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Judd Gregg Falls on His Sword


I'm persuaded by Andrew Sullivan on the Gregg withdrawal: it makes sense only as an act of partisan loyalty, which means in this case loyalty to partisans who have decided on a strategy of opposition and obstruction. The stimulus issue wasn't something that changed in the last few days; the census question is a canard.

But Gregg's stepping down is a losing move in a losing strategy. It's hard to see what Obama loses here, or what the Republicans (let alone Gregg) gain. Obama gets to appoint a Democrat and get full credit for bipartisanship anyway. The Republicans keep a Senate seat that they were going to keep for two years anyway, with no guarantees after that. And Gregg's vote won't change the stimulus package; losing 61-38 isn't different from losing 61-37. Gregg gets to be a minority Senator instead of Commerce Secretary, and if that were a better deal he would never have gone looking for a Cabinet gig.

There's been a lot of media spin about how well the Republicans are succeeding by being uncooperative, but I don't see it. Obama is getting to position himself as a cooperative bipartisan leader while the Republicans look like inflexible ingrates. (Taking a job from Obama and then quitting doesn't make Obama look bad.) And they end up cutting themselves out of the decisions. This isn't a strategy so much. It's more like a political suicide pact.

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Or perhaps the Abramoff scandal, which engulfed one of Gregg's senate staff, has gotten a bit closer to the senator.

It just seems that there is more to the story than has so far come to light. Gregg's explanation is just a big load of crap.

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Taking a job from Obama and then quitting doesn't make Obama look bad

Well, no, not in the reality-based community, but for Washington reporters, THIS IS JUST ANOTHER SIGN OF THE IMMATURITY OF THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION!!!@#$!

Jeff Zeleny, in today's Times:

“It was my mistake, obviously, to say yes,” he added.

But the political fallout is left to the White House, which now has a string of appointees who have stepped aside over vetting problems, unpaid taxes or philosophical differences with Mr. Obama. Since the president took office last month, not a week has passed without the White House responding to a personnel crisis.

Amazing, huh? Gregg says it's his mistake, but Mr. Zeleny says the fallout is on the White House.

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The truly fascinating thing about this exact point in the history of our politics is that if the increasingly arcane interests of the washington pundit core and the more practical interests of the general public get any further apart, people may just stop listening to the washington pundit core altogether.

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Judd Gregg: Trojan Horse.

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Doctor Cleveland has it just right.

Maybe I've missed it but I have not read that anyone has done real journalistic investigation to establish whether Gregg first approached the WH for the job (the WH version) or vice-versa. It seems to me that the actual truth on that issue would be valuable in evaluating the politics of the farce.

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The Republicans are succeeding at looking pathetic and inept, like clowns where statesmen should be found.

I think Gregg has a hidden secret, TH or not.

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Naw, just a Trojan(tm)

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