The  Beat

The Beat

(Subscribe to this RSS feed)Breaking news and analysis on political, social, economic and cultural activism that mainstream media commonly ignore.

  • Public Option Rejected As Key Dems Vote "No"

    By John Nichols

    The healthcare reform debate – such as it is – has already provided more than enough disappointment for Americans who recognize the need for a thorough reordering of the way in which this nation meets the medical needs of its populace.

    But the hits just keep on coming.

    Indeed, there is good reason to believe the Congress is edging away from a healthcare reform debate and toward a far more limited discussion of insurance reform.

    Read More »

    (261) Comments
    September 29, 2009
  • Can the Public Option Be Saved?

    By John Nichols

    Outside Washington, there is still a sense that a serious debate about healthcare reform is going on.

    In Washington, there is a good deal of fear among informed and engaged progressives that the debate may be done.

    Yes, of course, something called "reform" might be enacted this year by a Congress where Democrats control both the House and Senate by overwhelming majorities and signed into law by a Democratic president who says reworking the healthcare system is a top priority of his administration.

    Read More »

    (92) Comments
    September 29, 2009
  • William Safire: Conservative Critic of Media Monopoly

    By John Nichols

    Bill Safire and I disagreed on more issues than we agreed.

    It's like that with former Nixon speechwriters and Nation scribes.

    But Safire, the Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times columnist who has died at age 79, was an honest conservative.

    Read More »

    (58) Comments
    September 27, 2009
  • MoveOn Calls for Afghanistan Exit Strategy

    By John Nichols

    The online activist group MoveOn.org, which experienced its most explosive growth when it emerged as a focal point for opposition to the war in Iraq, has been criticized for failing to adopt an anti-war position with regard to the increasingly deadly and ineffectual US occupation of Afghanistan.

    Now, however, the 4.2-million member group has made a tentative move toward supporting an Afghanistan exit strategy.

    In a online e-blast to activists, MoveOn organizers argued Friday against the deployment of more US troops to Afghanistan and for the development of "a clear exit strategy."

    Read More »

    (51) Comments
    September 25, 2009
  • Senate-Pick Kirk 's Insurance, Drug-Industry "Conflicts"

    By John Nichols

    On Friday, former Democratic National Committee chair Paul Kirk cleared what was probably his last legal hurdle to become the selected-not-elected "temporary senator" from Massachusetts.

    A Massachusetts judge, rejecting a Republican challenge, ruled that the veteran Democratic operative was legitimately appointed and could hold his seat until a special election names a permanent successor to the late Senator Edward Kennedy.

    The temorary senator's charge is to fill seat during the Senate debate over health-care reform.

    Read More »

    (18) Comments
    September 25, 2009
  • G20 Schemes Threaten Democracy, Sustainability

    By John Nichols

    PITTSBURGH – The G20 Summit that opens Thursday is unlikely to achieve much when it comes to restructuring the global economic order. That's good news for workers, farmers, consumers and citizens.

    What's good about inaction on the part of the leaders of the world's wealthiest nations? While there is no question that a radical restructuring is needed, it must be the right restructuring.

    In the midst of the nastiest economic downturn since the Great Depression, and with so many unaddressed social and environmental challenges weighing on the planet, the necessity of finding new ways of organizing and managing the economic affairs of nation states and global trading and regulatory regimes should be evident to even the most nearsighted neo-liberals.

    Read More »

    (97) Comments
    September 23, 2009
  • Kennedy Family Pick Paul Kirk Is New Massachusetts Senator

    By John Nichols

    Rejecting prospects who had sought and won statewide office, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick has selected a veteran political insider, former Democratic National Committee chairman Paul Kirk, to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated by the late Senator Edward Kennedy.

    Kirk, a close Kennedy family friend who served as the former senator's special assistant during the challenging period from 1969 to 1977, is currently the chairman of the board of directors for the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation.

    Kirk, 71, was reportedly the pick of the Kennedy family.

    Read More »

    (44) Comments
    September 22, 2009
  • Obama At the UN: Think of Me as FDR, Not Bush

    By John Nichols

    Distancing himself from George Bush and embracing the legacy of Franklin Roosevelt -- to the point of quoting the 32nd president on the need for "the cooperative effort of the whole world" to build peace and prosperity -- Barack Obama addressed the United Nations Wednesday as an old-school liberal internationalist.

    After reviewing the breaks he has made with the Bush administration's unilateralist approaches -- with a heavy emphasis on the determination of the United States to engage with the UN and international groupings that promote human rights and cooperation between nations on issues such as disability rights -- the president said in his first speech to the UN: "We have reached a pivotal moment. The United States stands ready to (usher in) a new era of international cooperation."

    Obama portrayed that readiness as an opportunity that nations that had come to distrust the U.S. during the Bush-Cheney era should now embrace. And he suggested an ambitious global agenda.

    Read More »

    (84) Comments
    September 23, 2009
  • What Obama Should Be Saying About a Public Option

    By John Nichols

    President Obama did all the Sunday morning talk shows, as part of a ramped-up campaign to promote his sincere if ill-defined belief that health care should be reformed, and he continued to argue, albeit tepidly, that this reform probably needs to include a public option.

    Obama was smooth and smart and presidential and the appearances on ABC's "This Week," CBS's "Face the Nation," NBC's "Meet the Press," CNN's "State of the Union" and on the Spanish-language Univision network will undoubtedly aid his personal approval ratings.

    But these exercises in pulled punches and anti-government apologia will do little to advance the cause of genuine health care reform.

    Read More »

    (138) Comments
    September 21, 2009
  • AFL-CIO's Trumka Embraces All Workers -- Including Immigrants

    By John Nichols

    Richard Trumka's great strength as a leader of the AFL-CIO has always been his willingness to challenge this country labor movement to be better not just than its past but also its present.

    Long before he assumed the presidency of the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations on Thursday, the former head of the United Mineworkers positioned himself as the "old labor" warrior who was determined to push union members to embrace new realities and new opportunities.

    Trumka did that last year, in the thick of the 2008 presidential race, when he boldly confronted the reality of racism within the ranks of the movement to which he has devoted his life.

    Read More »

    (84) Comments
    September 18, 2009
Advertisement
Advertisement

Blogs

» Editor's Cut

Around the Nation | The week we went Rouge. Plus, Moyers on Afghanistan.
Katrina vanden Heuvel
Posted at 10:37 ET

» The Beat

Health Care Bill Advances, as Harry Reid Trumps Sarah Palin | The death panelist-in-chief rallied her followers to "KILL THE BILL." But 60 senators decided to follow the real leader.
John Nichols
31 Comments

» The Notion

Palin as the Church Lady | Going Rogue book tour brings passive-aggressive rightwing Christianity to the fore.
Leslie Savan
136 Comments

» Altercation

Slacker Friday | The "Second Amendment" sale; the raving paranoids of the right.
Eric Alterman

» The Dreyfuss Report

Chongqing: Socialism in One City | China is managing the most important event in the world: the urbanization of half a billion people. Fast.
Robert Dreyfuss
207 Comments

» Act Now!

Toward Copenhagen | A guide to joining the movement against climate change.
Peter Rothberg
67 Comments