Real Clear Politics


The site is an all-you-can eat buffet of political links, enough to fill almost any appetite, especially if you like to gorge on polls (and a very helpful average index of recent polls). But its layout is almost defiantly unfriendly, just unbroken columns of red-type headlines with no summaries at all. One drawback is that it’s harder to locate original pieces by Real Clear’s own reporters.
The links range across the political spectrum, from the Wall Street Journal to National Journal, from Fox News to the Nation, from Politico to Commentary, plus transcripts, speeches and blogs. There are morning updates (nearly 20 items) and afternoon updates, and a nice assortment of timely video clips. The left rail is helpfully sliced into categories: “GOP Analysis & Commentary,” “Media and Politics,” and so on.
Despite its comprehensive nature, Real Clear Politics could benefit from slightly expanded summaries so readers could decide whether each headline is worth a click. But its fans seem not to care.
You might also like:
Comments
Latest Posts
Stephen Colbert’s Congressional Candidate Sister
January 19th, 2013One of the ongoing gags of Stephen Colbert’s television show is the Comedy Central star’s constant willingness to float runs for public office. Colbert has started a SuperPAC, run for President and, most recently, campaigned for an appointment to the US Senate seat vacated by Jim DeMint’s retirement. These have all been in good fun. No one ever expected to see the comedian leaving his late night show for elected office. It was all a gag. But now Colbert’s sister is running for Congress and she’s dead serious about it.
A California Entrepreneur’s Take on Washington Gridlock
January 19th, 2013Andrew Nikou, chief executive of OpenGate Capital, talks about business and politics.
Watch: Armstrong Called Out By Wife of Ex-Teammate Live on CNN
January 18th, 2013Betsy Andreu, wife of Lance Armstrong’s former teammate Frankie Andreu, erupted on CNN after listening to Armstrong’s interview with Oprah Winfrey on Thursday. Mrs. Andreu was a guest on Anderson Cooper’s “AC360″ and appeared visibly upset with Lance’s lack of contrition.
Armstrong joked with Oprah during the interview that while he admitted to Andreu that he called her “crazy” and a “bitch,” he “never called her fat” – implying that guesture was some form of consolation. Watch Andreu react:
A Clash Over the Media and Beltway Gridlock at Daily Download Event
January 18th, 2013Michael Steele, the former Republican Party chairman, faulted his party for moving too far right–and said that breakneck media coverage “does a disservice to game shows.”
Lanny Davis, the former Clinton White House adviser, faulted President Obama for throwing “red meat” to his liberal base–and blamed the media for ignoring common-ground solutions.
And Howard Kurtz said the media provide incentives to political figures to make inflammatory attacks that receive wide coverage.
Crash: Lance Armstrong Emerges As Unlikable Liar Under Oprah Winfrey’s Prodding
January 18th, 2013Oprah Winfrey didn’t pussyfoot around.
She got Lance Armstrong to confess in the first minute.
It was a curiously unemotional moment, the prosecutor leading the witness through what seemed like well-rehearsed paces in a businesslike fashion.
Armstrong said he was sorry for all the years of lying, but he sounded like he was reading a shopping list. He may have been wearing a lavender shirt that Oprah’s violet dress, but the disgraced cycling champion was anything but colorful.
On her cable channel Thursday night, Winfrey wisely began with a series of yes-or-no questions that brought a decade of deception to an end.
Did Armstrong take banned substances? Yes. EPO? Yes. Blood transfusions? Yes. In winning all seven Tour de France titles? Yes.
If you changed the channel then, you didn’t miss much.