Live, from my bed, it's the Washington Post: EJ Dionne: Huckabee is conducting two separate insurgencies: One is grassroots evangelical campaign, which has sidestepped the traditional power centers of the Christian Right, and thus enabled an authentic evangelical candidacy free from their for-the-greater-political-good compromises. With that autonomy, he's created an evangelical populist campaign that terrifies the party's moneyed wing. What he's offering downscale Republican voters is an appeal to both sides of their interests: Moral conservatism mixed with economic uplift. And while Huckabee can, and probably will, be defeated, the political space he's opening won't evaporate, and his supporters won't soon forget the lesson of his candidacy: That they can demand, and render viable, politicians who reflect their beliefs, and they don't have to continually accept hardcore fiscal conservatism as the price for a weak moral traditionalism. The must-read of the day. Charles Krauthammer: One of the most astonishing op-eds I've ever read. Asking what Bush's record is on "the Axis of Evil" six years on, Krauthammer concludes we've had a win, a draw, and a loss. The loss? Iran, who we're now unlikely to attack. The draw? North Korea, whom we've reopened diplomatic relations with, convinced to shut down their production of plutonium, and generally detained. And the win? Why, Iraq, of course. Because that's going swimmingly. This man is a maniac. David Ignatius: It almost pains me to acknowledge such sentiment, but it appears that there might be certain individuals in this country who don't believe Iraq should be an endless occupation, and instead see the increased stability mixed with the utter political deadlock as a reason to begin withdrawing troops. On the bright side, Condoleeza Rice has said she's soon going to attempt diplomacy in the country, and that certainly seems worth a shot. Eugene Robinson: Somebody should tell Bill Clinton to shut up. Or at least conduct some research into whether such a thing is even possible. Michael Gerson: I believe in God. Here. Let me tell you about it.