A note to our readers
Ever since The Chicago Daily Tribune confidently proclaimed “Dewey Defeats Truman” in 1948, print journalists have been well aware of the pitfalls of publishing on the eve of an election. Our December issue, which went to press in late October, confronted us with that very problem, and we’ve dealt with it decisively—by having it both ways. We’ve created
two cover packages: one that assumes a Democratic victory, the other, that the GOP holds on. To do so, we rounded up a bipartisan group of veteran Washington observers and asked them to write short pieces in response to either outcome or both.
Hindsight may be 20/20, but foresight can often be more revealing. Whenever you’re reading this, and regardless of what happens (or happened) on Nov. 7, we think you’ll find Dick Armey’s surprisingly ambivalent musings on a GOP “win” as thought-provoking as Tom Daschle’s advice to “victorious” Democrats.
There’s another advantage to our approach: If you don’t like the actual election results, you can always click here and pretend things turned out differently. —The Editors
Govern Like LBJ, Not Tom DeLay
By Tom Daschle
Say you want a revolution
By Mark Schmitt
Be bipartisan: Impeach Bush
By John Nichols
Don’t do unto others
By Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein
Kick ’em while they’re down
By Ed Kilgore
Listen to the voters on Iraq
By David Gergen
Send the Baker Commission to Gaza
By Daniel Levy |