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A Letter to Steele
You Should Become a Democrat

WASHINGTON--It’s time for a change, Michael Steele….time for you to find a new political home.
Born into a family of Maryland Democrats, you became a Republican when the most revered members of the state’s GOP were Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin and Charles “Mac” Mathias.
McKeldin was the moderate Republican who gave the nominating speech for Dwight Eisenhower at the party’s 1952 convention, and who later broke with the GOP to back Democrat Lyndon Johnson over Republican Barry Goldwater in the 1964 presidential campaign. [Read full story] 

A Most Unsettling Tendency
The Supreme Court’s Aggressive Term

John Roberts Jr., the chief justice of the United States, did not write the most important opinion of his court’s just-concluded term:  the one that allowed unlimited corporate and union spending in election campaigns. [Read full story]

A Financial Crisis?
Boehner Gets a Little Antsy

WASHINGTON--If U.S. Rep. John Boehner (Rep., Ohio) feels like renting a movie this weekend, I suggest he steer clear of the 1954 sci-fi horror flick, "Them!"
In it, nuclear testing in the New Mexico desert creates a marauding colony of giant mutant ants. [Read full story]

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Congress Passes Financial Reform
Just Three Republicans Supported in Senate

There was more than enough in the financial reform bill--now on its way to President Barack Obama--to merit broad support. 
Yet, for Thursday’s final Senate vote on the bill, 60 to 39, just three Republicans joined 57 Democrats to support reform.  In the House of Representatives, only three Republicans voted for the bill when it passed that chamber in June, 237 to 192. [Read full story]

When Greatness Slips Away
Helplessness Becoming as American as Apple Pie

We’ve blown so many enormous opportunities over the past several years. 
In the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, when most of the world had lined up in support of the United States, President George W. Bush had the chance to lead a vast cooperative, international effort to combat terrorism and lay the groundwork for a more peaceful, more secure world.
He blew it with the invasion of Iraq. [Read full story]

Editorials

 

E.J. DIONNE
Washington Post

….And, Now, for the Next Battle
You, Mr. President, Set the Agenda!

WASHINGTON--President Barack Obama allowed Republicans to define the terms of the nation's political argument for the past two years and permitted them to draw battle lines the way they wanted.
Neither he nor his party can let that happen again.
President Obama's message for the day after Democrats would be foolish to turn in on themselves in a fruitless battle over
whether their troubles owe to a failure to mobilize and excite their base or to win support from the political center.
In fact, Democrats held onto moderate voters while losing independents.
What hurt them most was this brute fact:  Voters younger than 30 made up 18 percent of the electorate in 2008, but only
about half that on Tuesday, according to network exit polls.
This verdict was rendered by a much older and much more conservative electorate.
Yes, there was an enthusiasm gap.
This only underscored that Tuesday's results mark the beginning of the next round, not the end of the contest.
Before the next election--which will be decided by a broader electorate--progressives, including President Obama, have to be
wiser about the fights they pick, more focused on the country's economic pain, and as shrewd as their adversaries have been in promoting debates that rally their troops and advance their goals.
President Obama was not wrong to fight for health care, to stimulate the economy when it was in deep peril, or to push for financial reform.
But by failing to defend these achievements, the president and his allies opened the way for partisan critics, who shifted the conversation to airy language about "big government" and "bailouts."
One result:  Only a third of Tuesday's electorate, exit polls indicated, thought the stimulus had made the economy better.
Now, President Obama needs to offer proposals that advance the common interest and progressive ideals in ways that force Republicans to pay a price for opposing them.
The economy still needs far more support, and President Obama should take up the old Republican idea of revenue-sharing by offering states large-scale assistance to prevent layoffs and tax increases.
This would be welcomed by the many new Republican governors.  Will congressional Republicans really want to pick a fight with them?
President Obama should also push forward with an infrastructure bank, which has bipartisan support.
There is no better time to rebuild our nation's crumbling public
facilities than when borrowing is cheap.  And he should address the decline of American manufacturing, a prime cause of the discontent that roils the Midwest.

To prove that their concern about undisclosed money was not simply a campaign ploy, Democrats should make a full-disclosure law the first order of business in the lame-duck congressional session, and come back to it again and again if the
bill is blocked.
Republicans need to be pressed to put specifics behind their anti-spending, anti-deficit rhetoric.
They should be confronted with budget cuts that force them to face their constituencies.
Farm subsidies are not sacred, nor is spending for weapons systems the Pentagon says it doesn't need, nor are hundreds of millions in tax expenditures and preferences.
And if Republicans continue to insist on tax cuts for the wealthy, they should have to identify spending cuts to cover the costs.
On immigration, the president should make plain that no solution is possible absent bipartisan agreement.
The continuing public mistrust of government requires President Obama to press on with reforms to the bureaucracy and to the ways the federal government hires people, buys things and responds to citizens.
Government reform should have been a priority his first two years.  Now, it's an imperative.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell declared recently that "the single most important thing we want to achieve is for Obama to be a one-term president."
Republicans and President Obama will have to get things done together, but there can now be no pretending to an impossible level of bipartisanship.
Conservatives believe in freedom for the corporate sector, in limiting what the federal government does and in tax cuts for the best-off.
Progressives believe in a government that promotes modestly more equality, regulates business in the public interest and sees public action as promoting American competitiveness.
This election didn't change that.
It is a setback for progressives, not a permanent defeat.  They took real losses but held their own in the Senate and in
key governors' races.
The real showdown takes place in two years--and with the electorate equally disapproving of both Republicans and Democrats, that battle is wide open.


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