David Brooks' Slant

The Slant Chart

Bias strength score : 0.65 - Right

Strong conservative, right wing bias

This chart is a tally of our user community's Slant votes for David Brooks. This author has received 1 Left votes, 7 Center votes, and 18 Right votes.

Op-Ed's, Editorials and Blogs

Congress In the Lead

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Some of us like to think big. We thought at the beginning of this debt crisis that it might be possible to reach a Grand Bargain. This deal would make a serious dent in the country’s awful debt problem. It would begin to reform entitlements. It would involve enough revenue to forestall ruinous ..

The Grand Bargain Lives!

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Imagine you’re a member of Congress. You have your own preferred way to reduce debt. If you’re a Democrat, it probably involves protecting Medicare and raising taxes. If you’re a Republican, it probably involves cutting spending, reforming Medicare and keeping taxes low. Your plan is g ..

The Road Not Taken

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Over the past months, Republicans enjoyed enormous advantages. Opinion polls showed that voters are eager to reduce the federal debt, and they want to do it mostly but not entirely through spending cuts. There was a Democratic president eager to move to the center. He floated certain ideas t ..

Convener in Chief

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

This is a column about management styles. What sort of leader can get things done in an age of austerity? Our first case study is what you might call the Straight Up the Middle Approach. When Chris Christie ran for governor of New Jersey, he campaigned bluntly on the need to reduce the state ..

The New Humanism

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Over the course of my career, I’ve covered a number of policy failures. When the Soviet Union fell, we sent in teams of economists, oblivious to the lack of social trust that marred that society. While invading Iraq, the nation’s leaders were unprepared for the cultural complexities of the place ..

Huntington’s Clash Revisited

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Samuel Huntington was one of America’s greatest political scientists. In 1993, he published a sensational essay in Foreign Affairs called “The Clash of Civilizations?” The essay, which became a book, argued that the post-cold war would be marked by civilizational conflict. Human beings ..

From Baghdad to Benghazi Charles Krauthammer , Wash Post
How the U.S. Can Best Help Yemen Joshua Foust , The Atlantic
Doubling down on Afghanistan Carl Levin , Wash Post
Robert Gates, Neo-Isolationist? Pat Buchanan , Townhall

The New Normal

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

We’re going to be doing a lot of deficit cutting over the next several years. The country’s future greatness will be shaped by whether we cut wisely or stupidly. So we should probably come up with a few sensible principles to guide us as we cut. The first one, as I tried to argue last we ..

Run Mitch, Run

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

On Feb. 11, Gov. Mitch Daniels of Indiana met with a group of college students. According to The Yale Daily News, he told them that there is an “excellent chance” he will not run for president. Then he mounted the podium at the Conservative Political Action Conference and delivered one of the be ..

Make Everybody Hurt

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Over the past few weeks we’ve begun to see the new contours of American politics. The budget cutters have taken control of the agenda, while government’s defenders are waging tactical retreats. Given the scope of the fiscal problems, it could be like this for the next 10 or 20 years. No ..

Tomorrow Never Comes

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Jonathan Alter wrote a book about Barack Obama’s first year in office called “The Promise.” That’s a great title because it works on so many levels. For example, over the past four years, Obama’s career has been marked by a constant promise: He has continually said he is on the verge of do ..

The Experience Economy

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Tyler Cowen’s e-book, “The Great Stagnation,” has become the most debated nonfiction book so far this year. Cowen’s core point is that up until sometime around 1974, the American economy was able to experience awesome growth by harvesting low-hanging fruit. There was cheap land to be exploit ..

Wall Street’s Dead End Felix Salmon , NYT
The Siren of the Financial Meltdown Mary Sieghart , Daily Beast

The Splendor of Cities

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Chicago The people who run the federal government spend almost no time outdoors. They get driven from home to work and move through corridors from meeting to meeting. So it was a little odd after all those times interviewing Rahm Emanuel when he was the White House chief of staff to be chasi ..

A warning to Chicago's 'Mayor Next' Dana Levenson , Chicago Tribune

The 40 Percent Nation

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

In the 1990s, at the height of the democratic revolutions, many people assumed that getting rid of the dictator was the hard part. If the people in a country could topple the old regime, then their country would make the transition toward democracy. But in 2002, Thomas Carothers gathered the evidenc ..

Egypt Protests: Will Mubarak Stay? The Beast , Daily Beast
An Intelligence Failure in Egypt? Marc Ambinder , The Atlantic
A way forward in Egypt Salman Shaikh , CNN
Why Egypt erupted Kelli Arena , CNN

The Quest for Dignity

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

I wonder if sometime around 50 years ago a great mental tide began to sweep across the world. Before the tide, people saw themselves in certain fixed places in the social order. They accepted opinions from trusted authorities. As the tide swept through, they began to see themselves different ..

Mr. Hamilton and Mr. Burke

David Brooks , New York Times
Slant this

Every Thursday my gurus, Mr. Burke and Mr. Hamilton, get together at the Heavenly Rest to drink and talk politics. Mr. Burke prefers a whiskey and water, while Mr. Hamilton likes a good strong Sex on the Beach. This week, they ended up talking about President Obama. Burke: I congratulate you ..