On the run today. Yesterday, as Tom Daschle was flaming out, I asked Robert Gibbs if it was harder to change Washington than either he or his boss had thought it might be. He basically replied, We never said we could do this overnight. That sidestepped the question of whether President Obama could transform Washington by picking longtime insiders to help him run Washington? But as Dana Milbank in The Washington Post notes in Wednesday's paper--referring to my exchange with Gibbs--the president offered a more straightforward reply to a similar query:
Results tagged “Tom Daschle” from David Corn
Barack Obama wins. Mitch McConnell is talking nice about the president-elect. And Henry Waxman bounces John Dingell from the chairmanship of the all-powerful House energy and commerce committee.
It's a good time to be a liberal in Washington.
Sure, Clintonites are scoring well in the Obama administration sweepstakes, and the Clinton years are remembered by liberals for the exasperating triangulations of Bill, Hill and their crew. But the combo of Obama's triumph and the far-from-over economic meltdown has provided liberals with their best opening since the days of the Great Society, or even the New Deal. Forget--for the moment, only for the moment, I promise--Hillary Clinton's possible appointment as secretary of state. There's something larger going on and it's truly a fundamental change: the market is dead. It cannot even take care of itself. So how can anyone rely on--or call for--market-driven solutions for the challenges that face the nation: the economy, the health care crisis, and global warming?
