July 13, 2009 • Vol. 14, No. 40 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
On Obama's Watch
by William Kristol

SCRAPBOOK
The 'Argentine Firecracker'

ARTICLES
Questioning Sotomayor
by Robert F. Nagel

Reversing Sotomayor
by Terry Eastland

A Good Niebuhr Policy
by Matthew Continetti

Tehran Needs to Stop Meddling
by Jonathan Schanzer & Howard Gumnitzky

What If Writing Were Like TV?
by P.J. O'Rourke

The Triumph of Crony Capitalism
by Fred Barnes

FEATURES
Bibi's Choice
by Peter Berkowitz

To Board or Not to Board?
by Jeremy Rabkin & Mario Loyola

BOOKS & ARTS
Rebel With a Cause
by John O'Sullivan

Seeing It Now
by Terry Teachout

Additional Splendor
by James Gardner

Touch of Evil
by Stephen F. Hayes

Sacha Kidder
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
Michael and Me
by Jonathan V. Last

CORRESPONDENCE
Fortune 500, Rousseau & more

PARODY
Mark Sanford's inbox


« Classic McCain | Main

Who's Playing Politics with the Economic Crisis?

Today, after John McCain announced that he's suspending his campaign and returning to D.C. to focus on passing legislation to address the economic crisis, Harry Reid said that it wouldn't be helpful to have the presidential candidates at the negotiating table: “it would not be helpful at this time to have them come back during these negotiations and risk injecting presidential politics into this process or distract important talks about the future of our nation’s economy. … We need leadership; not a campaign photo op.”

But yesterday, Reid demanded that the White House made sure the legislation had John McCain's backing, and Reid floated this bogus piece of news clearly intended to force McCain's hand: "I got some good news in the last hour or so … it appears that Sen. McCain is going to come out for this." McCain flatly denied that he had endorsed the plan.

So Harry Reid says that it's essential that John McCain backs legislation designed to avert the greatest economic meltdown since the Great Depression. And when McCain says the legislation, in its current form, is not good enough, Reid tells McCain to stay away from Capitol Hill. Who's playing politics with economic crisis?

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