| "Punting the Pundits" is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.
Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past "Punting the Pundits".
Matt Taibbi: Is Obama's 'Economic Populism' for Real?
There is a lot to digest in a recent series of events on the Prosecuting Wall Street front - the two biggest being Barack Obama's decision to make New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman the co-chair of a committee to investigate mortgage and securitization fraud, and the numerous rumors and leaks about an impending close to the foreclosure settlement saga.
There is already a great debate afoot about the meaning of these two news stories, which surely are related in some form or another. Some observers worry that Schneiderman, who over the summer was building a rep as the Eliot Ness of the Wall Street fraud era, has sold out and is abandoning his hard-line stance on foreclosure in return for a splashy federal posting.
Others looked at his appointment in conjunction with other recent developments - like the news that Tim Geithner won't be kept on and Obama's comments about a millionaire's tax - and concluded that Barack Obama had finally gotten religion and decided to go after our corruption problem in earnest.
Mark Weisbot: Obama's SOTU Played to Media, Not Human Needs
To understand President Obama's state of the union speech, you have to understand his political strategy. From the beginning of his 2008 campaign, his main constituency has always been the major media. His calculation has always been that he can win without the energy companies and even some other big campaign donors, but not if the mainstream media doesn't like him. So, a little bit of populism on the tax issues - for example, the Buffet Rule - is now acceptable, especially in the context of deficit reduction and Republicans' pro-1% extremism.
The other key constituency is the swing voters - he is taking Democrats for granted - who, for the last four decades, have been composed largely of white working-class voters. According to the leading Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg, the speech was effective with swing voters. So, overall, a success for Obama.
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