit of land but among the people who determine what we read and watch. We won the Second World War in Europe and Japan, but we lost in Vietnam and are in danger of losing in Iraq and Lebanon in the newspapers, magazines and television programs we enjoy.

Though judging by circulation and viewership figures, fewer people are enjoying them these days, which may point toward the prospect of change.

ED MORRISSEY sees the race tightening.

The Glenn and Helen Show: A Foreign Perspective on U.S. Politics

The American media have been obsessed with this week's Congressional elections, but the foreign media have been just as interested. We caught up with Mark Little and Ken O'Shea of Irish TV's "Primetime" -- a show that's a bit like our "Nightline" -- to see what interests them about the American elections, and what has surprised them about their reporting. Plus, a look at the effect of American portion sizes on Irish waistlines.

You can listen directly -- no downloading needed -- by going here and clicking on the gray Flash player. You can download the file directly by clicking right here, or you can get a lo-fi version suitable for dialup by clicking here and selecting the lo-fi version. Better still, you can subscribe via iTunes by clicking here. As always, my lovely and talented cohost is taking comments and suggestions.

Music is "Tom Brokaw," by The French Broads.

This podcast is brought to you by VolvoCars.us -- if you buy a Volvo, tell them that it was all because of this show!

And it was recorded with this digital recorder and this external microphone, which I think did a good job despite multiple talkers and lots of background noise.

SLEEPWALKING INTO A GATHERING STORM? The Examiner says that's what we're doing.

THIS WEEK'S CARNIVAL OF THE CAPITALISTS IS UP!

A ROUNDUP OF ELECTION PREDICTIONS, at TCS Daily.

WASHINGTON POST: "Soldiers in Iraq say pullout would have devastating results."

Iraqis seem to be saying the same things.

A LAST LOOK AT INSTA-READERS' OPINIONS: I've run this question twice before, but here's a last pre-election look. How do you think things will turn out tomorrow?

How do you think tomorrow's elections will turn out?
Republicans win both houses
Republicans win one, Democrats the other
Democrats win both houses
  
Free polls from Pollhost.com

UPDATE: With over 4200 responses, it's holding pretty steady at 62% thinking the GOP keeps both, 34% Dems win one house, and only 4% thinking the Dems sweep both. This is much more favorable to the Republicans than the polls, the pundits, or the futures markets. Or my opinion, for that matter. Who's right? We'll know soon.

DUMBEST. TV SHOW. EVER. Last night I caught a few minutes of "The Celebrity Paranormal Project" on VH1. Celebrities festooned with Ghostbusters-type gear, wandering around allegedly haunted places. Picabo Street as a medium. Jeez.

However, I can report that Mariel Hemingway remains very hot. She deserves better. But then, so do we. . . .

A RAHM EMANUEL / ELIZABETH DOLE FACEOFF: With video. Tim Russert's interruption is annoying, and I agree that he had an agenda.

LOADS OF ELECTION INFORMATION at ElectionProjection.com.

WALTER SHAPIRO:

Just when partisan Democrats were finally allowing themselves to revel in the expectation that they would sweep the House and maybe win the six seats needed for control of the Senate, two national polls released Sunday seemed to sound the first ominous notes from the theme music from "Jaws."

Both polls showed the gap between Democrats and Republicans dramatically narrowing when likely voters were asked which party they intended to support for Congress. The Washington Post-ABC News poll had te Democrats leading by a 51-to-45-percent margin on the generic ballot question. A new survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press had the Democrats ahead among likely voters by 47 to 43 percent. Two weeks ago the margin was 50 to 39 percent. And both surveys put George W. Bush's approval rating above 40 percent, a rare high-water mark for the beleaguered president.

I don't know how much confidence to put in the polls -- not much is my guess -- but to the extent that they've been wrong in the last couple of elections, they've been wrong in a way that understates, rather than overstates, the Republicans' chances.

Meanwhile, this poll from USA Today shows Ford 46, Corker 49, which is pretty much a dead heat.

Shapiro concludes: "The truth is that -- with unreliable or nonexistent polling in most House districts -- virtually everyone in politics is flying blind as we enter into the desperate hours before Election Day." And he also adds: "Democratic activists may not be able to emotionally survive another election night like 2004, which for many began with gleeful expectation that John Kerry would be president and ended with desperate plans to enter an ashram in Nepal. The level of despair if the Republicans manage to hang onto both houses of Congress could only be described by a Sophocles or an Aeschylus." That probably won't happen, but who knows?

Well, that's why we have elections -- to find out what voters want, not to ratify the guesses of pollsters.

UPDATE: For what it's worth, I'm told that the Ford/Corker internals show a much closer race than the public polls, which is certainly how it seems to me.

HMM. IF THE DEMOCRATS WIN BACK CONGRESS, will it be because they dropped gun control as an issue?

Election season is indeed in full bloom. Yet I can't help but notice that something is conspicuously absent from this year's festivities: Charlton Heston.

It is almost impossible to fathom, but it seems that gun control has seen its last days as a big-ticket issue for elections. This is in no way to suggest that the issue has fallen out of favor with the Republicans' largely gun-toting constituency. It merely reflects the fact that the Democrats have moved on to issues that actually mean something.

Well, Bill Clinton has said that gun control cost the Democrats control of Congress back in 1994, so it might make sense that getting away from the issue might help them get it back.

On the other hand, if the Democrats don't sweep the Congress, Newsweek makes clear that it will be all John Kerry's fault.

And speaking of Kerry, if you missed it this weekend be sure to check out this post by Austin Bay.

November 05, 2006

K.C. JOHNSON posts a Nifong Duke rape roundup.

A PRO-GOP momentum shift? How much you believe in this depends on how much you trust the polls.

UPDATE: More thoughts here.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Mickey Kaus sees some good news for John Kerry -- the Democratic wave had already peaked when Kerry made his dumb remarks.

RANDALL PARKER LOOKS AT "Eternal Youth, Overpopulation, And Instincts To Reproduce."

VARIFRANK:

How do I know the "Get Out The Vote" machine in full swing?

Well, my phone has received a phone call every hour for the past two days. I enjoyed the Ben Stein call, but the rest just go right to the delete button. It's not that they are bad, its just that theres nothing more annoying the someone still trying to sell you when you've already bought the car.

There is one other thing I've noticed. All the calls are for Republicans and Republican issues. I havent received a single call or pamphlet from the Democrats for their candidates or issues in over a week. Its as if the Democrats ran out of ammo a week early.

Hmm.

IT'S A NEWLY REVAMPED POWER LINE NEWS, with lots of new features. Check it out.

A BIG ANTI-CHAVEZ MARCH IN VENEZUELA:

Hundreds of thousands of people on Saturday marched in Caracas to support opposition presidential candidate Manuel Rosales, whose populist campaign has focused on reducing crime and redistributing oil wealth.

Rosales, governor of the oil-rich Zulia state, trails leftist President Hugo Chavez by around 20 percentage points in most private polls ahead of the December 3 election.

Chavez is a close ally of Cuba and fiercely opposes the Bush administration even though Venezuela provides around 12 percent of U.S. oil imports.

Opposition sympathizers donning Venezuela's signature red, yellow and blue patriotic colors joined the march, which spanned some 12 miles across most of the capital city.

Photos, video, and more at VCrisis.com. Just keep scrolling.

tvdiningroom.jpg

YES, BLOGGING HAS BEEN LIGHT: Among other things, I was interviewed by some guys from Irish TV, who set up in our dining room, as you can see. We interviewed them right back -- this media thing is a two-way street -- and that podcast will be up later.

HEH: "Oh, no! It's the dreaded Sunni reaction to the death sentence for Saddam Hussein. I'd heard it was going to be horribly chaotic and violent, but this, this is terrible. I mean, I'm assuming it's a pretty violent PlayStation game, probably. Don't you think?"

MICKEY KAUS: "In 2002, remember, it was a generic ballot shift at the last minute--downplayed by the NYT's Adam Nagourney--that signaled a disappointing day for Democrats. I don't expect that to happen this time, but ... "

HAROLD FORD at the Tennessee / LSU football game. Les Jones posts a report, with photos.

USING WIKIPEDIA to spread computer viruses. Ouch!

"STOP U.S. AID TO ISRAEL:" I don't think this is actually part of Ned Lamont's platform.

ANN ALTHOUSE LOOKS AT JAMES WEBB'S VIEWS and asks: "So why is Webb running as a Democrat? Can you imagine how the Democrats would rake him over the coals for saying these things if he'd happened to run as a Republican?" Maybe that's why. It's interesting, though, that he's gotten so much support from the Netroots crowd. Back when the race was new I was surprised to discover that they were backing him, precisely because his views seemed so different from theirs.

UPDATE: Related thoughts on mental flexibility here.

MICHAEL RUBIN TO VANITY FAIR: "If they have nothing to hide -- for example taking quotes out of context -- then they should have no worries. Vanity Fair: Publish the full transcripts. Now. Before the elections. Stop playing games."

Ed Morrissey has more on the subject, leading reader C.J. Burch to email: "If reporters won't tell their sources the truth why should the rest of us assume they are telling their readers the truth?"

"SHE'S A LOT HOTTER THAN YOU, BUCKO:" My brother's take on the Amanda Congdon interview. Well, yeah.

OBSCURELY FAMOUS: A look at the guy who scored the first-ever perfect game of Pac-Man.

IF THE SITE'S BEEN ACTING FUNNY, it's because I've finally gotten around to a Movable Type upgrade. Things should settle down soon.

NEWS FROM EUROPE: "Lutheran vicar Roland Weisselberg, aged 73, set himself alight in Erfurt where Martin Luther took monastic vows in 1505. Bystanders rushed to extinguish the flames. The man later died of his injuries. In a farewell letter to his wife the vicar wrote that he was setting himself on fire to warn against the danger of the Islamization of Europe. . . . The UK Times reports, 'The Protestant Bishop of Saxony, Axel Noack, said the suicide had shocked the community and that he hoped it would not hurt relations between Christians and Muslims.'"

CANADA'S INDIGO BOOKSTORE CHAIN SAYS that it's not boycotting Mark Steyn's new book -- it just wildly underestimated the demand.

Steyn's book is still doing well on the Amazon Canada charts. How well? It's just behind a hugely popular diet book!

ORSON SCOTT CARD has thoughts on the 2006 and 2008 elections:

I say this as a Democrat, for whom the Republican domination of government threatens many values that I hold to be important to America's role as a light among nations.

But there are no values that matter to me that will not be gravely endangered if we lose this war. And since the Democratic Party seems hellbent on losing it -- and in the most damaging possible way -- I have no choice but to advocate that my party be kept from getting its hands on the reins of national power, until it proves itself once again to be capable of recognizing our core national interests instead of its own temporary partisan advantages.

To all intents and purposes, when the Democratic Party jettisoned Joseph Lieberman over the issue of his support of this war, they kicked me out as well. The party of Harry Truman and Daniel Patrick Moynihan -- the party I joined back in the 1970s -- is dead. Of suicide.

Read the whole thing.

UPDATE: Further comments from Eric Scheie.

A NEW ROUND OF MASON-DIXON POLLS shows Republicans likely to keep the Senate. Do I trust 'em? Polls have been pretty iffy the last several elections, so . . . no, not really. And I really doubt that Harold Ford is 12 points behind Corker. I think Corker's ahead, but not by nearly that much.

A SADDAM VERDICT:

Former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and two other defendants were sentenced to death in Baghdad Sunday for crimes against humanity. . . .

Despite a curfew, Iraqis celebrated in the streets of Baghdad while protests were held in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit.

I hope they don't take as long with the execution as they took with the trial.

Here's a reaction from Mohammed and Omar of Iraq the Model. And here's a big Saddam sentencing roundup from Pajamas Media.

UPDATE: Hmm. Turned on the TV. Fox was covering Saddam, but CNN was running an election-themed piece on stem cell research, and MSNBC was reporting on the hot prospects for the Harold Ford campaign. You'd think this would deserve more attention than that . . . .

Oh, wait, they just teased a coming story with "Will Saddam Hussein's sentencing spark more violence in Iraq?" I should've figured on that spin, shouldn't I?

And here's another big roundup from Gateway Pundit.

ANOTHER UPDATE: More thoughts from Austin Bay:

I know, the NY Times and John Kerry have told us Iraq is a disaster. No. The US has already gotten about 90 percent of what it needed on September 12, 2001. There’s a democratically elected government in the potentially most powerful (predominantly) Arab Muslim nation, a government trying to learn to crawl under the most trying conditions. It’s a government that is learning by doing — and learning often by failure. However, as long as the US and coalition remain around to coach, train, and respond to crisis, Iraqi failures will be controlled failures.

Yup. Fostering the development of choice in the Middle East — a choice other than tyranny or terror– is a tough process.

But will we get that story? I doubt it.

Still, congratulations to the people of Iraq.

Read the whole thing.