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"Media Matters"; by Jamison Foser

April 27, 2007 9:05 pm ET

The "best of the best"?

Washington Post reporter and columnist David Broder is widely known as the "dean" of political journalists. He is a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, has been named "Best Newspaper Political Reporter" by the Washington Journalism Review, and ranked as "Washington's most highly regarded columnist" by editorial page editors and by members of Congress in a Washingtonian magazine survey.

According to his Washington Week biography, Broder "has been called 'the high priest of political journalism' by author Timothy Crouse, 'the unchallenged "dean" of what many political reporters like to think is their "priesthood" ' by U.S. News, and 'probably the most respected and influential political journalist in the country' by columnist Richard Reeves. Esquire said Broder 'has few challengers as the most influential political journalist in the country,' and media critic Ron Powers on CBS-TV said 'Broder is not famous like Peter Jennings, he's not glamorous like Tom Brokaw, but underneath that brown suit there is a superman.'"

The accolades for Broder have shown no sign of slowing down in recent years: his colleagues routinely speak of him in the hushed, awed tone they typically reserve for John McCain and Joe Lieberman. NBC's Tim Russert -- himself often described as the nation's most influential journalist -- calls Broder "the most objective and respected reporter I know in this town." In 2005, Russert praised Broder's "superb" analysis and noted that he had appeared more often on Meet the Press than any other guest -- nearly 400 times in all. Just this week, the Washington Post's Chris Cillizza placed Broder alongside the late David Halberstam as "titans of journalism." Conservative pundit Bill Kristol says things like "I disagree with David Broder on this, which means I'm probably wrong..." While still working at The Washington Post, Politico executive editor Jim VandeHei wrote "Broder is the best of the best. His columns are fair and illuminating."

It is clear what political journalists say about Broder. But what does Broder's exalted position atop the media food chain say about the state of political journalism?

***

Broder's assault this week on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid touched off a new round of criticism of Broder's work. Twice this week, Broder lashed out at Reid over Reid's comments about the Iraq war. On Monday, Broder suggested that Senate Democrats might dump Reid as their leader, telling XM Radio listeners that "the Democrats are gonna have to have a little caucus and decide how much further they want to carry Harry Reid," accusing Reid of a "bumbling performance," and saying Reid is an embarrassment to the party. Broder went on to claim that "every six weeks or so there's another episode where he has to apologize for the way in which he has bungled the Democratic case."

As Think Progress noted, "It's apparently irrelevant [to Broder] that Reid's views are shared by President Bush's regular military adviser Henry Kissinger, or senior U.S. military officials, or the majority of the American people."

And Greg Sargent reported, "[I]t looks as if Broder completely butchered his facts in asserting that Reid has had to apologize 'every six weeks.' I just checked with Reid's office, and they told me in no uncertain terms that Reid has not apologized for any of his remarks during his first four months or so as majority leader. He certainly hasn't apologized for the 'war is lost' comment."

But Broder was just getting started. In his April 26 Post column, Broder compared Reid to embattled Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, claiming that Reid, like Gonzales, is "a continuing embarrassment thanks to his amateurish performance" and asserting that there is a "long list of senators of both parties who are ready for these two springtime exhibitions of ineptitude to end."

But Broder didn't name a single senator of either party to support his contention. Indeed, the entire Senate Democratic Caucus responded by sending a letter to the Post in which they praised Reid as an "extraordinary leader who has effectively guided the new Democratic majority through these first few months with skill and aplomb."

In claiming that Reid is as much an embarrassment as Gonzales, Broder cheated a bit: He not only distorted Reid's comments, he glossed over Gonzales' failings -- a complete description of which would have made the comparison laughable. Broder made only passing mention of Gonzales, downplaying his involvement in the scandal surrounding the Bush administration's purge of federal prosecutors, and omitting any mention of other Gonzales controversies.

In fact, Broder has written nearly nothing about Gonzales since he became attorney general, despite his involvement in several high-profile controversies. In his March 29 column, Broder wrote that Gonzales "has given his president plenty of reasons to fire him," noting "the Justice Department ... has been reduced in stature and has lost the trust of both the public and its career employees under Gonzales." But Broder didn't bother to explain what Gonzales has done to reduce the DOJ's stature and erode public trust in the Department. Instead, he took a stroll down memory lane, devoting the bulk of the column to Ronald Reagan's decision not to fire his budget director.

And that was the first column Broder had written that so much as mentioned Gonzales in more than a year.

This "dean" of the Washington Press corps, this "titan[] of journalism," this "superb" analyst, this "most influential political journalist in the country," this "superman" thinks that the attorney general of the United States should be fired; that he has reduced the Justice Department in stature and caused both the public and career DOJ employees to lose trust in the Department.

But this superman won't tell you why. He believes the attorney general -- one of the most important public officials in the nation -- has violated the public trust and should be fired. But he won't use his influence and credibility to explain his case. He won't tell his readers what one of their most powerful government officials is doing wrong. Not even a hint.

***

On October 7, 1969, The Washington Post published a lament by David Broder that the nasty anti-war activists were out to "break" an unfairly maligned president named Nixon:

The likelihood is great that they will succeed again, for breaking a President is, like most feats, easier to accomplish the second time around. Once learned, the techniques can readily be applied as often as desired - even when the circumstances seem less than propitious. No matter that this President is pulling troops out of Vietnam, while the last one was sending them in; no matter that in 1969 the casualties and violence are declining, while in 1968 they were on the rise. Men have learned to break a President, and, like any discovery that imparts power to its possessors, the mere availability of this knowledge guarantees that it will be used.

It may seem unfair to take advantage of the benefit of hindsight to note the absurdity of defending Richard Nixon from unfair attacks. But that probably wasn't the first time Broder displayed highly questionable judgment, and it certainly wasn't the last.

One of the most revealing statements Broder -- or, perhaps, any political journalist -- has ever made came in 1998. In November 1998, after nearly a year of public opinion polls showing, basically, that people liked Bill Clinton and wanted the Lewinsky investigation to just go away, and of the Washington journalist/pundit crowd vehemently disagreeing, the Post published an article by Sally Quinn attempting to explain the disconnect (which lives on to this day).

Quinn famously quoted Broder explaining why the "Washington Establishment" -- which under anybody's definition includes both Broder and Quinn -- was so angry at Clinton: "He came in here and he trashed the place ... and it's not his place."

Broder's implication -- that Washington was his place, not the president's -- is arrogant enough. But Broder's other comment speaks volumes: "The judgment is harsher in Washington. We don't like being lied to."

Try to imagine what would happen if, say, John Kerry made a comment like that. Just try. Try to imagine what the nation's pundit class and political reporters would say about John Kerry if he said that, unlike those immoral rubes out in the rest of the country, Washingtonians don't like being lied to. He would be relentlessly flayed as an arrogant elitist. And Broder would likely lead the charge, declaring that Kerry's "arrogance rankled Midwesterners such as myself."

But John Kerry didn't say it. David Broder did. That's what Broder thinks: He and his Beltway buddies, unlike the rest of you chumps, don't like being lied to. Keep that in mind the next time Broder criticizes a politician for being "arrogant" or "elitist."

You won't have to wait long. Broder can't seem to resist portraying progressives as arrogant elitists. Last year, for example, he described anti-war Democrats as "elitist" -- despite a majority of Americans agreeing with the stance. Being against a war that a majority of your fellow citizens also oppose isn't "elitist." Suggesting that you and your Beltway pals are uniquely offended by lying -- that's elitist.

***

During the 2000 presidential campaign, Broder used his perch at The Washington Post to heckle Al Gore for telling the American people, in detail, what he would do as president. No, we are not making this up. Broder described Gore's convention speech as "a request to step inside a seminar room, listen closely and take notes," adding, "Never has a candidate provided more detailed information on his autobiography and the program initiatives he plans. One more paragraph and he would have been onto the budget of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. ... [M]y, how he went on about what he wants to do as president. ... For all his Washington experience, Gore does not seem to have grasped Bush's point that a chief executive is smart to focus on a few key reforms, rather than dissipating his leadership on a crammed agenda. Or perhaps Gore just felt it necessary to throw a bone to every one of the constituency groups in the Democratic Party."

Broder did write of his "hunch" that Gore's "approach was highly effective -- for what Gore wanted to do." (Indeed, as Bob Somerby has noted, the speech was a success, and Gore's standing in the polls improved afterward.) But Broder also made clear his lack of interest in Gore's details and plans: "I have to confess, my attention wandered as he went on through page after page of other swell ideas, and somewhere between hate crimes legislation and a crime victim's constitutional amendment, I almost nodded off." Even the headline on Broder's column -- "Gore tells all" -- seemed to be a shot at the vice president.

By contrast, Broder had nothing but praise for George W. Bush's 2000 convention speech:

Lifted by an acceptance speech of exceptional eloquence and powered by a party enjoying unusual unity, Texas Gov. George W. Bush embarks on the final stage of his quest for the White House with prospects that almost measure up to his brimming self-confidence.

[...]

[T]he acceptance speech he delivered Thursday night was a success.

It contained almost everything good political rhetoric can provide -- humor, personal warmth, effective jibes at the opposition and glimpses of what his father, the former president, used to call "the vision thing." And Bush had rehearsed it enough to make it his own.

Reading Broder's reaction to Bush's speech, you wouldn't have known whether Bush made mention of a single policy, proposal, or issue in his speech. You would, however, have learned that "Bush is seen by the public as a stronger leader -- and, by almost any measure, a man more likely to help cure the poisonous partisanship of the capital city."

With a superman like David Broder leading the fight for less substance and fewer details, nobody should have been surprised by Thursday night's Democratic debate, in which moderator Brian Williams asked candidates about haircuts and horse-race polls, and repeatedly dumbed down the debate with questions instructing the candidates to raise their hands in response, or to "say a name or to pass." No details, please -- our titans of journalism might nod off. Just raise your hand and move on.

For those (progressives, at least) who do dare offer details and facts, Broder is quick to deride them as know-it-alls. "Gore tells all," Broder mocked in 2000. Then, in 2006, he wrote, "Bush was elected twice, over Democrats Al Gore and John Kerry, whose know-it-all arrogance rankled Midwesterners such as myself." That same year, he similarly took Hillary Clinton to task:

For those who remember the former first lady's effort at comprehensive health-care reform in 1993-94, the scope of her energy initiative is a throwback to those days. She called for the creation of a Strategic Energy Fund, financed in part by taxes on oil company profits, and a National Institute of Energy, with a multibillion-dollar bankroll for financing innovative conservation and efficiency plans.

She offered her proposal with the same self-assurance that she had brought to the health-care debate -- a tone that suggested that "if you just listen carefully to all the things I can tell you on the basis of the study I have given this subject, you will know exactly what to do."

Well, at least Broder is consistent: he doesn't like "know-it-alls"; too many details, and he's bound to fall asleep.

Well, maybe "consistent" isn't the word. Earlier this month, he wrote:

Obama's soaring rhetoric has left some of his audiences hungry for more substance from the senator. That was the case at a March 24 health-care forum in Las Vegas, where Obama promised to achieve universal coverage as president but had to admit that -- unlike former senator John Edwards of North Carolina -- he had not yet formulated a plan for getting there. And it was the case again Wednesday, when he was one of seven candidates addressing several thousand members of the Building and Construction Trades, AFL-CIO, at their convention in Washington.

Got that? Al Gore, John Kerry, and Hillary Clinton? Know-it-alls. Barack Obama? Light on substance. George Bush? Just right.

***

Like Brian Williams, we're running short on time, so we'll move to the lightning round:

  • In 1998, Broder suggested President Clinton should resign, apparently because he "he may well have lied to a federal grand jury." Read that again: Broder wasn't even sure if he thought Clinton lied to a federal grand jury, but thought he should resign. Because maybe he lied. About an affair.

But in 2006, Broder wrote that President Bush "has proved to be lawless and reckless. He started a war he cannot finish, drove the government into debt and repeatedly defied the Constitution." Did he think this "lawless and reckless" president who "repeatedly defied the Constitution" should resign? If he thought so, he did not tell us. Broder believes his president is a lawless man who repeatedly defies the Constitution -- yet this superman, this titan, this great and influential man will not say it is time for the president to step down. Now, if Bush "may well have lied" about sex ... then, perhaps this titan would be stirred to speak out a little more boldly.

  • Broder has repeatedly and disingenuously defended his window-peering coverage of the Clintons' marriage, despite having previously denounced such journalism. He hasn't entirely abandoned his earlier stance, though: when asked if he would write a similar article about Republican candidates, Broder replied: "Why would I write such an article? I know of no occasion for that." He is, however, "the most objective and respected reporter" Tim Russert knows.
  • In 2002, when Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, a prominent leader in the Republican Party, was forced to step down from his leadership position after suggesting the country would have been better off had we elected a segregationist president in 1948, David Broder explained that the "losers" in the matter were ... Democrats, because four years earlier, they hadn't impeached President Clinton.
  • In 2005, Broder blamed Democrats -- who were in the minority in both the House and the Senate -- for Congress' failure to conduct oversight hearings. Which, of course, they didn't have the power to do, being in the minority and all. Then, in March 2007 -- just two months into Democratic control of Congress -- Broder complained that the House had "slowed to a crawl," doing little other than "filling time with investigations." Later that month, Broder claimed "Democrats find it easier to investigate than to legislate. ... Accountability is certainly important, but Democrats must know that people were really voting for action on Iraq, health care, immigration, energy and a few other problems. Investigations are useful, but only legislation on big issues changes lives." In yet another March column, Broder warned, "It seems doubtful that Democrats can help themselves ... with more investigations ... At some point, Democrats have to give people something to vote for. People already know what they're against -- the Republicans."

So, when Democrats didn't control Congress, David Broder thought that oversight hearings were good, and blamed Democrats -- who lacked the authority to conduct such hearings -- for their absence. Now that Democrats control Congress, Broder warns Democrats not to conduct oversight investigations.

  • In 2005, Broder actually touted President Bush's response to Hurricane Katrina. 'Nuff said.
  • In December 2006, Broder praised Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld as "stalwarts of economic and national security policy." No, really.
  • In 2006, he called on journalists to apologize to Karl Rove for suggesting he was part of the campaign to out Valerie Plame, despite the fact that ... Karl Rove was part of the campaign to out Valerie Plame.
  • In August 2006, Broder warned that if Joe Lieberman was defeated in the Connecticut Senate primary, it would portend general election disaster for the Democrats. Lieberman lost that primary, and yet the Democrats thoroughly trounced the GOP in the fall.
  • In June 2006, Broder criticized Hillary Clinton for her "shortsightedness" after she had criticized the media for kowtowing to the Bush administration. In arguing that Clinton was off-base, Broder noted a "front-page story" in that morning's Post about the Downing Street Memos, concluding, "Who does she think is doing this work if not investigative reporters? Give us a break." Broder's invocation of a Washington Post article about the Downing Street Memos as evidence that the Post has aggressively reported stories that are bad for Bush seems disingenuous given that even Post Ombudsman Michael Getler and reporters Howard Kurtz and Jefferson Morley acknowledged that the paper was slow to cover the Memo story.
  • Last September, Broder wrote a column ostensibly about the "moral scale" of the debate over torture that somehow managed to avoid his own newspaper's report, three days earlier, that the U.S. had "secretly whisked" an innocent Canadian citizen to Syria, where he was beaten, forced to make a false confession, and "kept in a coffin-size dungeon for 10 months." Instead, as we explained at the time, "while paying lip service to the 'moral scale,' Broder suggested to the reader that he is kept awake at night by the 'loud' and 'vituperative' statements of bloggers and Democratic congressmen -- rather than by the thought that the Bush administration's pro-torture stance not only results in inhumane treatment of those we torture, but increases the risk of our own troops facing similar treatment from foreign regimes." In that column, as he so often does, Broder expressed confidence that the likes of Joe Lieberman and John McCain -- "these are not ordinary men," Broder stressed -- would step in and put an end to U.S. torture.
  • Earlier this year, Broder claimed that The New York Times is "not normally solicitous of Republicans' feelings." Broder's attack on the Times was not only a pitch-perfect rendition of a common GOP talking point, it was also clearly false: The Times actually has a "conservative beat" ... but no "progressive beat." That's small change, however, compared to Broder's recent slur that Democrats have little "sympathy for" the military. If this whole "dean of political reporters" thing doesn't work out, Broder can always start a new career as a speechwriter for Vice President Dick Cheney.
  • Earlier this month, the Post was criticized for running an op-ed by Liz* Cheney in which she echoed attacks on Nancy Pelosi made by her father, the vice president, without disclosing the relationship between the two. Despite the fact that the lack of disclosure was apparently a violation of Post policy, Broder declared that it would have been "gratuitous" to include such a disclosure.
  • In mid-February, Broder predicted a political comeback by President Bush, declaring "he is demonstrating political smarts that even his critics have to acknowledge." Instead, Bush's poll ratings (28 percent approval in the latest Harris poll) remain so dismal that conservative columnists have taken to arguing that the fact that Bush has spent a year in the mid-30s is a good thing, as it demonstrates consistency. No, really. On March 30, Broder was asked about that prediction during an online discussion:

Seattle: Remember your column about President Bush being on the verge of regaining his political footing? Isn't it about time you revisited that tidbit of political prognostication?

washingtonpost.com: Bush Regains His Footing (Post, Feb. 16)

David S. Broder: I remember that column well. It is time to revisit and revise. Stay tuned.

Bush remains as popular as a kick in the head, but rather than revising his absurd prediction, as promised, Broder declares Harry Reid a political incompetent.

Think about where the Democrats were when Harry Reid became their leader in the Senate. Think about where they are now. Think about David Broder's recent prediction of a Bush comeback; his touting of Bush's response to Katrina; his praise for Cheney and Rumsfeld; his claims that journalists should apologize to Karl Rove for saying he did something he did; his call for fewer details and less discussion of policy from candidates; his defense of Richard Nixon; his prediction that if Joe Lieberman lost his primary, Democrats would perform poorly in the general election; his double standards in his coverage of candidates personal lives; his suggestion that Bill Clinton should have resigned because he "may well have lied" about sex; his unwillingness to say that a "lawless" president who "repeatedly defied the Constitution" should step down; his elitist and arrogant statement that he and his pals care more about being lied to than you do; his hypocritical statement that Kerry's and Gore's "arrogance rankled Midwesterners such as myself."

Think about all that, and ask yourself: If you were David Broder, wouldn't you -- just maybe -- think twice before accusing someone else of "bumbling" and "ineptitude"?

*Correction: The original text of this column incorrectly stated that Mary Cheney, Vice President Dick Cheney's other daughter, had written the Washington Post op-ed. In fact, Liz Cheney was the author of the op-ed. Media Matters for America regrets the error.
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    • Author by mefirst (April 27, 2007 9:08 pm ET)
         

      and the real laugher is that when he's on stuff like meet the press, he's counted as one of the "liberals".

      Report Abuse
      • Author by mefirst (April 29, 2007 12:03 pm ET)
           

        watched the faux news boys this morning.  brit hume said almost every government in the world said the same thing as bush about wmd.  wrong.  the germans, in particular, warned us off "curveball", who was the source of much of our disinformation.  kristol also said clinton wanted to remove saddam.  true, but not through an invasion, but internal oppositon. wallace chastised juan williams for "running out the clock".  i guess any time not spent on right wing spin is not allowed.  also saw joe biden on meet the press earlier.    he refused to get drawn into the "is the war lost, are we better off without saddam" wordplay. he also blasted guiliani for his statements about how we're in danger of another 9-11 attack if the democrats get elected.  biden noted that on 9-10 he gave a speech predicting just such an attack.  he said that pre 9-11 the bush people only cared about iraq and missile defense.  that echoed what richard clarke, who worked in both bush administrations, has said.  clarke portrayed the bush people as "frozen in amber". because they came back after 8 years with the same concerns, and did not recognize the danger of terrorism.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by mefirst (April 29, 2007 12:54 pm ET)
             

          usa today, 5-17-02:  "bush defends his actions before 9-11"  from that article: ".. senator diane feinstein [d-cal], a member of the senate intelligence committee, told a tv interviewer [larry king] in july 2001 that panel staff members had informed her of a major possibility of a terrorist attack."   "..feinstein said that on sept 10 she had talked to vice president cheney's chief of staff, lewis libby, to convey her concerns and the response was 'we'll get back to you in six months'." 

           

          Report Abuse
        • Author by NotThatGeorge (April 29, 2007 5:56 pm ET)
             

          Brit Hume is full of it, as usual, but...

          There were lots of people who thought Saddam was a bigger threat than he truly was.

          Bush is the only one who invaded after the UN weapons inspectors told Bush and the world that Saddam was not really that big of a threat. It doesn't matter what others thought in the lead-up to invading Iraq. What matters is that Bush did it with no adequate planning for the future, not enough troops in the beginning, and contrary to the updated info and intelligence he got right before we invaded.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by mefirst (April 29, 2007 7:00 pm ET)
               

            i'm aware of what you are saying.  but hume was attempting to make the point that other intelligence agencies were saying the same things as the bush administration.  untrue.  the french said they did not believe that iraq had tried to buy uranium from niger.

            Report Abuse
            • Author by kevin1007 (April 30, 2007 1:28 am ET)
                 

              You're lying again. Hume said that other intelligence agencies in the world believed Saddam had WMD. The French also believed Saddam had WMD. See David Kay's testimony before Senate Armed Services Committee, January 28, 2004.

              Report Abuse
              • Author by mefirst (April 30, 2007 7:14 am ET)
                   

                i said in my post at 1203 that hume said other intelligence agencies said iraq had wmd.  but he was trying to imply that they all believed the same things as the bush administration.  they didn't. and the inspectors proved the weapons were not there.  bush invaded anyway. 

                Report Abuse
                • Author by kevin1007 (April 30, 2007 1:39 pm ET)
                     

                  That's a lie. Hume made no such implication.

                  It is also a lie to say that the inspectors proved that Saddam had no WMD. That's ridiculous. The UN inspectors were in Iraq between 1991 and 1998 and were unable to tell us what WMD Saddam had. How in the world would Blitz and his team accomplish in a few weeks what earlier inspectors could not do in seven+ years.

                  Kenneth Pollack explained the problem with inspections in "The Threatening Storm" (2002):

                  "As noted above, there is a consensus among American, British, Swedish, Dutch, and even French former inspectors that it would require twelve to eighteen months just to establish a baseline, let alone actually conduct inspections. And after that, we should never forget that once the inspections were completed we would need to transition to long-term montioring to try to prevent Saddam from reconstituting the WMD programs." (p. 238)

                  "This is the problem with the inspections: we knew the Iraqis were cheating but did not know where. If we had known, we would have bombed those facilities in 1998 during Operation Desert Fox. The fact that out of ninety-seven targets struck only eleven were WMD production facilities should give a good sense of the problem." (p. 241)

                  Report Abuse
                  • Author by mefirst (April 30, 2007 8:40 pm ET)
                       

                    you throw around the lie word pretty easily. hume clearly implied that, because that is the right wing mantra:  everybody believed what bush believed.  but not even our own intelligence agencies believed what bush was saying.  nor did the british.  the head of british intelligence said "the facts are being fixed around the policy" by bush.  and you can quote some book all you want.  bush said he did not want to go to war, he wanted to get the inspectors back in.  they were allowed back in and they were finding nothing at the sites we told them to go to.  and how did we know where to tell them?  well, rummy did say  "we know he has wmd because we know where they are."  and we went from being allowed access to the whole country to access to just a few areas now.  that's real progress in the search for your fabled wmd.  which angle are you going to argue next?

                    Report Abuse
        • Author by kevin1007 (April 30, 2007 1:15 am ET)
             

          "watched the faux news boys this morning.  brit hume said almost every government in the world said the same thing as bush about wmd.  wrong.  the germans, in particular, warned us off "curveball", who was the source of much of our disinformation.

          You're lying. The Germans also believe Saddam had WMD. In "The Threatening Storm" (2002), Kenneth Pollack wrote, "The German intelligence service, using methods it won't divulge, estimated in 2001 that Iraq was three to six years from having a nuclear weapon." (p. 175)

          BTW, Democrat Joe Biden said the same thing as Hume on Meet the Press ths morning.

          "kristol also said clinton wanted to remove saddam.  true, but not through an invasion, but internal oppositon."

          Yes, and who did Clinton and Gore work with? Was that wise?

          http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/809168.stm 

          "wallace chastised juan williams for "running out the clock".  i guess any time not spent on right wing spin is not allowed."

          Another lie. It has been a runnig joke on Fox News Sunday that Williams always manages to get the last word. Wallace said it in a jokingly manner and everyone, including Williams, laughed. 

          "also saw joe biden on meet the press earlier.    he refused to get drawn into the "is the war lost, are we better off without saddam" wordplay. he also blasted guiliani for his statements about how we're in danger of another 9-11 attack if the democrats get elected.  biden noted that on 9-10 he gave a speech predicting just such an attack.  he said that pre 9-11 the bush people only cared about iraq and missile defense."

          On their final days of the Clinton administration, Madeleine Albright and Richard Holbrooke warned that Iraq would be a major issue for the incoming Bush administration. They made no similar speeches during those days concerning al Qaeda. As far as missile defense, the Clinton administration was also putting that front and center before it left office. Here's what William Cohen, Clinton's Secretary of Defense, said in July 2000:

          "I cannot think of a more important issue to address than protecting the American people from the threat posed by states such as North Korea, Iran and Iraq, who are seeking to acquire nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and the long-range missiles to deliver them."  http://www.spacewar.com/news/bmdo-00zzs.html

          In ther words, Cohen saw missle defense as a more important issue that terrorism.

          "that echoed what richard clarke, who worked in both bush administrations, has said.  clarke portrayed the bush people as "frozen in amber". because they came back after 8 years with the same concerns, and did not recognize the danger of terrorism."

          Apparently, Clarke did not recognize that danger as well. Two U.S. embassies (i.e., U.S. soil) were blown up, the USS Cole bombed, and 9/11 occurred while he was the counterterrorism czar. Not much of a record there.

          http://www.retroactiveimpeachment.com/clarke.html

          Report Abuse
          • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (April 30, 2007 1:27 am ET)
               

            Kevin,

            Using methods he won't divulge, predicted Rush Limball would be Secretary of State in the Pat Robertson administration. 

            Report Abuse
            • Author by kevin1007 (April 30, 2007 1:57 am ET)
                 

              Pollack served as Clinton's top expert on Iraq in the NSC. His book also had the imprimatur of the Council on Foreign Relations. Madeleine Albright, Richard Holbrooke, and other Clintonistas sit on CFR's board of directors.

              Do you have another flippant remark, or can you make a cogent argument concerning why all these people shouldn't be listened to concerning German intelligence?

              Report Abuse
              • Author by mefirst (April 30, 2007 7:18 am ET)
                   

                the 9-11 report named chapter 8, about the summer of 2001:  "the system was blinking red".  is that a "lie"?  and the bush administration's response from bush on down was to do nothing.

                Report Abuse
                • Author by kevin1007 (April 30, 2007 1:47 pm ET)
                     

                  You're lying. If you actually read the 9/11 Commission report, you'll know that the Bush administration had taken many steps to counter the terrorist threat during the summer of 2001.  In fact, even the August 6 PDB, which contained no specific information about a future terrorist attack, stated, "The FBI is conducting approximately 70 full field investigations throughout the US that it considers Bin Laden-related. CIA and the FBI are investigating a call to our Embassy in the UAE in May saying that a group of Bin Laden supporters was in the US planning attacks with explosives."

                  That proves you lied about the Bush administration doing nothing.

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                  • Author by mefirst (April 30, 2007 8:27 pm ET)
                       

                    9-11 report, page 254:  "there were more than 40 intelligence articles in the presidential daily briefings from january 20 to september 10, 2001, that related to bin ladin."  the response by bush?  nothing, not one meeting that focused on terrorism, unlike clinton who held them weekly, sometimes daily.  page 265:  "in sum, the domestic agencies never mobilized in response to the threat.  they did not have direction and did not have a plan to institute."  "[acting fbi director] pickard told us that after two such briefings [in june and july 2001] ashcroft told him that he did not want to hear about the threats anymore."  page 256:  "threat reports surged in june and july."  again, nothing from bush.  page 259:  "to give a sense of his anxiety at the time, one senior official in the counterterrorism center told us that he and a colleague were considering resigning in order to go public with their concerns."  and then you have bush's statement to bob woodward that he was "not on point" about bin ladin prior to 9-11.  any lies there?

                    Report Abuse
      • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (April 30, 2007 1:16 am ET)
           

        Wel done, MeFirst...

        I think you about summed it up. 

        Report Abuse
    • Author by conleytgwinn (April 27, 2007 9:28 pm ET)
         

      This column reminds me a lot of reading the comments attached to Broder's column online: the first 57 consecutive, insisted that Broder should look into retirement, since he had clearly lost the capacity to write or even think coherently. I started to inquire then, when he had ever displayed such capacity, but got distracted into an attempt to determine whether 100% of the comments were similarly negative. I finally did find a few attempting to support him, but forgot all about the issue of whether he had simply lost his skills to age, or had spent his career totally without those requisite abilities.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by oscar the grouch (April 27, 2007 9:47 pm ET)
         

      My gawd, the man is like 80 years old. Cut a senior citizen a little slack!!! Guys like Mr. Broder, Mr. Rooney, Mr. Woodward should take a hint from Mike Wallace and ride off into the sunset while they still realize what direction that really is.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by johnny_nyc8351 (April 27, 2007 9:52 pm ET)
         

      Whoa!!...

      nice work, brilliant actually.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by tabkhan (April 27, 2007 10:15 pm ET)
         

      Reading his column day to day, I realize Broder is a vicious and illogical person, but seeing this list of his contradictions and hypocritical stances, well, it's a virtual indictment. The blindness -- it's stunning and remarkable.

      Great work, Jamison.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by jscott (April 27, 2007 10:39 pm ET)
         

      Foser shoots, scores.  Nothin' but net.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by spooky3 (April 27, 2007 11:34 pm ET)
         

      Mr. Foser, this was a dead-on piece. You are absolutely right and you articulated your points and the evidence beautifully. Thank you.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by HuntingtonBeachLefty (April 28, 2007 12:26 am ET)
           

        Nice piece.

        "Elitists" - there are too many abused buzzwords to count in politics and punditry, but this one  is on my bottom 10 list. I realize the GOP and their henchmen have created an undefined yet horrible definition for this word, and their audience has played along (I hear callers to righty radio tossing it into their comments), I just need to know:

        Who are these "elites" ?

        What makes them "elite"?

        Why is it bad?

        Report Abuse
      • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (April 30, 2007 1:30 am ET)
           

        God Bless Jamison Foser!

        He'll be remembered as one of the "minutemen" of the 21st century. 

        Report Abuse
    • Author by Phatt Aass (April 28, 2007 1:21 am ET)
         

      This is great research/reporting. Thank You! It'll be great seeing Broder on Meet the Press, or wherever, having read your thorough documentation of his chronic slop. Broder seems to consider himself "the lord elite"  of D.C. "journalistas". And his "elite" peers pile on the praise. What a sick pack of back-slappin' butt suckers!

      Report Abuse
    • Author by drkoelper3462 (April 28, 2007 1:23 am ET)
         

      If any student in my high school journalism class had repeatedly displayed the type of misleading, disingenuous and hypocritical analysis and commentary that has been David Broder's staple for so many years, that student would be sat down and told that this was unacceptable.

      If we won't accept such bogus and irresponsible work product from a student writer, I find it positively mystifying why WaPo grants Broder a carte blanche hall pass to do as he damn well pleases. Perhaps at his age, he doesn't give a rat's ass about the dubious example he provides our budding journlaists-to-be.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by mikesd (April 28, 2007 3:25 am ET)
         

      Great column! I never listened to Broder that much I simply believed the accolades and thought he was liberal. Recently I kept hearing his bone headed comments and thought he is just as lame as the rest. Wow, thanks for reminding us to always question what we are hearing.

      Mike

      Report Abuse
    • Author by dichrista3779 (April 28, 2007 5:21 am ET)
         

      I love Media Matters!  You expressed so well what I have been feeling about David Broder for years.  We news junkies don't need any enemies with friends like him.  Some superman, indeed!  Unfortunately, there are so many adored pundits in this country who I think are just as hopeless and malevolent as Mr. Broder.  Oh, well. 

      I like what Noam Chomsky said.  Something about the truth being out there, visable and available to those who seek it.  However, he added that it is not easy to find.  One must read very widely and as wisely as possible.  We aren't going to be told the unvarnished truth by reporters of the NY Times and/or Washington Post, that's for sure.

       Please keep up the good work.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by al75 (April 28, 2007 9:15 am ET)
         

      This column helps me understand:  "elitist" is a code for someone who isn't in tempo with the party message, as "defeatist" was used in England to silence dissent against WW I blunders, or "saboteur" was used by the Bolshevicks in the 20's or "commie" was used by the McCarthyites in the 50's.  Like Bill Moyers stunning piece BUYING THE WAR 

      [link to www.pbs.org] column illustrates how our so-called free press functions as a propoganda tool that has grown catastrophically disconnected from reality.  America's potency as a world power is shrinking.  The qualities that made us have some legitimacy as a world power are soiled.  Terrorist enemies of our society are strenghtened by the brutality and  ignorance of our leadership.

       Yet people like Broder, and those who control him, lead the chant "support the troops".

      Anyone using the word "elitist" should be scrutinized.  The word as it is used today suggests a mindset that is America's greatest peril. 

       

      Report Abuse
      • Author by UnEasyOne (April 29, 2007 10:13 am ET)
           

        And don't forget Moyers' Friday night program - it was great!

        Report Abuse
    • Author by doggril (April 28, 2007 9:52 am ET)
         

      David Broder is dean only of the smarmy little propagandists that the ruling class uses to do their bidding. Yeah, he's occasionally critical of his masters, but only in the most harmless way.

      He's a sad excuse for a journalist.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by Midwest Meg (April 28, 2007 10:00 am ET)
         

      Great post. How can DC journalists look themsleves in the face? How can anyone take them seriously? And David Broder as the best of the best.......Christ Almighty.

      By the way, I come from the Midwest-----I now live in Minneapolis, but I've done my time in Chicago, Detroit and a few other towns. And how strange, but I don't recall hearing my fellow Midwesterners being "rankled" by the arrogance of Gore or Kerry. I certainly heard Beltway pundits proclaiming this sort of thing, but I never saw it. Instead for the last six years, people in my world have been quietly furious about Bush. You hear people making bitter asides. On the street. At the supermarket. In the check-out lines. On the playgrounds. In the church coffee hours. At the gas pumps. At back-to-school night. Anti-Bush stickers and remarks are everywhere.

      Somehow I don't think Mr. "Midwest" Broder has been around in these parts. And as for his current Midwest credentials---I believe he owns a vacation home on Beaver Island in Lake Michigan and spends maybe a a week or two a year out there. It's probably not the best location to hang out with us humble, ordinary Midwesterners and find out what really rankles us.

      I graduated Columbia School of Journalism and for some reason, I also get the Medill School of J. stuff. Sometime in couple of years, Medill did a glowing profile of Elisabeth Bumiller, the NYT's pathetic, fawning, put-on-her-knee-pads-one-at-a-time, it's-scary-to-ask-the-President-tough-questions White House reporter. As I recall, they quoted one of her old classmates who said she was always such a hard worker, always typing her little fingers to the bone. The Columbia School of J. also writes up happy little profiles of its graduates who are now acting spokespeople or speechwriters for Bush or Cheney.

      It's this total disconnect. You think those schools would be ashamed of those graduates. But.....sadly, no.

      I went back for my 25th reunion last year. The Columbia School of Journalism actually had a panel called something like "What Is A Blog And Should You Get One?" It was so out of touch it was embarassing. My mom is 88 years old----she s been on the blogs for years--and she would have rolled her eyes at this panel.

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    • Author by 0O00O0O (April 28, 2007 10:12 am ET)
         

      I hate to point this out, but all Broder has to do is to publish a couple of good columns that liberals and progressives like, and all these sins will be forgotten.

      Remember Maureen Dowd?  She published some lightweight feminist stuff last year and everyone from salon.com to DU went gaga for months over her. 

      How about Andrew Sullivan?  These days he is lovingly linked to by Atrios, Washington Monthly, Tapped, and others who used to dedidcate a lot of screen space to the atrocity he was from 2000 on.

      Broder will be the same.  He will publish something we all like, and we will link to it gleefully, and his place as "priest" or "high dean" will be cemented again.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by jscott (April 28, 2007 11:12 am ET)
           

        The problem is that Broder will probaly never do that.  He has always been an avowed apologist for the right and I doubt this criticism will change that.

        Report Abuse
      • Author by kevin1007 (April 30, 2007 1:34 am ET)
           

        And don't forget that MMFA's president and CEO, David Brock once called Anita Hill "a little bit nutty, a little bit sl*tty." Now Brock is the darling of the moonbat left. All Broder has to do is write yet another Bush-bashing column and these moonbats will think he is the greatest. These folks will even embrace racists such as Pat Buchanan and Robert Byrd as long as they're bashing Bush.

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        • Author by anyfreedomleft (April 30, 2007 8:20 am ET)
             

          Gee, again the "Byrd is a racist" by remarking about something from over a half century ago ... by that same argument, the current Pope is still a Nazi, having been in the Hitler Youth but "renounced" it later (when convenient) ... of course, Guv Ahnold would also be a Nazi, because his daddy supported the Nazis, too (along with Prescott Bush ... hmm ...)

           

          And when has the "left" "embraced" Pat Buchanan?  What?  When he said nasty things about Bush?  Buchanan's still a nutcase, and will sidle up with the next Republican, until convenient.  Not to be trusted (Do you embrace everything Zellout Miller says?)

           

          Of course, you probably embrace (and french) Joe Lieberman ... well, except for that period when he was running with Al Gore ... JL was highly critical of Clinton during the impeachment hearings ... wonder why he doesn't like to talk about impeachment over a real impeachable offense, instead of a "dalliance" ... 

          Report Abuse
      • Author by dave_chicago (April 30, 2007 11:14 am ET)
           

        "[Broder] will publish something we all like, and we will link to it gleefully, and his place as "priest" or "high dean" will be cemented again."

        "We"-(which I can safely presume does not include "you"-obviously)-never gave Mr. Broder his "place" as "priest" or "high dean" to begin with, so we won't be restoring it. That's a moniker that was bestowed by Broder's fellow Beltway pundits and priests.

        If Broder publishes an item that just maybe happens to be fact and reality-based (unlike his recent bogus comparison of Reid to Gonzales) we may or may not reference it (we are very fond of facts and reality here). We're not holding our breaths, however. But an item like that, should he turn over a new leaf and publish, in no way whatsoever will diminish all he's done in the past (see Foser's column). We have deep memories and won't forget any of it.

         

        Report Abuse
    • Author by ChaoticIrony (April 28, 2007 11:17 am ET)
         

      This column was just outstanding.

       

      Report Abuse
    • Author by temphandle wreckers27mythologies (April 28, 2007 11:36 am ET)
         

      Forget the hypocrisy, arrogance and intellectual torpor: just ponder his leaden writing. "stalwarts of economic and national security policy"?? Has Broder ever written anything remotely memorable? He's like the anti-Twain, consitutionally incapable of writing an interesting, cliche-free sentence. As Alex Cockburn once said, Broder's writing is so somnolent, birds flying over his house fall asleep and drop out of the sky.

      But this, too, is part of Broder's strategic value, to induce a coma in his readership, thus removing the hoi polloi from the conversation. Too bad for him it's not working anymore.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by tabkhan (April 28, 2007 12:51 pm ET)
           

        Has Broder ever written anything remotely memorable?

        Yes, he has. Many years ago he wrote about seeing the play, "Angels in America," as AIDS was ravaging the gay community. This was at a time when George Will suggested tattooing HIV+ men on their posterior, a Scarlet Letter offering from a homophobe. It was eloquent and powerful, and I admired him for that.

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    • Author by janeanetheacerbicgoblin (April 28, 2007 3:44 pm ET)
         

      Broder's age is immaterial to me.  He is not necessarily senile, just completely and utterly WRONG on 99 percent of things.  He has been a royal screwup for quite some time, going all the way back to when he deried people for picking on Nixon, so his age has little or nothing to do with his incredible incompetence. 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by Millennium_Archangel (April 28, 2007 6:54 pm ET)
         

      He's on his way out, another pseudo pundit passed by in the age of the Google Search and activist bloggers.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by nshatt67835065 (April 28, 2007 6:55 pm ET)
         

      Perhaps the Washington Post’s David Broder was having a particularly disorienting senior moment when he unleashed the weirdly wrong-headed column of April 26 in which he paired Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales as being equivalently lamentable. The concept of equivalency of competence is so lame-brained that it might have been the inspiration of an increasingly reality-challenged Dick Cheney. The sole links between Reid and Gonzales seem to be that both overcame hard-scrabble beginnings in bleak settings (Nevada and Texas, respectively) and that both are attorneys.

      Yet Reid’s rise did not come from attaching himself to power, whereas Gonzales signed-on very early as legal lackey/enabler to Texas Governor George W. Bush; then rose in rank with his liege-lord’s fluke election to president. On his watch as Attorney General – acting as partisan Pavlov dog more than watch-dog for judicial rectitude – he facilitated grievous harm to this country, with repercussions that could continue over generations.

      Could the Gonzales-Reid column be considered an atypical “exhibition of ineptitude” by Broder it might be viewed more charitably. But I vividly recollect Broder’s far more grievous journalistic breach when he abetted the corrosive anti-Clinton rant published just before the election of 1998 and written by the Post’s Sally Quinn. The piece was studded with blatantly biased “me too, Sally” comments from Broder himself and others: Chris Matthews, Andrea Mitchell, David Gergen. Broder’s lofty, peevish, and breathtakingly arrogant quote: “He came in here and he trashed the place, and it’s not his place.”

      It’s not the president’s place to be in Washington, D.C.?

      When I objected to Quinn and her posse’s piece back then -- by letter to the Post (no response) -- I made the suggestion that Broder and his fellow offenders within the media deserved to pay some price for the significant ethical / professional breach. My idea was that they complete, one and all, a brush-up course in Journalism I! Other voices were heard lamenting the jarring journalistic lapse.

      As Ann Lewis, then Bill Clinton’s Director of Communications, asked in a letter she sent to the Post, “How are we to read news of the president’s policies by these same journalists in the future?” A New York Times “Journal” columnist also weighed in, calling Quinn’s piece a case of “moralistic Washington insiders bloviating about our trashy president in print and on MSNBC.”

      My hunch is that Quinn and Broder, et al, escaped scot-free for the malodorous product. Will the current Broder column trashing Senate Majority Leader Reid earn the veteran writer even a raised eyebrow from his Washington Post editors?

      NSHATT67835065

      Report Abuse
    • Author by hogprint (April 28, 2007 8:47 pm ET)
         

      If I may stray off topic for a sec (but not far!)...

      Not here to defend Broder, but I see there is not much wailing over what Sen. Reid actually said.  We have a senator undermining a mission with troops in the field.  Let's imagine a senator in say '42 when things looked bleak, saying the same thing? 

      I noticed MMfA has been strangely silent on his remarks.  It was all over RW radio last week.  No misinformation to report?  Had to be one tidbit out there.

      Could Harry be the loose cannon he has been reported to be?  Looks like the bird has come home to roost.  The Dems really do own defeat.  Keep talking Harry, you only help the cause. 

      Report Abuse
      • Author by solon (April 29, 2007 12:54 am ET)
           

        Reid told the truth. We know how allergic you wingers are to the truth. We know how it gives you a rash. Its what Einstein said the same mindset that CAUSED a problem cannot reasonably be expected to solve the problem. If we keep doing what HASNT been working its not going to magically work in the future.

        Report Abuse
      • Author by mefirst (April 29, 2007 10:09 am ET)
           

        hogprint:  "i notice mmfa has been strangely silent on his [reid's] remarks."   damn, people make jokes about planet wingnut all the time, like some of you guys live in some alternate reality.  it's right there on the home page screen, two stories thursday that directly talk about reid's remarks, more on wednesday.  i think some of you have become so caught up in defending the indefensible bush that you've lost your grip on reality.  don't write something that is obviously  and totally incorrect.  you look [?] like a fool.

        Report Abuse
      • Author by Kevin88101 (April 29, 2007 1:58 pm ET)
           

        Not to stray from the topic, but why do Republican visitors always change the subject, like turning a column about Broder into one about Harry Reid's comments? Or turning a topic about half a dozen Swift Boat vets contradicting themselves into whether John Kerry was in Cambodia? Is it because they lack the facts to argue the topic at hand? That's what I'll have to assume.

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      • Author by m6rt678 (April 29, 2007 9:08 pm ET)
           

        Yo...Hogprint. . . Yeah right 'the democrats own defeat' . . . in your deluded wingnut dreams maybe they do. But I thought that Bush was the drunk delusional fratboy, ever so ready to blame all his problems on anyone and everyone else.  This war is Bush's baby.  And I have one word for your HogPrint . . . C-R-A-C-K-E-R.

        Report Abuse
      • Author by solon (April 29, 2007 10:59 pm ET)
           

        Well the Republicans really own the lets get as many Americans killed as we possibly can warmonger policy. Good luck with that.

        Report Abuse
      • Author by dave_chicago (April 30, 2007 11:23 am ET)
           

        "Let's imagine a senator in say '42 when things looked bleak, saying the same thing?"

        Let's imagine a president, in '42, aboard an aircraft carrier, saying "In the war against our enemies, we and our allies are victorious!"

        Report Abuse
    • Author by TeddySanFran (April 28, 2007 9:31 pm ET)
         

      How exciting to see Broder's "Why would I write such an article? I know of no occasion for that." answer in this column! I hope Broder continues to participate in chatz at WaPoO, now that he has adjusted to his new keyboard, and that he won't be discouraged by MM's excellent and comprehensive analysis of his opining.

      It's truly frustrating to read young, next-gen journamalists profess their admiration for the Broder methods, reporting, and output. Makes me weep for what could be. Perhaps, though, it's best that the last throes of the current paradigm are so public. The better mousetrap, built on its ruins, must learn from the error-ridden ways Broder so perfectly illustrates.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by marshallphillips3914 (April 29, 2007 12:30 am ET)
         

      I noticed back during the Reagan era that Broder was one of the biggest loads in Washington.  His articles and TV appearances are noteworthy for their complete lack of any insight whatsoever, mere Beltway BS.

      He seems like someone who just wants to be loved...by the military-industrial complex.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by jjamele2880 (April 29, 2007 8:18 am ET)
         

      I think that there are two reasons why there isnt more "outrage" over Reids' remarks:

      First, they are entirely accurate.  The war as George Bush has chosen to fight it IS lost.  More people know this than care to admit.  Just like Vietnam- the people in charge refuse to admit their mistakes, stubbornly plod on, denounce anyone who disagrees, and more people die.

      Second, the "hurting the morale of the troops in the field" has been so done to death, it elicts a yawn.  For the past four years, we've heard this cowardly retort used for everything from laughing at Bush's malapropisms to opposing his Social Security plan.  When you cant say ANYTHING against Bush without "hurting the morale of the troops in the field," you might as well just say what you think.  That horse has been beaten to death.

      Know what hurts the morale of the troops in the field?  A President who puts them in harm's way and keeps them there because withdrawing them would be hard on his ego. 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by meahbottoms (April 29, 2007 4:42 pm ET)
         

      Broder is a Republican. That's all. He is also a pundent. To not come out against this administration is a journaiistic crime unless he really IS a pundent. The American people would love to be able to look to a journalist who has done his or her homework and knows what they are talking about. What Tim Russert says is NEVER taken seriously in my home. There is nothing honorable about reporters who claim to be objective but never are. Russert is one of those. His Cheney moments will not be forgotten. Broder is just not in touch with what is really going on in this country, and how we are in deep trouble. Comparing Harry Reid with Gonzales in ANY way is entirely inappropriate. It needs to be said that this war is lost. If it were not for the democrats who were mandated by the American people to put a stop to this needles carnage, he would not be doing his job. Broder is another Republican who cannot part from his dependence on the administration just like the Republican congress. The press, including this man, has really let this country down.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by bn14581 (April 29, 2007 7:13 pm ET)
         

      The fact that Russet and other leading news media "personalities/celebrities" continue to defer to Mr. Broder and others like him gives them cover to continue as the instruments of Bush and company and others before them. Strangely, the same people--and Russet among them--were also the best friends of Imus. They want it both ways. Russet was outright pathetic on last week's Bill Moyer's program when he was exposed for not asking the right questions in the run-up to the Iraq war and said something about his working class roots in Buffalo. What a racket.

       

      Report Abuse
    • Author by m6rt678 (April 29, 2007 8:56 pm ET)
         

      David Broder is Karl Rove's waterboy.  So where is the surprise in what he says.   He should just acknowledge that the While House pays his salary.  And the WaPo should stop pretending his is an honest journalist.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by kevin1007 (April 30, 2007 12:52 am ET)
         

      Wow, the liberals at MMFA are attacking a fellow traveler. Not a smart move.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (April 30, 2007 1:15 am ET)
         

      Bald-headed corporate dirtbag..,

      Yes, it is just that simple. 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by temphandle beaded67eugenia (April 30, 2007 1:26 am ET)
         

      No blogger anywhere does as good a job on plundits like Broder and Brooks than Driftglass. Driftey hoists them up by their soiled undies for all to see.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by IRON HEEL (April 30, 2007 6:32 am ET)
         

      Broder ought either be put to pasture or the knackers. He's lost whatever it was that he may have had.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by anyfreedomleft (April 30, 2007 8:09 am ET)
         

      I nearly puked on a library copy of the "Investor's Business Daily" when I saw that they had Broder as their "On the Left" columnist ... as I could see, at best, Broder was a moderate conservative ...

      Report Abuse

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