VICTOR DAVIS HANSON wonders who will police the police:

If it was true that when the Republicans enjoyed majorities in the House and Senate and ran the White House, there was no one to object when they overspent, grew the government, and ran up the debt, who now will police the Democratic police in matters of corruption?

Rep. Rangel oversees on Ways and Means US tax policy, but is himself a tax offender, among other, far greater charges and allegations about his behavior and character. Sen. Dodd simply cannot tell the truth about his cut-rate, quid pro quo mortgage deals. His actions and the Barney Frank-Franklin Raines exchange are metaphors for the entire subprime mortgage crisis. It would take a genealogist to sort out all the tribal ties, inside pay-offs, and pay for play deals involved in the selling of Obama’s Senate seat; meanwhile, we await the tapes of Jesse Jackson, Jr., Rahm Emanuel, and Co. Al Franken simply relied on Minnesota Democratic officials to keep counting until they came up with the right result. On matters of nepotism, entitlement, and insider favoritism, Democratic egalitarians will probably anoint Caroline Kennedy as Senator in New York. Bill Richardson didn’t even try to pull off being Secretary of Commerce. Nowhere is there anyone on the Democratic side to decry the culture of corruption as in the days of Duke Cunningham and Ted Stevens.

A fair, honest, and impartial press would do this. Wish we had one!