Rudy Giuliani, campaigning here at Mel’s diner in San Francisco
on Monday, needs a strong third in Iowa to help his campaign
get to promising big states later in the Republican presidential race.

** DEMOCRACY: PAKISTAN STYLE. President Pervez Musharraf is ending his state of emergency rule of martial law on December 15th, just in time for a three-and-a-half weeks of democratic campaigning in advance of the national parliamentary elections on January 8th.

Or is he?

Officially, the answer is yes, and Musharraf will be sure to mark the occasion. But in reality, the answer is no, because the nation’s media will continue under tight restrictions. The independent stations have been notified that if they give Musharraf’s critics a forum, they will be jailed and have their operations shut down. For fomenting violence and insurrection. Which was the very excuse used in the first place to institute martial law.

** DAVIS HAPPY ABOUT CLIMATE CHANGE COURT VICTORY. Former Governor Gray Davis is happy about today’s federal court decision rejecting the lawsuit against California’s landmark law to cut tailpipe emissions of greenhouse gases by new vehicles.

Davis told me that he’s very “pleased to see the automakers that have been blocking the implementation of the law I signed in 2002 allowing California to regulate carbon emissions from vehicles lost today in Federal Court.”

Davis signed the bill, by then LA Assemblywoman Fran Pavley, in August 2002 at a spectacular ceremony in San Francisco’s Presidio overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge with Robert Redford and other notables in attendance. The fog literally parted shortly before the event began. The auto industry had threatened a referendum to invalidate the measure during Davis’s re-election campaign, but he went ahead and signed the bill anyway.

** RISING OIL, AGAIN. Oil prices shot up to $94 a barrel today, with OPEC having backed away from production hikes last week.

** AN UNEVENTFUL REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE. To be blunt about it, not much happened in today’s Republican presidential debate in Iowa. The moderator, who is the editor of the Des Moines Register, effectively took the hot button illegal immigration issue off the table. Iran, once a big issue for the Republican candidates, barely came up in the wake of last week’s US National Intelligence Estimate downplaying a nuclear weapons program.

I thought Mitt Romney was the best performer on the stage. Mike Huckabee seemed sincere. Fred Thompson was livelier than usual. Rudy Giuliani was competent. John McCain, who is playing for New Hampshire, took a few shots at ethanol subsidies, an Iowa shibboleth that plays badly with New Englanders. Alan Keyes, who is not a serious candidate, was inexplicably on the stage wasting valuable time.

The upshot is that no one laid a glove on Mike Huckabee, who has the clear lead in Iowa, he was effective and likable, so he won.

** CLINTON CAMPAIGN OFFICIAL HITS OBAMA FOR DRUG USE. A veteran political operative who is Hillary Clinton’s New Hampshire co-chairman, Billy Shaheen, hit Barack Obama today on his youthful drug use. His rationale is that Republicans would use it against the Illinois senator, who is close to upsetting Hillary’s apple cart in the early states, and thus he would be less electable than he otherwise seems to be.

Shaheen is the husband of former New Hampshire Governor Jeanne Shaheen, one of Clinton’s national co-chairs. Obama’s drug use as a teenager is known because he wrote about it in his best-selling autobiography, presenting his own experience as an example of what young people should avoid.

** NATIONAL TRACKING POLL. The nightly national tracking poll by Rasmussen Reports — a robopoll, which I don’t especially like, but which does indicate directions in opinion — has Mike Huckabee atop the Republican presidential pack and Hillary Clinton’s national lead over Barack Obama in single digits.

Huckabee leads Rudy Giuliani, 23% to 19%, while on the Democratic side, Clinton leads Obama, 36% to 28%.

** BROWN ON CLIMATE CHANGE COURT VICTORY. The auto industry challenge to California’s landmark motor vehicle emissions standards failed today in a federal court in Fresno. Judge Anthony Ishi dismissed the carmakers’s case, handing a victory to former Governor-turned-Attorney General Jerry Brown and his legal team. The emissions standard, established by AB 1493 in 2002, requires a 30 percent reduction in tailpipe greenhouse gas emissions by 2016, starting with model year 2009.

“This is the fourth major legal victory for California and a stinging rejection of the automobile industry’s legal challenge to greenhouse gas emissions standards,” said Brown. “This court ruling leaves the Bush administration as the last remaining roadblock to California’s regulation of tailpipe greenhouse gas emissions.”

The court decided that both the US Environmental Protection Agency and California are equally empowered under the Clean Air Act to set regulations limiting tailpipe greenhouse gas emissions. It also ruled that the state’s regulations don’t conflict with federal authority.

** BIG REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE TODAY. With Mike Huckabee soaring in the polls, former Iowa leader Mitt Romney and the rest of the Republican field get a big chance to take the former Arkansas governor and Baptist preacher down a few notches in today’s Des Moines Register debate, the last before the Iowa presidential caucuses on January 3rd.

The Democratic presidential candidates hold their last Iowa debate before the caucuses tomorrow.

At 11 AM Pacific time, the Republican field goes at it for 90 minutes in this event sponsored by the Register, the Hawkeye State’s leading newspaper, and Iowa Public Television. For those who don’t get Iowa Public TV, you can watch the showdown on Fox News.

Much of Iowa has been in deep freeze with an ice storm cutting off power to nearly 100,000 people and causing some campaigners — like former President Bill Clinton — to suspend their schedules yesterday. But the heat should definitely be on in today’s debate.

Fueled by the evangelical Christian vote, Huckabee, who accepted the endorsement yesterday of Jim Gilchrist, founder of the anti-illegal immigrant Minutemen group — the crew that organized vigilantes along the Mexican border — has jumped to a double-digit lead in Iowa over the free-spending campaign of Mitt Romney and is surging around the country. Now Romney, and much of the conservative punditocracy, is taking dead aim at Huckabee for his various apostasies from their doctrine. While a clearcut social conservative, Huckabee has been a little bit more moderate on some economic and environmental policies.

Romney, the former Massachusetts governor whose big lead in neighboring New Hampshire has slipped, has always seen a victory in Iowa as the key to his strategic sequence. Romney, who started negative TV ads on Monday, has to bring Huckabee back to earth, and fast. His speech last week on religion — prompted by Huckabee’s rise and by concerns about Romney’s controversial Mormon faith — didn’t help him that much, despite many huzzahs from right-wing pundits in the press and blogosphere.

Meanwhile, the rest of the field hopes that the Huckabee-Romney dust-up will begin to “redistribute,” as one top Republican strategist puts it, support from the two in the center of the ring to other candidates.


Fred Thompson hopes to capitalize on other candidates’ difficulties
on the illegal immigration issue to break through in Iowa.

Fred Thompson, who tantalized the country for months with his almost candidacy, only to fizzle after entering the race via The Tonight Show, starts a huge Iowa push today that will see him spending virtually every day there from next week on through the caucus. Illegal immigration has emerged as a core issue in the race, and Huckabee (who supported scholarships for illegal immigrant children as Arkansas governor), Romney (who had illegal immigrants working in his home), Giuliani (who supported programs for illegals as New York’s mayor), and John McCain (who co-authored an “amnesty” bill with, gulp, Teddy Kennedy) all have problems in the area.

He’s fighting it out for third in Iowa with Rudy Giuliani, the 9/11 hero and longtime national frontrunner whose lead has been matched by the surging Huckabee.

Thompson needs a strong showing in Iowa to get back into the race. Giuliani needs a strong showing in Iowa to give him a boost going into New Hampshire, so that he has a strong enough showing there to survive till he gets to bigger states where he has a much better chance to win.

As for McCain, the wily Vietnam War hero — who was the frontrunner in this race when it started — is slowly moving up again in New Hampshire. There are few expectations for him in Iowa. If he manages to beat Giuliani there, so much the better for him five days later in New Hampshire.

** HILLARY AND OBAMA TIED IN NEW HAMPSHIRE POLL. A brand new poll for CNN/WMUR-TV has Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama now essentially tied for first in the New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary.

The numbers are Clinton 31%, Obama 30%, John Edwards 16%, and Bill Richardson 7%. A couple of months ago, Clinton led Obama by about 20 points.

** SCHWARZENEGGER IN PRIVATE CAPITOL MEETINGS TODAY. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger will again be closeted in private meetings today on the state’s chronic budget problems and deadlocked negotiations on water policy and comprehensive health care reform.

The administration is saying that California’s budget deficit for the current and next fiscal year — estimated recently by the Legislative Analyst’s Office at $10 billion — is now $14 billion.

Since legislative hyperpartisans of the left and, especially, right have declined to provide solutions, what Schwarzenegger should do, as NWN has suggested a few times before, is prepare a “disaster budget” showing what programs have to be cut absent compromise on spending and revenues.

** 24/7 LIVE TV NEWS FEED FROM RUSSIA TODAY. Russia has re-emerged as one of the world’s great powers. Click here for a live TV news feed on your computer, bringing you English-language, jargon-free, fast-paced coverage of global and Russian news from the new Russia Today channel.

You probably already know about CNN International, BBC World, and Al Jazeera. Russia Today, which also features culture, entertainment, and sports, is based in Moscow and is owned and operated by the TV Novosti division of Russia’s state news agency, RIA Novosti.

While it’s quite foolish to expect to see, say, criticism of Vladimir Putin on Russia Today, the channel is very interesting nonetheless. The NWN live link to RT does not constitute an endorsement of the channel’s views. It’s presented as an otherwise unavailable new media window.

** TRACK GLOBAL AND U.S. ENERGY PRICES IN NEAR REAL TIME VIA BLOOMBERG ENERGY MARKET WATCH. Crude oil prices are trading up in the $90 to $91 per barrel range.

Your posts are welcome in the Forum.

0 Responses to “Republican Presidential Debate, And Much More”

  1. Brasky says:

    “Would they finally have to drop their unreasonable stance in re taxes?”

    No

    “And how do we overcopme Dem aversion to any social cuts?”

    By endorsing term limit reform.

  2. Sacramento Solon says:

    Amazing how this chap named Brown keeps chalking up victories. Seems to be making a habit of it. Wonder if he has a future or if he will become a rookie flameout.

  3. Bill Bradley says:

    It’s beginner’s luck.

  4. Bill Bradley says:

    I don’t think the Clintons should want that clip replaying …

    >Brasky :
    “CLINTON CAMPAIGN OFFICIAL HITS OBAMA FOR DRUG USE”
    Clinton went to Wellesley College during the 1960’s and she’s married to Bill “I didn’t inhale” Clinton.

  5. Bill Bradley says:

    I don’t think the Clintons should want that clip replaying …

    >Brasky :
    “CLINTON CAMPAIGN OFFICIAL HITS OBAMA FOR DRUG USE”
    Clinton went to Wellesley College during the 1960’s and she’s married to Bill “I didn’t inhale” Clinton.

  6. Bill Bradley says:

    1. Yep.

    2. Or propose their own specifics, which they have avoided.

    3. Unknown.

    >Dana :
    Wouldn’t a disaster budget likely have to take on some Republican sacred cows? Would they finally have to drop their unreasonable stance in re taxes? And how do we overcopme Dem aversion to any social cuts?

  7. Jonas Blane says:

    Bill, I’m glad I didn’t have to watch the debate.

  8. Where’s Bob Salladay? He once used “like two cats in a bag” to describe a Lungren-Davis debate that still makes me laugh.

  9. Bill Bradley says:

    I’d say, Gospodin Bierko, that this debate was like two cats snoozing in front of the fireplace.

    I don’t know what happened to Bob Salladay. He’s kind of disappeared.

  10. Brasky says:

    “I don’t think the Clintons should want that clip replaying …”

    Well, Marcia Kramer of WCBS TV asked the question at a presidential forum in New York on March 29, 1992. The clip isn’t on the web…yet…

  11. Brasky says:

    “I don’t think the Clintons should want that clip replaying …”

    Well, Marcia Kramer of WCBS TV asked the question at a presidential forum in New York on March 29, 1992. The clip isn’t on the web…yet…

  12. Brasky says:

    I heard that once, in 3rd grade, Obama smelled a Dittoed list of vocabulary words.

  13. Ann says:

    He SNIFFED it. lol

  14. Dana says:

    Wow! He must have gone to a privileged school. Where I grew up into the late 1970s the local High School still used mimeo. I have outdated technology envy!

    >Brasky :
    I heard that once, in 3rd grade, Obama smelled a Dittoed list of vocabulary words.

  15. Wilbur says:

    Man, that ditto fluid was good stuff…

    Does anybody really believe the “Satan’s brother” thing was so innocent and totally inadvertent as portrayed? Pretty deft, I’d have to say, lots of guaranteed exposure of the hit yet plausibly deniable by “nice guy” Mike.

  16. Sacramento Solon says:

    Wilbur,

    Believe it about as much as Rosemary Woods erasing the tape by accident.

    Old Guy thinks that Huck ‘taint such a “nice guy”…but, then again, I’m harsh. :-)

  17. Sacramento Solon says:

    Wilbur,

    Believe it about as much as Rosemary Woods erasing the tape by accident.

    Old Guy thinks that Huck ‘taint such a “nice guy”…but, then again, I’m harsh. :-)

  18. Juan Cortina says:

    Alan Keyes a waste of time? He represent the conscience and heart of the GOP… according to his talking points from his last presidential election.

  19. Brasky says:

    “He SNIFFED it”

    To be fair, Obama only SMELLED the Ditto vocabulary list, and THAT was limited to the words “presidential” and “aspiration.”

  20. Len says:

    The only electable Republican is McCain. And they won’t nominate him.

  21. Bill Bradley says:

    Many things can happen.

  22. Bill Bradley says:

    Many things can happen.

  23. Bill Bradley says:

    Alan Keyes makes Mike Gravel look like an extremely reasonable guy.

    >Juan Cortina :
    Alan Keyes a waste of time? He represent the conscience and heart of the GOP… according to his talking points from his last presidential election.
    Dec 12, 2007 04:36 PM

  24. Bill Bradley says:

    Huck may not be a nice guy, but he does play one on TV.

    >Sacramento Solon :
    Wilbur,
    Believe it about as much as Rosemary Woods erasing the tape by accident.
    Old Guy thinks that Huck ‘taint such a “nice guy”…but, then again, I’m harsh. :-)
    Dec 12, 2007 04:35 PM

  25. Capitol Boy says:

    Good for Gray Davis. He deserves some vindication.

  26. Bill Bradley says:

    It was a good hit. Huck on the Mormon notion of Jesus, I mean, not the ditto flluid …

    >Wilbur :
    Man, that ditto fluid was good stuff…
    Does anybody really believe the “Satan’s brother” thing was so innocent and totally inadvertent as portrayed? Pretty deft, I’d have to say, lots of guaranteed exposure of the hit yet plausibly deniable by “nice guy” Mike.
    Dec 12, 2007 04:24 PM

  27. Bill Bradley says:

    It was a good hit. Huck on the Mormon notion of Jesus, I mean, not the ditto flluid …

    >Wilbur :
    Man, that ditto fluid was good stuff…
    Does anybody really believe the “Satan’s brother” thing was so innocent and totally inadvertent as portrayed? Pretty deft, I’d have to say, lots of guaranteed exposure of the hit yet plausibly deniable by “nice guy” Mike.
    Dec 12, 2007 04:24 PM

  28. Bill Bradley says:

    I vaguely remember that stuff.

    >Dana :
    Wow! He must have gone to a privileged school. Where I grew up into the late 1970s the local High School still used mimeo. I have outdated technology envy!
    >Brasky :
    I heard that once, in 3rd grade, Obama smelled a Dittoed list of vocabulary words.
    Dec 12, 2007 04:08 PM

  29. Bill Bradley says:

    But did he snort it?

    >Ann :
    He SNIFFED it. lol
    Dec 12, 2007 03:55 PM

  30. Bill Bradley says:

    It’s not on YouTube?

    Yet?

    >Brasky :
    “I don’t think the Clintons should want that clip replaying …”
    Well, Marcia Kramer of WCBS TV asked the question at a presidential forum in New York on March 29, 1992. The clip isn’t on the web…yet…
    Dec 12, 2007 02:58 PM

  31. Sacramento Solon says:

    Good that Gray is happy. He deserves it. Exchanged waves with him on Monday…he looks well.

  32. Bill Bradley says:

    He looks surprisingly fit.

  33. Bill Bradley says:

    He looks surprisingly fit.

  34. Sacramento Solon says:

    He do…nice picture of him and Sharon in the Christmas card…must admit, that given the lady in the background, took me a moment to focus on them. :-)

  35. Sacramento Solon says:

    Be warned, the old guy is about to go way off topic…way off.

    For those who love coffee, click on the link and you will see a photo of the world’s best coffemaker…

    Looks a little strange, but makes GREAT coffee. I’ve had one for close to a year and have never enjoyed home brewed coffee more.

    http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2007/12/11/dining/1212-GIFT_14.html

    Be a wonderful gift for someone you love…or just something for yourself.

    Return back to the topic of politics…but what would ‘tics be without coffee????

  36. The HRC campaign cannot be serious when they claim that the issue of drug use by a youthful Obama will be utilized by Republicans against him and that should be a major concern.

    No one currently running for POTUS has more baggage than HRC. She exceeds the entire field on both sides of the political divide when it comes to negatives.

    That claim is at least as laughable as the one that says HRC has more experience than Obama as a qualifier for the highest executive position in government.

    This stuff will provide the late night TV talk show hosts with an endless supply of jokes once the writer’s strike is over.

  37. Jack Aubrey says:

    I hope tomorrow’s debate isn’t as boring.

  38. Juan Cortina says:

    right on salon… that lady in the bikini on the x-mas card caught my eye too.

  39. magyart says:

    Fight illegal immigration. Contact your elected reps. and demand they co-sponsor the Save Act. The House bill is HR 4088. The Senate bill is S2368.

    Visit NumbersUSA for more details.- http://www.numbersusa.com/actionbuffet

    Only vote for candidates willing to support this bill. It forces all employers to verify social security numbers.

    Let’s take our country back !

  40. magyart says:

    Fight illegal immigration. Contact your elected reps. and demand they co-sponsor the Save Act. The House bill is HR 4088. The Senate bill is S2368.

    Visit NumbersUSA for more details.- http://www.numbersusa.com/actionbuffet

    Only vote for candidates willing to support this bill. It forces all employers to verify social security numbers.

    Let’s take our country back !

  41. Sacramento Solon says:

    Juan,

    Guess that’s what you get when you vacation in Cannes.

  42. Bill Bradley says:

    A perilous venture, to be sure.

  43. Bill Bradley says:

    Me, too, as I’m spending a lot of time on these debates.

    >Jack Aubrey :
    I hope tomorrow’s debate isn’t as boring.
    Dec 12, 2007 07:17 PM

  44. Bill Bradley says:

    Me, too, as I’m spending a lot of time on these debates.

    >Jack Aubrey :
    I hope tomorrow’s debate isn’t as boring.
    Dec 12, 2007 07:17 PM

  45. Bill Bradley says:

    I think the writers strike is helping her.

    >James- The Historian :
    The HRC campaign cannot be serious when they claim that the issue of drug use by a youthful Obama will be utilized by Republicans against him and that should be a major concern.
    No one currently running for POTUS has more baggage than HRC. She exceeds the entire field on both sides of the political divide when it comes to negatives.
    That claim is at least as laughable as the one that says HRC has more experience than Obama as a qualifier for the highest executive position in government.
    This stuff will provide the late night TV talk show hosts with an endless supply of jokes once the writer’s strike is over.
    Dec 12, 2007 07:15 PM

  46. Bill Bradley says:

    Coffee is one of the central elements in politics. Like hit pieces, advance work, and grabbing meals at funders.

    >Sacramento Solon :
    Be warned, the old guy is about to go way off topic…way off.
    For those who love coffee, click on the link and you will see a photo of the world’s best coffemaker…
    Looks a little strange, but makes GREAT coffee. I’ve had one for close to a year and have never enjoyed home brewed coffee more.

  47. Bill Bradley says:

    Incidentally, NWN passed 46,000 comments sometime in the past week.

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