Roll Call is reporting that President-elect Barack Obama has offered Tom Daschle the job as Secretary of Health and Human Services, and Daschle has accepted.
Meanwhile, the Hill has this really exceptional story about the conservative blogosphere:
Conservative groups are not celebrating the election of Barack Obama, with perhaps one exception: right-wing bloggers, who see a ripe opportunity to catch up with the left.
A Washington in the hands of Democrats offers online pundits on the right a fresh political target and a chance to vent against their ideological opponents. The reverse scenario allowed their liberal counterparts to blossom during the blogosphere’s infancy, when the GOP controlled the Congress and the Bush administration held power between 2003 and 2006.
But the aptly named “rightosphere,” much like its liberal counterpart, “the netroots,” doesn’t simply want to criticize the other team. It sees this as its time to reshape the Republican Party.
“The rightosphere will be much better when the right has something to oppose,” said Jon Henke, who writes at The Next Right.
Obama and Democrats will eventually provide conservatives with a “unifying grievance” that they can seize on. On the Democratic agenda could be universal healthcare proposals that would expand government programs, union-backed card-check legislation that would allow workers to bypass secret-ballot elections when unionizing, and calls to reverse momentum to expand offshore drilling, Henke said.
Being in the opposition is also a natural posture for conservatives, who want smaller government but have seen GOP lawmakers in the last few years create more federal programs, expand the deficit and spend greater sums of taxpayer dollars.
“It’s hard to be anti-state when you are state,” Henke said.
Read the rest of the story here.
Personal note: Not accepting advertising revenues from Exxon Mobil; the advertisement just kinda invaded my website when I cut and paste an excerpt of the above article.
Update: the advertisment has morphed into other things, which is fine. More than happy– indeed glad– to give an add to the Hill. Hope it doesn’t change back to an Exxon Mobil add again. I will keep having to update this post again… and again…
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November 29th, 2008 at 11:01 pm
I suspect that the biggest reason the political left has been more active on the internet than the political right is the lack of alternatives on the left. Conservatives can choose from a slew of talk radio shows or watch Fox News, so there is less incentive for them to go to conservative web sites.
December 7th, 2008 at 7:10 pm
Nice post. Thank you for the info. Keep it up.