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The Brian Lehrer Show

Monday, May 16, 2005
  • Christine Todd Whitman
    Christine Todd Whitman from It's My Party, Too

    Busting the Filibuster

    This week the showdown over judicial nominees may come to a head. Under the current climate in Washington DC is there room for moderate politicians such as Christie Todd Whitman. Whitman wants the Grand Old Party to open their philosophical umbrella to cover more diverse views including moderates who could save the filibuster.

All Things in Moderation

Christie Todd Whitman former Governor of New Jersey and former director of the Environmental Protection Agency and author, It's My Party Too (Penguin Press, 2005)
- on the importance of moderates in politics

Monday Morning Politics

Chris Nolan, Blogger, Politics from Left to Right,
- on the nuclear option and other hot topics in politics
» Politics From Left To Right

and

Markos Moulitsas, Blogger, Daily Kos,
- on political blogs and maintaining the left side of the blogosphere
» Daily Kos

Going Nuclear

Jeffrey Toobin, Staff Writer for the New Yorker and CNN Legal Analyst - on efforts to overturn the filibuster
» The New Yorker

Step Three: The Wiki

The Brian Lehrer Show

This fall, The Brian Lehrer Show will air our presidential election series “30 Issues In 30 Days.” With your help, we can produce great election coverage!

Digesting Politics

A weekly podcast with Brian Lehrer and Andrea Bernstein

New Episode Posted 10/03
Eavesdrop on Andrea Bernstein and Brian Lehrer, two of the most political savvy minds around, as they eat lunch and break down the week’s political activities.

Slideluck Potshow

The Brian Lehrer Show

Check out our contribution to the recent Slideluck Potshow, an event where folks share their love of food and photos!

ICANN, You Can…

Web Exclusive

Paul Twomey, president and CEO of ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers), on their recent decision to offer more top-level domain names.

Mixed Up

The Brian Lehrer Show

We discuss the implications of our mixed-race future and how Barack Obama's candidacy has changed the discussion about mixed-race identity.