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Tag Archives: david broder
A Modern Populist Movement
The lengths to which pundits, analysts, and establishment political leaders have always gone to avoid using dreaded populism in their political strategies for Democrats has always been remarkable to me. From Republicans since Richard Nixon, appeals to … Continue reading
A Modern Populist Movement
The lengths to which pundits, analysts, and establishment political leaders have always gone to avoid using dreaded populism in their political strategies for Democrats has always been remarkable to me. From Republicans since Richard Nixon, appeals to … Continue reading
Think Again: Conservative? Bad? How About Both?
When I began thinking about doing a column about recent developments on The Washington Post editorial page, I was torn between focusing on its increasing conservatism and its overall badness. The problem, however, is that the two appear inextricably linked. Is the problem with George Will’s constant global warming denialism ideological or intellectual? Is David Broder’s misinformed love letter to Sarah Palin indicative of a desire to ingratiate himself to Republican Tea Partiers or continued evidence of the deterioration of his ability to apply common sense to political analysis? Was the Post‘s decision to add former Bush administration official and vocal pro-torture advocate Marc Thiessen to its bevy of pro-torture advocates and former Republican officials more important for its right-wing tilt or its implied contempt for traditional journalistic values? Hard to say, really.
Of course, the categories “conservative” and “bad” are hardly mutually exclusive when it comes to columnists, making the choice a false one. In fact, based on the representation of conservative views at the Post, they often appear to be purposely complementary. One can be a deeply conservative individual politically and still find oneself offended by the constant stream of intellectual insult.
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Tagged administration official, badness, column, conservatism, conservative views, david broder, denialism, editorial, George Will, journalistic values, letter to sarah, love, Marc Thiessen, Page, partiers, Post, problem, republican officials, Sarah Palin, warming, Washington, washington post
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Battle Between David Broder And Harry Reid Heats Up: Broder Comments ‘Mind-Boggling’
David Broder simply doesn’t understand the way that today’s Senate operates, Jim Manley concluded on Wednesday. Manley, the senior communications adviser for Majority Leader Harry Reid, said that the longtime Washington Post columnist’s charge that Reid pales in comparison to former Senate leaders misunderstands the way the contemporary Senate works.
“It’s all fine and dandy to pine for the golden days of yesteryear, when politics was practiced differently, but that’s not the reality we’re dealing with,” Manley told HuffPost. “What David fails to understand is that Republican leadership in both the House and the Senate are being pulled along by the so-called birthers, the Tea Party movement and other far right fringe groups that are completely at odds with the views David claims to hold.”
Manley said that Broder’s failure to see the GOP for what it is today is common among Washington-based pundits.
“David might be one of the worst examples, but he highlights a myopic, inside-the-belt phenomenon that is at odds with the views of many Americans,” said Manley. There’s even a term for such thinking: Broderism.
The Broder-Reid spat broke into the open on Saturday night when Reid dismissed him as “a man who has been retired for many years and writes a column once in a while.” (Broder has taken a buy-out from the Post but continues to write two columns a week on a contract basis.) Reid was peeved at a column Broder had written accusing the Senate bill of not cutting costs adequately.
It may seem petty, but the Reid-Broder battle is a proxy fight between two competing approaches to politics. Reid, by attacking Broder, puts himself on the side of those attacking the Washington politico-media establishment.
“Maybe I have an idealized view of what a Senate leader ought to be,” Broder told Politico Wednesday for a story headlined: “David Broder: Harry Reid’s no Mike Mansfield.” “But I’ve seen the Senate when a leader could lift it to those heights…I wish it had that kind of leadership now.”
That’s not possible, said Manley, because Mansfield and Lyndon Johnson, revered Senate leaders, had a Republican Party willing to work across the aisle.
“LBJ had Robert Taft [R-Ohio], William Knowland [R-Calif.] and Everett Dirksen [R-Ill.]. Mike Mansfield had Dirksen and Hugh Scott [R-Pa.]. What David fails to acknowledge is that the current Repub leadership is betting on the president to fail,” said Manley.
“Why he can’t understand that is mind-boggling.”
“That’s an interesting argument and certainly there are differences between the people now and the people then and the environment that was there,” Broder told HuffPost. “But if that’s their effort to explain why Senator Reid has chosen the tactics that he’s chosen, that doesn’t strike me as an adequate explanation.”
Broder disputed Manley’s contention that the GOP blocks everything. “It is not a fact that the Republicans have refused everything. At least we don’t have much evidence of that so far. If he’s talking about a specific reaction to the pieces of the Obama agenda that have come up so far, then he’s in effect saying Obama is so frustrated that he’s about to abandon everything. I don’t suspect it’s the case. When the first measure relating to Afghanistan comes to the floor that generalization will collapse.”
Broder is probably right that the GOP will back Obama in his effort to expand the war in Afghanistan, but Manley was arguing more on the domestic policy front.
He references the fight to pass an unemployment insurance extension, which the GOP eventually supported but slowed down for several weeks.
“How David can make this kind of comment after UI bill is beyond me. It took more than four weeks to pass a bill in the senate that it took the House an hour to pass on the suspension calendar,” said Manley.
Broder acknowledged the unemployment point. “It’s a good argument as it implies to the unemployment extension. There have been many occasions where I have been very critical of the Republican stance.”
“It is a different Senate now and if I were writing on that topic — Mansfield, Baker, LBJ and so on — we might very well agree. But that was not the subject of that column and in my mind, that is not a particularly powerful or relevant rebuttal to the subject I was talking about, which is whether or not the potential savings everybody knows are needed are there in the bill Senator Reid brought to the Senate floor.”
Manley had specific gripes about Broder’s health care column, in which he cited deficit hawks to make the case that the Democratic Senate bill might not reduce costs.
Manley said that Broder’s column was discussed by “puzzled” Democrats in the Senate cloakroom. “No one could understand it,” said Manley. “We had the self-described gold standard of analysis – the CBO – highlighting that the bill reduces the deficit. And David utterly failed to acknowledge that was the case.”
Broder often refers to the Congressional Budget Office with the highest praise, but relied mostly in his column on “experts” who proclaim themselves “bipartisan” but whose goals are to dismantle Social Security, Medicare and other vestiges of the New Deal.
Broder’s argument was dismissed by his colleague at the Post, Ezra Klein. Broder, however, said he didn’t have to look far to find people who agreed with him – which is, in fact, one of the biggest problems the blogosphere has with his type of writing and thinking. “It was hardly a unique viewpoint,” Broder said accurately.
If Broder thinks that the GOP is genuinely willing to work with Democrats, the only centrist position between he and Reid might be in agreeing to disagree. “We have a Republic leadership betting on the president to fail,” said Manley. “David’s problem is he thinks this is all on the up and up.”
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Tagged Afghanistan, bill, Calif., case, column, David, david broder, david broder harry reid, Everett Dirksen, Everything, fringe groups, GOP, Harry Reid, Hugh Scott, Ill., Jim Manley, Leader Harry Reid, leadership, Lyndon Johnson, Mike Mansfield, Obama, Ohio, Pa., proxy fight, Reid, Reid-Broder, republican leadership, Robert Taft, Senate, senate bill, senate leader, senate leaders, Senator Reid, unemployment, Washington, washington post columnist, way, William Knowland
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David Broder Causes Confusion With Incomprehensible Health Care Column
David Broder is a Washington Post columnist who’s often credited with being the “Dean Of The Washington Press Corps,” which sound super fancy and important? Why then, is Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid — a man not known for his zingers — referring to his Excellency as “a man who has been retired for many years and writes a column once in a while?” Maybe because Reid’s had it with Broder’s walleyed Washington take and the way he never makes a lick of sense! In that regard, Broder’s got a tidy two-week nonsensical streak going, even by his own shockingly low standards!
Back on November 15, Broder decided that he had had “Enough Afghan debate.” He’s just so sick of hearing about generals and lawmakers, pondering options, trying to figure out a sound strategy, so that a bunch of human beings wearing uniforms, representing this nation, don’t get arbitrarily killed for no good reason! Nuts to that! And so what does Broder, who typically — and endlessly — calls for lawmakers to slowly and deliberately slog to the mushy middle of every single issue so as to maximize the yield of precious bipartisanship that Washington runs on, suggest? OH, HEY, MAKE A CRAZY, SNAP DECISION:
It is evident from the length of this deliberative process and from the flood of leaks that have emerged from Kabul and Washington that the perfect course of action does not exist. Given that reality, the urgent necessity is to make a decision — whether or not it is right.
“Whether or not it is right?” As Matt Yglesias said: “Surely this would have been a good opportunity for someone to say ‘David, you don’t really mean that do you?’” Far away, men and women will live and die by the decisions made, either carefully or foolishly, but those lives are so abstract to David Broder, who has cocktail parties to attend, where everyone will gossip about who’s up and who’s down politically, and the only casualties are electoral ones.
This week, Broder has taken a look at the state of the Senate health care plan. His column, which is damn near inscrutable, seems to say the following:
1. The CBO has determined that the Senate health care bill will reduce the deficit.
2. BUT! Some obscure poll says that a majority of Americans don’t believe that whatever health care bill we end up with will do what the CBO says it will!
3. There are people who David Broder knows whose stock in trade is concern trolling about deficits who say that the health care bill will not reduce the deficit.
4. OH NO!
Ezra Klein tosses a big, fat, “Huh?” grenade, in that direction:
I’m confused by the budget hawks who that take the line: “This bill needs to cut the deficit, and I don’t believe Democrats will cut the deficit, but since the actual provisions of the bill unambiguously cut the deficit, then I guess Congress won’t stick to it.”
People who want to cut the deficit should support this bill, and support its implementation. The alternative is no bill that cuts the deficit, and thus no hope of cutting the deficit.
What baffles me is the stock Broder places in this poll. Surely he realizes that just because a majority of people think something is going to happen, doesn’t mean that they are right? It could just be a measure of how badly misinformed the public is on the relevant facts of the discussion. It could also just be a measure of the public’s overall cynicism that lawmakers will really do the right thing when they are given a chance. But what could be causing this misinformation and instilling this cynicism? Maybe people like David Broder!
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