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Foley Sinking the GOP?

Is the Foley sex scandal tanking the GOP’s congressional chances?

Time and Newsweek, Oct. 16 A Time cover story on the Mark Foley e-mail scandal asks whether Foley’s behavior and the GOP response are signs that the “Republican revolution” has run its course. The piece cites polls showing that voters consider themselves more likely to vote for Democrats for Congress than for Republicans, a reversal from August. If the Democrats do reclaim the House in November, the writer argues, it may be because the GOP has abandoned the principles that Newt Gingrich used to guide it to victory in 1994—because Republicans in Congress have become ineffectual, corrupt, and more focused on partisan favors and politicking than on passing good legislation. Newsweek’s cover article on Foley explores the question of who knew what when, focusing on an incident several years ago when an apparently drunk Foley tried to gain access to the congressional pages’ dormitory at night—but the piece doesn’t come to much in the way of new conclusions.

Odds and ends: A Time article reports on the increasingly desperate situation in Gaza, where an Israeli blockade and bombing campaign, ongoing since January, seem to be edging Fatah and Hamas toward civil war. The conclusion: “If the Israelis thought their siege of Gaza might break Palestinian support for Hamas, they were wrong. It has only made Palestinians angrier and more desperate.” And a Newsweek piece reveals that Iraqi groups are publicly posting hit lists online—giving the “names, addresses and occupations of citizens to kill.” These lists are on sites run by both Sunnis and Shiite groups and offer tips about the actions of opposing factions for the safety of their readers, as well as exhortations to violence.—B.W.

New Republic, Oct. 15
A cover piece profiles Sen. John McCain, the hawkish “maverick” whose strongest suit, the author argues, has been a willingness to change his mind. The shadow of Vietnam long colored McCain’s realist foreign-policy views. But the success of the first Gulf War, plus the massacre of Srebrenica, pushed him toward neoconservatism. But his belief in Ahmad Chalabi, WMD, and the Iraqi people’s thirst for liberation hurt his credibility. “Was I too enamored with the INC?” he asks. “I would say yes.” Now, McCain’s success as a 2008 presidential candidate may depend, again, on his willingness to admit he was wrong. Andrew Sullivan argues that former Rep. Mark Foley’s “virtual pederasty” reveals much about Republican views of homosexuality: “There is something deeply sick about a Republican elite that is comfortable around gay people, dependent on gay people, staffed by gay people—and yet also rests on brutal exploitation of homophobia to win elections at the base.”— C.B.

Economist, Oct. 7 The cover features a package of articles on the global “talent shortage.” Corporate demand for intelligent and highly skilled workers, especially scientists and engineers, is outstripping supply. The problem will be magnified in Western countries—aging populations mean large numbers of the most-skilled workers will retire in coming years—unless the United States and Europe make serious strides in reforming education. A special report on “the cold war in Asia” outlines the strained relationships among Japan, South Korea, and China—and their shared problem of North Korea. China’s ascendancy is shifting the balance of economic and military power away from Japan and its U.S. backing, and South Korea and China are both alienated by Japan’s continuing efforts to sweep its WWII crimes under the rug. “Serious consequences” could result if new Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe makes moves to aggressively rearm Japan after a possible North Korean nuclear test.— B.W.

New York Times Magazine, Oct. 8 A recent spike in elephant attacks on humans in Africa and Southeast Asia can be traced to psychological damage from decades of poaching, a cover story suggests. Scientists have long ascribed pachyderm aggression to high testosterone levels and competition over resources. But now psychologists point to “a kind of species-wide trauma” with many of the same symptoms as post-traumatic stress in humans: “abnormal startle response, unpredictable asocial behavior, inattentive mothering and hyperagression.” Rehab centers now use “passive control” therapy to heal dysfunctional elephants. “She’s as sweet as can be,” says the founder of Elephant Sanctuary about one formerly violent animal. “You’d never know that this elephant killed anybody.” A piece profiles Brian Schweitzer, Montana’s pro-gun, fiscally conservative Democratic governor. Democrats see Schweitzer as a model for replacing the “disheartening wall of red blocks” with a “blue bridge from Alberta to Mexico.”— C.B.

New York, Oct. 9 A profile of Arianna Huffington reveals her metamorphosis from Manhattan ” ‘It’ girl” to the wife of a millionaire Republican politician, from liberal gubernatorial candidate to wildy successful blogging entrepreneur. Where’s the continutity? “Huffington has continually argued for, and modeled, a (depending on one’s perspective) disarming or maddening archetype of female power that draws little distinction between personal relationships and professional ones,” the author writes. NYU law professor Burt Neuborne was lauded by the Jewish community for representing Holocaust survivors in their lawsuit against Swiss banks, at least until he submitted a bill for $ 4.7 million—outraging many who thought his work was pro bono. What’s really driving the dispute is not a misunderstanding over legal fees but “the eternal philosophical divide between idealists, who believe the Holocaust is not something anyone should be profiting from, and the market-based realists, who argue that justice has a price and it ought to be paid,” says the author.— Z.K.

The New Yorker, Oct. 9 A piece examines the history of obstetrics and its progression from craft to industry. Weaving in and out of one mother’s narrative about resorting to a C-section, the author details the numerous methods that have reduced the chances of death among full-term babies. The discovery in 1933 that two-thirds of maternal deaths were preventable led doctors to standardize childbirth. Anesthesia and labor-inducing drugs became common. Fetal heart-rate monitors gained currency. But it was the Apgar score—a simple measurement of a child’s responsiveness immediately after birth—that pushed obstetrics into the realm of “evidence-based medicine.” An article profiles Richard McNair, murderer, robber, and perennial fugitive. McNair has slipped out of handcuffs using lip balm, escaped a maximum-security prison through an air duct, and talked his way out of an interrogation. “I promise you I’m not no damn prison escapee,” he tells an officer in a video clip that has made the rounds via YouTube. “You’da done run by now,” the cop replies, and they laugh.— C.B.  

Weekly Standard, Oct. 9 William Kristol chastises congressional Democrats for committing themselves to the “kinder and gentler treatment of terrorists.” The party’s refusal to support last week’s detainee legislation is damning, according to Kristol: “The most important front in the confrontation with terror sponsoring, WMD-seeking Islamic jihadism in the next two years may well be Iran.” An article warns that Russia—“now flush with oil wealth and intent on flexing its muscles in the international arena” —is looking to regain its imperial glory days. Sponsoring breakaway referendums and infiltrating the military in its former republics are signs that “Moscow is up to no good on this one,” says one intelligence officer from an ex-Soviet territory. An article examines Keith Elison, poised to become the first Muslim in Congress, and uncovers not only some normal skeletons—unpaid taxes and parking tickets—but a longer and more involved history with the Nation of Islam than Elison has fessed up to.—Z.K.