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Hillary Clinton Is Your Sec State

Sure, it’s not as sexy sounding as ‘Sec Def’ - though if you don’t carefully enunciate, it’s actually more sexy sounding - but Hillary Rodham Clinton looks to be a great Secretary of State.

I’ve had a number of discussions with other HRC fans, and none of us could understand why Clinton would take this post.

It locks her into an Obama administration, leaving her unlikely/unable to challenge him for the presidency in 2012. She easily could have brokered for strong committee appointments in the Senate. She also probably eliminated a run for NY governor.

But perhaps we’ve all bought too much into the idea of Clinton machinations, because it really seems like Clinton really just wants to be Secretary of State.

I can’t remember seeing her as relaxed and happy as she seems in her swearing in photo.

Clinton Swearing In

(And unfortunately that’s a small version; on my tv last night, she looked beatific.)

And check out her speech to State employees today. [Ed. - You have to watch it via that link (or at the Jezebel post below) because my software and MSNBC don't like each other so much. Sorry!]

Where was this woman on the campaign trail?

She’s charming, sounds incredibly sincere and embodies everything I want in the office. And most importantly, she seems at ease,  something she never seemed during the presidential campaign.

Interestingly, her poise in that speech reaffirms my decision to back Obama in the primaries. It appears she’s built for the role of top diplomat.

Well, this is all coming together nicely. I hope it’s as good a fit as it seems for both her and us.

Links:
Hillary Clinton Greets Her New Job, Staff with a Smile [Jezebel]

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36th Anniversary of Roe v Wade

I’ve been waiting to blog today because I was hoping that President Obama (not tired of saying/typing that yet!) would use the 36th anniversary of Roe v Wade to reverse the ‘global gag rule’.

Also known as the Mexico City Policy, the rule was enacted under Reagan, reversed by Clinton and then reinstated by Bush II on this very day in 2001. Here’s the gist (PP also has a video on the site):

Under this Reagan-era prohibition, no U.S. family planning assistance funding can be given to organizations that provide abortion services, offer counseling and referral for abortion care, or advocate legal abortion access in their own countries — even if they do so with their own funds.

Obama has promised to re-reverse the rule, and many were hoping he’d take this anniversary to reaffirm America’s commitment to women’s health and his administration’s commitment to reproductive choice.

I mean the Gitmo thing was good, too, but I like my symbols big and brash.

One person who apparently got the memo about big and brash is the idiot that drove his SUV into a Twin Cities Planned Parenthood this morning. Pro- and anti-choicers were united in their agreement that this disturbed individual should not pass go on his way to jail.

In related news, an anti-choice nurse is being sued for ‘accidentally’ removing a patient’s IUD. Said the nurse (according to the plaintiff):

Everyone in the office always laughs and tells me I pull these out on purpose because I am against them, but it’s not true, they accidentally come out when I tug.

Um. Yeah, I’m thinking new career path for you…

But big thumbs ups to the legions of reproductive health workers and educators out there. Way to fight the good fight, ladies and gents.

Finally, some at DHHS seem to think that Bush’s ‘conscience clause’ HHS rules - that I’ve blogged about ad nauseam - might fall under the Obama’s executive order halting all Bush’s midnight rules.

Oh all right, maybe that new president isn’t so bad after all.

Update: Obama released a statement recognizing and supporting Roe v Wade.

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New Day for the White House Gaggle

It’s a testament to how nerdy I am that this just completely made my day:

At 9:46 a.m., another reporter walked into the press office.

“Good morning,” [Deputy Press Secretary Bill] Burton said.

“I came to introduce myself,” the woman said. “I’m Helen Thomas.”

Other notes from President Obama’s first day are here.

Twenty four hours….. now.

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Inauguration Is Tomorrow

The Bush presidency ends in eleven hours.

That is all.

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Death of the Newspaper - Strib Bankruptcy, Chicago Tribune’s Tabloid

Minneapolis’ Star Tribune declared bankruptcy last night.

This is just the latest in the series, but demonstrates just how tough it is for papers these days.

The Strib has presumably been getting a boost from the Franken/Coleman debacle, but despite scanning every single challenged ballot, its web traffic is just not filling the ad gap.

Like most newspapers, the Star Tribune has experienced a sharp decline in print advertising. Its earnings before interest, taxes and debt payments were about $26 million in 2008, down from about $59 million in 2007 and $115 million in 2004.

Yikes.

The article also notes the recent purchase of the paper by private equity group,  Avista Capital Partners. Such fiscally-minded groups have generally not been as apt as family-owned companies to take a loss on their newsmaking, whilst balancing the books with other, more lucrative ventures.

In other bankruptcy-plagued news, the Chicago Tribune tried its damnedest this week to cut costs and produce a product someone wants to purchase.

In addition to last week’s re-redesign (which I’ll address in a minute), the Trib is now producing its single-copy paper as a tabloid, leaving its broadsheet to subscribing customers. [announcement and print version]

It’s unclear if readers will adopt/adapt to the latest Tribune change. After all, the Tribune’s truncated broadsheet isn’t some Age-sized behemoth. The change may also acclimate readers to the tabloid format, perhaps making them more likely to pick up the Sun Times, which is 25c less. Finally, given the new format, why would readers not pick up the Red Eye, which provides Tribune content in a tabloid format and is also free?

The Tribune presents these as positive changes, but - the aesthetic and cultural (elitist?!?)  impacts of a tabloid Tribune aside - the printing of two separate editions seems scattered. It makes the paper seem as though they’re scrambling, which, of course, they are.

I was going to say that a brave face, a la the NYT, might be a better approach. Then again, they may merely be trying anything to stay afloat at this point.

I do have some commendation for the Tribune, though. They redesigned their redesign this week (late last week?) and included a helpful pull out about it in the new edition. There was some PR-speak, but the Trib addressed some reader complaints head-on, saying of one aspect, ‘Yeah, we hated it too. It’s gone.’ (Not sure if that’s a direct quote.)

While there are still lots of things I hate about the redesign - such as the horrible Page 3, over-arting in most sections and the ed/op-ed in the back of the Business section - staying in communication with subscribers is the best possible way to keep your base.

Their (mostly) honest assessment of their work makes me more inclined to keep reading the Tribune than anything else they’ve done this year.

And that is what passes for an ‘attaboy’ in this media market.

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Bush’s Last Speechifying

So, I wasn’t going to watch this, but I figured what the hell. It is too freaking cold to go anywhere or to live.

Wow, he’s citing Afghanistan as a success story. Oh, and followed by Iraq, so great!

Bush acknowledged that there is ‘legitimate debate’ about some of the decisions he’s made, but ‘there can be little debate about the results.’ Um, I disagree with both that assessment and nearly everything he’s done.

He just can’t stop the smirk. I think it’s his nervous tic. (But, oh the rage it inspires.)

He also think he’s ‘expand[ed] opportunity and hope here at home.’ It appears he means NCLB and Medicare .

‘Vulnerable human life is better protected’ and America’s air and water are cleaner. I know he genuinely believes that first one, but it takes some serious gumption to look straight in the camera and say his environmental policy has been beneficial to the environment in any way.

But, oooh, oooh! This is the last time we’re going to see him as our president!

I remember thinking in 2004 that we wouldn’t get through these four years, but somehow we did. Not unscathed, but there are only 4.5 more days of this nonsense. And I get to spend the last two of them on vaycay.

I’m just glad he didn’t preempt The Office or 30 Rock. When I saw he was speaking at 8 I was incensed, but the existence of central time means he didn’t ruin absolutely everything he touches.

I mean, I’ll probably just watch them on Hulu anyway, but it’s the thought that counts.

And this is what I chose to blog about today. I dedicate it to the happy thought of Citizen Bush.

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HuffPo’s Tacky Obama Grandma Headline

I don’t read the Huffington Post very often. Despite their sometimes informative content, they often resort to tacky, lefty-Drudge headlines.

Ironically, I had clicked over to HuffPo for an article on why the online mag can’t replace the NYT.

(Oh, and speaking of which, the NYT took umbrage with the Atlantic article I quoted yesterday. Perhaps rumors of her death have been greatly exaggerated - or NYT’s communications dept has a vested interest in not appearing vulnerable. Updated: Gawker’s Hamilton Nolan takes a crack at the latter point.)

Anyway, the Huffington Post would like you to know that Africans are backwards, barbarous freaks:

obamagranny

The actual story explains that Obama’s grandmother wanted to bring a spear and shield amongst other gifts for her grandson on the occasion of his inauguration. It’s unclear from the article if she’ll check it, but it seems likely that she fears it being damaged during the flight and wanted to carry it on.

“But I have been told that due to security reasons I will not be allowed to board a plane with it,” she explained.

Hopefully, she and the airline can work out a compromise. (God, I’d love to see what today’s TSA would do with my grandmother; she packed everything… She also used to pack up all the bread rolls from the restaurant table into her purse, but that’s a separate issue.)

Needless to say, I did not click through to ‘Read HuffPost’s Inauguration BigNews Page’.

I made an angry noise and took a screen capture.

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Death of the Newspaper - Seattle’s P-I

[Updated below]

Just a month ago, Detroit’s two dailies, the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News, announced they would reduce home delivery to just three days a week. Except the mildly profitable Thursday, Friday and Sunday editions, non-delivery days will see truncated content.

This month’s Atlantic examines the plight of the NYT, and sketches out doomsday scenarios for the paper. The upshot? Though unlikely, the NYT’s paper edition could fold as soon as May 2009.

These cutbacks and death of the newspaper nightmares, however, pale in comparison to the actual and sudden death of Seattle’s Post-Intelligencer.

Reporters and newsroom staff were told to gather for an announcement midday on Friday where they were told that the P-I would be put up for sale by parent company, The Hearst Corp.

The chances of a buyer for the troubled paper are extremely low, and no one really sees a print edition remaining on the table if one did emerge.

For all intents and purposes, staff were told that the 146-year old paper will cease production within 60 days.

Many are discussing the move from paper editions to online editions, but it seems unlikely that web-based newspapers will be able to generate the amount of content (and more importantly, the quality of content) delivered by today’s newspapers.

The P-I’s article on its demise notes that a web edition of the paper would not be able to maintain the staff of the print edition. Hirschorn’s Atlantic article estimates that a web-only NYT would be forced to cut staff by 80%.

Outside of media professionals, few are making a fuss:

If you’re hearing few howls and seeing little rending of garments over the impending death of institutional, high-quality journalism, it’s because the public at large has been trained to undervalue journalists and journalism. The Internet has done much to encourage lazy news consumption, while virtually eradicating the meaningful distinctions among newspaper brands. The story from Beijing that pops up in my Google alert could have come from anywhere. As news resources are stretched and shared, it can often appear anywhere as well: a Los Angeles Times piece will show up in TheWashington Post, or vice versa.

That’s from the Hirschorn article, which I highly recommend. Also recommended is Eli Sanders’ evocative and sad posting on the P-I’s demise over at The Stranger.

There are many legitimate complaints about today’s newspapers (and god knows if you read this blog, you’ve heard many of them - and probably some illegitimate ones, too), but I would argue that they retain importance for our culture.

Without waxing overly romantic, newspapers provide us with a tangible, tactile record of our experiences. Holding the front page on November 5, 2008 is something no screen capture can replace. And while I get much of my news from the internet these days, reading the paper with a cup of coffee is a friendly, subtly comforting experience.

Newspapers have dug themselves some serious holes, many of which are destined to become graves in the current financial environment. The P-I is the first in what I fear will be a long line of papers to fold this year.

Best of luck to the staff and families of the P-I.

Update: The NYT’s communications dept takes issue with Hirschorn’s assessment.

Update II: Gawker’s Hamilton Nolan pushes back against the NYT’s letter, including some analysis of the NYT’s financial situation. Gawker also notes that the NYT’s online component would have to increase traffic sevenfold to survive without its print component. It already has the fifth highest traffic in the interwebs, so that kind of a jump seems unlikely, if nigh impossible.

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Roland Burris - Ready to Serve in the Senate

Today’s Tribune interview with Senate hopeful Roland Burris sketches out some of the candidate’s bold and nuanced policy positions:

Burris maintained it was unfair to seek substantive answers from him about his goals because he hadn’t taken the oath of office—even though he was interested in the Senate appointment since last summer.

“I want to get my Senate legs under me and make sure I get down all the rules and regulations,” Burris said in the interview…”In the meantime, I will begin to assess the various national issues that are out there in general and the Illinois issues in particular.”

To be fair, the Tribune’s editorial stance in the segment I just clipped seems fairly skeptical of Burris, so perhaps there were more thoughtful-sounding quotes in the interview.

But the fact that he let those words come out of his mouth is telling.

Politicians run for office - at least in theory - because they want to effect some kind of change. Accepting an appointment to an office without clear goals and policy positions is the height of  arrogance.

What is really galling, however, is how happy Burris is to express this sentiment to the media and, by extension, the people of Illinois. It’s an attitude that says, “Get stuffed; I’m going to the Senate.” This also pretty much sums up his appointment, and presumably his tenure in office.

At this point, we just need to seat or not seat this turkey. It would be nice if by Inauguration we could focus on the… horrible everything, rather than the absurdly inflated egos of a couple lame politicians that have proved ineffectual, at best. Let’s leave the limelight for those who actually have substantive contributions to make.

There comes a point in every story about Illinois’ corrupt politics where the citizens just give up fighting and try to make the latest electoral assault as brief and painless as possible.

I don’t know if laying back and thinking of 2010 is the most proactive answer, but it might present the least chance of permanent damage.

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January 7 Randoms

Poor blog - left to the side when I have better things to do.

But! Since I’m in vague study mode, now seems a good time to run down random crap.

Firstly, Roland Burris. I keep hearing things from non-Illinois talking heads about how qualified he is, etc. I admit that Burris is probably the most qualified person that would accept an appointment from Blagojevich, but that does not make him qualified for the senate seat, per se.

Four times the voters of Illinois said, “Meh, no thanks,” to Roland Burris. And that was for city and state office. If he’s so keen to be the junior Senator from Illinois, why did he never throw his hat in the ring before now? [Ed.- Sorry, I meant except for early in his career (1984) when he was Comptroller.]

Perhaps a resigned recognition of his popularity amongst voters had something to do with it.

Anyway, looks like Reid’s going to back down. But I guarantee that Burris will lose yet another statewide primary in 2010 if he chooses to run again. (Though I sincerely doubt he has any interest in doing that.)

Teen pregnancies are up in 26 states (for those of you doing the math at home, that’s over half). Some people are laying the blame at the feet of the $178mil we spend on abstinence only education in our schools.

For shame, you uterus-coddling liberals.

And finally, the reason the Obama’s couldn’t move in early to Blair House is… John Howard!

Everyone’s favorite slumming-it-on-YouTube former PM will be in town to receive a Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Yes.

I nearly blogged about the medal the other day, but there was still a bit of spit up in my mouth. The combination of the medal plus the rejection of the Obamas earns my hair-trigger moral outrage.

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