Gerald journeys into the darkness that was Sen. Collins' radio address, and sets out some basic principles that were uncontroversial across the political spectrum in the age before Fox News.
I also recommend the Glenn Greenwald post Gerald links to, which demonstrates how far the GOP (and elements in the Democratic party) have come--and how fast.
What does Sen. Collins mean when she says that the FBI's approach in the Abdulmutalib case, "undoubtedly prevented the collection of valuable intelligence about future terrorist threats to our country"?
Undoubtedly?
What does Collins know that the FBI and the rest of us don't? Someone really ought to pose the question.
But set aside the lying--and the poor production values and the even worse delivery.
The striking thing about this video is its demonstration of just how far the junior senator has drifted from the sensible, moderate center.
Sounding more like Sean Hannity (in full cowering-under-the-bed mode) than Sen. Snowe, she histrionically describes the judicial procedures used by the Bush administration in the cases of Zacarias Moussaoui and Richard Reid as "inconceivable"; "dangerous" and "a charade."
I wonder what country she was living in between 2002 and 2009.
Charade indeed.
UPDATE: Was Collins used, essentially, to launder a noxious, ultra-partisan message so that it would be more salient to the press?
It seems to have worked, at least with the right-leaning Politico.
Sen. Collins has been a poster child for fiscal recklessness for pretty much her entire tenure in office. But she's usually adept at concealing this fact.
The people who have been most outspoken about [the national] debt are the people most responsible for it...those that voted for the Iraq war, and charged it to our kid[s], those who voted for the giveaway to the drug and insurance industry in 2003 and charged it to our kids, and those who voted who tax cuts for the rich and charged it to our kids, and those who ignored infrastructure needs in this country for a decade and charged that to our kids.
And they come and they're screaming the loudest about the balanced budget. And that disturbs me.
It is extremely disturbing that members of the U.S. Congress are essentially calling for Obama administration officials to discard the Constitution when a terrorist suspect is apprehended--as if the Constitution should be applied on a case by case basis. The whole idea of having constitutional protections is that they be applied across the board for all those accused of a crime.
Sen. Susan Collins, the ranking Republican, wondered why Napolitano and National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair weren't part of the decision to charge Abdulmutallab as a civilian.
To be fair, Collins voiced similar thoughts back in 2001 about the civilian prosecution of shoe-bomber Richard Reid.
Given how dug in everyone has become over the past two months, I'm mindful of how difficult it will be to get a few Republicans to sign on to such a deal. But there is very little in the latest version of the health-care bill that Maine's two Republican senators haven't supported in the past or couldn't support in the future.
In succumbing to the intense social and political pressure from their caucus, both Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins flunked the leadership test last year. Massachusetts has now given them a second chance to redeem their reputations and political fortunes in a state that has always valued independence over party loyalty.
Good luck with that.
Still, its nice to see a mainstream journalist acknowledge the obvious.
Of course, Pearlstein is a business columnist, not a political reporter. Clearly, he never got the memo about how everyone is supposed to be very very nice to Saint Olympia and Saint Susan.
Senator Collins says she is still trying to influence what is in the bill. She has written letters to the House and Senate Majority Leaders asking for amendments that would ease the burden on small business and individuals buying health insurance.
Sen. Susan Collins (R) of Maine, ranking minority member of the Senate Homeland Security committee, added a call for the US to cancel all US visas for people whose names are listed in the broadest database of potential terrorists. This database, the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, is overseen by the National Counterterrorism Center and contains well over 500,000 entries.
Given how many totally legitimate visa requests get denied, it's ridiculous--absurd, really--that individuals suspected of being terrorists can still legally enter the US.
Via Gerald we learn that Steve Abbott, Sen. Collins' chief of staff, has resigned to run for governor.
Naturally, former Collins staffer and Collins-coddling BDN editor Mark Woodward has joined Abbott's campaign.
And in totally unrelated news, former Collins-coddling PPH editorial page editor Jon Porter has signed on as president of the Bangor Region Chamber of Commerce. Quite the jump--from journalist to business booster. (Or maybe not.)
Meanwhile, I wonder who PPH and BDN will endorse in the gubernatorial race.
A few of Abbott's greatest hits here, here and here.
"The administration came in determined to undo a lot of the [terrorism-related] policies of the prior administration," Senator Susan Collins of Maine, the top Republican on the homeland-security committee, told me, "but in fact is finding that many of those policies were better-thought-out than they realized--or that doing away with them is a far more complex task."
Sen. Collins doesn't support profiling airline passengers for additional security screening on the basis of their ethnicity. But she has no problem with the government illegally listening in on the phone calls of American citizens.
On national TV, Sen. Collins rejects profiling airline passengers on the basis of ethnicity and religion. (Though it should be pointed out that this sort of thing already goes on.)