Jimmy Clausen reportedly has two black eyes after fight outside South Bend bar at 2:30 AM Sunday. Was it the Backer?!?!
The GOP’s unserious leaders
Ross Douthat opines:
It’s possible to be a celebrity and a serious politician at the same time: Barack Obama’s career proves as much. But Obama’s celebrity status is frequently a political liability, and he’s (usually) wise enough to know it. That’s why he plays the wonk as often as he plays the global icon.
For now, no Republican leader projects a similar level of seriousness. Late in the Bush years, it was easy to dismiss conservatism as brain-dead. Among policy thinkers, that isn’t true anymore: the advent of Obama seems to have provided just the jolt that right-of-center wonks needed. But innovative proposals are useless without politicians willing to champion them.
When the Republican minority needed an alternative to the Obama administration’s sweeping stimulus proposal, for instance, a number of free-market economists were ready with an answer: a payroll tax cut. It was plausible, elegant and easy to explain — but there was no Republican leader with the wit to seize on it and sell it.
You could tell the same story about regulatory reform. A slew of conservative economists and think tankers, led by the University of Chicago’s Luigi Zingales and the Manhattan Institute’s Nicole Gelinas, have been working on ways to protect free markets from a re-run of last fall’s “too big to fail” fiasco. But most Republican politicians would rather rail against bailouts that have already happened than talk about how to prevent them from happening again.
In the health care debate, too, conservative and libertarian policy thinkers have floated a number of plans to expand insurance coverage. Some are incremental and some are sweeping; some build on the existing system and some would essentially replace it. But any of them would be better than that threadbare plan House Republicans actually put forward, which would hardly expand coverage at all.
True, these ideas won’t sell millions of books, or excite the crowd on Huckabee’s talk show. But they’re what the Republican Party needs if it’s going to be more than just a brake on liberalism’s ambitions. And they’re what voters are going to be looking for, in 2012 and beyond, as proof that conservatives can be trusted once again.
This means that there are substantial political rewards awaiting the politician who becomes the voice of an intellectually vigorous conservatism. It probably won’t be Mike Huckabee or Sarah Palin. If Republicans are lucky, though, it will be somebody who shares their charisma — but who prefers the responsibilities of leadership to the pleasures of celebrity.
A serious, “intellectually vigorous,” grown-up conservative leader with charisma: now that would be “going rogue.”
Seriously, it would be a profoundly good thing for the country if such a leader were to emerge. We need the Republicans right now — if for no other reason than to keep the Democrats in check — but they’re off in la-la land. And, as long as they stay that way, a lot of people are going to fall into Casey’s camp:
Personally, I have a lot to say against how Obama is running the country. But I won’t say a word of it. Why? Because I can’t abide being associated with the mainstream Obama opposition. So long as Republicans keep making a lunatic circus of their political affairs, they’ll never win over people like me. They’ll be stuck battling to get out their base.
Ah yes, “their base” — which is only slightly bigger than CNN’s viewership, post-Dobbs.
P.S. TNR‘s Isaac Chotiner says Douthat’s argument is tautological:
Sure, it would be nice for the GOP if Palin and Huckabee were interested in policy. But if they were interested in policy, then they would not be so appealing to the GOP base. In other words, the problem is that a large part of the right has no interest in a policy wonk, and sneers at intellectuals and elites and the types of people Douthat would like to see running the party. A candidate who was interested in learning the ins and outs of the welfare state and health care policy is unlikely to ever achieve Palin/Huckabee levels of popularity with the grassroots.
The weakest part of Douthat’s article is the assertion that seriousness is “what voters are going to be looking for, in 2012 and beyond, as proof that conservatives can be trusted once again.” Says who? Voters tend to like shiny things. Wishful thinking aside, I fail to be overwhelmed by the evidence of voters’ interest in genuine political leadership.
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All hail the mighty Pac-10
On the USC football team’s official blog, Ben Malcolmson goes there:
Stanford’s loss to California on Saturday further muddied the Pac-10 race and also caused several people to scratch their heads in confusion.
What is going on in this conference?
USC beats California by 27 points, Stanford beats USC by 34 points and then Cal goes out and beats Stanford by 6 — in Palo Alto? What a wacky season this has become along the Left Coast, where six teams are within two games of the conference lead and strange occurrences happen on a weekly basis.
The tight race and regular oddities might be a result of the all-around excellence of the conference. The strength of the Pac-10 could be unprecedented this year, as it’s rated No. 1 by Jeff Sagarin and seven teams — 70 percent of the conference — are already bowl eligible. …
You know, it looks and plays a lot like the NFL, where the perceived great teams are never shoe-ins for wins and parity rules the roost. … [T]he hottest teams are just 60 minutes away from dropping way down the standings and getting their Rose Bowl dreams crushed. Call it parity or across-the-board strength, but the Pac-10 has inarguably been a wild race this season.
It’s a WAAAARRR!!!!!!!
He’s right, though — or at least, he’s more right (this year) than the SEC worshippers who constantly claim that their favorite conference is the “toughest from top to bottom” because you “can’t take a week off” or somebody will rise up and beat you. That hasn’t really been true in the SEC in 2009, but it has been true in the Pac-10, or at least the Pac-9 (minus Wazzu).
By the way, you want further proof of how wild the Pac-10 is? If Oregon State beats Oregon next Thursday, they’ll go to the Rose Bowl. If they lose, the Beavers will probably fall all the way to… the Las Vegas Bowl! That’s the fifth-choice Pac-10 bowl, but with a four-way tie for second place likely among USC, Stanford, Cal and Oregon State in this scenario (assuming USC beats UCLA & Arizona, and Cal beats Washington), the second-choice Holiday Bowl can pick whichever of the tied teams it prefers, as can the third-choice Sun Bowl, and so on. The Holiday Bowl would very likely take USC; the Sun Bowl would certainly not take Oregon State, which it took last year, but would instead probably grab Stanford (particularly if the Drunken Trees beat Notre Dame next Saturday); and the Emerald Bowl, which loves the Bay Area teams, would snatch up Cal (or Stanford, if the Sun Bowl takes Cal). That would leave Oregon State, having just barely missed out on a date with Ohio State in Pasadena, heading instead for Las Vegas to play Utah or BYU.
Things are a bit more orderly if Oregon State beats Oregon (again assuming the Trojans win out): Beavers to the Rose Bowl, Ducks to the Holiday Bowl, Trojans to the Sun Bowl, Drunken Trees to the Emerald Bowl, Bears to the Las Vegas Bowl. Arizona is Poinsettia Bowl-bound regardless, unless it can win at ASU and at USC, which is another example of the conference’s craziness: the Wildcats controlled their Rose Bowl destiny until they were eliminated in a double-overtime heartbreaker on Saturday that was witnessed by Lee Corso and Kirk Herbstreit and a legion of fans ready to rush the field in Tucson. Now, instead of Roses, they’re looking at a much less prestigious flower, Poinsettias, unless they can win two tough road games.
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RT @AP_Top25 Urban Meyer seems to rule out Notre Dame job: “I’m going to be the coach at Florida as long as they’ll have me.”
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RT @slmandel BCS hires Ari Fleischer’s P.R. firm. http://bit.ly/8hZFlL | In unrelated news, WMDs found in playoff proponents’ briefcases!