Joe Carter, who was temporarily Huckabee's rapid-response man (and turned out the best mass emails of any campaign's communications shop), on his campaign-trail experiences, and what conservative elites don't get about "Reagan conservatives."
Jim Fallows on the post-caucus stagecraft.
Chris Orr's top ten films of '07 (as well as other year-end awards).
Jack Shafer on Bill Kristol, Times columnist.
Matt Zoller Seitz on There Will Be Blood - but only after you've seen it. And Tim Noah and Armond White, as well. (I'm still sorting through my own thoughts on the film, but you can find them in the next NR.)
Robert Royal on Sarkozy's trip to the Vatican.

That Joe Carter piece seems a little off base to me. Suburban and rural conservatives aren't a majority of voters (they are a majority of acres, if that counted). The Republicans have won by taking that base of suburban and rural conservatives (say 40% of the country) and adding some wealthy financial and professional types who want lower taxes, some defense hawks (most notably, in New York City where I live, some Jews who think having an America that aggressively supports Israel is preferable to Fritz Hollings Democrats), the 10 percent of the black vote that cares enough about sexual morality to vote Republican solely on that basis, etc., etc., to get to to 51%. The 40% base can talk all they want, but they will never win an election by themselves.
Posted by y81 | January 4, 2008 8:36 PM