The Commentariat -- December 23
President Obama walks out of the Oval Office to board Marine One before departing for Hawaii. He will join his wife and daughters, who are already there, for the Christmas holiday. Getty image.Tim Egan tells a lovely Christmas story. in the tradition of O'Henry's "Gift of the Magi." Read it to the end. BTW, if you're looking for the O'Henry story, you can find it here.
Dana Milbank: during his press conference yesterday, "... when [President Obama] wasn't praising his accomplishments, he was praising himself.... Careful, Mr. President. What got Obama in trouble in the first place were the extraordinarily high expectations that the nation had for his administration - and that Obama's campaign had encouraged." CW: Milbank says it was "the humility forced on him by the Republicans' triumph in November" that accounted for Obama's success. I doubt that assessment. See other analysis of the lame duck Congress & Republican mutiny below. ...
... Nonetheless, Jay Newton-Small of Time is impressed as all get-out by President Obama. She notes that "The headlines this week read, "Obama Bested GOP in Extraordinary Lame Duck Session" (Washington Post), "No Congress Since 1960s Makes Most Laws for Americans as 111th" (Bloomberg), "With Major Bills Passed, [Senate Majority Leader Harry] Reid Takes a Victory Lap (New York Times)." Small remembers this President Obama --
-- who has r-evolved into the old Obama we fell in love with at the 2004 Democratic convention:
Dan Friedman of the National Journal: "All Democratic senators returning next year have signed a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., urging him to consider action to change long-sacrosanct filibuster rules.... Adding to the momentum for change, say proponents, is a push by [Sen. Tom] Udall [D-NM] to seek a simple majority vote on changing Senate rules at the start of the session, rather than a two-thirds majority, that is gaining steam." ...
... Ezra Klein on the Democrats' letter to Reid: "They say elections have consequences. So too, it turns out, does obstruction.... [The Democrats'] Their unity stems from an unlikely source: Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who has mounted more filibusters in the past two years than occurred in the ’50s and ’60s combined." ...
... ... CW: I don't usually link to political analysis by Politico writers, but how can I resist this one by Glenn Thrush & Manu Raju titled "Mitch McConnell's Iron Grip Slips"? "... while nobody in the White House thinks McConnell has lost his grip, they see an opportunity to increase their leverage as McConnell finds himself squeezed between an incoming class of emboldened conservatives with a tea party tinge - and the eight to twelve Republicans who showed their independence on “don’t ask don’t tell” and START." ...
... Gail Collins celebrates the success of President Obama & the lame-duck Congress. ...
... What a Difference a Lame Duck Makes. Perry Bacon of the Washington Post: "... a six-week session that was expected to reflect a weakened president has turned into a surprising success." ...
... Ezra Klein on why the lame-duck Congress succeeded in passing so much legislation: "Sen. Lindsey Graham summed up the session by saying, 'When it's all going to be said and done, Harry Reid has eaten our lunch.' But it wasn't really Harry Reid who ate their lunch.... It was the Republicans.... The incumbent -- and the outgoing -- Republicans know that the fact that Republicans will have more power in 2011 doesn't necessarily mean that they'll use that power to pass sensible legislation. So those of them who wanted to pass sensible legislation decided to get it all done now...." ...
... Adam Serwer on why Republican obstructionism rendered Republicans their own worst enemy & gave a boost to President Obama, whom they hoped to destroy.
"Murkowski Goes Rogue."Meredith Shiner of Politico reports on Sen. Lisa Murkowski's new situation: "... she heads back to the Senate with a fresh six-year term without owing much to either her home state party establishment or her Washington leadership."
David Halbfinger of the New York Times examines the Senate career of New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. ...
... Scott Keyes of Think Progress: Ground Zero workers visited Sen. Tom Coburn's office yesterday. Coburn was blocking the 9/11 responders' bill & eventually won deep cuts in its funding. Watch the video to the end:
Holiday Cheer! In this USA Today op-ed, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says the TSA is doing a great job. ...
... BUT Tara Bahrampour of the Washington Post reports that "Muslims aren't alone in their antipathy toward the new security measures. Followers of other religions, including Sikhs and some Orthodox Jews and evangelical Christians, also say the scanners and pat-downs make them uncomfortable or breach the tenets of their faiths."
Greg Gordon & Kevin Hall of McClatchy News: "The Federal Reserve Board ... missed a chance to prevent much of the financial chaos ravaging hundreds of small- and mid-sized banks. In early 2005..., the Fed rejected calls from one of the nation's top banking regulators, a professional accounting board and the Fed's own staff for curbs on the banks' use of special debt securities to raise capital that was allowing them to mushroom in size. Then-Chairman Alan Greenspan and the other six Fed governors voted unanimously to reaffirm a ... magic bullet [that] allowed the banks to count the securities as debt, even while counting the proceeds as reserves. Banks were then free to borrow and lend in amounts 10 times or more than the value of the securities being issued."
Nate Silver looks at the potential effects of the upcoming changes in the Electoral College, and concludes it won't have much of an effect on the of the 2012 presidential election.
Lanny Davis & Mike Espy -- Two Sleazy Democrats Get Sleazier. Helene Cooper & Eric Lichtblau of the New York Times: "As the United States continued to push for President Laurent Gbagbo of Ivory Coast to step down, two former Clinton administration officials were trying to present Mr. Gbagbo, who has clung to power despite international condemnation, in a more sympathetic light. Michael Espy, the former agriculture secretary who is now a lobbyist, has appeared on Ivorian television on behalf of Mr. Gbagbo’s government, while Lanny J. Davis, former chief counsel to President Clinton who was hired by Mr. Gbagbo’s government this month, worked the phones and described himself as a liaison of sorts to the tainted regime." ...