Jump to May 2012 archive page: 1 2 3
  • Cartoon slideshow: Facebook IPO

    Dave Granlund / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to launch slideshow)

    Facebook has set expectations sky high for its initial public stock offering. Priced at $38 a share, the social networking giant plans to raise $18.4 billion for the company and some early investors. The price sets at total value for Facebook at $104 billion. Not bad work if you can find it. 

    Nearly all of our cartoonists use Facebook to promote their work (you can "like" my Facebook page here), but I'm not sure they're all convinced of Facebook's value. Check out their thoughts in our new Facebook IPO cartoon slideshow


  • The Return of Reverend Wright?

    It’s campaign season again, and that means controversial Reverend Jeremiah Wright is back in the news.

    Back in 2008, sermons by Obama’s Chicago pastor created a media firestorm during the Iowa primaries, with Wright screaming, “Goddamn America!” Obama cut ties with Wright following the controversy, but now the outspoken reverend is back with new allegations that Obama’s team tried to buy his silence.

    In “The Amateur,” author Edward Klein’s unauthorized biography of Obama, Wright said that once his controversial sermons surfaced, he received an email asking him not to preach until after the elections. The New York Times reports that the financier of the Ending Spending super PAC is considering going nuclear with millions of dollars worth of commercials once again linking Wright to Obama.

    Here’s my cartoon from back in 2008 that I drew when Wright’s controversial sermons caught the media’s attention:

    Here are some cartoons from our archives featuring Wright and Obama from the 2008 campaign. Will he become a major campaign issue again? Comment below or post a note on our Facebook page.

    Eric Allie / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by Allie)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    Mike Keefe / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by Keefe)

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Gary McCoy / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by McCoy)



     

  • Cartoon slideshow: JP Morgan Chase

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to launch slideshow)

    JP Morgan Chase has found themselves in the target of critics for tighter regulations after losing $2 billion on the same type of risky short-term profit schemes that brought the economy to its knees back in 2008. 

    Two separate lawsuits by shareholders accuse the bank and its management of excessive risk, charging executives with breach of fiduciary duty, waste of corporate assets and unjust enrichment.

    Sadly, banks making risky bets is nothing new for our cartoonists. Check out their cartoons on the most recent debacle in our new JP Morgan Chase cartoon slideshow.  


     

  • My Cartoons About California's Deficit Crisis

    California is my home state, and for years our state legislature has been kicking the budget deficit can down the road. Now it seems we might have reached the end, as legislators struggle to close a new, eye-catchingly large $16-billion deficit, which has nearly doubled since Gov. Jerry Brown released his initial budget proposal in January.

    This is nothing new for our state. Back in 2009, when the state faced a $21 billion deficit, I suggested several new flag designs that California could adopt, all featuring the same blame-free bear.

    Unfortunately, there might not be much of a future for that poor bear if we can’t figure this problem out...

    Many are calling Brown a butcher for proposing $8.3 billion in cuts, which include slashing welfare, social services and health care for the elderly, and converting state workers to a four-day work week…

    Brown’s budget assumes voters will pass $8.5 billion in new taxes, but I don’t know many people who are going to support it…

    Businesses are fleeing California as fast as they can…

    As much as I love California, it’s not hard to see what it might look like in the future…


     

  • Romney the Bully: Five Cartoons

    The Washington Post recently reported that during high school, Mitt Romney bullied a gay classmate by forcing the kid down and cutting off his long, blond hair. Bullying has been in the news a lot in recent weeks, so the idea that Romney could have acted this way sent cartoonists racing to their drafting tables. 

    Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)

    Adam Zyglis / Buffalo News (click to view more cartoons by Zyglis)

    Jimmy Margulies / The Record (click to view more cartoons by Margulies)

    John Darkow / Columbia Daily Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Darkow)

    Kirk Walters / Toledo Blade (click to view more cartoons by Walters)



     

  • Does this risqué Obama cartoon cross the line?

    Our brilliant but knuckle-dragging conservative cartoonist, Eric Allie, weighed in on the Washington Post’s Mitt Romney bullying story with this funny but risqué cartoon I imagine many editors will pass up for safer cartoons:

     

    I asked Allie to weigh in with his thoughts on the cartoon, but he preferred to let it speak for itself.

    “It’s crude,” he told me. “And if I offended anyone, sweet. That’s what I intended.”

    There were certainly some readers offended on our Facebook page, but there were also a lot of readers who seemed to enjoy the cartoon, even as they disagreed with its message. Here’s a sampling of what readers had to say:

    Gregory Kauffman: Demonstrates the wholesome family values of our conservative friends.

    Sharon Foust: LOL Oh dear! That is a little risque but accurate. I used to read WaPo every day online. I got so tired of the editorial board sucking up to The Anointed One I stopped reading it.

    Joshua Delano: Love it, Bill only had one Intern down there…Barack found a way to have a whole newspaper on their knees for his perpetual pleasuring. Monica had to at least come up for air…

    William S E. Coleman: Tasteless and foul. Beyond that, it is stupid.

    Matt Doyle: The media has always been in bed with Obama, but this is immature.

    David Dolkart: Linda Lovelace would be amused, Mark Felt and Ben Bradlee wouldn’t.

    Carlton Godbold: Ugly and stupid, like so much of the senseless Teanderthal bashing. Definitely a low blow.

    Alexander Thorburn Hoffman: It sure beats cartoons that are so safe and bland with nothing important to say.

    Joseph Edward Bodden: Snide, baseless, intended to be inflammatory, fraudulent and misleading and divert attention away from sober, intelligent consideration of the real issues and their real world relevance.

    Jeffrey McMillian: Another lowering of the “common” denominator.

    Skip Simons: The GOP has a” Democrat fellatio fetish”, I think… they all want to get serviced, but, their “Conservative Values” prohibit it…. First Lewinsky, now this…

    Tim Harshman: Actually you could substitute any of the major networks and the NY Times and it would still fit.

    John Swegan: Interesting that the one guy in Washington not caught cheating on his wife would be depicted this way.

    What do you think of Allie’s cartoon? Comment below, or drop us a line on our Facebook page.

     

  • Jesus, Freddie Mercury and Gay Marriage

    Following the big news events last week surrounding gay marriage, we received lots of great cartoons, from both the right and the left, about whether gay marriage should be legal in this country (check out our complete collection here).

    Mr. Fish is one of my favorite cartoonists and probably the farthest left of any cartoonist on our site; his gay marriage cartoon included the unlikely paring of Jesus Christ and former Queen frontman Freddie Mercury:

    I asked Mr. Fish to write up his thoughts about the cartoon, and here’s what he had to say:

    The cartoon was drawn in reaction to the vote in North Carolina approving a constitutional ban on same sex marriage. It took me a full day to work through my rage before figuring out the cartoon.

    Like so many other progressive cartoonists, my initial instinct was to attack all Southerns in the United States and to classify them as backwoods hicks crippled by a history marred by prejudice and intolerance and legislative buffoonery. Not wanting to join the chorus of such vitriol, though I didn’t find it at all disagreeable, I decided to illustrate the hypocrisy that I heard when listening to those in support of the ban who insisted that their decision was Biblically motivated.

    While I don’t believe in the Gospel and think that the subjective nature of Scripture allows for innumerable interpretations and conflicting readings, I do appreciate the historical significance of there having been a big-mouthed radical hell-raiser named Jesus Christ living in Bronze Age Palestine who got in trouble with the political and religious elite for saying that the poor and the sick and the homeless and the misunderstood minorities and the unjustly vilified riffraff were NOT worthless human beings.

    It seemed to me that such a committed revolutionary thinker, if presented with contemporary culture, might tend towards acceptance of our glorious differences as human beings rather than condemnation.

    What are your thoughts about the cartoon? Either comment below, or drop us a line on our Facebook page.


     

     

  • 1912 Cartoon on Media Bias

    For those of you that think so-called “media bias” is something new and unique to our 24-hour media landscape, check out this classic cartoon about the difference in coverage a Teddy Roosevelt meeting received.

    The cartoon was drawn by Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist John T. McCutcheon, who is known as the “Dean of American Cartoonists”, and appeared in the Chicago Tribune on May 13, 1912.

    As you can see, the more things change, the more they stay the same…



     

  • Will Durst: Evoluting Fabulously

    Taylor Jones / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons)

    Satirist Will Durst weighs in on President Obama's decision to come out and support Gay Marriage...

    A thousand rainbows of congratulations to Barack Obama for bursting out of his own personal policy closet and fabulously proclaiming he believes "same sex couples should be able to get married." Sir! Welcome to the third year of the second decade of the 21st century, sir! You also might want to check out some of the strides we've been making in communications. 

    The president went on to explain he was slow in using his powers for good because it had taken a while for those thoughts to go Darwinian. Sadly, he stopped short of endorsing transmutation and neglected to hail Hugh Jackman as the best entertainer on the face of the PLANET! 

    What we witnessed was no eon eating, natural selection-type evolution; this native political animal spontaneously grew flippers and walked on dry land, prodded only by a nudge from the Biden fossil. Come to think of it, maybe flippers aren't the only body parts BHO grew. 

    You might even call it a chrysalis, with a caterpillar emerging from its cautious cocoon to sprout wings and fly to a lonely position atop the moral high ground previously inhabited by such disparate denizens as Tammy Baldwin, Barney Frank and, unaccountably, Dick Cheney. Facing extinction. 

    Rick McKee / Augusta Chronicle (click to view more cartoons by McKee)

    As predictable as a brush-back pitch following a grand slam, Republicans began to howl from eight different vantages. One right-wing rag claimed he "Buckled" on the issue. Others called him the First Waffler. Might be difficult to hide Mitt Romney's 8000 waffles behind this big one of Obama's, but they'll give it the old prep-school try. 

    Besides, isn't a waffle when you expediently move to a more popular position to curry votes? Meaning this swing- state polarizer is the exact opposite of a waffle. More of an elffaw. Which is waffle backwards. A polf- pilf. Or a yrrek. 

    Rush Limbaugh jumped into the fray accusing Obama of waging a "War on Marriage." Everything's a "War" with this guy. Bet he calls breakfast a War on Pancakes. Not to mention being a tad disingenuous coming from a multi- millionaire who hired Elton John to sing at his fourth wedding. 

    The president's supporters worry he offended the black church-going community, one of his inviolate bases. But come on, really? Don't you suspect he could be caught naked in a dumpster with a goat and a Portuguese seamstress and still carry the black church-going community? Just the goat? Male seamstress? 

    Opening a conspiratorial can of mutating worms, it has been suggested someone at The Washington Post leaked the Mitt Romney high school gay-pranking story and Obama knew he had to poop or get off the pot before it hit. Adding to Romney's image problems: do we really want him tackling Belgium and cutting off its hair because he didn't like the way it looked? 

    Adam Zyglis / Buffalo News (click to view more cartoons by Zyglis)

    Michelle Obama's husband disavowed any desire to legalize gay marriage on a federal level, maintaining it should be a states-rights issue. Of course, interracial marriage was illegal in 16 states until a Supreme Court decision in 1967 and some people still consider that an abomination. Guess who's whining about this? Same marine invertebrates. 

    Fine. Let all gay people move to California. We'll take 'em. Then just try to get your hair cut in Mississippi. Or take ballet lessons in Montana. Or raise money in D.C. And that right there might be the origin of the species. 

    Will Durst is a political comedian and columnist for Cagle Cartoons Inc. Read more of Durst's columns here. 

  • Happy Mother's Day

    Did you wake up this morning and somehow forget it's Mother's Day? 

    Don't worry, we've got your back. Just pick out one of these five cartoons that you think she'd like, click the image and e-mail it to her ASAP. 

    And next year, think about ordering her flowers.

    Rick McKee / Augusta Chronicle (click to e-mail cartoon)

    Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to e-mail cartoon)

    Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen (click to e-mail cartoon)

    Andy Singer / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to e-mail cartoon)

    Dave Granlund / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to e-mail cartoon)



     

     

  • My Gay Marriage Cartoons

    President Obama’s decision to come out this week in support of Gay Marriage caps a decade-long shift in the acceptance of same-sex couples in this country. Obviously, there are many religious groups and individuals that will never support the idea of two men shacking up, but the polling data is pretty interesting.

    When the Defense of Marriage Act was signed in 1996, only 25 percent of the American public supported same-sex marriage. Since then, support has increased gradually until an August 2010 CNN poll showed majority support for same-sex marriage, where it has remained ever since.

    I decided to look back into my archives. To my surprise, I’ve drawn a great number of cartoons dealing with the idea of gay marriage.

    Here’s the cartoon I drew after gay marriage was legalized in California…

    Here’s a cartoon I drew after the military repealed its “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy…

    While society’s view of same-sex marriage has changed over the years, the GOP’s wardrobe has remained stuck in time…

    This is a cartoon I drew after two sex scandals rocked the GOP – one involving a congressman hiring a prostitute, and the other involving gay sex and a bathroom stall. You might guess how the reactions differed…

    Here’s a cartoon I drew back in 2004 when gay marriage became legal in Massachusetts…

    And here’s how I imagined baptist preachers might respond to the growing trend of same-sex marriages…

    And because no discussion of gay marriage is complete without Bert and Ernie…


     

  • Mother's Day cartoons

    Dave Granlund / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to launch slideshow)

    Mother's Day is once again on its way, and as cartoonists, we don't care if you're a stay-at-home Mom or working for a Fortune 500 company - we'll leave that to the politicians to fight about. We just want you to relax, feel loved and enjoy the day. 

    So don't forget your Mom this Mother's Day! Buy her some flowers, take her out to dinner, and share with her our new slideshow featuring some great Mother's Day cartoons.  


  • Obama’s Gay Marriage Evolution – Five Cartoons

    President Obama’s decision to complete his “evolution” on the issue of same-sex marriage has created a media feeding frenzy, and momentarily shifted the debate from the economy and jobs.

    The timing for Obama is odd, who was obviously forced to announce his position after Vice President Joe Biden openly supported same-sex marriage on “Meet the Press” on Sunday. I bet gay voters in North Carolina would have appreciated Obama’s support sooner, rather than wait until the day after the state voted to ban all same-sex marriages and civil unions.

    This will obviously be a huge issue in this campaign, so you can expect a lot of cartoons on the subject. Here are some initial reactions about Obama’s metamorphosis, including my own…

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)

    Mike Keefe / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by Keefe)

    Rob Tornoe / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Tornoe)

    Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen (click to view more cartoons by Cardow)

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)



     

  • Iranian Cartoonist Sentenced to 25 Lashings

    This is the cartoon that got an Iranian cartoonist a sentence of 25 lashes. The cartoon depicts an Iranian member of parliament wearing a soccer jersey, regarding a story about moving an Iranian soccer team to a different city.

    There is disturbing news to report from Iran, where cartoonist Mahmoud Shokraiyeh has been sentenced to 25 lashings for drawing a member of parliament wearing a football jersey. That’s right – he’s going to be whipped for drawing a cartoon.

    While it’s nothing new for repressive governments to crack down on press freedoms and punish cartoonists, in Iran this incident seems like an escalation not only because of the harsh punishment, but because Shokraiyeh’s cartoon didn’t have anything to do with religious issues.

    Even more unsettling is that under Chapter 27 of the “Islamic Penal Code of Iran,” anyone who “wrongfully” libels through print media can be subjected to “74 lashes” and imprisonment from one month to a year.

    For more insight, I turned to my good friend Nik Kowsar, an Iranian cartoonist now living in Washington, D.C. who was imprisoned for depicting Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi as a crocodile:

    —–

    When writing about cartooning in Iran, I always think back to the cartoon I drew that literally changed my life. Though I had not directly portrayed an Ayatollah, by drawing a crying crocodile as the main enemy of the press and using a name that rhymed with the name of that powerful cleric, it was obvious I was messing with the most powerful class in Iran.

    Cartoonists had been told not to draw Ayatollahs. Even though the constitution is silent about poking fun at clerics, judges have the power to interpret the law as they wish. By making fun of the Islamic dress code, in their point of view, you are insulting the religion, and insulting the religion is a crime based on the Islamic Penal Code. Many have lost their lives over the years by simply making fun of some symbols or making jokes about the prophet and the Imams.

    In 2009, I asked (via email) Grand Ayatollah Montazeri (who died months later) if based on his interpretation of Islam, was it OK to draw Grand Ayatollahs in cartoons or not. He said that as long as you are not insulting a person, there are no objections to drawing that individual. This was sort of a “Fatwa” (a juristic ruling concerning Islamic law), though I had only asked for his opinion.

    Still, no one inside Iran dares draw an Ayatollah, and until a few days ago, it was totally OK to draw cartoons of non-cleric officials. Now, Iranian cartoonist Mahmoud Shokrayeh has been sentenced to 25 lashes because he drew a caricature of Ahmad Lotfi Ashtiani, a member of the Iranian parliament, wearing a soccer jersey.

    One thing interesting about Shokrayeh’s cartoon is the dark skinned mark on Lotfi Ashtiani’s forehead. In Islamic countries, this is the sign of “praying too much”. Rubbing the forehead on the ground during prayer for years and years does this. You can see it on many Islamist leaders’ faces.

    Last week, while attending UNESCO’s World Press Freedom Day’s conference in Tunis, I noticed the Tunisian prime minister had been praying too too much. A Tunisian cartoonist present at the conference, drawing live on a pad, intentionally drew the dark mark on the prime minister’s forehead. Including this interesting religious symbol in his cartoon might have been seen by the Iranian court as insulting.

    Now, Iranian cartoonists who are living outside of Iran, in solidarity with their colleague, are drawing caricatures of the insulted MP Lotfi Ashtian. Iranian cartoonist Mana Neyestani, who was imprisoned for his cartoons in 2006, has invited other cartoonists to draw in support of Mahmoud Shokrayeh.

    In one of the cartoons, the cartoonist suggests that Mahmoud Shokrayeh’s caricature looks much better than the MP, and the MP should be lashed because of making fun of the cartoon.

    It is important to note that if the ruling takes place and the judgement is not set aside, any cartoonist in Iran will have to fear at least 25 lashes on his back if he happens to insult public official.

     

    —–

    I had a couple of questions for Nik.  Why did Shokraiyeh draw the MP in a soccer jersey?  The MP was interested in bringing soccer clubs to the city of Arak. Nik said, "Imagine if LA Lakers move from LA to SF and turn into SF Lakers."

    I asked Nik how the lashings work and if Shokraiyeh was in prison pending his punishment. Nik responded to say that Shokraiyeh was not imprisoned and the lashings are done by appointment; Shokraiyeh will be called and given a time to come in to get his lashings, then he can leave (kind of like a trip to the dentist for a root canal, I guess).

    Here are some of the cartoons drawn by Iranian cartoonists in solidarity with Mahmoud Shokrayeh over the lashing decision:

     

  • Happy Birthday to American Editorial Cartooning

    On this day back in 1754, Benjamin Franklin’s now-famous "Join or Die" woodcut cartoon was first published in his Pennsylvania Gazette newspaper. The cartoon, which showed a snaked severed into eight segments each representing a British American colony or region, became a symbol of colonial freedom during the Revolutionary War.

    Interestingly, Franklin chose to represent all of New England as one segment, as opposed to the four colonies it was at the time. He also omitted Delaware and Georgia completely. Even back in the 18th century, space was tight for cartoons.

    It’s also a learning lesson for editors about the power of cartoons. Along with the cartoon, Franklin wrote an editorial about the “disunited state” of the colonies to drive home the importance of colonial unity. Over 250 years later, the column is long forgotten, but the cartoon is still as popular as ever.

    Here’s how it appeared back in 1754:



     

  • Does Biden Make Obama Look Bad on Gay Marriage?

    On Sunday’s “Meet the Press,” Vice President Joe Biden told host David Gregory that he is “absolutely comfortable with… men marrying men, women marrying women.” Biden gave credit to the TV show “Will & Grace”, which featured numerous openly-gay characters, for helping change his position.

    This puts him at odds with President Obama, who supports gay rights but has said repeatedly that he believe marriage should be between a man and a woman. He has also noted that his views on the matter are evolving.

    Here are some cartoons about the contentious issue. What do you think – should same-sex couples be allowed to marry each other? Comment below or drop a note on our Facebook page.

    Jimmy Margulies / The Record (click to view more cartoons by Margulies)

    Chris Weyant / The Hill (click to view more cartoons by Weyant)

    Rob Tornoe / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Tornoe)

    Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Bagley)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    Andy Singer / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Singer)



     

  • Will Durst: 2012 Veepstakes

    Jeff Parker / Florida Today (click to view more cartoons by Parker)

    Satirist Will Durst goes through the odds of who will win Mitt Romney's Veepstakes...

    Since Gov. Romney has sewn up the nomination tighter than one of Chris Christie's old suits, the only remaining Republican election drama is which name the Bairn of Bain Capital intends to place on the bottom of his bumper sticker. Yes, friends, it's once again time to play that quadrennial game sensation sweeping the nation: Let's Guess Mitt's Vice Presidential Pick!

    Usually the question of the presumptive nominee's prom date doesn't play out until June or July, but this year, the mushrooming punditocracy has chewed on the fat, tasty, rancorous primary for so long they bloated up like a poisoned toad. And are hungry. Which is why "running mate" is currently chalked atop the media blackboard menu. "Feed Me!" 

    The vice presidency is an odd job interview. Best way to apply is to deny desiring the position. Saying exemplary things about the candidate never hurts. Neither does fund-raising. Disguising any interest in 2016 -- all good. But the choice ultimately depends on whether Willard decides to excite his base, gravitate towards the middle, or make a game change. Here's a couple contenders. 

    Texas Congressman Dr. Ron Paul: 1,000 to 1. Less chance than a snail hauling a piano has of qualifying for the 100-meter dash at the London Summer Olympics.

    Texas Gov. Rick Perry: 10,000 to1. Same thing, only the snail is dead.

    Taylor Jones / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Jones)

    Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, pizza CEO Herman Cain, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, and Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann: 100,000 to 1. The snail is dead and the piano is made of uranium, heaviest element on Earth.

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie: 100 to 1. Spends much time bringing many things to the table but, alas, New Jersey is not among them. 

    Former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty: 10 to 1. Only problem is, two guys so white, might become known as the Albino Ticket. 

    Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal: 25 to 1. President Barack. Vice President Piyush. Totally possible.

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush: 50 to 1. Too soon. People need more time to recover from Bush Fatigue. Another two decades should do it.

    New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte: 50 to 1. Would help nail down that crucial Northeast vote.

    Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels: 25 to 1. Bland and boring. A victory party guaranteed to cure insomniacs. 

    Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan: 30 to 1. More polarizing than a linear accelerator. Makes Romney look liberal.

    Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman: 200 to 1. Two Mormons? That's a Broadway musical, not a presidential ticket.

    South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley: 80 to 1. Hybrid of Sarah Palin and Bobby Jindal with associative perks and potholes.

    Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum: 10 to 1. Good Christian mudder. Especially helpful should Mitt need Old Testament righteousness to counter squishy-conservative charges.

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Ohio Sen. Rob Portman: 100 to 1. Dubyah's old budget director could make Romney's economic argument fuzzier than peach season in Georgia. 

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice: 1,000 to 1. More dead snails and immensely heavy pianos.

    Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell: 60 to 1. Fading fast. Broke unwritten "don't speak of wanting it" rule. Blatantly airing image ads even though he's not running for office.

    Florida Sen. Mario Rubio: 3 to 1. Catholic Hispanic AND state of Florida. Fits together like seashores, lemonade and halter tops.

    Former Vice President Dick Cheney: 300 to 1. Relieved to leave D.C., but could be convinced to work on behalf of country again. After all, he's already had one recent change of heart.

    Will Durst is a political comedian and columnist for Cagle Cartoons Inc. Read more of Durst's columns here. 

  • French President Sarkozy Is Out: Five Cartoons

    Over the weekend, cartoon-friendly French President Nicolas Sarkozy lost his re-election bid to Socialist candidate Francois Hollande. By rejecting Sarkozy, the French also rejected austerity measures that have been enacted across Eurpope to combat the debt crisis. Now they turn to their first Socialist president in 17 years to fix their financial house and get people working again.

    Here’s my cartoon about Sarkozy’s exit, and four others from some of our best world cartoonists, who tend to care more about these things than our American counterparts…

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)

    Patrick Chappattee / Switzerland, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Chappatte)

    Martin Sutovec / Slovakia, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Sutovec)

    Petar Pismestrovic / Austria, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Pismestrovic)

    Joep Bertrams / The Netherlands, PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Bertrams)



     

  • Avengers Assemble! Five Heroic Political Cartoons

    Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve heard about the super mega-colossal new superhero movie featuring everyone’s favorite crime-fighting squad, the Avengers.

    If there’s one thing a political cartoonists like more than a unique visuals to play with, it’s a huge movie release to peg a cartoon on. With that in mind, here are five cool cartoons featuring Earth’s mightiest heroes…

    Joe Heller / Green Bay Press-Gazette (click to view more cartoons by Heller)

    Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen (click to view more cartoons by Cardow)

    David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Randy Bish / Pittsburgh Tribune- Review (click to view more cartoons by Bish)



     

  • Stagnant Job Growth – Five Cartoons

    U.S. employers may have added 115,000 jobs in April, but that was the smallest number in six months, and much lower than economics expected. Even though the unemployment rate fell to 8.1 percent, it was mostly due to more people leaving the workforce entirely (nearly 350,000 of them).

    None of this is good news for the nation’s unemployed, looking to decide on which candidate has the best plan to steer them to a steady job and a paycheck. Here are five timely cartoons about the struggle our economy still has…

    Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)

    Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Bagley)

    Jeff Parker / Florida Today (click to view more cartoons by Parker)

    R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Matson)

    Eric Allie / Cagle Cartoons (click to view more cartoons by Allie)



     

  • The Case of Chinese Activist Chen Guangcheng

    There is a tense international situation developing in China surrounding blind activist Chen Guangcheng. Chen, who served time in prison for exposing forced abortions and sterilizations being done to comply with China’s one-child policy, escaped from house arrest early this week and was being given refuge at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.

    Here’s the first cartoon I drew on the subject:

    Once the Chinese government found out about U.S. involvement, they demanded that the U.S. apologize for meddling in its affairs, and according to reports, threatened the safety of Chen’s family. According to Chen, U.S. officials promised that at least one representative would stay with him at the hospital where he was being treated for an injury he received while escaping. But once he was brought to the hospital room, they all left, and now have no access to the activist.

    The New York Times reported the Obama administration was “exposed to criticism from Republicans and human rights groups that it had rushed to resolve a delicate human rights case so that it would not overshadow other matters on the bilateral agenda,” such as the Iranian and North Korean nuclear programs and China’s currency and trade policies.

    So here is my new cartoon on the incident:

    Chen now says he wants to leave China as soon as possible. “My fervent hope is that it would be possible for me and my family to leave for the U.S. on Hillary Clinton’s plane,” he told The Daily Beast.

    What do you think we should do? Comment below or drop a line on our Facebook page.


     

     

  • The 1%

    Monte Wolverton/Canada, Politicalcartoons.com

    Nearly a quarter of the nation's population is taken by 1 percent of the people.  This leaves 99 percent of the people to complain about it. 

     

    Our cartoonists take a look at the gap between the 1 percent and the 99 percent. Check out what our cartoonists think in this cartoon slideshow called The 1 percent!  

  • Is this the end for Rupert Murdoch?

    Loujie / China Daily (click to launch slideshow)

    The fallout from a phone hacking scandal that took down the popular News of the World newspaper in England continues to cloud the future of New Corporation CEO Rupert Murdoch.

    A UK parliamentary committee have declared the media mogul "unfit" to run his global media empire, which includes Fox News, The New York Post and The Wall Street Journal

    Cartoonists from around the world have weighed in the future of Rupert Murdoch. Check out their thoughts in our new Rupert Murdoch cartoon slideshow.  


     

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