|
|
January 2009 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
|
July/August 2008 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
Any serious candidate needs to have experience with failure. And Obama's lacking.
|
Web Only |
Daniel Casse |
|
Conservative critics err in charging that the President's domestic program betrays the legacy of Reagan; his own legacy is another question.
|
March 2006 |
Daniel Casse |
|
|
July/August 2005 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
Castigated increasingly for betraying the movement that elected him, the President seems to be fashioning a new approach to government.
|
February 2004 |
Daniel Casse |
|
The GOP is up, the Democrats are down; what does this tell us about the famous red and blue map?
|
January 2003 |
Daniel Casse |
|
The war has thrown the Democrats into disarray; despite the President's popularity, the Republicans may not be much better off.
|
March 2002 |
Daniel Casse |
|
|
October 2001 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
If the President sticks to his brand of conservatism, he may yet revive the moribund GOP.
|
March 2001 |
Daniel Casse |
|
If it truly intends to become a governing party, today's fractured, directionless GOP needs to unlearn a few things and, more importantly, relearn a few others.
|
October 1999 |
Daniel Casse |
|
|
April 1999 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
|
November 1998 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
While enjoying a strange resurgence, the thoroughly Clintonized party has rendered itself bereft of principles, money, and new leadership.
|
August 1998 |
Daniel Casse |
|
|
July 1998 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
|
February 1998 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
Though barely in effect (and already under siege), the new policy is a rousing success.
|
September 1997 |
Daniel Casse |
|
|
January 1997 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
Later this summer, 20,000 members of the Democratic party will assemble in Chicago for their quadrennial political convention.
|
July 1996 |
Daniel Casse |
|
To commemorate Commentary's fiftieth anniversary, the editors addressed the following statement and questions to a group of American intellectuals:
|
November 1995 |
Elliott Abrams, Joseph Adelson, Robert L. Bartley, Arnold Beichman and William J. Bennett |
|
The voters are angry—and so is Kevin Phillips. In this, his most recent political tract on the misguided course of American politics, Phillips marches us through a tour of Washington's corroded institutions and corrupt dealings, huffing and puffing all the way.
|
December 1994 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
James Davison Hunter has written a temperate book about the volatile subject of abortion—more precisely, about the debate that has swirled around our abortion laws for more than two decades.
|
August 1994 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
Nearly twenty years ago, a movement was undertaken to modernize two major areas of family law, abortion and divorce. At the time, advocates of both no-fault divorce and divorce and abortion-on-demand heralded the sought-for changes as a victory for individual rights.
|
May 1988 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
At one time in this country, observes the constitutional scholar Walter Berns, there were two ways of dealing with journalists who damaged a man's reputation by publishing false and defamatory statements: pistols at dawn or a horsewhip in the public square.
|
November 1986 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
When Generals Eisenhower and Patton arrived at Ohrdorf, one of the first concentration camps to be liberated by American forces at the end of World War II, they insisted that their troops view the
entire camp.
|
April 1986 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |
|
In 1967, during the Six-Day War, the Israeli government press office circulated a photograph of Moshe and Yael Dayan that appeared in hundreds of newspapers in Europe and North America.
|
March 1986 |
Reviewed by Daniel Casse |