In the course of the past week an odd double standard has emerged in the presidential campaign. Every sentence and gesture of the young John Kerry has been scrutinized — and often deliberately misinterpreted — for signs of insincerity, self-promotion, lack of patriotism and fledgling Francophilia. The sentences and gestures of the young George W. […]
Harold Meyerson
Harold Meyerson is editor at large of The American Prospect.
Dirty Work
Has John Kerry fully pondered the extent of the mess — or, more properly, messes — he will inherit from George Bush should he be elected president in November? The crystal ball for Iraq is necessarily more cloudy than the one for the home front. Still, the United States will almost surely still have a […]
Kerry Was Right
Don’t look now, but is the Bush administration creeping toward John Kerry’s position on Iraq? I am writing this column hours before the president’s Tuesday news conference, so I have to allow for the possibility that he will stun us with some radical new departure — perhaps even articulating a coherent policy. But whatever the […]
Death Grip
So now the president’s war of choice has led to an occupation with no good options. The Bush administration’s plan is to hand over control of Iraq to the Iraqi Governing Council on June 30. Just how that council will sustain itself in power, however, is increasingly unclear after the upheaval of the past few […]
Unsung Heroine
Behind every successful man, the old saying used to go, stands a supportive woman. No one has come up with an adage identifying who, exactly, stands behind a successful woman, so let me make a modest suggestion: Millie Jeffrey. Mildred McWilliams Jeffrey, who died last week at a Detroit nursing home at age 93, was […]
Incurious George
The Price of Loyalty: George W. Bush, The White House, and the Education of Paul O’Neill By Ron Suskind, Simon & Schuster, 348 pages, $26.00 George W. Bush has had a cold winter, and it’s not chiefly the Democrats’ doing. The weapons of mass destruction in Iraq — and with them the raison […]
Professional Revolt
Just a few minutes after 8 a.m. on Dec. 7, 1941, with the bombs still falling on Pearl Harbor, Pacific Fleet intelligence officer Lt. Cmdr. Edwin Layton, who’d been predicting a Japanese attack for that very weekend, was scurrying through fleet headquarters when two of his superiors stopped him. “Here is the young man we […]
China’s Workers
Until last week, U.S. trade law belonged to big business. Corporations routinely petitioned our government to threaten other countries with sanctions if their products were being knocked off or undersold by foreign manufacturers with state subsidies, and our government frequently complied. The solicitude the Bush White House and its predecessors showed for shareholders, however, was […]
United Front
They are, by conservative estimate, the two most goddamn tenacious unions in the United States. The Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE) and the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union (HERE), which Thursday announced their intention to merge, are each known for two of the most remarkable long-term campaigns in American labor […]

