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POLITICS OCTOBER 12, 2011

Our Favorite People

Welcome to TNR’s 2011 list issue. Earlier this week we named the most over-covered storiesDC’s most over-rated thinkers, and the most powerful, least famous people in Washington. Today’s installment: TNR’s Favorite People in DC.

RICHARD CIZIK

As the National Association of Evangelicals’ chief lobbyist in D.C. for ten years, Richard Cizik pushed evangelical-supported legislation. That is, until he was ousted in 2008 for his increasingly progressive opinions—he told NPR that his views were “shifting” on gay marriage and implied that he had voted for Barack Obama. Now, he runs the New Evangelical Partnership for the Public Good (NEP), a faith-based nonprofit organization that he hopes will defuse the culture wars and provide more opportunities for dialogue. While we don’t agree with all of the organization’s positions, it provides an important outlet for a more moderate evangelical outlook and takes admirable stances on issues such as climate change, endangered species, and prison reform. It’s also on the right side of history when it comes to gay and lesbian rights. As the NEP states on its website, “We do not believe that denigrating the dignity and denying the human rights of gays and lesbians is a legitimate part of a ‘pro-family’ Christian agenda.”

BARNEY FRANK

Barney Frank does not suffer fools. During a town hall in which a constituent compared Obama’s health care reform to a “Nazi policy,” he showed no restraint in his dismissal. “Trying to have a conversation with you,” he said, “would be like trying to argue with a dining room table. I have no interest in doing it.” In Washington, most politicians are too scared or just too stupid to go off script. But Frank is neither. And, while his values are unambiguously liberal, he also believes that a lawmaker’s first responsibility is to make laws. His advocacy for financial regulation has been a case in point: The new law that Obama signed in 2010 bearing Frank’s name (as well as Senate sponsor Christopher Dodd’s) made it to the president’s desk because Frank was willing to make the deals necessary to get a bill through Congress. He hasn’t let up since, advocating loudly for the appointment of an aggressive director for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (he was a big Elizabeth Warren fan) and excoriating Republicans who would repeal the measure altogether.

CARL GERSHMAN

When you hear about “democracy promotion,” someone is very likely talking about Carl Gershman, president of the National Endowment for Democracy, the congressionally backed private foundation that supports democratic and civil society institutions all over the world. Perhaps more than anyone else in Washington, Gershman ensures that news of oppression gets out and that opponents of tyranny receive assistance. “I try to bring Democrats and Republicans together,” Gershman has said; faith in democracy is “one of the few places you can go in Washington where people can come together who are at opposite sides of the political fence.” He has been at it, indifferent to partisan U.S. politics, for more than a quarter of a century. Who else in Washington has benefitted so many people in so many places for so many years?

GWEN IFILL

In an era when cable news talkers on both sides smugly repeat the same tropes night after night, Gwen Ifill offers another way of covering politics on television. Her calm, dispassionate style on both “PBS NewsHour” and “Washington Week” makes her the antithesis of our current moment in TV journalism—a refreshing reminder that watching politics discussed on television does not have to be a thoroughly unpleasant experience.

ELENA KAGAN

We finally got it: the anti-Scalia. The past year saw Elena Kagan emerge as the leading voice for the liberal justices on the Supreme Court—a worthy answer to Antonin Scalia’s sharp rhetoric and John Roberts’s analytical acumen. Kagan combines both those qualities. As Jeffrey Rosen pointed out in these pages (see “Strong Opinions,” August 18, 2011), she has the ability “to puncture her colleagues’ bloodless abstractions and tendentious arguments, and to explain the constitutional stakes in plain language that all citizens can understand.” Embodying that rare combination of chutzpah and eloquence, she is likely to play a major role in shaping liberal judicial theory in the coming years.

MARK KIRK

His record on environmental measures isn’t perfect, and he has fanned conservative paranoia about voter fraud; but, at a time when Republican foreign policy seems to be drifting toward mixed-up isolationism, Republican Senator Mark Kirk has taken up the mantle of sensible internationalism—backing U.S. intervention in Libya, for instance, and pushing for sanctions on the Syrian energy sector. Amid rampant partisan rancor, the moderate Illinois senator has actually demonstrated a willingness to work with Democrats.

TOM PERRIELLO

Though technically not in Washington any longer, we commend Tom Perriello for his conduct during his brief stint as the representative for Virginia’s 5th congressional district. Knowing his support for the Affordable Care Act and other liberal legislation would cost him dearly, he said: “My ultimate goal is not to get reelected. It’s to know that I did the best damn job I could representing the people of the 5th District and making a difference.” After losing in 2010, he didn’t become a lobbyist. Instead, he left for a six-week trip to the Middle East and Africa, where he worked on peace talks in Sudan. (Before serving in Congress, Perriello had worked for the international prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone—helping to indict Charles Taylor—and has consulted for the International Center for Transitional Justice in Kosovo, Darfur, and Afghanistan.)

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Yes, that one. It is not commonly known that the Bard is everywhere in Washington—the Folger Shakespeare Library, the Shakespeare Theatre Company, the Kennedy Center, and any number of black-box stages. Is there any more perfect counterpoint to the ubiquitous blather of the city? While the cowards on the Hill or the equivocators at the White House carry on, there is wisdom aplenty for them on the local stages. What writer, after all, better portrayed the fury of ambition, or the consequences of partisanship, or the tragedies of power?

STEPHEN STRASBURG 

In a town that doesn’t have much going on in the way of sports, pitcher Stephen Strasburg single-handedly generated interest in the Nationals when he signed a record $15.1 million contract. But, while his debut last year did indeed live up to the epic hype, it was what came next that was truly impressive: a debilitating injury, followed by Tommy John surgery, followed by a painstaking and successful return late this season—suggesting that he might fulfill his immense promise after all. Perseverance is a trait that Washingtonians admire, and Strasburg seems to have it. 

RADWAN ZIADEH 

Since the start of the Syrian revolt, Radwan Ziadeh, the U.S.-based head of the Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies, has been one of the most outspoken Syrian activists outside his country—making sure that this potentially transformative uprising doesn’t go unheeded. In the past few months, he has met with Hillary Clinton, testified before the U.N. Human Rights Council, and visited refugee camps in Turkey. His courageous activities apparently have not gone unnoticed by the Assad regime: The government has barred his family in Syria from traveling abroad and his brother was arrested in Damascus in August.

This article appeared in the November 3, 2011, issue of the magazine.

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14 comments

Great list even though I'm not a D.C.er. My favourite on it is of course Shakespeare, prehaps the most brilliant antidote to blather at all paces and at all times ever to emerge on the human stage.

- basman

October 20, 2011 at 12:11am

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What basman said.

- skahn

October 20, 2011 at 1:11am

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This is a great list overall, but Mark Kirk?!?! I understand that he is grounded in reality on many foreign policy issues, but he ran a primary campaign designed to appeal to the Tea Party and is regularly dishonest, if not outright lying, on all fiscal and domestic issues. And don't forget the lies he's told about his personal history. Naming Mark Kirk to this list shows just how much much the bar has been lowered for Republicans nowadays.

- Attrill

October 20, 2011 at 2:18am

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Ditto Attrill -- I've observed Kirk for decades and he will dispose of his "moderate-ness" faster than John McCain. Fool you once...

- Lymon1

October 20, 2011 at 7:15am

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The advantage of TNR's myopia when it comes to international relations is that you don't have to purchase a world atlas. On the other hand, you are susceptible to a Mark Kirk man crush.

- rayward

October 20, 2011 at 10:43am

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Just for the hell of it I've been trying to think of any Republican that should be included in this list. So far Ray LaHood is all I got.

- Attrill

October 20, 2011 at 11:37am

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What a great list, thank you for introducing me to some of these terrific people. Thank you for including Elena Kagan! Is Richard Lugar still around?

- WandreyCer

October 20, 2011 at 11:44am

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Richard Lugar is exactly who I was thinking of. I understand the Tea Party is gunning for him in next year's Primary.

- JackR

October 20, 2011 at 12:27pm

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After Shakespeare I might add that, like Jill, I'm loving Kagan on this list. I think Rosen's brief protrait of her judging and legal reasoning did "justice"--did I just say that--to her great abilities and potential. I love reading her opinions. What a stellar pick she is.

- basman

October 20, 2011 at 1:17pm

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This is sort of like when Rolling Stone doesn't feel like spending any money and puts out an issue of, oh say, 'The 40 Best Fretless Bass Players In Rock'! (not my joke, I think Spy magazine came up with it.) This combined with the pining colloquial tone of Esquire magazine's The Women We Love.' TNR's 'Ten Most Underrated People' or 'Ten People TNR Loves'. Quickie content of little substance written in gossip magazine prose. Jon Chait leaves; Marty Peretz continues his excruciating public struggles with the English language; "articles" like this and its companion piece. The post-Kinsley decline of TNR continues into yet another decade.

- mtinora@me.com

October 20, 2011 at 1:20pm

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Cohn, Noah, MacGillis, Scheiber (soon), Bernstein, Kilgore, Judis, Rosen, LW (opposing views expand the mind), Galston (same), Kazin, Shapiro, Berman, just to name some of the frequent (not occasional) contributors. Just is doing an excellent job.

- rayward

October 20, 2011 at 1:40pm

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Atrill---I second Ray LaHood. Not only is he a thoughtful Republican (who would think that species hasn't gone extinct yet) but as transportation secretary he's moved the football down the field in very meaningful and progressive ways. And as a cyclist (commuter and recreational) I applaud his stance and policy position in promoting multi-use paths & bike routes as part of our transportation infrastructure.

- singlspeed

October 20, 2011 at 3:31pm

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TNR doing lists? Yikes. At least make a slideshow out of it already. If I want lists I'll read Rolling Stone or the Daily Beast. Perhaps TNR could do the top-ten magazines for top-ten lists.

- josh_y

October 20, 2011 at 8:41pm

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I think the next TNR list should be the "Hottest Belt-Way Babes" pictorial slideshow (wearing only wool socks and DC's favorite two-tone dress shirts w/ cufflinks of course) followed up with some hearth warming Fall soup recipes.

- singlspeed

October 21, 2011 at 10:25am

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