Boehner seeks action on debt reduction

Featured image Speaker John Boehner is calling on Congress to deal with the issues of budget reductions and the Bush tax cuts before the election. And he is threatening to block an increase in the federal debt ceiling unless significant new cuts occur. The case for tackling these issues now is straightforward. If they are put off until the lame duck session, there will be little time to avoid the train wreck »

An upset in Nebraska

Featured imageIn Nebraska, State Senator Deb Fischer has upset Jon Bruning, the state’s attorney general, to win the Republican nomination for the Senate seat held by Democrat Ben Nelson, who is retiring. Late returns had Fischer leading Bruning by 40-36. She will face former Senator Bob Kerrey. Until recently, Bruning had been leading in the polls. Fischer had been running third, behind Don Stenberg, the state’s treasurer, who was endorsed by »

The Last Lion at Long Last

Featured imageLots of good books out right now deserving comment and reflection, including Jonathan Haidt’s The Righteous Mind (spent the day with him last Friday), Jonah Goldberg’s The Tyranny of Clichés: How Liberals Cheat in the War of Ideas, and Jim Manzi’s Uncontrolled: The Surprising Payoff of Trial and Error for Business, Politics, and Society (Jim is another pal, and maybe one of the two or three most incandescently brilliant people »

George Zimmerman’s Defense

Featured imageABC News has obtained a copy of a doctor’s report on a visit by George Zimmerman the day after the Trayvon Martin shooting. The report discloses that Zimmerman had a broken nose, two black eyes, two cuts on the back of his head, bruising on the upper lip and cheek and lower back pain. This revelation obviously bolsters Zimmerman’s claim of self-defense and sheds light on why local authorities initially »

In Larson’s Garden: Ten notes

Featured imageErik Larson’s In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin, just out in paperback, is the best book I’ve read since Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption. In truth, I’m afraid it may be the first book I’ve read front to back since Unbroken, but still… When I finished Unbroken I offered 10 notes on Unbroken in »

Van Jones Cops a Plea

Featured imageA sharp-eyed Power Line reader directed us to this C-SPAN video featuring Van Jones, President Obama’s short-lived “green jobs” czar, admitting around the 19:14 mark what is plain to anyone who pays attention, namely, that the environmental movement is basically an adjunct of the Democratic Party: “I’m critical of myself, first, and the environmentalists.  When the oil spill had happened in the spring of 2010, there was another moment to say, »

Who is the reality-based presidential candidate? Part Two

Featured imageYesterday, I asked which presidential candidate – Mitt Romney or President Obama – is, by training and background, more “reality-based” and which is less driven by ideology. In claiming that Romney is more reality-based and less driven by ideology, I showed how his education and decades of work at Bain and Bain Capital focused heavily on diving into, and finding answers in, data, with no real reference to ideology. Let’s »

What is judicial activism and do we need the concept?

Featured imageToday, I attended a debate sponsored by the Federalist Society about “judicial activism” between our friend Ed Whelan and Prof. Jeffrey Rosen. At the heart of their debate was a disagreement over the definition of judicial activism. Ed defined judicial activism as a form of legal error – the type that occurs when a court wrongly decides that a statute is unconstitutional. Rosen defined it as the judicial overturning of »

Team Obama flips out over mildly adverse New York Times poll

Featured imageIf a left-wing president were to lose the New York Times, there would be good reason for him and his operatives to flip out. President Obama hasn’t lost the New York Times; he has merely “lost” a new poll by CBS/New York Times taken five months before the election. It shows him trailing Mitt Romney 46-43, and trailing among women by 46-44. And he hasn’t “lost” that poll in any »

A Few of the 23 Million

Featured imageThis excellent new video by the Romney campaign is well produced and packs a punch. It features three people who have been hurt by the Obama economy–three of the 23 million who are unemployed, underemployed, or have stopped looking for work. Unlike Obama’s cartoon character Julia, they are real people. Check it out: Today on “The View”–what was this, his tenth or twelfth appearance on that program?–Obama said that the »

“You Should Know Better When Politicians Make Promises”

Featured imageOne of the funny things about Barack Obama is that his supporters seem to think that he is somehow different from the usual politician, whereas his record, and his own statements, demonstrate that if he differs from the average politician, it is only in being more cynical. This is one of the points that emerge from the new biography of Obama by Edward Klein, The Amateur. I haven’t yet read »

Who’s the Bully?

Featured imageThe Washington Post’s effort to portray Mitt Romney as a teenage bully is laughable on several levels. One that deserves mention is that the Democratic Party media itself is one of the more belligerent, arrogant, bullying institutions in our society. A point which Michael Ramirez makes with characteristic panache: So far, though, it seems that the bullying Democratic media may have met their match in the Romney campaign’s ability to »

The High Cost of Regulation

Featured imageRemember when President Obama said that his policies would cause the cost of electricity to skyrocket? Well, the cost has skyrocketed, but not only because of Obama. In February, Robert Bryce of the Manhattan Institute released a study of the cost of renewable energy mandates. In most states, regulatory authorities have required utilities to obtain a specified portion of their power from renewable sources–wind, solar, and so on. Those energy »

Green Loser of the Week

Featured imageVery tough competition for this week’s Power Line Green Loser of the Week Award.  Are you ready for the complete disappearance of the Arctic ice cap this summer?   That’s what NASA climate scientist Jay Zwally predicted back in 2007.  From National Geographic: This week, after reviewing his own new data, NASA climate scientist Jay Zwally said: “At this rate, the Arctic Ocean could be nearly ice-free at the end of »

America’s First Female President?

Featured imageThat is what the Washington Post’s Dana Milbank calls President Obama. I am skeptical, however. Combined with Newsweek’s proclamation that he is the first gay president, does that make him a lesbian? Milbank’s column is rather silly, although he does highlight some instances where Obama “brazenly flaunted his feminine mystique.” What I want to comment on, however, is this statement: His reelection campaign has been working for months to exploit »