Mona Charen
Mona Charen is a syndicated columnist and political analyst living in the Washington, D.C. area. She is a Senior Fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Institute.
She received her undergraduate degree at Barnard College, Columbia University, with honors. Ms. Charen also holds a degree in law from George Washington University.
Ms. Charen began her career at National Review magazine where she served as editorial assistant. On her first tax return at the age of 22, Ms. Charen listed her occupation as “pundit,” explaining later, “You have to think big.”
In 1984, Ms. Charen joined the White House staff, serving first as Nancy Reagan’s speechwriter and later as Associate Director of the Office of Public Liaison. In the latter post, she lectured widely on the Administration’s Central America policy. Later in her White House career, she worked in the Public Affairs office helping to craft the President’s communications strategy.
In 1986, Ms. Charen left the White House to join the presidential campaign of then-Congressman Jack Kemp as a speechwriter.
Ms. Charen launched her syndicated column in 1987. It is featured in more than 150 newspapers and websites. She spent 6 years as a regular commentator on CNN’s Capital Gang and Capital Gang Sunday, and has served as a judge of the Pulitzer Prizes. She has served as a fellow at the Hudson Institute and the Jewish Policy Center and is the author of two bestsellers: Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got it Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First (2003); and Do-Gooders: How Liberals Harm Those They Claim to Help – and the Rest of Us (2005).
In 2010, she received the Eric Breindel Award for Excellence in Opinion Journalism.
Ms. Charen is the co-host, with Jay Nordlinger, of the weekly podcast Need to Know, and is a frequent guest on television and radio public affairs programs.
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It was always for our own good. It was always for a very good reason. It was always within the American tradition of this, that, or the other. That’s what they’ve told us; that’s ... -
’Tis the Season to Spoil Our Children?
The advice columns are beginning to reflect the season. A dismayed mother wrote to the Washington Post, “I love the holidays, but they bring out the greed in my children. From Halloween to Christmas Eve, all I hear is &... -
The Daniels Dilemma
Indianapolis, Ind. — “If I could wave a magic wand, and change just one thing, it would be to guarantee that every American child could grow up in a two-parent home until the age of 18. That would solve ... -
For the Boys’ Sake, Don’t Kill the SAT
Three years ago, before any of my kids had reached the age to take the SATs, I noticed an interesting piece by Charles Murray on the tests. Murray is always interesting, but I was particularly curious about his take on ... -
Look for Terrorists, Not Weapons
Back in January, the Obama administration announced a new policy for airline safety: country-based profiling. Travelers from 14 countries known to harbor terrorists would automatically receive extra scrutiny, including additional pat-downs or full-body scans. The named states were: Afghanistan, Algeria, Cuba, ... -
I Shouldn’t Be Writing This
I don’t know why I’ve agreed to suggest that you dig into your pockets and support NRO. It’s completely against my interest. NRO, you see, has dramatically impaired my productivity. For one thing, about ... -
Obamacare Hits the Most Vulnerable
Everyone agrees that the burden of dealing with escalating health-care costs should not fall on the most vulnerable, right? Democrats in particular are always at pains to convince us that they are sensitive to the needs of the less fortunate. ... -
Impressions From a Historic Election
It’s an occupational hazard of pundits to see what they want to see in election returns. After the Democrats’ 2008 sweep, any number of liberal commentators (and even some conservatives) consigned the Republican party to Whig status (the ... -
GOP: Hold the Hubris
I am as delighted as any conservative could be about predictions for Tuesday’s election. But the exultation of some on the right is making me nervous. It’s not just superstition. The votes haven’t even ... -
NPR and Juan Williams, cont.
Tonight I’ll be on the NPR radio show “On Point” with Tom Ashbrook. The NPR ombudsman (wouldn’t you hate to have that job right now?), a professor from NYU, and I will discuss the Juan Williams dismissal. Check ... -
About That 'Ditch'
Here’s a technique they don’t teach in campaign school: Patronize the voters. President Obama, speaking at a fundraiser in Boston, said, “People out there are still hurting very badly, and they are still scared. And ... -
Liu Si, Obama No
Ten months ago, when Liu Xiaobo was sentenced to eleven years in prison for “inciting subversion of state power,” the world response was muted. There were condemnations of this unashamed assault on free expression and individual freedom, but ... -
Good Riddance to the Pelosi Era
Her opponent grabbed his 15 minutes of fame by depicting Nancy Pelosi as the Wicked Witch of the West in a campaign spot — a sophomoric attempt at humor that accomplished nothing except to generate sympathy for its target. Not that Nancy ... -
The Dog That Didn't Bark
The poverty rate in the United States, reports the Census Bureau, increased to 14.3 percent last year, up from 13.2 percent in 2008, bringing the number of Americans living in poverty to its highest level since 1994. This is not the change for which ... -
Democrats Chose Wrong Moment for Big Government
As a social conservative who has written extensively about abortion, stem-cell research, family structure, failing schools, the degradation of popular culture, and abstinence education, I submit, without fear of misinterpretation, that the next two elections are not going to be ... -
Obama’s Delusions of Competence
‘Washington: We Have a Problem” proclaims Vanity Fair magazine. In an eerie echo of the verdicts passed during the presidency of Jimmy Carter, namely that the presidency was “too big for one man,” ... -
The Sin of Indulging Your Guilty Conscience
Newly returned from a week in Paris and well sated with delicious cheeses, magnificent art, and glorious (inexpensive!) wines, one is disinclined to reflect upon the decline of Europe. But the demographic reality so scathingly limned in Mark Steyn’... -
Here’s a Concept: Let’s Not Talk About Race
On a regular basis, we are enjoined, usually by a leading Democrat, to overcome our reticence — or, in Attorney General Eric Holder’s formulation, “cowardice” — and engage in a hearty national conversation about race. #ad#No, thanks. ... -
Did He Spy for Nothing?
Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, the 43-year-old Iranian mother of two whose death by stoning was commuted to death by hanging (so generous) after an international outcry, appeared on Iranian television this week. Speaking unsteadily in her native Azeri, Ashtiani admitted to ... -
Case Closed: Embarrass Them
For now, the Iranian government has suspended the death-by-stoning sentence meted out to Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, the 43-year-old mother of two who was convicted of adultery. There is a lesson here. There is often debate in free countries about whether ... -
A Democrat Goes into a Psychiatrist's Office
Come in. Make yourself comfortable. What’s that? You’re a congressional Democrat? You voted to triple the national debt; destroy a health-care system that an overwhelming majority of Americans were happy with in a way that creates ... -
The Washington Post Finds Waste -- In Government!
Congratulations are due to the Washington Post. “Top Secret America,” its in-depth, multi-part, two-year investigation into the vast network of government security agencies and private contractors is an eye-opener — obvious Pulitzer bait. Reporters Dana Priest and William Arkin ... -
Sestak's Attempt to Suppress Speech
The story goes that after The New Times Magazine labeled Virginia senator William L. Scott the country’s “dumbest” congressman in 1974, he confirmed this judgment by calling a press conference to deny it. Is Democratic congressman and ... -
Too Much House
Asheville, N.C. — The Biltmore House, the extravagant mansion built by Cornelius Vanderbilt’s grandson in the Smoky Mountains of North Carolina, makes the White House look like a gardener’s cottage.George Washington Vanderbilt opened his new ... -
NASA Does Muslim Outreach
It’s not really surprising that President Obama told NASA administrator Charles Bolden that his highest priority should be “to find a way to reach out to the Muslim world and engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations ... -
From Palestinian Media Watch
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas and the Fatah movement have used the death of the mastermind of the murders of the 11 Israeli athletes during the 1972 Munich Olympics as their latest opportunity to honor and glorify terror, presenting him as a ... -
Making the World More Dangerous
The timing could hardly have been worse: Just days after President Obama shared a chummy hamburger with Russian president Dmitri Medvedev — the better to dramatize our newly “reset” relations — the FBI announced the arrest of eleven “deep-cover&... -
The Meaning of Orszag
President Obama’s budget director Peter Orszag, who supposedly made “nerdy sexy,” is skedaddling from Washington before the huge budgetary Potemkin fa�ades he erected come crashing down. Orszag was the numbers-crunching guru who supplied the economic ... -
Misplaced Sensitivity to Islam
When the New York Times covered a party in honor of Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s new book, Nomad, they placed it on the same page as a sympathetic story about American Muslim women who choose to wear the full ... -
Wanting to Abolish the Department of Education Is Not Radical
Newly minted Nevada Senate candidate Sharron Angle is a kook: That’s what Sen. Harry Reid’s people are telling reporters. ABC, CNN, and other outlets seem to agree, noting that Mrs. Angle wants to shutter the federal ... -
International Outrage
A number of astute readers have pointed out that North Korea’s brutal, unprovoked attack on South Korea’s warship, which killed 47 on March 26, has received little international comment and nothing like the condemnations hurled at Israel today. -
Sestak
FWIW, I think these hunts for criminal wrongdoing are excessive and unhealthy. The Democrats do it incessantly to Republican office holders. That much having been said, this administration explanation seems quite lawyerly. And what can Sestak do, deny it? If ... -
As Morally Serious as a Root Canal
I am often asked whether I support Sarah Palin for president. I don’t. But I do very much support her as America’s next Oprah. Her cultural antennae are exquisitely sensitive, and she relishes combat. “Sarah&... -
Polarization May Be Our Best Hope
Recent liberal laments about the increasing “polarization” of American political life are as predictable as the seasons. But pleas for centrism ring pretty hollow in light of recent history. The Washington Post editorial board, after noting Sen. Robert ... -
The First Lady and Fat Government
‘The closest thing on this earth to immortality,” Ronald Reagan once said, “is a federal program.” We still have a Rural Electrification Commission, for Heaven’s sake (though it’s been renamed) — FDR’... -
Lessons for the U.S. in Greece's National Meltdown
“The President of Greece warned last night that his country stood on the brink of the abyss after three people were killed when an anti-government mob set fire to the Athens bank where they worked.” - The Times Online That “... -
Republicans Shouldn't Alienate Hispanic Voters
Imagine yourself inside Democratic National Committee headquarters, in the department of long-term planning. Huddling in the no-longer-smoke-filled room, no doubt stocked with eco-friendly coffee cups and whole-wheat snacks, the savants are pleased with themselves. In the great game of buying ... -
The Foreign Policy of Self-Abasement
‘Lighten up.” That’s what defenders of Obama’s national security adviser, Gen. James Jones, are saying. Appearing before the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, General Jones introduced his remarks with the following story: A ... -
Democrats Hate that Tea Parties Are Peaceful
Former president Clinton reminds us, on the 15th anniversary of the bombing in Oklahoma City, to police our discourse so as not to incite the “delirious” and “unhinged.” Timothy McVeigh, he notes, “took to the ... -
Coming to Their Senses?
A new poll shows plurality of Jewish voters would consider voting for someone other than Obama in 2012.� -
What the Euphemisms Tell Us
In the latest installment of politically correct (not to say Orwellian) language emanating from the Obama administration, the term “rogue states” has been sidelined in favor of “outliers.” The switch was unveiled as part of the ... -
Go Quietly, Michael Steele
How to put this politely? Michael Steele is a man of considerable talents — it’s just that he conspicuously lacks those required for his present position. He’s energetic, personable, and articulate. But those are not the qualities ... -
Inevitable Decline?
Throughout the past year of debate on health-care reform, the conservative fear and the liberal hope have been the same: that passage of a huge new entitlement program would prove irreversible. “No one now dares touch Social Security or ... -
To Democrats, It's Monopoly Money
It is America’s misfortune that at a moment in history that required sober, grown-up stewardship and a realistic appraisal of our fiscal trajectory, we elected (by large margins) the party of supplicants and whiners. How appropriate that one ... -
Two Terrible Ideas in One!
It’s interesting that the Democrats are attempting to roll two of their highest priorities into one bill this month. The labyrinthine legislative legerdemain called health-care reform now includes a reconciliation package that would fold in student-loan reform. And ... -
Beware of Democrats Bearing Gifts
The signs are all around us. Even as Barack Obama and the Democrats lower their heads and prepare to bulldoze a huge new entitlement through Congress, the results of profligate government spending are everywhere apparent. It requires a prodigious degree ... -
Correction
My column was unintentionally misleading on one point. I should not have said that Obama’s doctors recommended he moderate his alcohol intake. Instead, they suggested he “continue�smoking cessation efforts, a daily exercise program, a�healthy diet, moderation in ... -
The Anti-Obama?
On the morning of November 5, 2008, the world rocked to news that the United States had elected Barack Obama to the presidency. That same morning, Mitch Daniels, governor of Indiana, joined the list of those most often mentioned as potentially defeating ... -
Rethinking Political Virtue
Asked by a radio host about the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. FCC, Newt Gingrich said something that I imagine many conservatives have always believed — that political contributions are a form of speech and as such ... -
Liberals and the Scientific Method
True to their mission as the organs of the liberal establishment, Time magazine and the New York Times ran stories in the midst of the great snowmageddon warning us against drawing any politically incorrect conclusions. “Skeptics of global warming,&...
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Will Mrs. Obama Downsize Your Kid?
The First Lady got a bit of a bum rap last week when some on the Right wrenched out of context her comment on the new school-lunch program. Justifying an expanded federal program to feed kids healthy breakfasts and lunches ... -
Are Democrats Delusional?
By any standard, the fury directed at President Obama by his own party this week has been jaw-dropping. Forget that the object of their rage was “The One” who just two years ago sent thrills down the legs ... -
Two Shots at History
It was pleasant — and frankly a little shocking — to see the Washington Post editorialize over the weekend about the recent film Fair Game, which purports to be the true story of Joseph Wilson and Valerie Plame. Noting that Ms. Plame ... -
Another Mysteriously Motivated Attack
A couple of weeks ago, on the occasion of the annual hajj, in which 2.5 million Muslim pilgrims fulfill their obligations to travel to Mecca, prominent Muslim clerics from Asia, Africa, and Europe, along with the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, ... -
Why Sarah Palin Shouldn’t Run
By telling Barbara Walters that she thinks she can defeat President Obama, Sarah Palin has dimmed hopes cherished by sensible Republicans that she might decide against a run for the White House in 2012. Here are just some of the reasons ... -
The Happy Meal Banners and Their Ilk
What are we to make of Nancy Pelosi’s hometown’s measure to ban Happy Meals? Shall we say that the San Francisco board of supervisors got a little carried away in their zeal to prevent childhood obesity? ... -
Is Obama Trapped?
It’s almost enough to evoke sympathy: The entire journalistic world poring over President Obama’s post-election comments and applying a humility meter to his words, his facial expressions, and his mood. Does he get it? Is he ... -
Corruption As Usual
First there was Bell, Calif., the little Los Angeles suburb that achieved distinction for its florid corruption. Robert Rizzo, former city manager, stands accused of 53 counts of misappropriating public funds and conflicts of interest. In a town described as the ... -
NPR Confronts Its Own Tea Party
I appeared on the public-radio program On Point this week with National Public Radio ombudsman, Alicia Shepherd, and listened to her defend NPR’s firing of Juan Williams. NPR, the listener is invited to conclude, has no ... -
Democrats Are the French Party
Only in France could a labor action sound like a tasty appetizer. They call it “escargot,” but they’re not referring to snails in a buttery garlic sauce. No, this escargot refers to the practice of truckers ... -
Obama’s Conscience
Two great questions ricochet around the capital in the countdown to the midterms. The first: Does Barack Obama plan to seek reelection? A remarkable number of top advisers have left the administration. Rank-and-file Democrats are listless. And the economic news ... -
The British Try to Climb Out of the Ditch
Three and a half weeks from now, Americans will decide whether to pull the emergency brake on a train that is headed to bankruptcy. Across the pond in Great Britain, which got aboard that train following World War II, the ... -
Non-Marriage, Not Markets
Income inequality, we learn from the Census Bureau, has reached its highest level since data were first collected on the subject in 1967. Poverty has increased dramatically, with one of seven Americans now falling below the poverty threshold. Additionally, the Census ... -
Vietnam Sneaks Up on Obama
At a CNBC town-hall meeting, President Obama responded appropriately to a supporter who mentioned, in passing, that his son had just been commissioned as a U.S. Army officer. Before turning to the questioner’s principal query, the president ... -
D.C. Voters Betray Their Kids
Amid all the good news from primary season — the surging grassroots rejection of leviathan government being the theme — there was one tragedy. The voters of the District of Columbia rejected Mayor Adrian Fenty, and with him the bold education reforms ... -
Reverend Jones and Both-Sidesism
For once, I’m with Hillary Clinton. Regarding the Rev. Terry Jones, the would-be Koran igniter who has at last backed down, the secretary of state said, “It is regrettable that a pastor in Gainesville, Florida, with a ... -
These Talks Are Doomed
Hamas sent a greeting card to the quintet of leaders meeting in Washington, D.C., this week to initiate negotiations about a peace settlement between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. In a well-planned ambush, they killed four Israeli civilians near ... -
Obama’s Manichean World
President Obama has a weakness for thinking in categories. For someone who provokes swoons among liberals for his great intellect, he has repeatedly evidenced an unsophisticated, one might even say simple-minded, view of the world: Workers good; bosses exploitative. Borrowers ... -
Do We Have Anything to Teach the Young?
Do you associate dirt with great music? You might if you were the parent of kids attending the Interlochen summer music program in Michigan. For their third and second summers respectively, my teenage sons have plunged into six weeks of ... -
Is President Obama Fair to African Americans?
I’m starting to wonder: Is President Obama fair to African Americans? Asked about Rep. Charlie Rangel’s ethics problems on CBS’s evening news, the president could hardly have been more direct if he’d ... -
Russia Spies, America Apologizes
Arriving at a biker’s convention in Ukraine on his Harley Davidson trike, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin offered a few observations on his recent celebratory meeting with the ten Russian sleeper agents deported from the United States. “... -
Fred Barnes: Call Your Office
The well-worn accusation of racism — most recently trotted out by the NAACP against the Tea Party movement — has been losing its punch (see Dennis Prager today and me last week). But rarely do we see the motivation so baldly stated. ... -
The NAACP's Descent
The NAACP’s decision to condemn “racist” elements within the tea-party movement is about as surprising as the U.N. Human Rights Council voting to condemn Israel. Still, there’s a difference. The U.N. Human ... -
America's Cuba Policy: A 50-Year Failure?
After a 134-day hunger strike, Guillermo Fari�as’s waist is so small that a dog collar could fit around it. This living skeleton (who has survived this long only because he has taken nutrients intravenously) is now victorious; ... -
Happy Birthday Nancy Reagan
Hope it is filled with wonderful memories and pleasant comforts. -
Long May She Wave
I confess I wasn’t familiar with the other stanzas of the Star Spangled Banner. Elaine Donnelly of the Center for Military Readiness was kind enough to send along this link�of a former Marine singing the final verse. Perfect ... -
Obama Owes Bush an Apology
Had it not been for opposing war, President Obama might never have been catapulted to the White House. It was taken for granted in the run-up to the presidential campaign of 2008 that candidate Obama had principled objections to the war ... -
The Trouble with World Opinion
Do we care what the world thinks of us? Should we? A new survey of global opinion is getting the usual respectful attention. The Pew Global Attitudes Project surveyed people in 57 countries and found that President Obama’s approval ... -
What Obama Should Say Tuesday Night
My fellow Americans: Events of the past 55 days have taught me some valuable lessons about leadership and I’d like to share those with you tonight. When the Deepwater Horizon rig blew up and spawned a terrible oil spill ... -
Disgracing America
Pres. Barack Obama, who got his start in politics in the living room of domestic terrorists Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn and spent his first year in office apologizing for American history, has now decisively tipped U.S. foreign policy ... -
Flotillas and Falsehoods
The effort to destroy the Jewish state has many fronts. One front is in Iran, where the maniacal regime that has repeatedly promised to “wipe Israel off the map” marches inexorably toward a nuclear bomb. Another is in ... -
New Jersey, Little Greece
At a New Jersey town meeting, Gov. Chris Christie, the newest YouTube star for the limited-government set, was reproached by an unhappy teacher. The governor, facing a budget shortfall of $11 billion, has proposed, among other economies, a one-year salary freeze ... -
Getting Lectured on Human Rights by Mexico
The Obama administration is deeply embarrassed by the legislators of Arizona. Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner, in discussions with representatives from China (China!), cited the Arizona law as evidence of human-rights failures in the U.S. Doubling down, State ... -
Watch Till The End
David Horowitz does the difficult and often thankless work of trudging to university campuses around America to confront hate groups. If he were on the left, as of course, he once was, he would be celebrated. He’d probably get ... -
A World Without Nuclear Weapons?
When I was a little girl, at the height of the Cold War, I used to wish, deeply and fervently, that nuclear weapons had never been invented. An accompanying fantasy placed me at the center of world events. Just as ... -
Opera Obit
This obit in today’s Washington Post celebrates the life of Italian soprano Giulietta Simionato, who would have reached age 100 next week. A gifted singer and actress, she was a link to another era in opera and in history (one ... -
Who's More Irresponsible, Wall Street or State Governments?
The Democrats’ narrative about the financial crisis of 2008 (and their justification for financial reform) goes like this: Investment bankers, typified by Goldman Sachs, manipulated markets, bamboozled investors, and in their greed managed to bring the entire economy to its ... -
Alito: A Model Supreme Court Justice
EDITOR’S NOTE:�Please be warned that this column�contains disturbing material.While�disclaiming an “abortion litmus test,” President Obama has signaled his intention to appoint a new Supreme Court justice who shares his concern for “... -
A Pathetic Response to an 'Unprecedented Threat'
Welcoming the leaders of 47 nations to Washington to discuss what he called “an unprecedented threat,” President Obama described in ominous terms the potential for nuclear terrorism. “Just the smallest amount of plutonium — about the size of an ... -
Journalism as Rubbernecking
As one who does not play or follow golf and who doesn’t know a birdie from a chickadee, I was pleased to see Phil Mickelson win the Masters. His long embrace of his ailing wife — she has been ... -
Go Quietly, Michael Steele
How to put this politely? Michael Steele is a man of considerable talents — it’s just that he conspicuously lacks those required for his present position. He’s energetic, personable, and articulate. But those are not the qualities ... -
Dems Win Dirty but Still Lose the Argument
The revisionist history writers were busy last week. The health-care law was “sweeping” and “historic.” Mrs. Pelosi was the “most powerful speaker in history,” and President Obama had cemented his place as “one ... -
Defending David Frum
I don’t find myself in agreement with David Frum about the health-care bill, but I do think some of the criticism directed his way this week has been overwrought. David may be wrong about the Republicans’ “... -
This Is a Non-Arrogant Foreign Policy?
Funny, President Obama was supposed to be against an arrogant foreign policy. Remember his speech in Strasbourg last spring? There had been instances, he told the European students, “where America has shown arrogance and been dismissive, even derisive.” ... -
The Democrats Won't Talk About This Provision
On March 9, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said: You’ve heard about the controversies within the bill, the process about the bill, one or the other. But I don’t know if you have heard that it is legislation ... -
Mostly Hope
After more than a year in office, the Obama foreign policy based on hope has run its course. Time after time, the administration has pursued a policy of preemptive concession rather than hard bargaining, with predictable results. In Europe, the ... -
Voyeurism Dressed Up as a Public Service
It’s none of my business what Pres. Barack Obama’s LDL cholesterol level is. I don’t have to know that he is using nicotine therapy to help kick his smoking habit. But all of this ... -
Not Much of a Reputation to Lose
Amnesty International has been a handmaiden of the Left for as long as I can remember. Founded in 1961 to support prisoners of conscience, it has managed since then to ignore the most brutal regimes and to aim its fire at ... -
Unpacking Obama's Rationale on Terrorists
Is there an organizing principle behind the Obama administration’s decisions on how to deal with accused terrorists? Announcing that Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, mastermind of 9/11, and four of his co-conspirators would be granted a civilian trial in Manhattan while ... -
Frontier Suburbanite
Al Gore is responsible for this. He taunted Mother Nature. Consider this her memo: Don’t Presume to Know What I Have in Store. Here in Fairfax County, we thought we were prepared. I had purchased enough milk to ...