
The confirmation hearings of Sonia Sotomayor which transpired last week were wholly uninteresting and without drama. There is
no doubt whatsoever that the first Hispanic justice will sit on the Supreme Court, and, despite her
significant flaws in philosophy, it will be a good and proud day for the fastest growing segment of the great melting pot that is the United States of America. On Sotomayor, Republicans decided to pick their battles and decided to
pass on this one. Note my previous comment about the fastest growing segment of our population if you need a
good reason.

One significant effect is that Democrats are seeing their
agenda slipping as the whole thing gets
bogged down and Obama's
momentum dramatically slows. Rather than sequentially address the most pressing issues of our time, our "
Shuffle President" is taking a seemingly chaotic stab at
all the above in an effort to
remake America. The fate of all of his priorities could now be
in danger. Peggy Noonan wisely
suggests that Obama slow down and focus his administration on a sentence, not 10 paragraphs, saying "an administration about everything is an administration about nothing. The administration is so aware of this trend that it has
put off the scheduled release of the latest budget update which it knows will greatly diminish its chances of pushing more record spending through Congress. Polls around our nation's birthday show that Americans still
overwhelmingly believe in limited government, not the more expansive, expensive and intrusive government Obama desires.
LEFTOVERS:
The economy is still in shambles and showing timid signs of recovery. Faced with his own broken promises and a disappointed public, the President is attempting to move the
economic goalposts. Here's a look at how he's doing on
job growth since passing the $787 billion stimulus package. The
budget deficit has topped $1 trillion for the first time while unemployment
rose to 9.6% last month and has risen
over 10% in 16 states, including several
swing states critical to Obama in 2012. There is even talk of
another stimulus bill. Shall we look at how the last one has fared so far?
Sarah Palin has decided to
resign as Governor of Alaska. Bam! Wow! What? Many suspect she is resigning to focus on a
Presidential run. Most see the move as
puzzling at best as
only 33% of Republicans think she has the ability to be an effective president. Despite the definite unorthodoxy of the move, a leading political commentator
does not think she's crazy. As with all major developments in the political world, there are
winners and losers. In the end, it appears that Palin, viewed
favorably by 72% of Republican leaning voters, is
here to stay. She adds evidence for that belief with a recent
op-ed on Cap and Trade legislation.
The House of Representatives passed the
economy killing Cap and Trade bill late last month, even with
44 Democrats voting nay, but thankfully it has
dim prospects in the Senate where there are two many reasonable, moderate and vulnerable Democrats for easy passage of what would likely be the
biggest tax in American history. Meanwhile, climate change, the underpinning of the legislation, is facing
increasing scepticism.
Republicans are looking good in the two major races of 2009. McDonnell leads Deeds by
6 and
3 points for Virginia governor in recent polls while New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Chris Christie
leads wildly
unpopular governor Jon Corzine by 7 points.
A bipartisan
blueprint for immigration reform.