New York Times Style and Presidents

Random, extremely nerdy thought that nobody but me cares about:

It is New York Times style to refer to an elected official by full name upon initial reference in any article, no matter how familiar the official is: “Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg,” “Senator Charles E. Schumer,” “Gov. David A. Paterson,” “Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.” (Except that it was “Vice President Al Gore” and “Vice President Dick Cheney.” Apparently the Times calls people what they want to be called.)

The only exception to this rule is an incumbent U.S. president. So in Timespeak, on January 20, “President-elect Barack Obama” magically became “President Obama.”

Ex-presidents don’t count; only a sitting president gets that honor. Therefore, on the day he left office, “President Bush” became “President George W. Bush.”

I get a kick out of seeing him referred to as “President George W. Bush” in the Times now. It reminds me that he’s gone and can no longer hurt us.

10 Days Ago

Doesn’t it kind of seem like Barack Obama has been President of the United States forever? And yet it’s only been 10 days.

I’m having this weird cognitive dissonance. I keep wondering why he’s never given a State of the Union address or gone on a foreign trip as president or celebrated Christmas in the White House like all of our other presidents. And then I remember, oh yeah, he’s only been there for 10 days. He hasn’t even seen the calendar turn to a new month yet.

I guess it’s because it seems like so much has happened in the last 10 days — he already seems to have worn out the carpet in the East Room with all the speeches he’s given there. And he had a high profile during the transition — he seemed in charge, because nobody else did.

I’m already getting used to seeing photos of him in the Oval Office or the Cabinet Room or, again, the East Room. But every so often I have to stop and pinch myself and appreciate the fact that this is all real.

Stimulus Oddness

This paragraph doesn’t make sense to me:

Democrats said Mr. Obama could also support a demand from a senior Senate Republican, Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, to add a provision adjusting the alternative minimum tax so that it does not hit millions of middle-class taxpayers this year. That would add costs of nearly $70 billion over 10 years to a package that Republicans already say is too big.

Huh?

Under that logic, Republicans would oppose all tax cuts because they increase the size of the stimulus plan.

That’s clearly not the case. The bolded sentence is just weird.

Updike

This is shocking. John Updike seemed like one of those writers who had been around forever and always would be. It seemed like he had something in The New Yorker every other week. I can’t say I read much of his work, but he was an icon.

Obama Replaces Oval Office Photos

Although Obama has mostly kept the Bush Oval Office decor, he’s removed two paintings from prominent locations — the walls on either side of the big south-facing windows behind his desk — and restored two Clinton-era paintings that hung in the same spots. Pinkpillbox compares two before-and-after photos.

In the upper right of the photos, you can see that Obama has taken down A Charge to Keep, by W.H.D. Koerner, and replaced it with a painting of Lady Liberty’s torch that looks very bright and modern. On the other side, he’s replaced Bush’s painting with The Avenue in the Rain, by Childe Hassam.

Bill Clinton had both of those paintings in the same places in his Oval Office (at least according to his official Oval Office replica). Even President Bartlett on “The West Wing” had Avenue in the Rain in the same location at one point, no doubt in tribute to Clinton.

Feingold Proposes Amendment

Constitutional wonkery! In the wake of Blago and Caroline Kennedy, Senator Russ Feingold is introducing an amendment to require special elections in the event of U.S. Senate vacancies. It would clarify an ambiguity in the second paragraph of the Seventeenth Amendment.

Nate at 538 thinks it has a good chance of getting passed and ratified, because successful amendments are those that are “seen as advancing sufficiently nonzerosum objectives (e.g. Good Government) that do not clearly advantage one party over another.” But some of his commenters think there should be an exception for national emergencies in which the entire membership of the Senate gets killed.

Bill Kristol Leaves the Times

This week’s New York Times column by Bill Kristol has the best ending ever:

This is William Kristol’s last column.

Hallelujah.

As for the substance of his piece:

Conservative policies have on the whole worked…

Yes, that’s why the country is in such great shape right now.

Good riddance, jackass.

Obama on Air Force One

Below: Obama orders a burger and fries on his first flight on Air Force One — although technically it wasn’t Air Force One, because he was still president-elect at the time. This is from his flight from Chicago to D.C. a couple of weeks ago.

God, I live for this kind of presidential minutiae.

Oscar Predictions

My predictions for the Oscar nominees for Best Picture:

  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

  • either Doubt or Frost/Nixon

  • Revolutionary Road

  • Slumdog Millionaire

  • WALL-E

[Update: Oh well. Duh, there’s a separate category for Best Animated Picture. Oops. I got 2.5 out of 5 (I’ll count Frost/Nixon as half.)]

Obama in the Oval Office

Here is what President Obama found waiting for him in the Oval Office this morning.

bush note to obama

It’s an envelope with a Post-It that says “44.” Inside is the traditional note from the outgoing president to the new one. (Of course, the Book of Secrets is hidden inside the desk, so Obama can learn the truth about Area 51 and the Kennedy assassination and the faked moon landing.)

After walking into the Oval Office, he spent 10 minutes alone. I wonder what he thought about. I picture him sitting at his desk, saying to himself, so it’s true — I really am the President of the United States, and this is my office, and then thinking about all that has transpired in that room.

I wonder if he said a prayer — or performed a cleansing ritual to rid the place of eight years of bad karma.

After those 10 minutes, his chief of staff, Rahm Emmanuel, walked in.

Here’s the President at his desk — the Resolute desk that many presidents before him have used, including his two recent predecessors as well as JFK.

For now, Obama is keeping Bush’s oval office decor, except for the paintings of Texas. Laura Bush designed the rug and Obama apparently loves it. (So does Bill Clinton.) I hope he eventually has the room redesigned, so he can put his own stamp on it. Cleansing ritual or no, it’s going to be hard to get that Cheney smell out of everything.