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.

  • "The Senator Edward M. Kennedy Health Care Reform Act of 2009"

    By John Nichols

    Ted Kennedy led an epic life that defined American politics and policy-making across much of the latter half of the 20th century. Indeed, Kennedy was so much a part of our public life that his death, shortly before midnight Tuesday, made one last and remarkable historic connection -- a connection that reminds us of the importance of extending his legacy into the 21st century.

    Kennedy's passing came on the one year anniversary of his surprise speech to the Democratic National Convention in Denver, where the liberal icon of the Democratic Party completed his mission of securing the presidential nomination for a young man named Barack Obama.

    Fearful of the centrism of the Clintons, Kennedy had resisted the rush to embrace the front-runner candidacy of New York Senator Hillary Clinton and instead backed the insurgent candidacy of the freshman senator from Illinois.

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    (133) Comments
    August 26, 2009
  • Holder -- and Obama -- Must Focus on Torture Accountability

    By John Nichols

    Attorney General Eric Holder chose not to take the counsel of the Republican partisans who have been campaigning in recent weeks to avert an accountability moment with regard to the Bush-Cheney administration's torture regime.

    But that does not necessarily mean that an accountability moment will come.

    For that to happen, Holder -- and, by extension, President Obama -- must stop being so cautious about laying the groundwork for the prosecution of wrongdoings.

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    (199) Comments
    August 24, 2009
  • Congress Must Investigate Ridge Allegations

    By John Nichols

    While it may be true that no one in their right mind doubted that the Bush-Cheney administration was manipulating all those color-coded terror alerts for political purposes, former Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge's confirmation of the suspicion is significant for political and legal reasons.

    Ridge's upcoming book, The Test of Our Times: America Under Siege... And How We Can Be Safe Again, accuses the Bush-Cheney White House of pushing the homeland security chief to "raise the national security alert just before the 2004 election."

    According to the former Pennsylvania governor's publisher, the book will reveal that Ridge was, for political reasons, "pressured to connect homeland security to the international ‘war on terror.'"

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    (136) Comments
    August 21, 2009
  • American Majority Agrees: Afghan War's Not Worth Fighting

    By John Nichols

    With record numbers of US troops being killed in Afghanistan, with Pentagon expenditures for the war skyrocketing and with little or no evidence that the US occupation is making the country more stable, safe, free or humane, a majority of Americans now say the war is not worth fighting.

    Fifty-one percent of those surveyed for a a new Washington Post-ABC News poll now say the human and economic cost of the war is too great.

    Forty-four percent say it is worth its costs.

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    (157) Comments
    August 19, 2009
  • Don't Let the White House Spin the Public Option Debate

    By John Nichols

    President Obama referred to the creation of a public program to compete with for-profit health insurers as a mere "sliver" of his reform agenda and then told a Colorado town hall meeting that: "The public option, whether we have it or we don't have it, is not the entirety of healthcare reform."

    Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius said the public option is "not essential" to addressing what ails a broken healthcare system.

    Those statements, obvious signals of a slackening in commitment to take on the insurance companies, caused an outcry.

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    (206) Comments
    August 18, 2009
  • If Obama Discards Public Option, What's Left of Reform?

    By John Nichols

    When Barack Obama assumed the presidency, there was talk that former Democratic National Committee chair Howard Dean might be his Secretary of Health and Human Services.

    That would have made Dean the administration's point person in the fight for healthcare reform.

    It also would have increased the likelihood that reform would be real.

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    (220) Comments
    August 16, 2009
  • Harry Reid Versus Democracy

    By John Nichols

    No member of Congress should serve without having been elected by the people of the district or state they represent.

    Unfortunately, four appointed senators are currently serving. And since Florida Sen. Mel Martinez has just resigned and Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison is talking about doing so, more appointed senators will soon join the ranks.

    What all this means is that more laws will be proposed, more filibusters will be broken, more critical votes will be tipped in one direction or another by "senators" who never earned a single vote.

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    (51) Comments
    August 14, 2009
  • The Guns of August and Afghanistan

    By John Nichols

    Yes, yes, of course, everyone is talking about healthcare and the "mobs" of foes and supporters of reform confronting members of Congress during this month's House and Senate recess.

    I'm with the small "d" democrats on this one: bring on the mobs.

    The more citizens the merrier. The more raucous debate the better.

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    (121) Comments
    August 12, 2009
  • Winning the Lobster Marriage Debate With Colbert

    By John Nichols

    A surprising number of U.S. House members still stumble through their "Better Know a District" segments on Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report."

    Not Chellie Pingree, the freshman Democrat from Maine who host Stephen Colbert says "has the cocktail sauce to represent" the lobster capital of the world.

    Noting that Portland has the nation's third highest concentration of women living together, Colbert said at the start of his 57th interview with a House member, "You don't have to explain it, I just like the image."

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    (61) Comments
    August 11, 2009
  • The Cheney-Like Secrecy of the Obama White House

    By John Nichols

    Those of us who proposed the impeachment of Vice President Dick Cheney for violating his oath of office and engaging in a Nixon-on-steroids spree of high crimes and misdemeanors began to recognize the abusive nature of the previous administration when Cheney refused to release details of the industry insiders with whom he met to craft energy policies.

    The refusal of the Bush-Cheney administration to permit public review of White House visitor logs detailing who was meeting with the vice president's energy task force during the very first weeks of their tenure was a deliberate decision made to cloak dirty dealing by officials who were determined to serve corporate rather than public interests.

    It also provided an early indicator that darker and dirtier deeds would eventually be done by Cheney and his compatriots. And they were.

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    (126) Comments
    August 8, 2009
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