In a just world, Speaker John Boehner’s failure to get the votes for a Republican debt-ceiling plan that is already doomed to certain Senate defeat should put pressure on Republicans to compromise. But that doesn’t seem likely. Boehner may yet find the votes for an even more conservative (and doomed) measure, and in any case, […]
Robert Kuttner
Robert Kuttner is co-founder and co-editor of The American Prospect, and professor at Brandeis University’s Heller School. His latest book is Notes for Next Time: Surviving Tyranny, Redeeming America. Follow Bob at his site, robertkuttner.com, and on Twitter.
Remember World War I
Like most American spectators watching this slow-motion train wreck of a budget disaster, I have assumed that at the last minute the damsel would be pulled off the track of the oncoming train. Somehow, the Republicans would appreciate the stakes, a compromise (albeit on sickeningly Republican terms) would be reached, and the nation would be […]
Another Capitulation?
Uh-oh. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who has previously functioned pretty well as a firebreak against President Obama’s instincts to give away the store, now seems to be tottering toward a Republican deal. If that occurs, yet another leader would be rewarding Republican intransigence. Reportedly, Reid’s deal, offered as the Democrats’ last hope to ward […]
Let’s Make an EU Deal
The EU’s bailout deal for Greece was slightly more generous than expected — $159 billion of refinancing, of which private bondholders, mainly banks, are expected to eat about 20 percent of the loss. However, rating agencies are arguing that this will be technically considered a default, triggering payments under credit-default swaps; and there is still […]
Snatching Defeat out of the Jaws of Victory
When it comes to setting up Democrats to give away Social Security and Medicare, the Bowles-Simpson Commission is the diabolical gift that keeps on giving. Long officially defunct, the B-S Commission is a zombie that just won’t die. The Gang of Six is the commission’s spawn — same kind of proposal, same needless sacrifice of […]
What Murdoch Teaches Us About Policing Global Corporate Abuse
Rupert Murdoch and News Corp may end up being prosecuted in the US under a 1977 US law known as the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) for their illegal bribes to officials in Britain. The law prohibits American companies from bribing foreign public officials overseas. I had a hand in both drafting the law and […]
A Little Courage on the Right to Unionize
I’ve long argued that the Obama administration, despite Republican obstructionism, could do a lot to help ordinary people in this economy through executive action. On Monday, the National Labor Relations Board began two days of hearings on a proposed rule change that would make it just a little harder for employers to stonewall and harass […]
Senator Warren?
The White House this morning announced that President Obama will appoint Richard Cordray, former Ohio Attorney General, to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The appointment drew the strong support of Elizabeth Warren, who said today, “Rich has always had my strong support because he is tough and he is smart-and that’s exactly the combination […]
I Love It When You Get Angry
So far in his handling of the budget/debt issue, President Obama gets an A for splitting the Republicans and a D for offering far more substantive concessions than necessary. His bigger mistake was accepting the premise that what America needs is a ten-year budget deal, a premise that played to the Republican strategy of privatizing […]
Fannie-Backwards
How did Gretchen Morgenson, one of America’s best financial reporters, get the story of Fannie Mae’s role in the financial collapse so wrong?

