Fuzzy Math (Book Review)

Commentary 

The Essential Guide to the Bush Tax Plan by Paul Krugman, Norton. 128 pp. $17.00

PAUL KRUGMAN is an economist at Princeton University and a twice-weekly op-ed columnist for the New York Times. The two occupations would seem to be conjoined in Fuzzy Math, a slim but energetic polemic against the tax-cut proposal that George W. Bush made the centerpiece of his 2000 presidential campaign.

The timing of Krugman’s book turned out to be inauspicious: Fuzzy Math had barely made its way to bookstores before Congress reached final agreement in late May on a major tax cut only slightly modified from what Bush had proposed. Krugman’s “Essential Guide to the Bush Tax Plan” is thus somewhat less essential than it might have been. But in any case, the illumination it casts on the debate over the tax cut is mostly of the inadvertent kind.

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Bush dispels European skepticism

The Washington Times

George W. Bush had a superb trip to Europe earlier this month, simultaneously winning professions of admiration from European leaders, convincingly restating the U.S. commitment to remain engaged, advancing his case for missile defense, moving NATO enlargement forward in fulfillment of the vision of “Europe whole and free” and successfully engaging with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

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Bush has survived media

The Washington Times

One of the things that has vexed many Democrats since January is how easy a time the new Bush administration was having with the press. Indeed, some members of the press themselves were vexed about the generally favorable coverage they perceived they were giving the new administration. In one memorable Outlook piece, a reporter for the Washington Post contrasted Mr. Bush’s first 100 days with his recollection of Bill Clinton’s in 1993, reaching the conclusion that the problem Mr. Clinton faced that Mr. Bush did not was a determined and well-organized political opposition || the precursor, as it were, of the “vast right-wing conspiracy” Hillary Clinton would denounce six years later.

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A whole and free Europe

The Washington Times

President Bush is in Europe this week, and much of the attention will focus first on the atmospherics of his meetings with our European friends and allies, second on the case he makes for missile defense and the response to it. Just as important, though, will be the impression Mr. Bush leaves about the commitment of the United States to remain fully engaged with Europe.

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Bait and switch

The Washington Times

It was, in point of fact, odd that national elections ending essentially in a tie should yield a White House, Senate and House of Representatives all under the control of the same party. That outward appearance of one-party dominance masked, it’s now clear, a substantial amount of instability underneath. Al Gore’s challenge to George W. Bush’s victory in Florida was probably a product of, more than anything else, the instability produced by the evenly divided electorate. Mr. Gore failed. But so, too, was GOP control of the Senate highly unstable, and Tom Daschle succeeded.

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No one’s rallying cry

The Washington Times

A grand total of six Republicans voted “no” in the House Education Committee on the school reform legislation the White House wants and has been working with Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy to get through in bipartisan fashion. The vote tells us a thing or two about the state of the organized conservative movement and about the relationship of conservatives and the Republican Party.

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