gordon.coale
 
Home
 


Weblog Archives

   
 
  Monday  January 19  2004    03: 10 AM

campaign 2004

The voting has begun. The sound you hear is the rubber hitting the road.

Who Gets It?
By Paul Krugman

 

 
Earlier this week, Wesley Clark had some strong words about the state of the nation. "I think we're at risk with our democracy," he said. "I think we're dealing with the most closed, imperialistic, nastiest administration in living memory. They even put Richard Nixon to shame."

In other words, the general gets it: he understands that America is facing what Kevin Phillips, in his remarkable new book, "American Dynasty," calls a "Machiavellian moment." Among other things, this tells us that General Clark and Howard Dean, whatever they may say in the heat of the nomination fight, are on the same side of the great Democratic divide.

Most political reporting on the Democratic race, it seems to me, has gotten it wrong. Some journalists do, of course, insist on trivializing the whole thing: what I dread most, in the event of an upset in Iowa, is the return of reporting about the political significance of John Kerry's hair.

But even those who refrain from turning political reporting into gossip have used the wrong categories. Again and again, one reads that it's about the left wing of the Democratic party versus the centrists; but Mr. Dean was a very centrist governor, and his policy proposals are not obviously more liberal than those of his rivals.

The real division in the race for the Democratic nomination is between those who are willing to question not just the policies but also the honesty and the motives of the people running our country, and those who aren't.
 

 
[more]


Here is an excellent site that acts as a bullshit detector for the campaign press.

The Campaign Desk
Critique and analysis of 2004 campaign coverage from Columbia Journalism Review

  thanks to daily KOS


The best site for following the Iowa caucuses has been dailyKOS.