Martin F. Nolan worked for The Boston Globe as a reporter, Washington bureau chief and editorial page editor. He has covered every presidential election since 1968. A veteran of the U. S. Army, he owns several flag pins.

Blog Entries by Martin Nolan

The Republican Collapse: 100 Years In The Making

1 Comments | Posted October 30, 2008 | 08:26 PM (EST)


THE REPUBLICAN COLLAPSE: 100 YEARS IN THE MAKING
Even amid the stressful heat of the campaign, the candidate could not escape the obvious. "The Republican party needs the discipline of defeat," William Howard Taft told a friend in 1912, near the end of his one term as president.
...

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Four Ways to Civilize and Simplify Debates

12 Comments | Posted October 14, 2008 | 06:25 PM (EST)


No picket signs, no shouting crowds, no "spin alley," no corporate sponsorship, no bread, no circuses, and perhaps best of all, no live audience. Today's presidential debates have become unserious to the point of self-parody. They have strayed from the original, the first national presidential debate in 1960.

On Sept....

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John McCain, Joe McCarthy and a Code of Honor

12 Comments | Posted October 10, 2008 | 12:18 PM (EST)


What rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches toward the sad end of this presidential campaign? It is the shade of the late Joseph R. McCarthy, who bequeathed his name to an "ism" John McCain has clumsily exhumed. McCarthyism asserted that if you ever met a Communist, you...

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How McCain Created a Referendum on McCain

6 Comments | Posted October 3, 2008 | 11:19 AM (EST)


Why do John McCain's daredevil stunts recall George Romney's mangled syntax, Edmund Muskie's teardrops in the snow or Bill Clinton's relentlessly roaming eye? These campaign phenomena were not gaffes, not aberrations, but revelations, confirming what many voters suspected. They were epiphanies of character.

McCain is the perpetual rebel, a Waldo...

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How Tim Russert Got His Start

Posted June 16, 2008 | 06:58 PM (EST)


Daniel Patrick Moynihan had the touch of a poet. He was also a practical man. In 1982, after Tim Russert's political skills had assured Moynihan's reelection, the senator invited me to lunch in New York. "I need your advice," he said. "Let me clutch my wallet," I replied. "No, no....

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''The Vice President is The Only Person The President Can't Fire.''

Posted June 4, 2008 | 03:47 PM (EST)


It is not a Miss Congeniality award, not a runner-up trophy, nor a consolation prize of any sort. The vice presidency has been derided and desired, but one central fact about it is inescapable

In 1966, after a reporting trip with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, I enjoyed off-the-record drinks...

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Not A Gaffe, An Epiphany: Clinton, Muskie, Romney

Posted May 25, 2008 | 08:05 PM (EST)


Edmund Muskie weeping in the snow, George Romney being brainwashed, Michael Dukakis in an Army tank, John Kerry on his windsurfer. These moments are memorable not because they are gaffes, but epiphanies, illuminating what many voters already think of a candidate. The images endure not because they were aberrations, but...

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Moving Clinton's Goalposts, Again

Posted May 22, 2008 | 05:45 PM (EST)


Has anyone noticed the resemblance between George McGovern and Robert Mugabe? Sen. Hillary Clinton and her inventive mathematicians have. They see a parallel between the longtime dictator of Zimbabwe and the heroic former South Dakota senator, who won the 1972 presidential nomination while losing the popular vote in Democratic primaries.

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Casting Hillary: The Movie

Posted May 13, 2008 | 05:05 PM (EST)


Is she Barbara Stanwyck of Night Nurse and Baby Face? The pre-Code 1930s Stanwyck was a tough cookie who did not stay home baking them.

Sally Field, Hillary Rodham Clinton's contemporary, could play her on screen. The Oscar winner for Norma Rae won again for Places in the Heart and...

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Hoosier Showdown 1968 and 2008

Posted May 1, 2008 | 03:34 PM (EST)


A senator whose antiwar eloquence appealed to young voters faced off against a senator with a famous name seeking to restore a dynasty. In 1968, Indiana and its unique political heritage stood at the center of American politics. On May 7, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York won the...

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The Veepstakes: Four Rules

Posted April 28, 2008 | 06:05 PM (EST)


It's never too early to plan to think about choosing a vice president. Here are some rules.

1. Toss the Pollsters Out of the Room

They know nothing about choosing a VP because most voters are too busy to peruse the details of an office that is still standby equipment....

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