Saturday, October 31, 2009

Weekend Potpourri

In No Particular Order Crapo Draws "Opponent" Idaho Senator Mike Crapo, occupying (and defending in 2010) what is perhaps the safest seat in the Senate, has an opponent. Sort of. Betsy Russell in the Spokesman-Review has the story of a New York resident - always a part of a winning political resume in Idaho - announcing that he'll take on the two term GOP incumbent. Other than not living in the state, the new challenger may have other issues with Idaho voters. He's never been west of Buffalo, for example. And not Buffalo, Wyoming, either Here is a key paragraph from Betsy's story: "(William) Bryk, for his part, has run for offices including district attorney, state legislature, city council and Congress, but has never been elected. He ran for Congress as a Democrat in 1980; and eight years after his New Hampshire win on the GOP ticket in 2000, ran again for vice president there as a Democrat, and lost." Last time, Crapo gathered in 99% of the vote against various write-ins. I think you can safely keep this one in the "leans overwhelmingly GOP" column. A Udall Comes Out for Nuclear Power Here is a man-bites-dog story from Colorado. Democratic Senator Mark Udall delivered a speech on the floor of the U.S. Senate this week saying it was time for the nation to reconsider nuclear power. Udall said he hoped new nuclear facilities could be constructed over the next decade and then added: "For some, news that a Udall is speaking favorably about nuclear power will come as a stark - and perhaps unpleasant - surprise." Udall's father - Mo - the great Arizona congressman, campaigned for the White House in 1976 in opposition to nuclear power. There was immediate speculation that Udall's stance would draw serious environmental push back, but his positioning on the issue could also have a "Nixon goes to China" quality in that it may prompt other Democrats with environmental credentials to re-examine long held positions on nuclear power. The Times on "The Big Burn" New York Times on-line columnist Tim Egan - his new book is called "The Big Burn" - will be featured in the Sunday Times Book Review. The Times offers a generally strong review, something the book deserves as I've noted here before, but it wouldn't be the Times if the review didn't offer a bit of snark, even for one of its own. Egan was also a great interview this week on NPR's Fresh Air with Terri Gross. Afghanistan Policy Everyone it seems has advice for the president on Afghanistan. Two thoughtful pieces over the last few days are worth a view: Christopher Buckley cites the reasoning of a former Marine-turned-State Department official, Matthew P. Hoh, who resigned recently over the Afghan war and Ted Sorensen, the former JFK speechwriter, offers up what may be the worst possible analogy for Obama - Afghanistan is already his Vietnam. A Great Humanities Event On Thursday, the Idaho Humanities Council's 13th annual Distinguished Lecture was delivered by the superb Lincoln scholar, Harold Holzer. Holzer's talk focused on how every president, since at least Teddy Roosevelt, has appropriated Lincoln - his words and deeds - to fit their own needs and circumstances, often unfairly. Republicans naturally claim the political Lincoln, but Holzer's survey made the case that Democrats, starting with Woodrow Wilson and continuing to Barack Obama, make some legitimate claims on the great president, as well. Lincoln's legacy clearly weaves through the political reality of the two major parties swapping positions and geography over the last century. FDR largely took the African-American vote, that had been solidly GOP since the Civil War, to the Democratic Party during the New Deal and Richard Nixon broke up the "solid south" after Lyndon Johnson picked up the mantle of civil rights in the 1960's. Holzer diplomatically took a pass when asked if Lincoln were alive today would he be a Republican or a Democrat. He did point out that Lincoln was a fan of big public works projects and he did push a civil rights agenda. The interesting thing to consider is that through the evolution of the two major parties since Lincoln's day, the great president's priorities still stay in the mainstream of American political thought. Holzer, author of 34 books, including an award winning book about Lincoln's coming to national prominence by virtue of his speech at Cooper Union in New York in 1860, has also had a major hand in a grand Lincoln exhibit at the New York Historical Society. Harold Holzer is a really nice fellow and a very engaging speaker. If you get a chance to hear him talk on Lincoln and the presidency - do it.