Showing posts with label Clinton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clinton. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Hillary Clinton, Pussy Riot, and Shameless Propaganda

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Hillary Clinton, Pussy Riot, and Shameless Propaganda

Hillary Clinton, Pussy Riot, and Shameless Propaganda


Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
April 7, 2014


The Iron Maiden recently did a photo op with Pussy Riot, the punk group that served time for holding a guerrilla performance inside a Russian Orthodox church.


Pussy Riot is said to be against the dictatorial policies of Vladimir Putin. One wonders if they consider Madame Clinton, who has admitted following the policies of the Council on Foreign Relations – a globalist directorate ultimately no less authoritarian in approach – any less despicable.


If Pussy Riot was an American protest music group going up against the establishment Hillary serves – the CFR, the Trilateral Commission, Bilderberg, and the shadow government interlocked with banks and transnational corporations – one has to wonder if Hillary would be as enthusiastic.


Poor Pussy Riot. Like no shortage of Americans, they are politically clueless and easily manipulated. They are useful idiots.


This article was posted: Monday, April 7, 2014 at 4:07 pm









Infowars



Hillary Clinton, Pussy Riot, and Shameless Propaganda

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Hillary Clinton 2016? Not If She Keeps Repeating These Mistakes


“Just over a year after leaving her job as secretary of state, Hillary Clinton has offered views on foreign policy that analysts said seem part of an effort …
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Hillary Clinton 2016? Not If She Keeps Repeating These Mistakes

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

New Details From Benghazi Whistleblowers Could Be The End Of Obama and Clinton

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New Details From Benghazi Whistleblowers Could Be The End Of Obama and Clinton

Monday, March 24, 2014

Clinton Victim Kathleen Willey and her Hillary Benghazigate Report

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Clinton Victim Kathleen Willey and her Hillary Benghazigate Report

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Hillary Clinton: Playing a Dog-Eared “Hitler” Card



U.S. political leaders" comparisons of overseas adversaries to Hitler have a long history of fueling momentum for war.








The frontrunner to become the next president of the United States is playing an old and dangerous political game — comparing a foreign leader to Adolf Hitler.


At a private charity event on Tuesday, in comments preserved on audio, Hillary Clinton talked about actions by Russia’s President Vladimir Putin in the Crimea. “Now if this sounds familiar, it’s what Hitler did back in the ’30s,” she said.


The next day, Clinton gave the inflammatory story more oxygen when speaking at UCLA. She “largely stood by the remarks,” the Washington Post reported. Clinton said “she was merely noting parallels between Putin’s claim that he was protecting Russian-speaking minorities in Crimea and Hitler’s moves into Poland, Czechoslovakia and other parts of Europe to protect German minorities.”


Clinton denied that she was comparing Putin with Hitler even while she persisted in comparing Putin with Hitler. “I just want people to have a little historic perspective,” she said. “I’m not making a comparison certainly, but I am recommending that we perhaps can learn from this tactic that has been used before.”


Yes indeed. Let’s learn from this tactic that has been used before – the tactic of comparing overseas adversaries to Hitler. Such comparisons by U.S. political leaders have a long history of fueling momentum for war.


“Surrender in Vietnam” would not bring peace, President Lyndon Johnson said at a news conference on July 28, 1965 as he tried to justify escalating the war, “because we learned from Hitler at Munich that success only feeds the appetite of aggression.”


After Ho Chi Minh was gone, the Hitler analogy went to other leaders of countries in U.S. crosshairs. The tag was also useful when attached to governments facing U.S.-backed armies.


Three decades ago, while Washington funded the contra forces in Nicaragua, absurd efforts to smear the elected left-wing Sandinistas knew no rhetorical bounds. Secretary of State George Shultz said on February 15, 1984, at a speech in Boston: “I’ve had good friends who experienced Germany in the 1930s go there and come back and say, ‘I’ve visited many communist countries, but Nicaragua doesn’t feel like that. It feels like Nazi Germany.’”


Washington embraced Panama’s Gen. Manuel Noriega as an ally, and for a while he was a CIA collaborator. But there was a falling out, and tension spiked in the summer of 1989. Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger said that drug trafficking by Noriega “is aggression as surely as Adolf Hitler’s invasion of Poland 50 years ago was aggression.” A U.S. invasion overthrew Noriega in December 1989.


In early August 1990, the sudden Iraqi invasion of Kuwait abruptly ended cordial relations between Washington and Baghdad. The two governments had a history of close cooperation during the 1980s. But President George H. W. Bush proclaimed that Saddam Hussein was “a little Hitler.” In January 1991, the U.S. government launched the Gulf War.


Near the end of the decade, Hillary Clinton got a close look at how useful it can be to conflate a foreign leader with Hitler, as President Bill Clinton and top aides repeatedly drew the parallel against Serbia’s president, Slobodan Milosevic. In late March 1999, the day before the bombing of Kosovo and Serbia began, President Clinton said in a speech: “And so I want to talk to you about Kosovo today but just remember this — it’s about our values. What if someone had listened to Winston Churchill and stood up to Adolf Hitler earlier?”


As the U.S.-led NATO bombing intensified, so did efforts to justify it with references to Hitler. “Clinton and his senior advisers harked repeatedly back to images of World War II and Nazism to give moral weight to the bombing,” the Washington Post reported. Vice President Al Gore chimed in for the war chorus, calling Milosevic “one of these junior-league Hitler types.”


Just a few years later, the George W. Bush administration cranked up a revival of Saddam-Hitler comparisons. They became commonplace.


Five months before the invasion of Iraq, it was nothing extraordinary when a leading congressional Democrat pulled out all the stops. “Had Hitler’s regime been taken out in a timely fashion,” said Rep. Tom Lantos, “the 51 million innocent people who lost their lives during the Second World War would have been able to finish their normal life cycles. Mr. Chairman, if we appease Saddam Hussein, we will stand humiliated before both humanity and history.”


From the Vietnam War to the Iraq War, facile and wildly inaccurate comparisons between foreign adversaries and Adolf Hitler have served the interests of politicians hell-bent on propelling the United States into war. Often, those politicians succeeded. The carnage and the endless suffering have been vast.


Now, Hillary Clinton is ratcheting up her own Hitler analogies. She knows as well as anyone the power they can generate for demonizing a targeted leader.


With the largest nuclear arsenals on the planet, the United States and Russia have the entire world on a horrific knife’s edge. Nuclear saber-rattling is implicit in what the prospective President Hillary Clinton has done in recent days, going out of her way to tar Russia’s president with a Hitler brush. Her eagerness to heighten tensions with Russia indicates that she is willing to risk war — and even nuclear holocaust — for the benefit of her political ambitions.


 

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Hillary Clinton: Playing a Dog-Eared “Hitler” Card

Friday, February 28, 2014

4,000 Pages Of Clinton White House Communication Released

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4,000 Pages Of Clinton White House Communication Released

"90s documents show Clinton health care concerns








FILE – In this Oct. 30, 2013 file photo, former President Bill Clinton speaks in Charlottesville, Va. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)





FILE – In this Oct. 30, 2013 file photo, former President Bill Clinton speaks in Charlottesville, Va. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)





FILE – In this Jan. 27, 2014 file photo, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks in New Orleans. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — Bill Clinton’s aides were concerned early in his presidency about his health care overhaul effort, led by his wife, that never passed and a need to soften the image of Hillary Rodham Clinton, according to documents released Friday. Mrs. Clinton now is a potential 2016 presidential contender.


The National Archives released about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving the former president’s administration, providing a glimpse into the struggles of his health care task force, led by the first lady, and other priorities such as the U.S. economy and the North American Free Trade Agreement.


Hillary Clinton’s potential White House campaign has increased interest in Clinton Presidential Library documents from her husband’s administration during the 1990s and her own decades in public service. A former secretary of state and New York senator, Mrs. Clinton is the leading Democratic contender to succeed President Barack Obama, though she has not said whether she will run.


Friday’s documents included memos related to the former president’s ill-fated health care reform proposal in 1993 and 1994, a plan that failed to win support in Congress and turned into a rallying cry for Republicans in the 1994 midterm elections. As first lady, Hillary Clinton chaired her husband’s health care task force, largely meeting in secret to develop a plan to provide universal health insurance coverage.


White House aides expressed initial optimism about her ability to help craft and enact a major overhaul of U.S. health care.


“The first lady’s months of meetings with the Congress has produced a significant amount of trust and confidence by the members in her ability to help produce a viable health reform legislative product with the president,” said an undated and unsigned document, which was cataloged with others from April 1993. The document urged quick action, warning that enthusiasm for health reform “will fade over time.”


But the documents also showed the growing concerns among Clinton’s fellow Democrats in Congress. Lawmakers, it said, “going to their home districts for the August break are petrified about having difficult health care reform issues/questions thrown at them.”


Administration officials also wanted to distance Hillary Clinton from a staff meeting on the touchy subject of making health care cost projections appear reasonable. Top aides wrote an April 1993 memo saying pessimistic cost-savings projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office were “petrifying an already scared Congress.”


“CBO has the very real potential to sink an already leaking health reform ship,” said the memo, signed by Clinton aides Chris Jennings and Steve Ricchetti, the latter now a top aide to Vice President Joe Biden. A White House and congressional meeting meant to “align budget assumptions with CBO” would be “all staff,” the memo said, so “we do not believe it appropriate that Mrs. Clinton attend.”


By September 1993, Mrs. Clinton acknowledged the obstacles in a Capitol Hill meeting with House and Senate Democratic leaders and committee chairs. “I think that, unfortunately, in the glare of the public political process, we may not have as much time as we need for that kind of thoughtful reflection and research,” the first lady said, citing “this period of challenge.”


The meetings also showed that Mrs. Clinton was doubtful that a health care law with a universal mandate — requiring people to carry health insurance — would be approved. “That is politically and substantively a much harder sell than the one we’ve got — a much harder sell,” she told congressional Democrats in September 1993.


In 2007, when she ran for president, Clinton made the “individual mandate” a centerpiece of her “American Health Choices Plan,” requiring health coverage while offering federal subsidies to help reduce the cost to purchasers.


The health care overhaul signed into law by Obama in early 2010 carried a mandate that all Americans must obtain health insurance or pay a fine.


The documents also include detailed media strategy memos written as aides tried to soften Mrs. Clinton’s image.


Her press secretary, Lisa Caputo, encouraged the Clintons to capitalize on their 20th wedding anniversary as “a wonderful opportunity for Hillary” and also suggested she spend more time doing White House events celebrating first ladies of the past.


Placing Clinton in a historical context “may help to round out her image and make what she is doing seem less extreme or different in the eyes of the media,” Caputo wrote in a lengthy August 1995 memo about courting better press coverage as the president looked toward re-election.


Caputo also proposed the “wild idea” of having Clinton do a guest appearance on a popular sitcom of the day, “Home Improvement.”


Other documents offered a glimpse into the juggling of priorities early in Clinton’s first term and administration concerns after Republicans took control of the House and Senate in the 1994 elections.


A July 1993 memo shared among Clinton’s advisers sought guidance on how the administration should focus its attention on three major priorities: health care reform, the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement and an initiative aimed at “reinventing government.”


“The president has repeatedly promised that health care will come after the economic package passes,” the memo from Clinton advisers Rahm Emanuel, Bob Boorstin, Mark Gearan and others said. “Surveys indicate that health care remains the second or third priority (behind job creation) for the vast majority of voters, but also that people fear reform is just another promise to be broken.”


“Our core supporters are rapidly losing patience and could block passage by throwing their support to alternative plans,” the memo warned.


Following the midterm losses, Clinton policy adviser William Galston wrote in January 1995, before the president’s State of the Union address, that the public had “not given up on the Clinton presidency.” But he warned the annual speech before Congress “may well be our last chance for a very long time to command the attention of the people as a whole. We cannot hold anything back.”


The new documents offer only glimmers of Clinton’s internal national security deliberations. The most detailed material, contained in files from then-national security speechwriter Paul Orzulak, show top Clinton officials wrestling with how to deal with China’s emergence as a world financial power.


Notes from an undated meeting with National Security Adviser Samuel “Sandy” Berger show Berger pushing for China’s membership in the World Trade Organization despite concerns about human rights abuses.


A series of emails pertaining to the 9/11 Commission’s research into Clinton-era handling of al-Qaida attacks were all apparently withheld by Archives officials, citing national security and confidential restrictions. The only memo released was a single July 1998 email about whether to send a high-ranking diplomat to Minnesota with a presidential message to greet ailing Jordanian King Hussein. “Sounds like too much crepe hanging,” said a dismissive official.


___


Associated Press writers Stephen Braun, Henry C. Jackson, Connie Cass in Washington and Jill Zeman Bleed in Little Rock, Ark., contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



"90s documents show Clinton health care concerns

Clinton files show worries over health care bill



The Clinton Presidential Library released a batch of roughly 4,000 pages of previously-secret White House documents Friday, fueling questions about how history could affect the presidential ambitions of former first lady and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.


Several topics covered in Friday’s release relate to Mrs. Clinton, including records from the Health Care Task Force she headed and from her press office in the White House.



The papers include internal musings by White House aides, including a warning that there was “great disquiet” on Capitol Hill about whether the Clintons understood the legislative process needed to enact the health care reform package known as the Health Security Act.


(PHOTOS: Hillary Clinton’s 50 influentials)


In an unsigned memo from April 1993, an aide recommended that both Bill and Hillary Clinton hold three “working dinners” with Democratic leaders to hear their concerns.


“To restate the obvious: While the substance is obviously controversial, there is apparently great disquiet in the capitol over whether we understand the inter-activity between reconciliation and health, procedurally, and in terms of timing and counting votes for both measures,” the memo stated. “We need strategic agreement among ourselves and. between us and the Hill on timing and process. This can work, but it will come apart if we don’t get these pieces right.”


The memo also warned that “there is great concern that CBO is going to screw us on savings, etc. just as it did on the budget.” It asked, “Do we have a Reichauer [sic] strategy?” – an apparent reference to Robert Reischauer, then -director of the Congressional Budget Office.


(Also on POLITICO: Clinton defends Obamacare)


Another line in the memo warned that then-House Speaker Tom Foley’s “relations with the Democratic Caucus, especially the freshmen, are remarkably bad.”


The health care reform effort ultimately bogged down in Congress and was declared dead by Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell in September 1994.


POLITICO reported Tuesday that about 33,000 pages of records withheld as confidential advice given to President Clinton or exchanged among his top advisers, along with information about candidates for appointments to federal office, were still unavailable to the public even though the legal basis to withhold them under the Presidential Records Act ran out in January 2013 — 12 years after Clinton left office.


(WATCH: Reince Priebus: ‘Truckload’ against Hillary Clinton)


A White House official said Tuesday that lawyers there had approved release of about 25,000 of the 33,000 previously-withheld pages.


The remainder of the roughly 25,000 pages are expected to be posted online in the next couple of weeks. The White House has extended the deadline on the additional 8,000 pages until March 26, the National Archives said earlier this week.


The larger body of records includes legal memoranda about the Whitewater investigation and other independent counsel investigations. Those files do not appear to be among those being released Friday.


(PHOTOS: Stars line up for Hillary Clinton 2016)


The list of files disclosed Friday suggested they would touch on how Clinton’s team dealt with foreign policy crises, as well as Al Qaeda strikes that preceded the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.


However, the only new document released in the 9/11-related file pertained not to that event, but to a decision not to send an additional note or gift to King Hussein of Jordan when he was at the Mayo Clinic being treated for cancer that would claim his life a few months later.


“Sounds like too much crepe hanging,” a Clinton aide wrote, recommending against the step.


A variety of Al Qaeda-related documents remain withheld on grounds that they’re classified for national security reason.


(Also on POLITICO: Hillary’s no slam dunk in 2016)           


The roughly 33,000 pages of still-secret records accumulated through early last year as records from the Clinton Library were requested under the Freedom of Information Act or processed as part of systematic efforts to disclose records of most interest to historians and the public. Archvists reviewing the records marked the pages involved as exempt, but with an eye to releasing them after the 12-year waiting period ended.


It’s still unclear precisely why the records were tied up for more than 13 additional months. The process requires the National Archives, which runs the library, to give notice to the former president and current president. Their representatives ordinarily have 30 days to clear the records for release or declare an intention to withhold them under executive privilege. However, that period can be extended.


Aides to Obama and Clinton said this week that no assertion of executive privilege was made for records in the cleared batch of 25,000 pages. No final decision appears to have been made on the remaining 8,000 pages.


(WATCH: ‘Hillary papers’ reporter speaks out)


A Clinton aide said that aides to the former president cleared the larger batch of documents for release immediately on Monday, just after getting word from Obama’s attorneys that the White House had signed off on disclosing the records.


Under an executive order Obama signed in 2009, a former president can object to disclosure by asserting executive privilege. Obama could then concur and block release of the records, or disagree and move towards release. Either way, such a dispute could end up in court.


That’s just what happened in 2001, when about 70,000 pages of records from President Ronald Reagan’s White House hit the same 12-year mark and were slated for disclosure. Ultimately, Reagan asserted executive privilege over just 74 pages. A judge upheld the assertion.


Obama’s White House vowed that his executive order would speed disclosure of even sensitive files at presidential libraries. However, with respect to the previously-withheld records now beginning to emerge, the pace is well behind that for comparable records of President George H.W. Bush. They started to come out days after the 12-year mark was hit in 2005.


David Nather contributed to this report.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Clinton files show worries over health care bill

Monday, February 24, 2014

RO KHANNA: I"M NO TECHIE – Reid"s 2014 game plan: Dash of bipartisanship – McCAUL: EXTRADITE "EL CHAPO" -- Clinton stars in Grimes"s campaign -- Trivia


By Scott Wong (swong@politico.com or @scottwongDC)


RO KHANNA: I’M NO TECHIE – The former Obama administration official taking on fellow Democrat and veteran Rep. Mike Honda in Silicon Valley, may have Sheryl Sandberg, Marissa Mayer and Eric Schmidt in his corner. Just don’t call him a techie. 


In an wide-ranging interview with Huddle at a Starbucks near Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., Ro Khanna went out of his way to distance himself from the “techie” label that’s defined his campaign for the past year.  “I’m not an entrepreneur. I’m not a CEO. I’ve never started a company. I’ve got a middle-class background and am still paying off student loans. I went to public schools. If anything, I took more philosophy and economics classes than computer science and technology classes. … My voice is not one of Silicon Valley. Because of my life experiences, I see some of these structural changes taking place, globalization, technology, and I have ideas about how we can allow middle-class families and their kids to participate in this economy. …


– “I’m not a techie. I wish I were. I wish I were worth a billion dollars and started a company. … I have access to people who are technology leaders and thought leaders but I come from the perspective of someone who is not part of that world. And I’ve criticized tech companies for a lack of representation of Asian Americans at their highest ranks, with a lack of women, with a lack of African American and Latino employees. … I’m not supporting the pack policy interest of these companies.


– Khanna, 37, a patent lawyer and former deputy assistant secretary in the Commerce Department, knocked Honda for having a thin legislative record and failing to articulate any sort of economic vision for the future. But Khanna acknowledged that he had praised the seven-term congressman publicly in the past: “I said Mike Honda is an honorable person who’s had a distinguished career in public service. I’ve said he’s been a go-to person on national Asian American issues. I believe that Mike Honda has helped national Asian American candidates run for office, people like Ami Bera. … I just don’t think he’s understands or is the right leader to represent Silicon Valley. And I don’t think there is any intellectual inconsistency with that. …


– “He has focused on issues of civil liberties and civil rights. So there is a complete difference in expertise and focus in what we want to achieve. It’s up to the voters to decide whose experience and background better matches the times and the district. My view is that this district — which is the heart of Apple, Yahoo, Intel, Cisco, LinkedIn, Google, Tesla and middle class folks from all of those areas — will pick someone with economic expertise and background.


– While Khanna thinks it’s time for Honda to go, he wouldn’t say the same for other longtime Silicon Valley Democrats: “I think Anna Eshoo is very different. She has called for transparency in the procurement process. Recently, she was outspoken as a leader when the NSA debate happened. She would have the support of almost all the tech leaders who are supporting me. Many of them would support Zoe Lofgren. … They know Anna Eshoo, they like Anna Eshoo, they think Anna Eshoo has been a champion for Silicon Valley. It is night and day. She’s far more effective, and Zoe has done substantive work on SOPA and PIPA.”


REID’S 2014 GAME PLAN: SOME BIPARTISANSHIP – Burgess Everett writes for POLITICO: “Harry Reid is aiming for a dash of bipartisanship in his election-year game plan. The Senate majority leader will still push long-shot measures, like paycheck fairness and hiking the minimum wage, designed to appeal to his party’s base. But now he’s considering taking up bills that some Republicans actually support, too, like a manufacturing bill and a prison reform measure. It’s a marked shift from the widely held belief among members of both parties that Senate Democrats will hold votes this year only on proposals that stress their political message — a strategy in line with the Nevada Democrat’s goal of keeping the Senate in Democratic hands in the 2014 election. … Passing some bills — even if they’re modest ones — could help rehabilitate the image of the entire chamber, which has grown more bitterly partisan since Reid last fall activated the ‘nuclear option’ rules change that eliminated filibusters on most presidential nominees.” http://politi.co/1fv237w


** Republicans and Democrats finally agree! Congress has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. But not if Congress gives up before the March 31 deadline. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. FixMedicareNow.org


GOVERNORS: TOUGH ROAD FOR OBAMACARE REPEAL – Steve Peoples and Ken Thomas report for the Associated Press: “The explosive politics of health care have divided the nation, but America’s governors, Republicans and Democrats alike, suggest that President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul is here to stay. While governors from Connecticut to Louisiana sparred Sunday over how best to improve the nation’s economy, governors of both parties shared a far more pragmatic outlook on the controversial program known as ‘Obamacare’ as millions of their constituents begin to be covered. ‘We’re just trying to make the best of a bad situation,’ said Republican Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa, who called the health care law ‘unaffordable and unsustainable’ yet something he has to implement by law. …  [G]overnors from both parties say a full repeal of the law would be complicated at best, if not impossible, as states move forward with implementation and begin covering millions of people…” http://bit.ly/1h52WnS


EGYPT’S MILITARY-BACKED GOVERNMENT RESIGNS – Reuters’ Yasmine Saleh and Asma Alsharif report from Cairo: “Egypt’s government has resigned, the prime minister said on Monday, paving the way for army chief Field Marshal Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to declare his candidacy for president of a strategic U.S. ally gripped by political strife. … For Sisi to run for president he would first need to leave his post as defense minister. ‘This (government resignation) was done as a step that was needed ahead of Sisi’s announcement that he will run for president,’ an Egyptian official said. He told Reuters that the cabinet had resigned en masse as Sisi did not want to appear to be acting alone.” http://reut.rs/1gvZSyC


CLINTON STARS IN GRIMES’S CAMPAIGN – Philip Rucker on A1 of the Washington Post: “During Bill Clinton’s first-inaugural festivities, a 14-year-old girl from Kentucky presented the new president with an honorary bouquet of red roses at the base of the Lincoln Memorial. Two decades later, that girl, Alison Lundergan Grimes, is a candidate to become Kentucky’s first female senator. And Clinton — an uncle figure whom Grimes counts as a friend, mentor and adviser — is playing a starring role in her campaign and will appear at a sold-out Grimes fundraiser Tuesday.


– “As Grimes weighed whether to run for the Senate, Clinton took nearly an hour out of a visit last year to Owensboro, Ky., to huddle privately with her. Hillary Rodham Clinton provided her counsel as well. They both offered their unconditional support and talked about how much fight it will take for a Democrat to unseat Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, a wily campaigner known for vilifying his opponents. ‘I think what the Clinton family, from President Clinton to Secretary Clinton, and I have in common is that we don’t scare easy — no matter the bully,’ Grimes said in an interview. …


– “Grimes is living proof that the Clintons, both now out of office, remain the first family in Democratic politics. At 35, Grimes is just 15 months older than their daughter, Chelsea Clinton, and is practically the Clintons’ political offspring. A win in November would demonstrate the appeal of Clintonian centrism in Republican territory.” http://wapo.st/1gv5dpT


UNDER DeMINT, HERITAGE SHIFTS FROM POLICY TO POLITICS – Jennifer Steinhauer and Jonathan Weisman write on A1 of the New York Times: “Not long after Jim DeMint took over the Heritage Foundation last spring, his team summoned the staff for a meeting unlike any the decorous conservative policy organization had ever convened. Music blared in the auditorium. Policy analysts began with a few awkward jokes and then scampered about in a series of skits that laid out the foundation’s goals. Some of the veteran managers of the staid think tank stared on balefully. A new era had arrived. From its inception in 1973, the Heritage Foundation has provided the blueprint for the Republican Party’s ideas in Washington. In doing so, it has proved to be the most durable organization of its kind. But under Mr. DeMint, a South Carolinian who gave up his Senate seat last year to take the helm, Heritage has shifted. Long known as an incubator for policy ideas and the embodiment of the party establishment, it has become more of a political organization feeding off the rising populism of the Tea Party movement.” http://nyti.ms/1fh70fL


GOOD MONDAY MORNING, FEB. 24, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your-play-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @AdamWollner and @mateagold.


MANY THANKS to my colleagues Ginger Gibson and Seung Min Kim for filling in for me last week.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The House returns from its Presidents’ Day recess on Tuesday. The Senate is back at 2 p.m. today, at which time Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) will be recognized to read George Washington’s Farewell Address. At 5:30 p.m., the Senate will vote on the nomination of Jeffrey Alker Meyer to be U.S. District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas.


AROUND THE HILL – Sen. Tim Kaine, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Near Eastern and Central and South Asian Affairs, holds a conference call at 4:30 p.m. to discuss his visits to Israel, the West Bank, Lebanon and Egypt. RSVP to amy_dudley@kaine.senate.gov. At 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Sens. Tim Scott and Cory Booker and former Sens. Carol Moseley Braun, Roland Burris and William “Mo” Cowan  mark Black History Month with a panel titled “Honoring our Past and Celebrating our Future: Discussing Personal Journeys and a Nation’s Progress with America’s Black Senators,”  at the Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress. RSVP to rsvp@scott.senate.gov or Scott_Press@scott.senate.gov by 2 p.m. today.  On Thursday morning, Sen. Bob Corker speaks at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


SUNDAY, SUNDAY, SUNDAY


– McCAUL: EXTRADITE ‘EL CHAPO’ – Rep. Mike McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, is urging Mexico to consider extraditing alleged drug lord Joaquín Guzmán Loera — also known as El Chapo — to the United States for prosecution, reports POLITICO’s Byron Tau: “I would ask that the Mexicans consider extraditing him to the United States, where he would be put into a super-max prison under tight security where he cannot escape,” McCaul (R-Texas) said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”  Guzmán was apprehended in a beachfront condo Saturday by Mexican marines and police, aided by U.S. law enforcement agencies. http://politi.co/1cH7sY6


– SEN. JOHN McCAIN said the violent uprising in Ukraine should make Russian President Vladimir Putin “nervous” about his own leadership in Russia,” writes POLITICO’s Trevor Eischen. “They want to be western,” the Arizona Republican, appearing on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” said of the Ukrainian people. “They don’t want to be eastern.” http://politi.co/1c0Vgn3


– NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER SUSAN RICE said Sunday she has no regrets about her now-infamous round of TV interviews in 2012 about the attacks on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, Byron Tau writes. Asked by NBC’s “Meet the Press” host David Gregory if she had any regrets about the interviews, Rice replied: “No.”  “Because what I said to you that morning, and what I did every day since, was to share the best information that we had at the time,” Rice said. http://politi.co/1nYpl6B


KANSAS SENATE HOPEFUL POSTED GRISLY X-RAY IMAGES – Tim Carpenter writes for the Topeka Capital-Journal: “U.S. Senate candidate Milton Wolf posted a collection of gruesome X-ray images of gunshot fatalities and medical injuries to his Facebook page and participated in online commentary layered with macabre jokes and descriptions of  carnage. Wolf, a Johnson County radiologist anchoring a campaign for the Republican nomination with calls for federal heath care reform, said in an interview the medical images were legally uploaded to public social media sites and other online venues for educational purposes. They also served, he said, to demonstrate evil lurking in the world. However, Wolf and others viewing these Facebook postings relentlessly poked fun at the dead or wounded. The gunshot victim, Wolf joked online, wasn’t going to complain about the awkward positioning of his head for an X-ray.” http://bit.ly/1lbAYKy


– Wolf later acknowledged Sunday that he posted “insensitive” comments online, which he described as “mistakes.” James Hohmann in POLITICO: http://politi.co/1gtTwjl


LANDRIEU SEEKS SUPPORT FROM INDEPENDENTS, CONSERVATIVES – The AP’s Bill Barrow in Lafayette, La.: “Democrat Mary Landrieu’s quest for a fourth Senate term will turn on whether she can attract just enough support from independents and Republicans to win in this increasingly conservative state. The daughter and sister of New Orleans mayors, that’s been Landrieu’s re-election strategy since 2002, when her donors included a Baton Rouge physician named Bill Cassidy, now her Republican challenger in this year’s midterm elections. Replicating that winning formula could depend on what matters more to voters: Landrieu’s growing ability to help Louisiana’s oil and gas industry through her recent promotion to chairwoman of the Senate Energy and National Resources Committee or her unapologetic vote for President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. …


-- “In this race, allegiances don’t fall neatly along party lines. ‘I’m a die-hard Republican, but I love Mary Landrieu,’ said Lafayette resident Mark Miller, who owns and runs multiple Louisiana-based companies that drill and offer support services to other energy companies. ‘You can’t overstate what it means for this state to have her experience and influence, especially with the energy chairmanship.’” http://yhoo.it/1k3jixj


SCOTT BROWN, MAN OF MYSTERY – James Hohmann writes for POLITICO: “Scott Brown performed with the band Cheap Trick at a concert in Massachusetts last weekend, strumming his guitar along as they played ‘Surrender.’ Two weeks earlier, a shirtless picture of him at a polar bear swim appeared on the cover of New Hampshire’s largest newspaper. On Thursday, a conservative blog reported that the former senator will keynote an April GOP fundraiser … in Iowa. If Brown plans to challenge Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), something he’s flirted with for the better part of a year now, the former Massachusetts senator has chosen a very unusual way to lay the groundwork. But those who know the 54-year-old Republican say it doesn’t mean he won’t. He’s just a one-man band who will do it on his own terms and timetable.


– “Half a dozen people who have spoken with Brown recently about his future say he is genuinely conflicted about whether to run. Several of them said Brown thinks he has until April to make up his mind, or possibly even closer to the June 13 filing deadline. But another person familiar with his thinking cautioned an announcement might come as early as the first week of March. …  Unique, detached, aloof — call it what you like. ‘Doing what I said I would do,’ Brown emailed POLITICO nonchalantly last week, in response to the latest query about what he’s up to. ‘I’m settling in, adjusting, introducing myself and helping … Keep you posted.’” http://politi.co/1pi5C5m


THE POLITICAL AFTERLIFE – The University of Minnesota’s Eric Ostermeier writes on his “Smart Politics” blog that a dozen retiring, ex- or deceased members of Congress still have active campaign websites: “One announced his retirement last September. Another died in October. One resigned last week. A dozen members of Congress that aren’t running for reelection still have active campaign websites – that accept financial donations … A Smart Politics analysis finds that through February 23rd, a dozen U.S. Representatives from the 113th Congress who have announced their retirements, resigned, or died in office still have campaign websites that actively solicit campaign contributions. The most eyebrow-raising among these is the reelection website of former 22-term Florida Republican Bill Young. Young died last October 18th and a special election to fill his seat will be held in less than a month.” http://bit.ly/MnT0K6


CURTAIN CLOSES ON SOCHI, RUSSIA BREATHES SIGH OF RELIEF – Sarah Lyall writes on A1 of the NYT: “Russia had so much to prove at the Winter Games. Was spending however-many billions of dollars to build an Olympics-industrial complex from scratch on the edge of the Black Sea worth it? How could the country overcome a thicket of potential problems: security worries, logistical obstacles, weather annoyances and the darkening specter of revolution in nearby Ukraine? The closing ceremony on Sunday night was advertised as a celebration of Russian culture and heritage: a grand party to show off the work of distinguished Russian musicians, dancers, artists and authors through the centuries. But it seemed as much a great sigh of happy relief as anything else. Russia had done it. It had held an Olympics that were safe and secure and that, thrillingly to the home fans, demonstrated the restoration of Russia’s athletic might. Four years after finishing the Vancouver Games with less than half as many medals as the United States, Russia won the most: 33. Almost overnight, it seemed, the mood in Russia shifted, from a kind of grumbling fatalism to a burst of national pride.” http://nyti.ms/1bE45Tq


FRIDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Todd Metcalf was the first to correctly answer that John Kerry is the current sitting Cabinet member who received a degree from Boston College.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – With spring training underway, Claude Marx pitches a baseball question: The grandchild of what presidential aide turned secretary of state became an owner of a New York City sports team? Name the secretary of state, the team owner and team name. The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


** After years of saying “wait until next year,” Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. This is the news seniors have been waiting for.  But we’re not over the finish line yet. Congress must act by March 31st to avoid another costly temporary patch. Let’s pass H.R. 4015/S. 2000, scrap the broken SGR formula and fix Medicare once and for all! FixMedicareNow.org




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



RO KHANNA: I"M NO TECHIE – Reid"s 2014 game plan: Dash of bipartisanship – McCAUL: EXTRADITE "EL CHAPO" -- Clinton stars in Grimes"s campaign -- Trivia

RO KHANNA: I"M NO TECHIE – Reid"s 2014 game plan: Dash of bipartisanship – McCAUL: EXTRADITE "EL CHAPO" -- Clinton stars in Grimes"s campaign -- Trivia


By Scott Wong (swong@politico.com or @scottwongDC)


RO KHANNA: I’M NO TECHIE – The former Obama administration official taking on fellow Democrat and veteran Rep. Mike Honda in Silicon Valley, may have Sheryl Sandberg, Marissa Mayer and Eric Schmidt in his corner. Just don’t call him a techie. 


In an wide-ranging interview with Huddle at a Starbucks near Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., Ro Khanna went out of his way to distance himself from the “techie” label that’s defined his campaign for the past year.  “I’m not an entrepreneur. I’m not a CEO. I’ve never started a company. I’ve got a middle-class background and am still paying off student loans. I went to public schools. If anything, I took more philosophy and economics classes than computer science and technology classes. … My voice is not one of Silicon Valley. Because of my life experiences, I see some of these structural changes taking place, globalization, technology, and I have ideas about how we can allow middle-class families and their kids to participate in this economy. …


– “I’m not a techie. I wish I were. I wish I were worth a billion dollars and started a company. … I have access to people who are technology leaders and thought leaders but I come from the perspective of someone who is not part of that world. And I’ve criticized tech companies for a lack of representation of Asian Americans at their highest ranks, with a lack of women, with a lack of African American and Latino employees. … I’m not supporting the pack policy interest of these companies.


– Khanna, 37, a patent lawyer and former deputy assistant secretary in the Commerce Department, knocked Honda for having a thin legislative record and failing to articulate any sort of economic vision for the future. But Khanna acknowledged that he had praised the seven-term congressman publicly in the past: “I said Mike Honda is an honorable person who’s had a distinguished career in public service. I’ve said he’s been a go-to person on national Asian American issues. I believe that Mike Honda has helped national Asian American candidates run for office, people like Ami Bera. … I just don’t think he’s understands or is the right leader to represent Silicon Valley. And I don’t think there is any intellectual inconsistency with that. …


– “He has focused on issues of civil liberties and civil rights. So there is a complete difference in expertise and focus in what we want to achieve. It’s up to the voters to decide whose experience and background better matches the times and the district. My view is that this district — which is the heart of Apple, Yahoo, Intel, Cisco, LinkedIn, Google, Tesla and middle class folks from all of those areas — will pick someone with economic expertise and background.


– While Khanna thinks it’s time for Honda to go, he wouldn’t say the same for other longtime Silicon Valley Democrats: “I think Anna Eshoo is very different. She has called for transparency in the procurement process. Recently, she was outspoken as a leader when the NSA debate happened. She would have the support of almost all the tech leaders who are supporting me. Many of them would support Zoe Lofgren. … They know Anna Eshoo, they like Anna Eshoo, they think Anna Eshoo has been a champion for Silicon Valley. It is night and day. She’s far more effective, and Zoe has done substantive work on SOPA and PIPA.”


REID’S 2014 GAME PLAN: SOME BIPARTISANSHIP – Burgess Everett writes for POLITICO: “Harry Reid is aiming for a dash of bipartisanship in his election-year game plan. The Senate majority leader will still push long-shot measures, like paycheck fairness and hiking the minimum wage, designed to appeal to his party’s base. But now he’s considering taking up bills that some Republicans actually support, too, like a manufacturing bill and a prison reform measure. It’s a marked shift from the widely held belief among members of both parties that Senate Democrats will hold votes this year only on proposals that stress their political message — a strategy in line with the Nevada Democrat’s goal of keeping the Senate in Democratic hands in the 2014 election. … Passing some bills — even if they’re modest ones — could help rehabilitate the image of the entire chamber, which has grown more bitterly partisan since Reid last fall activated the ‘nuclear option’ rules change that eliminated filibusters on most presidential nominees.” http://politi.co/1fv237w


** Republicans and Democrats finally agree! Congress has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. But not if Congress gives up before the March 31 deadline. SGR is the problem; H.R. 4015 and S. 2000 are the solution. FixMedicareNow.org


GOVERNORS: TOUGH ROAD FOR OBAMACARE REPEAL – Steve Peoples and Ken Thomas report for the Associated Press: “The explosive politics of health care have divided the nation, but America’s governors, Republicans and Democrats alike, suggest that President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul is here to stay. While governors from Connecticut to Louisiana sparred Sunday over how best to improve the nation’s economy, governors of both parties shared a far more pragmatic outlook on the controversial program known as ‘Obamacare’ as millions of their constituents begin to be covered. ‘We’re just trying to make the best of a bad situation,’ said Republican Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa, who called the health care law ‘unaffordable and unsustainable’ yet something he has to implement by law. …  [G]overnors from both parties say a full repeal of the law would be complicated at best, if not impossible, as states move forward with implementation and begin covering millions of people…” http://bit.ly/1h52WnS


EGYPT’S MILITARY-BACKED GOVERNMENT RESIGNS – Reuters’ Yasmine Saleh and Asma Alsharif report from Cairo: “Egypt’s government has resigned, the prime minister said on Monday, paving the way for army chief Field Marshal Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to declare his candidacy for president of a strategic U.S. ally gripped by political strife. … For Sisi to run for president he would first need to leave his post as defense minister. ‘This (government resignation) was done as a step that was needed ahead of Sisi’s announcement that he will run for president,’ an Egyptian official said. He told Reuters that the cabinet had resigned en masse as Sisi did not want to appear to be acting alone.” http://reut.rs/1gvZSyC


CLINTON STARS IN GRIMES’S CAMPAIGN – Philip Rucker on A1 of the Washington Post: “During Bill Clinton’s first-inaugural festivities, a 14-year-old girl from Kentucky presented the new president with an honorary bouquet of red roses at the base of the Lincoln Memorial. Two decades later, that girl, Alison Lundergan Grimes, is a candidate to become Kentucky’s first female senator. And Clinton — an uncle figure whom Grimes counts as a friend, mentor and adviser — is playing a starring role in her campaign and will appear at a sold-out Grimes fundraiser Tuesday.


– “As Grimes weighed whether to run for the Senate, Clinton took nearly an hour out of a visit last year to Owensboro, Ky., to huddle privately with her. Hillary Rodham Clinton provided her counsel as well. They both offered their unconditional support and talked about how much fight it will take for a Democrat to unseat Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, a wily campaigner known for vilifying his opponents. ‘I think what the Clinton family, from President Clinton to Secretary Clinton, and I have in common is that we don’t scare easy — no matter the bully,’ Grimes said in an interview. …


– “Grimes is living proof that the Clintons, both now out of office, remain the first family in Democratic politics. At 35, Grimes is just 15 months older than their daughter, Chelsea Clinton, and is practically the Clintons’ political offspring. A win in November would demonstrate the appeal of Clintonian centrism in Republican territory.” http://wapo.st/1gv5dpT


UNDER DeMINT, HERITAGE SHIFTS FROM POLICY TO POLITICS – Jennifer Steinhauer and Jonathan Weisman write on A1 of the New York Times: “Not long after Jim DeMint took over the Heritage Foundation last spring, his team summoned the staff for a meeting unlike any the decorous conservative policy organization had ever convened. Music blared in the auditorium. Policy analysts began with a few awkward jokes and then scampered about in a series of skits that laid out the foundation’s goals. Some of the veteran managers of the staid think tank stared on balefully. A new era had arrived. From its inception in 1973, the Heritage Foundation has provided the blueprint for the Republican Party’s ideas in Washington. In doing so, it has proved to be the most durable organization of its kind. But under Mr. DeMint, a South Carolinian who gave up his Senate seat last year to take the helm, Heritage has shifted. Long known as an incubator for policy ideas and the embodiment of the party establishment, it has become more of a political organization feeding off the rising populism of the Tea Party movement.” http://nyti.ms/1fh70fL


GOOD MONDAY MORNING, FEB. 24, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your-play-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @AdamWollner and @mateagold.


MANY THANKS to my colleagues Ginger Gibson and Seung Min Kim for filling in for me last week.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The House returns from its Presidents’ Day recess on Tuesday. The Senate is back at 2 p.m. today, at which time Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) will be recognized to read George Washington’s Farewell Address. At 5:30 p.m., the Senate will vote on the nomination of Jeffrey Alker Meyer to be U.S. District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas.


AROUND THE HILL – Sen. Tim Kaine, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Near Eastern and Central and South Asian Affairs, holds a conference call at 4:30 p.m. to discuss his visits to Israel, the West Bank, Lebanon and Egypt. RSVP to amy_dudley@kaine.senate.gov. At 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Sens. Tim Scott and Cory Booker and former Sens. Carol Moseley Braun, Roland Burris and William “Mo” Cowan  mark Black History Month with a panel titled “Honoring our Past and Celebrating our Future: Discussing Personal Journeys and a Nation’s Progress with America’s Black Senators,”  at the Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress. RSVP to rsvp@scott.senate.gov or Scott_Press@scott.senate.gov by 2 p.m. today.  On Thursday morning, Sen. Bob Corker speaks at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


SUNDAY, SUNDAY, SUNDAY


– McCAUL: EXTRADITE ‘EL CHAPO’ – Rep. Mike McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, is urging Mexico to consider extraditing alleged drug lord Joaquín Guzmán Loera — also known as El Chapo — to the United States for prosecution, reports POLITICO’s Byron Tau: “I would ask that the Mexicans consider extraditing him to the United States, where he would be put into a super-max prison under tight security where he cannot escape,” McCaul (R-Texas) said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”  Guzmán was apprehended in a beachfront condo Saturday by Mexican marines and police, aided by U.S. law enforcement agencies. http://politi.co/1cH7sY6


– SEN. JOHN McCAIN said the violent uprising in Ukraine should make Russian President Vladimir Putin “nervous” about his own leadership in Russia,” writes POLITICO’s Trevor Eischen. “They want to be western,” the Arizona Republican, appearing on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” said of the Ukrainian people. “They don’t want to be eastern.” http://politi.co/1c0Vgn3


– NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER SUSAN RICE said Sunday she has no regrets about her now-infamous round of TV interviews in 2012 about the attacks on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, Byron Tau writes. Asked by NBC’s “Meet the Press” host David Gregory if she had any regrets about the interviews, Rice replied: “No.”  “Because what I said to you that morning, and what I did every day since, was to share the best information that we had at the time,” Rice said. http://politi.co/1nYpl6B


KANSAS SENATE HOPEFUL POSTED GRISLY X-RAY IMAGES – Tim Carpenter writes for the Topeka Capital-Journal: “U.S. Senate candidate Milton Wolf posted a collection of gruesome X-ray images of gunshot fatalities and medical injuries to his Facebook page and participated in online commentary layered with macabre jokes and descriptions of  carnage. Wolf, a Johnson County radiologist anchoring a campaign for the Republican nomination with calls for federal heath care reform, said in an interview the medical images were legally uploaded to public social media sites and other online venues for educational purposes. They also served, he said, to demonstrate evil lurking in the world. However, Wolf and others viewing these Facebook postings relentlessly poked fun at the dead or wounded. The gunshot victim, Wolf joked online, wasn’t going to complain about the awkward positioning of his head for an X-ray.” http://bit.ly/1lbAYKy


– Wolf later acknowledged Sunday that he posted “insensitive” comments online, which he described as “mistakes.” James Hohmann in POLITICO: http://politi.co/1gtTwjl


LANDRIEU SEEKS SUPPORT FROM INDEPENDENTS, CONSERVATIVES – The AP’s Bill Barrow in Lafayette, La.: “Democrat Mary Landrieu’s quest for a fourth Senate term will turn on whether she can attract just enough support from independents and Republicans to win in this increasingly conservative state. The daughter and sister of New Orleans mayors, that’s been Landrieu’s re-election strategy since 2002, when her donors included a Baton Rouge physician named Bill Cassidy, now her Republican challenger in this year’s midterm elections. Replicating that winning formula could depend on what matters more to voters: Landrieu’s growing ability to help Louisiana’s oil and gas industry through her recent promotion to chairwoman of the Senate Energy and National Resources Committee or her unapologetic vote for President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. …


-- “In this race, allegiances don’t fall neatly along party lines. ‘I’m a die-hard Republican, but I love Mary Landrieu,’ said Lafayette resident Mark Miller, who owns and runs multiple Louisiana-based companies that drill and offer support services to other energy companies. ‘You can’t overstate what it means for this state to have her experience and influence, especially with the energy chairmanship.’” http://yhoo.it/1k3jixj


SCOTT BROWN, MAN OF MYSTERY – James Hohmann writes for POLITICO: “Scott Brown performed with the band Cheap Trick at a concert in Massachusetts last weekend, strumming his guitar along as they played ‘Surrender.’ Two weeks earlier, a shirtless picture of him at a polar bear swim appeared on the cover of New Hampshire’s largest newspaper. On Thursday, a conservative blog reported that the former senator will keynote an April GOP fundraiser … in Iowa. If Brown plans to challenge Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), something he’s flirted with for the better part of a year now, the former Massachusetts senator has chosen a very unusual way to lay the groundwork. But those who know the 54-year-old Republican say it doesn’t mean he won’t. He’s just a one-man band who will do it on his own terms and timetable.


– “Half a dozen people who have spoken with Brown recently about his future say he is genuinely conflicted about whether to run. Several of them said Brown thinks he has until April to make up his mind, or possibly even closer to the June 13 filing deadline. But another person familiar with his thinking cautioned an announcement might come as early as the first week of March. …  Unique, detached, aloof — call it what you like. ‘Doing what I said I would do,’ Brown emailed POLITICO nonchalantly last week, in response to the latest query about what he’s up to. ‘I’m settling in, adjusting, introducing myself and helping … Keep you posted.’” http://politi.co/1pi5C5m


THE POLITICAL AFTERLIFE – The University of Minnesota’s Eric Ostermeier writes on his “Smart Politics” blog that a dozen retiring, ex- or deceased members of Congress still have active campaign websites: “One announced his retirement last September. Another died in October. One resigned last week. A dozen members of Congress that aren’t running for reelection still have active campaign websites – that accept financial donations … A Smart Politics analysis finds that through February 23rd, a dozen U.S. Representatives from the 113th Congress who have announced their retirements, resigned, or died in office still have campaign websites that actively solicit campaign contributions. The most eyebrow-raising among these is the reelection website of former 22-term Florida Republican Bill Young. Young died last October 18th and a special election to fill his seat will be held in less than a month.” http://bit.ly/MnT0K6


CURTAIN CLOSES ON SOCHI, RUSSIA BREATHES SIGH OF RELIEF – Sarah Lyall writes on A1 of the NYT: “Russia had so much to prove at the Winter Games. Was spending however-many billions of dollars to build an Olympics-industrial complex from scratch on the edge of the Black Sea worth it? How could the country overcome a thicket of potential problems: security worries, logistical obstacles, weather annoyances and the darkening specter of revolution in nearby Ukraine? The closing ceremony on Sunday night was advertised as a celebration of Russian culture and heritage: a grand party to show off the work of distinguished Russian musicians, dancers, artists and authors through the centuries. But it seemed as much a great sigh of happy relief as anything else. Russia had done it. It had held an Olympics that were safe and secure and that, thrillingly to the home fans, demonstrated the restoration of Russia’s athletic might. Four years after finishing the Vancouver Games with less than half as many medals as the United States, Russia won the most: 33. Almost overnight, it seemed, the mood in Russia shifted, from a kind of grumbling fatalism to a burst of national pride.” http://nyti.ms/1bE45Tq


FRIDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Todd Metcalf was the first to correctly answer that John Kerry is the current sitting Cabinet member who received a degree from Boston College.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – With spring training underway, Claude Marx pitches a baseball question: The grandchild of what presidential aide turned secretary of state became an owner of a New York City sports team? Name the secretary of state, the team owner and team name. The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


** After years of saying “wait until next year,” Congress finally has bipartisan legislation to repeal Medicare’s broken funding formula. This is the news seniors have been waiting for.  But we’re not over the finish line yet. Congress must act by March 31st to avoid another costly temporary patch. Let’s pass H.R. 4015/S. 2000, scrap the broken SGR formula and fix Medicare once and for all! FixMedicareNow.org




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