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Mr. Broder Goes to Washington

Editorial of The New York Sun | May 2, 2007

So the entire Democratic caucus in the United States Senate — 50 senators — has sent a letter to the Washington Post attacking the dean of the Washington press corps, David Broder, for a column in which Mr. Broder dared to criticize their leader for his preemptive surrender to the terrorists in Iraq. "We, the members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, contest the attack on Sen. Harry Reid's leadership by David S. Broder in his April 26 column," the letter says. "In contrast to Mr. Broder's insinuations, we believe Mr. Reid is an extraordinary leader who has effectively guided the new Democratic majority through these first few months with skill and aplomb."

Mr. Broder's offense? The Pulitzer-prize winning columnist and reporter, 77, wrote a column criticizing the Democratic leader in the Senate, Mr. Reid, for Mr. Reid's comment that the Iraq war "is lost." Mr. Reid, Mr. Broder wrote "is assuredly not a man who misses many opportunities to put his foot in his mouth. In 2005, he attacked Alan Greenspan, then chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, as ‘one of the biggest political hacks we have here in Washington.'" Wrote Mr. Broder, "Reid's verbal wanderings on the war in Iraq are consequential — not just for his party and the Senate but for the more important question of what happens to U.S. policy in that violent country and to the men and women whose lives are at stake." The New York Sun publishes the column today on the adjacent page.

For this Mr. Broder won a rebuke not only from the senators but from the New York Times's Frank Rich, who ridiculed Mr. Broder in his column Sunday and who defended as "obvious" Mr. Reid's assessment that the war is lost. The episode illuminates how thin-skinned and intolerant the left is in this country of a press corps that is anything less than completely pliant. It began with the Democratic presidential candidates refusing to participate in a presidential debate that would be aired on the Fox News Channel, a network so reflexively right-wing that its regular paid contributors include Michael Dukakis's campaign manager Susan Estrich, National Public Radio's Mara Liasson, and the 2006 Democratic candidate for Senate in Tennessee, Harold Ford Jr. First they came for Fox News Channel, then they came for David Broder.

One starts to get the feeling here that some of the divides in the rift between Mr. Broder and the Democratic caucus are not so much political but cultural. The chairman of the Washington Post Company, Donald Graham, served in Vietnam, and Mr. Broder himself is an army veteran. The notion of a Washington politician declaring a war lost even as American GIs are appearing in arms on the field of battle in the cause of freedom abroad, well it has a way of grating on those who have worn the uniform, a fact that many of Mr. Broder's readers, if not the 50 senators, understand.


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The Sun editorial raises the question, just how many, and who, are veterans of military service in the U. S.... [MORE]

Frank Melia 

May 2, 2007 08:26

Does the list of the 50 senators who signed the letter to the Washington Post supporting Harry Reid's leadership include... [MORE]

sid 

May 2, 2007 08:38

No, Sid, JL is an Independent. Sort of. [MORE]

terry 

May 3, 2007 00:43

"First they came for Fox News ...." This says so much about the current state of the Democratic Party. [MORE]

Vicent Forte 

May 2, 2007 08:46

well said [MORE]

Jon and Barb Brightman 

May 2, 2007 08:50

I'm glad someone is pointing out the high-schoolish behavior of the so-called vaulted Democrat party. It just gives another reason... [MORE]

Terri 

May 2, 2007 08:54

It has been a long time since we Americans, growing up as children during WWII have read an editorial reporting... [MORE]

Dorothy Wachsstock 

May 2, 2007 08:54

It's not surprising to see all of the Democrat Senators whine when their "Leader" is called to account by a... [MORE]

John Primmer 

May 2, 2007 09:22

I was at the "Gathering of Eagles" in DC. I saw the awakening of those who served in or during... [MORE]

Al Reasin 

May 2, 2007 09:40

I cannot understand why the anti-war representatives of the people don't comprehend that every time they voice their opposition they... [MORE]

Alexis Hemingway 

May 2, 2007 09:55

I have also worn the uniform and it doesn't bother me one bit to hear the truth about the Bush... [MORE]

Paul W McCarty 

May 2, 2007 10:02

If there are in fact 35 senators who served in the military, I was able to confirm these 23 republicans,... [MORE]

Bob Czigan 

May 2, 2007 18:38

Funny how you ignored the reason these Senators responded to Mr. Broder--to rebut his claim that they, the Democratic Senators... [MORE]

Sabina's Hat 

May 2, 2007 10:09

This article misstates the central premise of Broder's piece, which compares Harry Reid to the discredited, inept, and probably mendacious... [MORE]

Caroline Ely 

May 2, 2007 10:45

The aforementioned letter from The Democratic Caucus, describing Senator Reid as possessing "..skill and aplomb" is an exercise in inanity... [MORE]

Carl Foster MD 

May 2, 2007 11:08

I would think a smart guy like Mr. Broder would know that you can attack a Republican, especially the President... [MORE]

Don Ware 

May 2, 2007 11:21

"One starts to get the feeling here that some of the divides in the rift between Mr. Broder and the... [MORE]

Eric 

May 2, 2007 11:25

Good for you Mr.Broder and bless you. Our wonderful young men and women defending our country need to hear more... [MORE]

Joy Venosa 

May 2, 2007 11:34

Is that Frank Rich the Theatre critic? Wow! He must know a bunch about warfare? [MORE]

Ali Augoo 

May 2, 2007 11:39

Hah, criticize the Dems and they go ballistic! They can dish it out continually, unrelentlessly, but they can't take the... [MORE]

Jill Lawless 

May 2, 2007 11:53

I thought Mr. Broder's comment was simply a statement of the obvious. Just what has the good Senator accomplished in... [MORE]

Jim Verdolini 

May 2, 2007 11:55

Senator Reid's declaration that the war is lost in Iraq is a betrayal of the American military and the commitment... [MORE]

David Wallace 

May 2, 2007 11:57

Your remarks would have some validity if the real battle were military, but the "war" is cultural and was lost... [MORE]

Frank M. Gray 

May 2, 2007 12:10

Yeah, that is right Broder & Graham served our country in the military just like 5 deferment Cheney & President... [MORE]

TANK 

May 2, 2007 12:48

Thank you Mr. Broder for writing what a lot of citizens agree about but don't ever get to be heard,... [MORE]

Ellen 

May 2, 2007 14:41