John Harwood, Washington correspondent/political journalist for assorted flavors of NBC, the NYTimes, and assorted other usual suspects, has something of a file at Media Matters. Lately it seems to be his promoting about the standard McCain stuff -- he's a 'maverick' who voted against Bush's tax cuts, etc. And Arianna Huffington just wrote a piece about him supporting this 'bipartisan' crap. Or, in her own words, "The Bipartisan Scam." So that's the kind of Villager-think he's part of.
His book is called "Pennsylvania Avenue: Profiles in Backroom Power." MSNBC has an excerpt, which I found more uninteresting than most. I suppose it's part of Chapter 1, but it reads more like an extended blurb. Or back-cover ad copy. Anyway, here's from Kirkus (via B&N):
There are plenty of centrists in America, but to judge by Wall Street Journal stalwarts Harwood and Seib, there are very few in Washington. These profiles of 16 of the capital city's fixers, fundraisers, spin doctors and assorted movers and shakers reveal that they agree on little except that they disagree. Americans have always known political divisions, the authors aver, but "today the divisions have taken on a new character. Power is so divided between the two parties that, in a very real sense, nobody has enough control either to paper over differences or to roll past them. Nobody is in charge." Moreover, Republicans and Democrats no longer hang out in the same bars and restaurants, as they once did. Indeed, many, such as Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas, no longer hang out in Washington, preferring, in essence, to commute from their districts rather than become dreaded inside-the-Beltway insiders. The furor over the Dubai Ports World affair, whereby a foreign-owned (and Arabic-speaking) company would be in charge of several American seaports, is just one of the partisan cases in point. There was so much shouting involved that few sat down to discuss if there was any merit to awarding the contract to a company that, after all, managed ports all over the world. Some lament the death of collegiality; some true believers applaud it. But the real movers and shakers, this book makes plain without quite saying so, are a tribe unto themselves. Ken Mehlman, one-time Republican Party chairman, is the law partner of one-time Democratic Party chairman Robert Strauss, and he is given to wondering why the two contingents have yet to really make common cause against the "Islamic fascists . . . themost anti-Semitic, sexist, homophobic, religiously intolerant force in the world."The culture may change soon. It may not. Policy wonks will enjoy this solid, well-reported portrait of life in the District, while insiders will look for their names in the index.
Sigh. |