BLOG by Joshua Micah Marshall

« November 4, 2007 - November 10, 2007 | Talking Points Memo Home | November 18, 2007 - November 24, 2007 »

11.17.07 -- 9:51PM // link | recommend

Crooks and Liars

Remember Manuel Miranda? He was the judicial nominations 'counsel' to then-Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) who got busted and subsequently canned for hacking into senate Democrats' computers up on Capitol Hill. Seems we've sent him to Baghdad to be in charge of teaching Iraqi legislators democracy.

The State Department has hired him to head up the Office of Legislative Statecraft at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.

--Josh Marshall

11.16.07 -- 8:42PM // link | recommend

Krongard Resigns

But not the one you might think.

Buzzy Krongard resigned today from Blackwater's advisory board.

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 5:52PM // link | recommend

Gonzo's Got Some 'Splainin' To Do

Fired Washington State USA John McKay, on what Alberto Gonzales could be facing:

"It's apparent that he had a conversation with the president about David Iglesias and David Iglesias was fired six weeks later," he said. "There was real live investigation and the Republicans wanted the indictment out in time to help them in the election, and Iglesias said 'no' and they fired him.

"Now if all of that's true and the attorney general was aware of that when he fired David Iglesias, then he has some 'splainin' to do -- and probably in front of a grand jury."

This isn't the first time that McKay has suggested criminal culpability may attach to Gonzo's conduct. I've had a hard time seeing things evolving very far in that direction, but then again an attorney general doesn't crank up a legal defense fund unless there's a "real live investigation" going on.

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 5:46PM // link | recommend

Fox News Alert

Always good to check in from time to time on the latest nonsense Ailes' bunch has cooked up:

Because if high gas prices aren't Nancy Pelosi's fault, then whose fault are they?

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 5:17PM // link | recommend

Tony Fratto takes his turn at the podium in today's White House press briefing:

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 5:11PM // link | recommend

Rove v. Kos: Does pissing off the right and the left really mean Newsweek is doing good journalism?

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 4:54PM // link | recommend

Noose

I don't usually say this: but you've really got to read Spencer's latest on what "Buzzy" Krongard told Waxman about what he'd told his brother "Cookie" Krongard, the State IG. He'd already given them a decent amount of rope to hang his brother in what he told Spencer a couple days ago. But he heaped on a lot more in what he told Waxman. Almost gave them the guy gift-wrapped.

--Josh Marshall

11.16.07 -- 4:17PM // link | recommend

M.J. Rosenberg thinks Capitol Hill orthodoxy on Israel is slipping.

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 3:18PM // link | recommend

Itchy and Scratchy

Remember a couple days ago TPMmuckraker's Spencer Ackerman broke the news that "Buzzy" Krongard, brother of embattled State Department IG "Cookie" Krongard, contradicted Cookie's testimony before the Waxman committee earlier this week.

Now Waxman wants to talk to Buzzy to get to the bottom of it.

--Josh Marshall

11.16.07 -- 2:20PM // link | recommend

CNN spokesperson confirms that network picked last night's "diamonds or pearls" debate question from among those submitted by student in advance.

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 2:04PM // link | recommend

Sweeney Cops a Plea

Fmr. Rep. John Sweeney (R-NY) took a plea yesterday in his drunk driving arrest. He'll pay a thousand dollar fine, agree to a suspension of his license and avoid jail time. Sweeney said he pled guilty "as a means of expressing my desire to accept personal responsibility for the events of this past Saturday and Sunday ... I do so and would like to as well offer several apologies. One to the court for burdening it with this matter. Two, to the general public for having creating a risk that I should not have created ... and finally but maybe almost importantly to me, my family for the pain I've caused them through this."

--Josh Marshall

11.16.07 -- 1:17PM // link | recommend

The Least We Can Do ...

The chasm that divides us on Iraq is profound. But there's one thing you'd think the fiercest voices on both sides could agree on: asylum for the Iraqis who worked closely with the US and now seem certain to get killed for it. A USAID official came up with a list of the 800 most urgent cases and so far we've only managed to cough up visas for 10 of them.

(ed.note: To be clear, this isn't about sharks like Chalabi and folks like that. It's translators, assistants -- ordinary folks.)

--Josh Marshall

11.16.07 -- 1:05PM // link | recommend

Are We in Stevens' Crosshairs?

You probably know that we've been pretty aggressively covering the Stevens' investigation for months now -- from his freebie home renovation courtesy of now-convicted briber Bill Allen to all the other corruption and shenanigans Stevens is being investigated for.

Now in a new interview Sen. Stevens (R-AK) is saying that if he comes out of the investigation in one piece he's going to come gunning after the reporters who helped publicize all his scams ...

In the interview, Stevens made vague threats to the people who have suggested that he and his son, former state Senate President Ben Stevens, might be guilty of some sort of wrongdoing. The younger Stevens hasn't been charged with a crime, but his name has come up repeatedly in court proceedings. Plea documents in Allen's own case say that payments of $243,250 the Veco CEO made to Ben Stevens were bribes in exchange for "giving advice, lobbying colleagues, and taking official acts in matters before the Legislature" when the younger Stevens was a state lawmaker.

"Your papers print (the names of) those people who have been convicted and my son's name and mine at the same time. As far as the public is concerned, it's all the same ball of wax," Stevens said. "I'm not going to comment on that ball of wax."

"But we've been included in a way that I hope people understand the laws that are doing it," he said. "Because when it's all over, some people are going to have to account for what they've said and what they've charged us with."

It was unclear whom Stevens was threatening. When asked if he meant libel or perjury, Stevens said: "No. I'm just saying there are ways to account for this in the future."

When asked if he meant political retribution, he remained vague:

"I think the people out there ought to worry about that the way I worry about the investigation. There are myriad things you can do. Just a myriad of things."

When pressed, he wouldn't elaborate further:

"I've said it," Stevens said.

All I can think to say is you should probably immediately watch our TPMtv episode about Stevens' freebie house renovation deal before he forces us to take it offline or puts us in preventive detention or whatever else he's got up his sleeve.

Actually, while you're at it, you should probably watch our Alaska Mucktacular! episode too.

--Josh Marshall

11.16.07 -- 12:24PM // link | recommend

Can We Just Close Down CNN?

Probably like a lot of people I was stunned at the amazingly lame and I'd say fairly offensive diamonds or pearls question that closed out last night's debate. I'd assumed they'd just given the last question to a complete dingbat. Seems CNN got the girl to ask that one rather than a question about Yucca Mountain.

Just to be clear, I'm not above a few cutesy or fun questions. But it's a friggin' presidential debate. And don't ask the first competitive female candidate for president her jewelry preferences.

--Josh Marshall

11.16.07 -- 12:17PM // link | recommend

Cookie's Excellent Adventures

One of the more curious aspects of Cookie Krongard's exploits as State Department inspector general is him going off to Iraq all by himself to investigate the alleged use of forced labor in the building of the new U.S. embassy in Baghdad: no investigative team and as it turned out not much of an investigation.

In response to a House subpoena, Krongard turned over an investigative file of a whopping 20 pages, six of which were Krongard's own work product -- sketchy handwritten notes from his interviews with the contractor's handpicked witnesses.

All of which gives Cookie's travelogue pictures from his trips abroad a bit of a comical gloss.

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 10:18AM // link | recommend

How Do Republicans Get Away With It?

The NYT has picked up on the McCain "How do we beat the bitch" incident that TPM Election Central first noted earlier in the week, but get a load of the double-triple-reverse psychology that Katharine Seelye's piece employs.

Her angle (albeit not a new one) is how the McCain people are trying to use CNN's report on the bitch comment as a fundraising tool. It's a hackneyed GOP ploy: attack the messenger and your opponent at the same time. But Seelye sees it as just another example of the sort of thing all the campaigns do:

Several presidential candidates this year have tried to cash in instantly on negative publicity, seeing it as a way to tap into anger that their supporters feel on their behalf.

John Edwards of North Carolina sent a fund-raising letter after he was attacked by Ann Coulter, the conservative pundit. Mrs. Clinton, a New York Democrat, derided a newspaper article about her cleavage and then used it in a fund-raising appeal.

Are those comparable? Hardly. You be the judge.

But we also learn from Seelye that this whole incident could really hurt Clinton because, you know, it's a reminder of how much voters don't like her:

Mr. McCain’s attack on CNN also serves to keep the episode involving the hostile question alive and as a reminder that many voters view Mrs. Clinton as divisive.

Sort of a polite way of saying Hillary really is a bitch.

The piece concludes with the sort of confounding logic that makes national political coverage oftentimes seem like palm reading in a circus tent:

At the same time, the episode may remind voters that many people have strong feelings about Mrs. Clinton and make them question whether they want to live with animosity and polarization.
So it's really all Hillary's fault that some crotchety old conservative grand dame in South Carolina called her a bitch. If Hillary wasn't so divisive (such a bitch) then conservatives wouldn't get so riled up about her (that bitch) and that would in turn make fair-minded people (like those of us who read the Times) happier because then they wouldn't have to hear angry GOPers fouling the air with words like bitch.

See? This really isn't about John McCain at all.

Late Update: More on Seelye's conclusion that the McCain "bitch" flap is bad for Hillary right here.

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 10:13AM // link | recommend

Today's Must Read

Which FISA bill will Harry Reid bring to the Senate floor: the intel committee version with telecom immunity or the Judicary Committee's without?

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 9:32AM // link | recommend

Warning: Asbestos-Clad Debate Highlight Reel

The good, the bad and the ugly from the Dems' Vegas showdown:

Plus, Eric Kleefeld has our written roundup at TPM Election Central.

--David Kurtz

11.16.07 -- 8:52AM // link | recommend

Stoller Responds

Matt Stoller responds to Ed Kilgore's post from yesterday about Obama, Social Security, Net Neutrality and more.

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 10:47PM // link | recommend

What Did You Think?

So, that was the debate. Below, you can see my live responses as things unfolded, and those concluding thoughts toward the end. But what did you think? Send us your thoughts. And I'll post them at TPM.

For me, there were three key moments in the debate -- the opening skirmish, which I think largely defined the debate, Hillary's answer to Campbell Brown's 'gender card' questions and the final tete a tete over Social Security. Of those three, two were Hillary's. Obama also had a moment when he went after Blitzer over his constant invocation of the presumption that no significant problems can ever be solved. But it was too fleeting.

Late Update: Yglesias has a good point here about one of the most insufferable parts of this debate. The aim behind most of Blitzer's questions was to "put Democrats on the wrong side of public opinion, even if those questions are about things like driver's licenses or "merit pay" for teachers that aren't really under federal purview. Efforts to reframe those questions by putting those topics in the larger context of immigration policy more generally or education more generally are derided as cowardly dodges. The point, after all, is to force a choice -- piss off an interest group, or say something that could be used in a GOP attack ad." My only addition to this point is that I thought Obama should have put Blitzer and his militant simpletonism in its place. Just tell him to shut up. He was terrible. But a presidential candidate should be able to stand down a moderator.

Later Update: More Blitzerly questions ...

1. Do you believe there are any times when abortion is killing a baby? Yes or No?

2. If a million people die in the next 9/11, would you be willing to chill out about torture? Yes or no?

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 8:02PM // link | recommend

Dem Debate Live Blog

8:03 ... So far, I got nuthin'.

8:03 ... Sam Marshall's 1st birthday today. Dunno if it'll come up in the debate.

8:08 ... Campbell Brown works for CNN now? I'm way behind.

8:10 ... Not sure what Hillary's answer to the first question meant; Obama's answer about as full of generalities as Hillary's. Dunno, looks like Hillary came to fight.

8:18 ... Huh, not sure I ever quite fully got what that meant when a pol talks about people "sitting around the table, just got their kids to bed." Yeah, I get it. Now I get it.

8:30 ... Obama should have cut Wolf off and told him he was stupid -- not just a yes or no question. But he didn't. He let Blitzer hold the floor. Obama also didn't explain his point well enough.

8:33 ... Richardson addressed the question better than Obama.

8:43 ... Guess Campbell Brown's research ain't great.

8:57 ... Barack's talking now, but it seems like he hasn't spoken for like nine hours. Don't know if it's me but this feels like the longest debate in history.

8:59 ... Obama's close on the surge was pretty good. First good moment.

9:00 ... Is Wolf the worst debate moderator ever?

9:02 ... Kit Seelye is a lot wordier live blogger than I am; and she blogs in reverse-reverse chronological order. Or what I guess you might call chronological order if you want to be concise about it. When in Rome! Try actually blogging!

9:12 ... Hillary: "Not attacking me because I'm a woman. They're attacking me because I'm ahead." Good line, well delivered. Regardless, now we've got to go back to Campbell Brown, who at this point I think Hillary has made to look like a fool. That's almost a decent reason to support here right there ... I think Brown thought she was going to trip Hillary up on that one but she was so ham-fisted and lame about it that Hillary basically hit that one out of the park.

My reactions right after a debate often tend to be very different from what the consensus opinion turns out to be. But trying to get a feel for the broader narrative of this debate (75 minutes in) I think the basic tone got set very early in the back and forth between the top three candidates. The story going into this debate was that Hillary's veneer of inevitability had been cracked and that the knives were out for her. But she came out aggressively, and basically knocked Obama and Edwards back. Not that she flattened them, but she was more aggressive than I think either of them were quite ready for (I'll have to go back and watch the tape). And since then I think the debate has been hassled out on that basis -- basically a wash and therefore a plus for Hillary. Not sure what others will think. I think we'll still be talking about the surge for Obama and Edwards. But so far at least I say the first exchange out of the gate was the most significant.

9:49 ... Okay, that was another key moment. Obama/Hillary back and forth on Social Security.

9:52 (commercial break mull) ... One thing that surprises me about the Obama cap issue is that a few more details would I think resolve almost all the issues, at least among Dems. Is he committed to raising the cap now -- as I've said I think would be a bad idea? Or at the point where we start dipping into the trust fund or when the trust fund runs out? Latter makes a lot more sense. And is he saying he'd remove the cap completely or in part? Usually more details are something a candidate wants to avoid, but here I think the opposite is the case.

10:13 ... Am I wrong or was the whole thing pretty painful?

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 7:47PM // link | recommend

Ed on Barack and Chris and Matt and ...

Before we get started tonight I wanted to flag Ed Kilgore's post over at TPMCafe on the left's obama "problem". He gets into what some of the love/hate is about, and the key role of Social Security.

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 6:25PM // link | recommend

FISA bill emerges from Senate Judiciary Committee without telecom immunity.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 5:17PM // link | recommend

Barry Bonds Indicted

CNN: A federal grand jury indicts Barry Bonds on perjury and obstruction of justice charges, AP and CNN affiliate KTVU report.

From the AP:

Barry Bonds was indicted Thursday on perjury and obstruction of justice charges, culminating a four-year federal investigation into whether he lied under oath to a grand jury looking into steroid use by elite athletes.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 5:08PM // link | recommend

Paulose the Victim of Pro-Sex Slave Cabal?

You may remember the story of Rachel Paulose, the inexperienced right-wing comer and friend of Monica Goodling who got installed in what was first intended to be a Patriot Act appointment to be US Attorney in Minnesota. Her managerial incompetence quickly spawned an office rebellion in which all four members of the office managerial team resigned their positions to go back to being line attorneys in the office, then there's the investigation into her mishandling of classified material and mistreatment of employees. And then there's the unfortunate matter of her using racial slurs ("fat", "black", "lazy", "ass", etc.) to describe staff.

When Paulose lost the confidence of even confirmed Bush party-liner Sen. Norm Coleman, you'd think that people had given up on making the case for this poster-child for US Atty Purge hackdom.

But no.

Minnesota blogger Eric Black has been in the lead on the Paulose story since the spring. And now he brings news that Paulose's supporters are now pushing the story that she's being run out of office by a secret pro-prostitution cabal at the Justice Department.

Black's got the details.

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 4:55PM // link | recommend

Romney stiffs Fox News debate in Iowa--effectively killing the debate.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 4:43PM // link | recommend

Mukasey's Crew

The President has announced a slew of new top level nominations at DOJ, starting with U.S. District Judge Mark Filip as the new deputy attorney general.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 4:03PM // link | recommend

Can the secretary of state fire the State Department inspector general? Word is State will be releasing a statement on the mechanics of this issue this evening.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 2:36PM // link | recommend

Sifting through the wreckage of U.S. policies on Pakistan and Iran, at today's White House press briefing:

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 1:47PM // link | recommend

Mayor of the Universe

TPM Reader AN descends into further Rudyology ...

I just watched the clip that Ben Craw put together of all the various times Rudy Giuliani mentions 9-11. There was one moment in particular that actually made me laugh out loud. With about 2:45 to go in the clip Giuliani says, "I had to be responsible for the safety and security of my assistant U.S. Attorneys; for the law enforcement people who work for me; then for 8 million people..." You've previously pointed out the absurdity of a mayor claiming to be responsible for the safety of a city's residents. But I think claiming to be responsible for the safety of his subordinates while U.S. Attorney and claiming to be responsible for the safety of the very people (law enforcement officials) who are in fact largely responsible for the safety of city residents takes Rudy's hero complex to new heights. Bravo Mr. Giuliani. Well played sir.

My candidacy for Lord High Universal Dungeon Master will be based largely on the fact that I am responsible for the safety and security of one million TPM Readers around the globe. It's a terrible burden to carry. But I'm not complaining.

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 1:46PM // link | recommend

Sidney Blumenthal signs on as a "senior adviser" to the Clinton campaign.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 1:35PM // link | recommend

We'll Talk, We'll Work It Out

TPM Reader SL gets it. Who else does?

Of all the things in Giuliani's past and present I find frightening was his suggestion in the fall of 2001 that the mayoral election be postponed or its result disregarded. And he proposed doing this with the simple agreement of the candidates. This is not someone who understands what a republic is, let alone a democracy. I keep waiting for one of his critics to point this out as an astonishing disqualifier for the presidency.

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 12:46PM // link | recommend

TPMtv: Yeeeaaaahhh, That's The Ticket!

As in the courtroom, there aren't many real Perry Mason moments in congressional investigations. But Henry Waxman had one yesterday when he was trying to get to the bottom of why the State Department's chief private contractor watchdog (the Inspector General) was running interference for Blackwater and Dyncorp rather than the taxpayers. We bring you the key moments in today's episode of TPMtv ...

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 12:25PM // link | recommend

House Dems plan big push against GOP on subprime mortgage crisis, while Harry Reid plots to foil recess appointments during Thanksgiving recess.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 12:13PM // link | recommend

State IG Cookie Krongard gets a less-than-ringing endorsement from the State Department spokesperson.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 11:12AM // link | recommend

Really That Many Times?

A number of you who watched our Rudy Giuliani 9/11 commercial spoof in yesterday's episode of TPMtv have written in to ask, "Did you re-use any of those Giuliani 9/11 moments for effect? Were there any repeats? Or was every single clip a unique Rudy milking 9/11 moment?"

Well, don't tell him I told you this. But TPMtv producer/editor Ben Craw was actually kind of hurt that the question was even asked. Because, yes, every clip is unique. I actually handcuffed Ben to his editing chair and told him I didn't want to see him again until he came back with the montage of Rudy's moments trying to exploit 9/11 all the way to the White House.

Anyhow, by the time Ben was done putting the thing together he was pretty much fried. So even he didn't know how many individual clips were used.

So check it out if you missed it yesterday. And if you're a good counter, try to figure out how many individual clips are included ...

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 11:02AM // link | recommend

What If Huckabee Wins Iowa?

It's early to speculate. Perhaps Huckabee is even peaking too early. It's always hard to know with these things. But the polls out of Iowa now leave little doubt that Mike Huckabee isn't just surging or in the first tier. He may even now be tied with Romney.

Now, Huckabee has little organization outside of Iowa and the classic problem of not enough money and infrastructure to effectively capitalize on a strong showing in Iowa. But the issue is less what a Huckabee "win" does for Huckabee as what it could do to Mitt Romney.

There's been a loose assumption for a while that Romney will sweep or at least dominate the early primaries. But if Huckabee wins in Iowa (and depending on the state of the expectations game a strong second could be a "win") it could be devastating for him.

Let's walk through it.

If Romney doesn't win Iowa then anything but a crushing victory in New Hampshire amounts to a loss since it's his backyard (a big chunk of New Hampshire is part of the Boston media market and many New Hampshirites work in Massachusetts). And if there's no momentum coming out of either Iowa or New Hampshire it's really hard to see how he does well in South Carolina since he's never been ahead there in the first place.

The Romney strategy is to capitalize on momentum coming out of the first contests just as most voters are really starting to pay attention to the race. But live by the mo, die by the mo. So much of the logic of Romney's candidacy is based on those early states and he's spent so much money to build up those leads, that an Iowa loss followed by the probable negative feed back loop would pretty much mean the Romney candidacy is over.

So you can see how a Huckabee win in Iowa, while probably not doing much good for Huckabee, could have a profound effect on the outcome of the GOP race.

--Josh Marshall

11.15.07 -- 10:58AM // link | recommend

The Huckabee train keeps on rolling: He catches Romney in Iowa.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 9:11AM // link | recommend

Today's Must Read

Now you, too, can make a difference: Contribute to the Alberto R. Gonzales Legal Expense Trust.

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 8:51AM // link | recommend

A Blue Light Special

The White House is pushing the meme that it is already withdrawing troops from Iraq, and the AP picks it right up:

House Democrats pushed through a $50 billion bill for the Iraq war Wednesday night that would require President Bush to start bringing troops home in coming weeks with a goal of ending combat by December 2008.

The legislation, passed 218-203, was largely a symbolic jab at Bush, who already has begun reducing force levels but opposes a congressionally mandated timetable on the war. And while the measure was unlikely to pass in the Senate — let alone overcome a presidential veto — Democrats said they wanted voters to know they weren't giving up.

This of course is a reference to the fact that some elements of the ballyhooed surge are coming to an end. It reminds me of the old retail trick of artificially inflating a price so that you can call the actual price a "sale."

--David Kurtz

11.15.07 -- 8:07AM // link | recommend

David Broder again writes about Clinton marriage -- less than a week after vowing not to.

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 11:32PM // link | recommend

Not So Fast, David ...

From the Times-Picayune ...

The "D.C. Madam" served a subpoena Tuesday on Sen. David Vitter, R-La., requiring him to testify about his use of the Washington, D.C., escort service federal prosecutors say was a prostitution ring.

The subpoena calls on the freshman senator to testify at a federal court hearing Nov. 28 looking into the business operations of the $2 million escort service Deborah Jeane Palfrey operated in the nation's capital for 13 years.

Vitter has acknowledged being a client of Palfrey's company, Pamela Martin & Associates, and his telephone number appeared six times in the firm's phone records between 1999 and 2001, when he was a member of the House of Representatives. He was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2004.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 11:19PM // link | recommend

It's a Wrap

Osmond family endorses Romney.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 10:57PM // link | recommend

Dems Pass War Funding Bill

From The Hill ...

Staring down the threat of a White House veto and some internal opposition, House Democrats Wednesday night passed legislation linking $50 billion in funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to a withdrawal date.

The spending bill, which requires Bush to begin bringing troops home from Iraq within 30 days and to complete that withdrawal by Dec. 15, 2008, passed 218-203. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), who had said he was undecided earlier in the day, voted present.

Republican Reps. Phil English (Pa.), Walter Jones (N.C.), Christopher Shays (Conn.) and James Walsh (N.Y.) supported the bill. English and Walsh had never sided with Democrats on war-related funding measures.

Fifteen Democrats voted against the bill, including conservative Democratic Reps. John Tanner (Tenn.), Brian Baird (Wash.), Dan Boren (Okla.), Jim Cooper (Tenn.), Gene Taylor (Miss.), John Barrow (Ga.), Jim Marshall (Ga.), Jim Matheson (Utah), Nick Lampson (Texas) and Vic Snyder (Ark.) voted against the bill.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 6:02PM // link | recommend

Hillary comes out against driver's licenses for illegal immigrants after NY Gov. Eliot Spitzer drops his plan to do just that, providing instant fodder for her opponents.

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 5:16PM // link | recommend

"P" is for ...

Not looking good for State Department Inspector General "Cookie" Krongard. Today he told the House Oversight Committee that his brother wasn't on the Blackwater advisory board. Then when he was later confronted with news to the contrary, he said he'd only just found out and would henceforth recuse himself from all Blackwater inquiries.

But Spencer Ackerman just interviewed Krongard's brother, "Buzzy" Krongard, who told Spencer that he definitely did tell his brother all about it. Only a few weeks ago apparently.

Perjury charges have been made of much less.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 4:41PM // link | recommend

The Gift That Keeps on Giving

The indictment in the Kerik case suggests the White House knew about the mafia problems well before they trotted out the "nanny" cover story.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 3:33PM // link | recommend

At today's White House press briefing, we learn that the troops are coming home (and they're winning!) . . . that terrorism is born of poverty and despair . . . and that Dana Perino is no longer commenting on the Blackwater shooting:

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 2:15PM // link | recommend

Remember those amusingly mendacious wingnuts from yesterday? Now they've responded to The Horse's Mouth.

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 2:11PM // link | recommend

Falling Hard

As we've been reporting on the Kerik-Giuliani relationship, a number of TPM Readers have referred to this NYPD blog NYPDConfidential.com. The November 12th entry, still the most recent as of this moment, gives some background on Rudy's soft spot for Bernie and other crushes which trumped all else.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 1:54PM // link | recommend

McCain: Only I Can Beat the Bitch!

Is McCain doubling down with the paranoid wingnuts? McCain's campaign manager just sent out an email claiming that CNN ran the McCain/Hillary "bitch" vid because CNN execs know he's the only Republican who can beat Hillary. Feast your eyes ...

Friends,

The CNN Network, affectionately known as the Clinton News Network, has stooped to an all-time low and is gratuitously attacking John McCain for not defending Hillary Clinton enough when a South Carolina voter used the 'B' word to describe her when John McCain stopped into a luncheon yesterday at the Trinity restaurant in Hilton Head, SC.

A voter used a word that I would not have used to describe Senator Hillary Clinton and asked the Senator how he was going to beat her. Senator McCain first responded by saying that he respected Senator Clinton, as he has said repeatedly throughout the campaign. Then, focusing on the question, he pointed to the new Rasmussen national poll showing that he is the only Republican candidate who can beat her in a general election. No other Republican candidate beat Clinton in the poll.

As an independent news agency, CNN owes John McCain an apology because of the outrageous behavior of their network host Rich Sanchez. Liberal bloggers and their friends at CNN went on the attack yesterday and continued their attacks through the night. They said the McCain campaign was over because of the statement of one, lone voter in South Carolina. Well friends, we are on a comeback, we are the only campaign that can defeat Hillary Clinton and CNN knows it. We are not going to let Senator Clinton's friends in the liberal blogosphere and on CNN try to destroy our campaign. Senator McCain is a fighter and he is not going to back down to CNN.

Please click here to watch how John McCain responded to the question.

Please click here to watch CNN's Rich Sanchez's biased and factually incorrect "reporting" try to end the McCain candidacy.

Why are they doing this?

Because John McCain is the only Republican who beats Hillary Clinton in recent national polling data and who will beat her in the general election. The Rasmussen poll shows that he leads Senator Hillary Clinton by two or three points while Rudy Giuliani loses to Hillary Clinton by six points. State-by-state polling shows that he can win important swing states in the general election whereas Rudy Giuliani loses those swing states. John McCain is now in a strong second place in most, if not all, recent national polling. These polls emphasize what CNN and their liberal friends are afraid of: John McCain is the best general election candidate.

John McCain is improving in primary polls. A poll released yesterday by CBS News shows that he is now in second place in New Hampshire. He won New Hampshire in 2000 and he will win New Hampshire in 2008. The McCain comeback is here and it is real.

John McCain displayed leadership on Iraq when others were silent. He was the only candidate who criticized the Rumsfeld strategy and argued for a new strategy in Iraq - a strategy that is now succeeding. The liberal media knows that if John McCain is nominated they can no longer try to use the War in Iraq for political gain.

The liberal media has figured out that John McCain is the only thing that stands between a Hillary Clinton presidency, and they are therefore trying to stop the McCain comeback. Simply put, CNN is scared that John McCain will beat Hillary Clinton. They are right to be scared. We are not going to back down.

We need your help. We need you to stand with John McCain, a man of honor, integrity and love of country, against the liberal media and liberal blogosphere that are trying to bring him down. We need you to stand with John McCain against Rick Sanchez and his friends at CNN and their biased reporting. We need you to stand with John McCain against Hillary Clinton's allies who will do anything to prevent him from winning the Republican nomination.

Can we count on you to stand up and support John McCain against these attacks?

Will you stand up and help strengthen the resurgence of our campaign as the best candidate to defeat Hillary Clinton?

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 1:33PM // link | recommend

Romney catches Rudy in new national poll; and Huckabee surges in Iowa.

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 1:17PM // link | recommend

Rudy Asked About Regan Allegations

As to whether a News Corp. official asked Judith Regan to mislead federal investigators about her relationship with Bernie Kerik, as she claims, Rudy has a surprisingly elusive response:

Rudy Giuliani dismissed questions Wednesday about allegations made by his ex-police commissioner Bernard Kerik's former lover - that she was asked to lie about the affair to avoid hurting Giuliani's presidential ambitions.

The candidate laughed when reporters asked for his response to one-time publishing powerhouse Judith Regan's $100 million lawsuit claiming that her former employers directed her to lie to federal investigators about Kerik because of the implications for Giuliani.

"I don't respond to the story at all. I don't know anything about it. And, it sounds to me like a kind of gossip column story more than a real story," Giuliani said at the end of a 20-minute campaign stop, his only one of the day in this early voting state.

Asked if he was aware of Kerik and Regan's relationship, the former New York mayor said: "I think that's a gossip column story, and the last thing in the world you want to do when you're running for president is respond to gossip column type stories."

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 1:15PM // link | recommend

D'Oh!

I guess you could say these hearings aren't going to well for Howard "Cookie" Krongard. Anytime the morning's questions lead you to recuse yourself from investigations you're currently accused of blocking or whitewashing, that just can't be good.

In case you're joining the programming late, Howard "Cookie" Krongard is the Inspector General at the State Department, the guy charged with investigating fraud, waste or wrongdoing at the department or by contractors working for the department. But he seems to have spent his time blocking or hobbling investigations into big money military contracting outfits like Blackwater, Dyncorp and others.

Cookie's brother (small world) was #3 at CIA. And at the committee hearing this morning it emerged that "Buzzy" Krongard is on Blackwater's advisory board.

No word yet on the Krongard family's aversion to normal names.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 12:30PM // link | recommend

Greg Anrig on "intelligent design" as a window into the machinery of conservative politics.

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 11:55AM // link | recommend

Fox in the Henhouse

We've been trying to nail down whether the brother of State Department Inspector General Howard "Cookie" Krongard is a member of the Advisory Board of Blackwater. The Democrats on the Waxman committee are saying he is; and Krongard himself appeared to deny it in his testimony this morning. But we've just received confirmation from Blackwater that he in fact does sit on the board.

There was some confusion at first because Rep. Waxman seemed to say that Krongard's brother, himself a former #3 man at the CIA, was on the company's board of directors, which would be a bigger deal. But sitting on Blackwater's advisory board is still plenty to create a clear conflict. And it sheds a lot of light on Krongard's habit of scuttling investigations into Blackwater's business practices.

As a secondary matter, there's also now the question of why Krongard denied it.

Beyond that though there's a lot of evidence emerging that the State Department has been peculiarly lax in its dealings with a number of major military contractors in Iraq, seemingly enabling a lot of the subsequent rip-offs of taxpayer money as well as arguably creating the climate in which incidents like the Nisour Square shooting were allowed to take place.

More coming soon.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 11:04AM // link | recommend

TPMtv: Rudy's First TV Ad!

You've probably heard the news that Rudy Giuliani is finally hitting the airwaves with his first TV ad. Well, we've got it. And we're actually premiering it here at TPM. Even we were a bit surprised, though, at just how 9/11 focused it is. But you take a look and make your own call ...

Watch this episode on Blip.

--Ben Craw

11.14.07 -- 10:42AM // link | recommend

That's the Way the Cookie Crumbles

Already under FBI investigation, State Department Inspector General Howard "Cookie" Krongard testifies before Rep. Henry Waxman's committee today. Spencer Ackerman anchors our ongoing coverage of the hearing.

Right out of the gate this morning, Waxman has dropped the bombshell that Krongard's brother Buzzy--the former No. 3 at CIA--sits on the board of Blackwater, State's most controversial contractor.

Perhaps a minor conflict of interest?

Late Update: At issue is whether Buzzy Krongard sits on a Blackwater advisory board--not the Blackwater board of directors.

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 10:33AM // link | recommend

Today's Must Read

The FBI has determined that the Nisour Square shooting was unjustified--but will the Blackwater shooters be prosecuted?

--David Kurtz

11.14.07 -- 9:22AM // link | recommend

Already Making His Feelings Known?

Everybody seems to be reporting this morning that Judith Regan claims, in her $100 million lawsuit against NewsCorp, that an unnamed NewsCorp Executive told her to lie to and conceal evidence about Bernard Kerik from federal investigators to protect Rudy Giuliani.

Except the Wall Street Journal.

Even the New York Post has it.

Late Update: The online version of the Journal article noted above has now been updated with a discussion of the Kerik-Giuliani issue.

--Josh Marshall

11.14.07 -- 8:06AM // link | recommend

Driving While ...

Getting a Lapdance?

From the Times-Union ...

State Police received an unexpected surprise when they stopped former Rep. John Sweeney on the Northway early Sunday a female passenger on his lap, a law enforcement source said Tuesday. When troopers began following the ex-lawmaker north on I-87, just south of Exit 9, they assumed the Clifton Park Republican was driving alone in his 2004 BMW, said the individual, whose identity is being withheld by the Times Union.

The 23-year-old woman, who has not been identified, was on Sweeney's lap, the source said.

--Josh Marshall

11.13.07 -- 6:46PM // link | recommend

The Rudy and Rupert Chronicles

Just out from the NYT:

Judith Regan, the book publisher who was fired by the News Corporation last year, asserts in a lawsuit filed today that a senior executive at the media conglomerate encouraged her to mislead federal investigators about her relationship with Bernard B. Kerik during his bid to become homeland security secretary in late 2004.

The lawsuit asserts that the News Corporation executive wanted to protect the presidential aspirations of former Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mr. Kerik’s mentor, who had appointed him New York City police commissioner and had recommended him for the federal post.

--David Kurtz

11.13.07 -- 5:23PM // link | recommend

Some amusing mendacity from self-described conservative "media watchdogs."

--David Kurtz

11.13.07 -- 5:10PM // link | recommend

Kick Some Butt, John!

I guess we can count on McCain's response to the "How do we beat the bitch?" question to rally the wingnuts.

--David Kurtz

11.13.07 -- 4:38PM // link | recommend

Mukasey Makes First Big Move?

The DOJ's internal investigation into warrantless wiretapping--an investigation once blocked when the White House refused to authorize security clearances for the investigators from the Office of Professional Responsibility--has been restarted.

--David Kurtz

11.13.07 -- 4:25PM // link | recommend

Finally, The Numbers ...

In our coverage of the US Attorney Purge story a major issue looming in the background was the Republican party's effort to reduce minority voting. And a key way of doing that was to get states to pass (and the gutted Voting section at DOJ to approve) so-called voter ID laws to crack down on vote fraud for which there was in fact no evidence.

The truth is that if you're an educated and reasonably well-off person who has time free to read about politics during the day at TPM you very likely have one or more pieces of ID, in all likelihood a drivers' license. But among minorities, low-income voters, the young and the old that's often not the case. And those who don't have acceptable voter IDs are disproportionately Democrats.

Remember, the point of voter ID laws is not to eliminate fraud it is to eliminate Democratic voters. So if your voter ID law disenfranchises 10% of voters and 80% of those are Democrats you've just handed yourself several percentage points that can win you a bunch of close elections -- it's certainly easier than winning them the old fashioned way.

In any case, I return to this topic because one of these laws has been enacted in Indiana. And the Brennan Center and others have filed an amicus brief with a new quantitative study which finally puts real numbers on how many people will effectively lose their right to vote.

I'm quoting here from the press release on some of the study's key findings ....

# 21.8% of black Indiana voters do not have access to a valid photo ID (compared to 15.8% of white Indiana voters - a 6 point gap).

# When non-registered eligible voter responses are included - the gap widens. 28.3% of eligible black voters in the State of Indiana to not have valid photo ID (compared to 16.8% of eligible voting age white Indiana residents - a gap of 11.5 percent).

# The study found what it termed "a curvilinear pattern (similar to an upside down U-curve)" in the relationship between age and access to valid ID - younger voters and older voters were both less likely to have valid ID compared to voters in the middle categories. 22% of voters 18-34 did not have ID, nor did 19.4% over the age of 70. (compared to 16.2% of Indiana voters age 35-54 without valid ID and 14.1% for 55-69 year olds).

# 21% of Indiana registered voters with only a high school diploma did not have valid ID (compared to 11.5% of Indiana voters who have completed college - a gap of 9.5%).

# Those with valid ID are much more likely to be Republicans than those who do not have valid ID. Among registered voters with proper ID, 41.6% are registered Republicans, 32.5% are Democrats.

The study puts in a very stark relief what the Republican effort to keep minority and low-income voters from the polls is really about. And the Supreme Court will soon sign off on whether this is permitted -- a decision that will have a huge effect on voting rights in this country for years to come. Please take a moment to check out the press release and find out more.

--Josh Marshall

11.13.07 -- 2:42PM // link | recommend

There's a more complete version of that video of McCain responding to a supporter's query of "How do we beat the bitch?" After a bit of rueful chuckling, he says, "But that's an excellent question."

--David Kurtz

11.13.07 -- 2:18PM // link | recommend

Edwards is asked again about whether he'll support Hillary if she wins nomination.

Late Update: Watch the video. Is that a hedge?

--David Kurtz

11.13.07 -- 1:32PM // link | recommend

Trippin'...

Musharraf says Bhutto's actions since her return to Pakistan have been "producing negative vibes."

--Josh Marshall