Showing posts with label Dems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dems. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Senate leaders give floor time to vulnerable Dems

Mark Pryor, Kay Hagan, Mary Landrieu and Mark Udall are shown in a composite. | AP Photos

Mark Pryor, Kay Hagan, Mary Landrieu and Mark Udall are all at risk in 2014. | AP Photos





Top Democrats are putting something special together for their Senate colleagues in tough races this year: a vulnerable-incumbent protection program.


At-risk senators will get to beef up their back-home cred by taking the lead on bills and amendments tailored to their campaigns. And they won’t be stuck in the back row at news conferences but will be in front of TV cameras and taking center stage during Senate debates.







It’s all part of an effort to blunt a furious Republican midterm campaign centered on attacking President Barack Obama and Democrats in the Senate who supported his signature health care law.


(PHOTOS: Senators up for election in 2014)


Leaders are coalescing around giving Arkansas Sen. Mark Pryor the lead on a bill to protect the Medicare eligibility age, which has become a key issue in his race. Kay Hagan will tout her fight for long-term unemployment benefits rejected by the GOP-dominated North Carolina Legislature and her likely opponent, statehouse Speaker Thom Tillis. And leaders hope to give Jeanne Shaheen a triumph on energy efficiency, a bipartisan breakthrough that would play well in purple New Hampshire.


There are other, more narrowly tailored options that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and his lieutenants could consider. Hagan has a bipartisan deal on a sportsman’s bill to shore up her hunting cred, while Colorado’s Mark Udall and Louisiana’s Mary Landrieu want to fast-track U.S. natural gas imports — a key industry in their states.


“We try to showcase our members who are up for reelection so they have a chance to shine and show what they believe in, why they are seeking reelection in their states,” said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). “I think it helps a lot.”


Other possibilities include bequeathing a veterans bill to Montana’s John Walsh, who served in the military, and taking up manufacturing legislation from Delaware’s Chris Coons. And Democratic leaders still haven’t ruled out a vote on proposed fixes to Obamacare championed by red-state Democrats, despite reluctance to do anything to undermine the law.


One of the most intense election-year pushes comes from Pryor, who wants to prevent House Republicans from raising the eligibility age of Medicare above 65. In Arkansas, he has repeatedly attacked GOP opponent Rep. Tom Cotton for supporting a conservative budget that would gradually raise the eligibility age to 70. Now he stands to get a vote on his own bill to build on those broadsides.


“People are concerned about that. And we have over 500,000 people in our state who are on Medicare, and it’s a very important part of their lives. And so we want to protect it and not let some folks — especially on the House side — try to fundamentally alter it,” Pryor said.


A spokesman for Cotton’s campaign shot back: “Anyone who voted for Obamacare, as Sen. Pryor did, can’t credibly claim to be ‘protecting Medicare.’”


The strategy isn’t just pursuing overtly partisan ideas to appeal to the Democratic base — though there’s plenty of that — but also about forcing Republicans to help some of their biggest Democratic targets score legislative victories.


Shaheen’s energy efficiency bill with Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) is on a shortlist of bipartisan proposals Reid may bring up by this summer. It may have sufficient GOP support to avoid a repeat of last fall, when a push by Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) on an Obamacare amendment tanked the bill, thanks to revisions made to incorporate ideas from both parties.


One senior Senate GOP aide stressed that such bipartisan measures still face an uncertain fate because Democratic leaders don’t want to vote on Republican energy amendments, including on the Keystone XL pipeline. And in an election year that tilts toward the GOP, some Republicans will be all too happy to stymie bipartisan bills that might help Democrats keep the Senate.


“Does that happen? Sure it does. I think we know that,” said Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee ranking member Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, a Shaheen-Portman supporter. “Sometimes people look at who the author is, and look at whether or not they’re running, and then decide whether they’re even going to look at the bill.”


Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) blamed election-year politics for preventing lawmakers during the previous Congress from passing a bill to increase access for hunters, anglers and other sportsmen — in part because his stewardship of the bill looked good back in Montana.


“Unfortunately, people thought that if they passed that, I’d win the race in Montana. Guess what? I won it anyway,” Tester said in an interview. “It needs to pass because it’s a good bill. Has nothing to do with politics.”


This time, the lead Democratic sponsor of sportsman legislation is Hagan, who is targeted by the GOP. Hagan introduced a bipartisan compromise in early February with Murkowski that is cosponsored by a swath of vulnerable Democrats and deal-seeking Republicans.


Hagan will have something even more state-specific to tout Monday when the Senate passes its unemployment bill. Democratic leaders slipped in Hagan’s language to restore long-term unemployment benefits to North Carolina that fell out of federal compliance — aid that expired under the watch of state House Speaker Tillis.


Though energy issues often divide Democrats, leaders also want to help Landrieu, the newly installed Senate Energy and Natural Resources chairwoman, claim a legislative win for her energy producing state. Landrieu passed a popular Senate bill to rein in rising flood insurance rates in Louisiana, but so did her chief GOP opponent, Rep. Bill Cassidy, accentuating the need for her to capitalize on a fortuitously timed leap to the chairmanship.




POLITICO – Congress



Senate leaders give floor time to vulnerable Dems

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Health care sign-ups surge _ will they save Dems?

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Health care sign-ups surge _ will they save Dems?

Monday, March 24, 2014

House Dems press for immigration vote

Activists gather near the U.S. Capitol to urge Congress to pass immigration reform this year. | M.Scott Mahaskey/POLITICO

Democrats are hoping to spread the pressure outside Washington. | M.Scott Mahaskey/POLITICO





House Democrats plan to launch a discharge petition on Wednesday in a long-shot effort to force a floor vote on immigration reform – their latest move to pressure Republicans to advance an overhaul this year.


Already this year, Democrats have tried the procedural gambit to compel votes on raising the federal minimum wage and extending unemployment insurance that have so far failed to attract GOP support. And the third time likely won’t be the charm for House Democrats – successful petitions are notoriously rare. A member of the majority party signing onto a discharge effort is considered a significant breach of party loyalty.







Still, the strategy brings more attention to comprehensive immigration reform, an issue that House Republicans are letting fade from the spotlight. As the prospects of reform in the House have dimmed, attention from Democratic lawmakers and immigrant advocates has turned to President Barack Obama to do some sort of administrative action that would slow the rate of deportations of undocumented immigrants.


The discharge petition will be filed on a House bill that largely mirrors the legislation written by the Senate Gang of Eight that passed that chamber last June, according to a senior House Democratic aide. Democrats will mark the launch with an event on the steps at the East Front of the Capitol on Wednesday morning.


And Democrats are hoping to spread the pressure outside Washington. The New Democrat Coalition, a group of center-left House Democrats who have taken up immigration reform as a key issue, will be working with FWD.us to host press events in key districts to promote reform and the discharge petition effort. FWD.us is the advocacy group backed by Facebook CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg.


“We’ll be driving home the case that comprehensive reform is good for the economy, lowers the deficit, and helps our most innovative tech companies succeed in the global marketplace,” another House Democratic aide involved in the effort said.


The legislation has three Republican co-sponsors – California Reps. Jeff Denham and David Valadao, and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida – but all three lawmakers have indicated separately that they won’t sign a discharge petition on the bill.




POLITICO – Congress



House Dems press for immigration vote

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Vanden Heuvel: Dems Need To Go On Offense On Obamacare





KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL: I think any party needs to turn out its core voters. And I think the Democrats need to think very hard, and they are thinking hard about how you go on the offense around not only Obamacare, but in economic agenda.


Repeal is not a policy. Repeal provides no economic security for anyone. So I think the Democrats need to go on the offense, explain how the Republican Party wants to repeal healthcare, which is a right, wants to take back those policies that would prevent discrimination against women, against people who have preexisting conditions and then lay out a robust economic agenda, minimum wage, better jobs which are being obstructed by Republicans in congress, pre-K, all kinds of things that will turn out core voters.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Vanden Heuvel: Dems Need To Go On Offense On Obamacare

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Fla. loss exposes Dems" disarray on Obamacare

David Jolly is shown. | AP Photo

Jolly’s win has many Democrats worried about how to talk about Obamacare. | AP Photo





Democrats can’t even agree whether Obamacare was the reason for their crushing loss in a Florida special election Tuesday.


Now picture how their messaging plan for the health care law is shaping up for 2014.







Republican lobbyist David Jolly’s victory over Democrat Alex Sink has many Democrats privately worried and publicly split about how to talk about Obamacare.


(Also on POLITICO: Full health care policy coverage)


A few Democrats are advocating a drastic rhetorical shift to the left, by criticizing their own party for not going far enough when it passed the law in 2010.


Other Democrats plan to sharply criticize the Affordable Care Act when running for re-election.


Many plan to stick to the simple message that Obamacare is flawed and needs to be fixed —a tactic that plainly didn’t work for Sink.


Taken together, the Democratic Party is heading into an already tough election year divided — instead of united — on the very issue Republicans plan to make central to their campaigns.


The political tug of Obamacare is neatly encapsulated by Rep. Ron Barber, a Democrat who holds a Tucson, Ariz., area seat. Barber said he’s uncomfortable with his party’s health care message, and added that you “can’t, with a straight face, stand up and say this is a perfect bill.” He wishes Democrats would “be willing to be honest about this legislation and to be willing to point out, and not be defensive, and say what’s good about it and say what we are willing to change.


But illustrating the tension, Martha McSally, Barber’s opponent, appeared at a closed House Republican Conference meeting Wednesday, saying she’s “on offense” against Obamacare, and the Florida results prove her race is winnable.


(Also on POLITICO: Who says lobbyists can’t win?)


Vulnerable members of the president’s party appeared to run from questions about it Wednesday.


Sen. Kay Hagan (D-N.C.) — one of the Senate’s most vulnerable incumbents — twice waved off a reporter’s questions. Sen. Mark Udall (D-Colo.), who will likely face GOP Rep. Cory Gardner in November, said he would prefer to answer a reporter’s question by phone to offer a “coherent” response. But his aides did not later make him available for an interview.


Democrats are concerned the health care law’s approval ratings won’t rebound by the time voters go to the polls in November. Even more significantly, they fear the law’s unpopularity — along with President Barack Obama’s flagging approval ratings — could keep Democrats home in November, according to conversations with several top lawmakers and aides.


Republicans seem to think they’ve struck political gold, but Democrats aren’t even sure how to interpret the loss. A veteran Democratic fundraiser called the loss a “double whammy,” hurting the party with major donors and energizing Republicans. Some senior members of the party say the defeat in a district President Barack Obama won twice means nothing, and Democrats should not fret. Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.), who is likely to have a tight race in November, attributed Sink’s defeat to flood insurance legislation, which played a minor role compared to Jolly’s nearly singular focus on the health care law.


(Florida special election results)


This all comes as Democrats and Republicans are gearing up for a brutal battle for control of Congress this fall. Jolly’s victory over Sink, while not a definitive measure of the political climate, is not a good sign for Obama’s party as voters head to the ballot box in less than eight months. Republicans are expected to make some gains in the midterms, but the results in Florida show Democrats could be facing stiffer headwinds than they thought in protecting their five-seat majority in the Senate and chipping away at Republican control of the House.


“Every off-year election, with the exception of two in our history, has been rough on the president’s party. And last night in Florida was no exception,” said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), who is expected to cruise to victory in his reelection bid this November. “Republicans have decided there’s only one issue. I think they’re wrong — I think they’re going to find that horse won’t cross the finish line.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Fla. loss exposes Dems" disarray on Obamacare

Friday, February 28, 2014

Senate Dems Won"t Produce a Budget This Year


Patty Murray official portrait


A Capitol Hill source source says that Senate Democrats will not produce a budget this year. The news is expected to come from Senator Patty Murray’s office at 3 p.m. today, as part of a Friday afternoon news dump. Murray is chairman of the Senate Budget Committee.


Senator Jeff Sessions from Alabama released this statement. “Senate Democrats are required by law to produce a budget,” wrote Sessions.


The Weekly Standard



Senate Dems Won"t Produce a Budget This Year

Senate Dems Won"t Produce a Budget This Year

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Senate Dems Won"t Produce a Budget This Year

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

GOP BORROWS DEMS" IDEAS ON TAX REFORM – Obama to call for $300B transpo bill – DINGELL DYNASTY ROLLS ON – Furman, Simas to brief House Dems – trivia


CAMP PLAN: GOP BORROWS DEMS’ IDEAS ON TAX REFORM – POLITICO’s Zachary Warmbrodt, Lauren French, Brian Faler and Kelsey Snell dive into the Camp plan: “House Republicans’ top tax writer is set to offer something unthinkable in virtually any other context: a big new tax on the wealthy. A proposal slated to be released this week by Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp will include a special surcharge on the wealthy, according to documents obtained by POLITICO. The surtax and a new bank tax that lobbyists are widely expecting both sound like proposals Democrats have repeatedly offered in recent years, drawing scoffs from Republicans.


– “The Camp plan narrows tax brackets and cuts the top individual and corporate rate to 25 percent but includes a special 10 percent surtax on joint income more than $ 450,000, according to the document, confirmed by a Republican aide. The wealthiest individuals now face a top tax rate of about 40 percent, while the top corporate rate is about 35 percent to make the difficult math behind any reform work, and it would have the added political bonus of allowing him to claim that he’s extending an olive branch to Democrats. … The Michigan Republican is expected to release his long-awaited plan Wednesday.


– “Rumors have swirled in recent days on K Street that big banks and insurers will face a special surcharge, likely 3.5 percent basis points on financial firms with more than $ 500 billion in assets. These two ideas are reminiscent of the administration’s proposed ‘Buffett rule’ on millionaires as well as a proposed bank tax proposed by President Barack Obama in recent years.” http://politi.co/1cmnW4C


– BUT SENATE MINORITY LEADER MITCH McCONNELL promptly declared that there’s no hope for tax reform this election year. AP: http://strib.mn/MtiINp


– Camp outlined and defended his plan in a Wall Street Journal op-ed today: “The tax code changes in my plan are not intended as a means of raising revenue. If loopholes are closed, Americans should get the benefit by way of lower rates. Tax reform needs to be about strengthening the economy and making the code simpler and fairer. That’s what Republican President Ronald Reagan did when he worked with Democrats in Congress in 1986. We need to get to work and repeat that success.” http://on.wsj.com/1ho9kpD


** 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


RUNNING TALLY: About 4 million people have signed up for health coverage under the Obamacare exchanges since Oct. 4, up from 3.3 million at the end of January. POLITICO’s Susan Levine: http://politi.co/1pslhis


PRESIDENT OBAMA, visiting St. Paul, Minn., later today, will call for a four-year, $ 302 billion transportation bill to replace the law that expires at the end of September. Our own Kathryn Wolfe writes: “The White House didn’t say whether Obama will offer a full reauthorization proposal — for the first time in his presidency — or simply a “vision.” But he has been clear recently that he wants to use money from overhauling corporate taxes to make up for chronic shortfalls in the Highway Trust Fund’s gasoline tax revenues.” http://politi.co/1frujth


HILL REPORTER MATT LASLO has got something brewin’. He emails Huddle: “We’re hoping to change Washington one sip at a time …”  http://billsandbrews.com/


CRUZ GOES AFTER GOP ‘PARTY BOSSES’ … AGAIN – POLITICO’s Manu Raju reports: “Ted Cruz is at it again. Cruz said last fall he wouldn’t raise money for a controversial group attacking fellow Republicans. But the Texas senator has since written a fundraising missive for another conservative group that’s backing the primary challengers to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and others. This time, the tea party freshman has helped the lower-profile Madison Project, a political action committee working to defeat McConnell and Sens. Pat Roberts of Kansas and Thad Cochran of Mississippi — and prop up other primary challengers in 2014 midterm races. In the mailer, Cruz asks donors to ‘pull out all the stops’ to elect ‘solid, principled, conservative fighters’ who will ‘not answer to the party bosses in Washington, D.C.’” http://politi.co/1psiLsD


– Meet Amanda Carpenter, Ted Cruz’s Twitter torrent. Roll Call’s Humberto Sanchez: http://bit.ly/1fruswX


CLINTON STUMPS FOR GRIMES – New York Times, A16, “Ex-President Ventures Where Some Might Not,” By Jonathan Martin in Louisville, Ky.: “When Alison Lundergan Grimes, Kentucky’s Democratic Senate candidate, welcomed former President Bill Clinton to a fund-raiser here Tuesday, she offered a rendering of recent political history suited for red-state Democrats: Mr. Clinton’s tenure was showered with praise, former President George W. Bush was mildly scorned, and President Obama was implicitly rebuked. ‘We all know what the problem is: it’s a Washington, D.C., that just doesn’t understand Kentucky,’ Ms. Grimes said. Her gibes at the capital’s ‘dysfunction’ were chiefly aimed at her likely opponent, Mitch McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, but her nostalgia for the 1990s, when Ms. Grimes was in her teens, and her lament about the present was also aimed at linking herself to Mr. Clinton and distancing herself from Mr. Obama.” http://nyti.ms/OC1L5u


DINGELL HAT TRICK: DEBBIE’S IN – Anna Palmer and Scott Wong report for the hometown paper, with an assist from Seung Min Kim: “The Dingell dynasty dates back to the era of FDR and there’s very little that can stop it from rolling on. Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.) announced Monday he’s leaving the seat he took over from his father nearly six decades ago. And now his wife, Debbie Dingell, on Friday is planning to announce in the 12th District her candidacy for the open seat, according to a source close to Dingell. Debbie Dingell wasted no time putting together a campaign apparatus, holding a conference call Monday night with her husband’s former aides. She also may sever ties with the American Automotive Policy Council, where she has led the manufacturing arm of the Big Three-backed trade group, according to a source familiar with the situation.


– “Debbie Dingell has huge advantages over nearly any challenger: She will be able to tap into the powerful Dingell machine, her husband’s campaign coffers and a vast network of political operatives and donors. And she’s already got the support of powerful Wolverine State figures like retiring Sen. Carl Levin. …Political observers in Michigan and Washington say she’d be the favorite to win the seat that’s been continuously held by John D. Dingell Sr. and John D. Dingell Jr. since 1933, the year Franklin D. Roosevelt entered the White House.” http://politi.co/1jzIdZu


NANCY PELOSI AND HOUSE DEMOCRATS today will formally launch a discharge petition to raise the minimum wage to $ 10.10 per hour, Seung Min Kim reports: http://politi.co/NwJ9Th


– This morning at the Capitol, two top White House officials – Jason Furman, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors and David Simas, deputy senior advisor for communications and strategy, will brief House Democratic members on the importance of raising the minimum wage to $ 10.10 an hour, a Democratic aide emails Huddle.


– But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid delayed a vote on hiking the minimum wage until March or April, citing scheduling conflicts and GOP obstruction, CBS’s Rebecca Kaplan reports: http://cbsn.ws/1hogTNg


GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEB. 26, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your play-by-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 @LisaMarieBoothe and @tellittoal.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate meets at 9:30 a.m. and at 11:30 a.m. will continue work on the Comprehensive Veterans Health and Benefits and Military Retirement Pay Restoration Act of 2014. Votes are possible but are not currently scheduled


The House is in at 10 a.m. with first votes expected between 2 and 3 p.m. and last votes expected between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. on the Taxpayer Transparency Act and the Stop Targeting of Political Beliefs by the IRS Act. The House will also begin consideration of the All Economic Regulations Are Transparent Act.


AROUND THE HILL – House Democrats huddle at 9 a.m. in HVC-215, though no media availability is planned. Speaker John Boehner and other GOP leaders hold a post-conference media availability at 10 a.m. in HC-8. Sen. Bob Menendez and other Foreign Relations Committee members meet with UK Foreign Secretary William Hague at 10:30 a.m. in S-116. Sen. Barbara Boxer speaks on the health effects of tar sands and Keystone XL Pipeline at 10:30 a.m. in Dirksen 406. Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Reps. Rosa DeLauro and Donna Edwards, and others participate in a discussion hosted by the National Partnership for Women & Families at 11 a.m. in SVC 212-10.


Rep. Michael Fitzpatrick speaks on executive branch authority at 11 a.m. at the House Triangle. Sens. Chuck Schumer, Chris Murphy, Debbie Stabenow, Barbara Boxer and Sheldon Whitehouse discuss benefits of health care reform at 11:30 a.m. in S-120. House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp unveils his tax reform plan at 1:30 p.m. in HVC Studio A. Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi and others speak on the minimum wage increase at 2 p.m. in HVC-215. On Thursday morning, Sen. Bob Corker speaks at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast at the St. Regis Hotel.


CORRECTION: Yesterday’s “Around the Hill” section incorrectly identified the congressman hosting a reception for First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones. Rep. Morgan Griffith and the Congressional Friends of Wales Caucus actually hosted.


PLENTY OF ISSUES, NO BREAKTHROUGHS – Speaker Boehner and President Obama had their first one-on-one meeting in more than a year, the AP’s Jim Kuhnhenn reports: “Disentangled from showdowns or looming crises, President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner held a rare one-on-one Oval Office meeting Tuesday addressing potential areas of common ground that could lay a foundation for more ambitious goals like immigration and trade that remain long shots for action this year. … Yet the one-hour session unfolded in an atmosphere in which both sides could benefit from modest bipartisan accomplishments. In addition to trade and immigration, aides said the speaker and Obama also discussed manufacturing, flood insurance, Obama’s health care law, upcoming spending bills, California drought relief, wildfire suppression and a highway construction bill.” http://bit.ly/1o5yL06


GOP ON ARIZONA GAY BILL: MAKE IT GO AWAY – James Hohmann and Burgess Everett report for POLITICO: “As Republican Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer weighs whether to sign a bill that would allow businesses to deny services to gay customers, top national Republicans just want the issue to go away. Proponents of the legislation — which Brewer has until Saturday to sign or veto and is reportedly leaning against — say the bill is designed to protect religious liberty. But many Washington Republicans see it as a political loser, giving the left another cudgel to attack conservatives as intolerant while motivating liberals and younger voters ahead of the midterm elections. It also threatens to widen the chasm between social conservatives and GOP operatives, who have become increasingly public in their support for gay marriage. … ‘I hope she moves quickly,’ [GOP Arizona Sen. Jeff] Flake said. ‘I just don’t see any reason to wait.’” http://politi.co/N29gS5


GOP’S ANSWER TO ‘WAR ON WOMEN’ CHARGE – The New York Times’ Ashley Parker in Tucson, Ariz.: “In Ms. [Martha] McSally, Republicans believe they have found what they hope is the human solution to their gender gap: A woman warrior to help them combat what Democrats have tried to paint as their ‘war on women.’ Ms. McSally, 47, who is favored in her party primary, is also part of the National Republican Congressional Committee’s ‘Project GROW,’ a recruiting and mentoring program designed to promote women and encourage them to run for elected office. … In an interview, Ms. McSally agreed that Republicans ‘have a bad brand’ when it comes to women, but said her candidacy may help. ‘I think certainly having someone like me that comes in, I’ve been spending my whole life breaking stereotypes, and I think I would do it again,’ she said, though added, ‘Just like my time in the military, I’m not running because I’m a woman.’” http://nyti.ms/1c7xUMG


DEMOCRATS’ IMMIGRATION GAMBIT – Seung Min Kim writes for POLITICO: “Though aides say no decision has been made, House Democratic leaders are strategizing on when to deploy what’s known as a discharge petition, which would have to garner a majority of lawmakers’ signatures to force immigration legislation onto the House floor for a vote. Advocates of the gambit are aiming to increase the pressure on Republicans who have so far resisted moving on reform this year. But the pro-reform coalition is split over the timing of the discharge effort — with some urging lawmakers to take it up immediately and others advising them to hold off.” http://politi.co/NvyAjk


FIRST BLACK CONGRESSWOMAN GETS A STAMP – Eli George reports for WIVB in Buffalo, N.Y.: “The U.S. Postal Service is honoring the first African-American Congresswoman, Shirley Chisholm. The USPS is releasing a limited edition Black Heritage Forever Stamp featuring Chisholm, which was unveiled on Tuesday at Forest Lawn Cemetery. She and her husband are both interred there. Those who were close to the Congresswoman say she was a pioneer. Chisholm even made a run at the Democratic nomination for president in 1972.” http://bit.ly/1c7GcUY


TUESDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Shelby Boxenbaum was first to correctly answer that Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio) is the most senior woman in the House. She ranks 15th overall.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Roll Call’s David Hawkings points out that Debbie Dingell could make history by becoming the first person in Congress to succeed their living spouse. http://goo.gl/GFa82U Huddle reader Caitlin Gallagher asks: Who was the most recent member of Congress to be succeeded by his spouse? 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



GOP BORROWS DEMS" IDEAS ON TAX REFORM – Obama to call for $300B transpo bill – DINGELL DYNASTY ROLLS ON – Furman, Simas to brief House Dems – trivia

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS ONGOING SAGA, More House Dems retire, CBO: MINIMUM WAGE HIKE WOULD COST THOUSANDS OF JOBS


By Ginger Gibson (ggibson@politico.com or @GingerGibson)


UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS ONGOING SAGA – A group of Senate Republicans are trying to get the politically dangerous issue of unemployment benefits off the congressional agenda before the fall election. POLITICO’s Burgess Everett has the story: “Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has vowed to press the GOP on unemployment benefits — forcing them to keep taking votes on a bill to extend aid to the long-term unemployed. But Republicans have rejected it twice since the program expired on Dec. 28.


“Sens. Dan Coats of Indiana, Rob Portman of Ohio, Dean Heller of Nevada and Susan Collins of Maine want a deal that could bring the Democratic drumbeat to an end. They gathered last week to plan how to revisit the cause when the Senate returns next week, hoping they can get Democrats to agree to their policy changes and finally move the red-hot issue off the Senate’s plate. “We’re still working on the same thing, which is solving the problem,” Portman said in an interview Tuesday. “I continue to believe that we can solve this if Democrats want to.”


“The political maneuvering is a reminder that voting down money for a government program might be good politics for hard-liners running on slashing deficits and spending, but for centrists, especially those from states where jobless rates remain high, looking unsympathetic to the long-term unemployed is a big risk. That explains the nuanced positions of senators like Coats, who has surprised Democrats by engaging in the unemployment debate last week.” http://politi.co/1bL5b02


CBO: MINIMUM WAGE HIKE WOULD COST THOUSANDS OF JOBS – POLITICO’s Brian Faler has the newest bombshell from the CBO: “Raising the minimum wage would cost thousands of jobs while simultaneously lifting wages for millions more, according to a new report sure to inflame an election-year battle over income inequality.


“In an analysis providing fodder to both Democrats and Republicans, the Congressional Budget Office said Tuesday that a proposal similar to one offered by President Barack Obama would reduce total employment by 500,000 workers or about .3 percent by 2016. At the same time, it would boost earnings for some 16.5 million people, lifting 900,000 above the poverty line, the report said.” http://politi.co/1jDiK0U


– House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Workforce Committee Chairman George Miller both released statements after the report saying they will continue to press for a hike in the wage.


EXECUTIVE AUTHORITY— President Obama announced a renewed effort to reduce emissions from large trucks and is acting with his executive authority. The Washington Post’s Juliet Eilperin reports: “President Obama announced Tuesday that the federal government will further tighten fuel efficiency for medium- and heavy-duty trucks, part of his ongoing effort to use executive authority to address climate change and spur domestic manufacturing.


“Speaking at the Safeway distribution center in Upper Marlboro, Md., Obama did not specify what new standard the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Transportation should set for these larger trucks, which weigh more than 8,500 pounds, but he said he was confident manufacturers could meet this “ambitious” goal.” http://wapo.st/1fghuAx


NUMBERS: DSCC raised $ 6.5 million in January, topped NRSC by $ 2 million – http://politi.co/N9oQLy


HOUSE DEM RETIREMENTS CONTINUE – Two more House Democrats announced they are not seeking reelection.


– Rocket scientist New Jersey Democrat Rep. Rush Holt will not run for reelection. Holt becomes the third member of the New Jersey delegation to skip out on Congress this year. POLITICO’s Alex Isenstadt reports: ““There is no hidden motive for my decision,” Holt, 65, said in a statement Tuesday. “As friends who have worked with me know, I have never thought that the primary purpose of my work was re-election and I have never intended to make service in the House my entire career. For a variety of reasons, personal and professional, all of them positive and optimistic, the end of this year seems to me to be the right time to step aside and ask the voters to select the next representative.”


“Holt, a member of the House Education and the Workforce Committee, is a former Swarthmore College professor. He’s also a five-time Jeopardy! champion.” http://politi.co/1kSNIW1


– Freshman California Democrat Rep. Gloria Negrete McLeod announced she will instead seek a seat as a San Bernardino County supervisor. The LA Times Richard Simon reports: “”My heart is here in the district,” she said in a written statement. After agonizing over whether to run for reelection to Congress or a seat on the Board of Supervisors, “my desire to represent this community locally, where I have lived for more than 40 years, and where I have long served as an elected official, won out,” she said.


“Negrete McLeod, 72, a former state lawmaker, defeated a fellow Democrat, then-Rep. Joe Baca of Rialto, to win election to the House in 2012. Baca said by telephone Tuesday that he was still planning to run for the seat being vacated by retiring Rep. Gary Miller (R-Rancho Cucamonga) but added that he was keeping his options open.” http://lat.ms/1dIIqbK


And then Baca – who is running for George Miller’s seat — called McLeod a bimbo: And then he apologized. The Hill’s Cameron Joseph has the story, asking Baca about party leaders trying to tip the scales against him: “Look at what we wound up with: Some bimbo who decided not to run again. … Here we go again now with another New Yorker trying to tell us who’s going to be the representative of the 31st. It’s up to the people to decide.”


“Baca called back Tuesday evening to apologize for his “poor choice of words.” “I was just upset the district lost a representative in a short period of time. To me, that’s a disservice to the area. I do apologize for my poor choice of words,” Baca told The Hill.” http://bit.ly/1bkZ3ez


MISSISSIPPI SENATE – POLITICO’s Alex Burns looks at the Mississippi Senate race: “As Sen. Thad Cochran faces a potentially career-ending primary challenge, his strategy for victory is straightforward: Stress his decades of bringing home federal largesse and his long relationships with home-state Republicans; tap Washington rainmakers to fill his campaign account; and bring in Mississippi political legends like Haley Barbour and Trent Lott to help seal the deal.


“Cochran’s opponent in the June 3 showdown, state Sen. Chris McDaniel, is practically salivating over the contrast that it represents. As the 2014 election cycle begins to accelerate, perhaps no race presents a sharper difference of views on what it means to be a Republican or offer a sharper microcosm of the ongoing GOP civil war than the race in Mississippi.” http://politi.co/1kWjCRH


**A message from POWERJobs: Jobs on our radar this week: Senior Data Modeler at Deloitte, Client Financial Management Analyst at Accenture and Director of Business Development at Evolver.  Interested? Apply to these jobs and more at www.POWERJobs.com; finally, a career site made for YOU!**


GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEB. 19, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your-play-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Scott is out for the week, so send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to ggibson@politico.com. You can also heckle me on Twitter @GingerGibson. Seung Min Kim will be taking over tomorrow. Email her skim@politico.com.


TODAY IN CONGRESS –. The House and Senate have both recessed for the week.


AROUND THE HILL – All is quiet on Capitol Hill. But far from the hill members are holding press conferences in their districts. Sen. Ted Cruz will hold a press conference to discuss his energy plan at 2 p.m. CT at Spindletop in Beaumont, Texas. No livesteam is available. 


MUST-WATCH: DRIVING THE DAY – POLITICO insiders Alex Burns, Anna Palmer, Manu Raju and Jake Sherman relaunch this classic POLITICO video series, taking you behind-the-scenes of what’s driving the day’s headlines every Tuesday – Thursday morning. Today’s video looks at the future of the Senate control and who has the upper hand, Republicans or Democrats: www.politico.com/drivingtheday .


DISCHARGE PETITIONS – Roll Call’s David Hawkings argues the unlikely success of two discharge petitions Democrats are pushing in the House: “the one they’ve been talking about most enthusiastically in recent days — the discharge petition — has a high probability of failure.


“It’s almost certainly not going to realize the stated legislative objective, which is to break the deadlock created by conservatives on both immigration and increasing the minimum wage. But neither is it likely to produce the unstated political objective, which is to push the GOP into looking like the sort of discordant and mean-spirited mess that’s undeserving of running the House for another two years.


“The reason for those predictions is the same on both counts. There just aren’t enough genuine moderates in the Republican conference, nor a sufficient number of endangered GOP incumbents, to give either discharge petition a chance for success.” http://bit.ly/1eQJXrV


Former Rep. Mel Reynolds arrested in Zimbabwe – No stranger to the legal troubles, former Rep. Mel Reynolds was arrested in Zimbabwe on Monday after authorities found him in possession of pornography, a crime in the African nation. Reuters has the story: “Former congressman Mel Reynolds has been arrested in Zimbabwe, an immigration official said on Tuesday, after state media reported the convicted sex offender had been found with pornography at a local hotel.


“Police and immigration officials were investigating Reynolds for living in the southern African country without a valid visa, Francis Mabika, an assistant regional immigration officer, told Reuters.” http://yhoo.it/1falXpS


HILL ALUMNI FILES: Former Carper aide running for Delaware treasurer – Sean Barney will primary embattled Democratic Treasurer Chip Flowers. The News Journal’s Jonathan Starkey has the story: “He has now launched a campaign website, where he takes only veiled shots at Flowers, who has come under fire in recent months for his troubled relationship with the board that manages a $ 2 billion taxpayer portfolio and questionable credit card spending out of his office. “I will restore the focus of the Treasurer’s office on its core responsibility of protecting the integrity of payments made with taxpayer resources,” Barney said on his website. He added that, “As policy director to the governor, I worked with 16 cabinet secretaries and cabinet agencies of state government to help develop consensus…. I understand that the role of the State Treasurer on the State’s Cash Management Policy Board operates in a similar vein– not to make policy unilaterally, but to work effectively with others to do right by the people of Delaware.”” http://delonline.us/1mrEJNr


Outside spending in Florida 13 –The Washington Post’s Sean Sullivan takes a look at the numbers: “There’s no doubt that Republicans and Democrats see the outcome of Florida’s 13th district special election as a crucial marker ahead of the midterm elections this fall. For proof, look at how much money organizations on both sides have been pouring in.


“The biggest spenders thus far have been Republican-aligned groups, according to a tally from the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks campaign spending. GOP groups have spent more than $ 2.8 million to boost Republican nominee David Jolly or attack Democratic nominee Alex Sink, CRP’s most up-to-date numbers show. Democratic groups have spent nearly $ 1.5 million doing the opposite.” http://wapo.st/1jQq9gr


Happening in Ukraine – As violent clashes between protesters and riot police continue, government officials are beginning to take more public note of the conflict. From The Hill’s Justin Sink: “Vice President Biden on Tuesday called Ukranian leader Viktor Yanukovych to express “grave concern” about a brutal police crackdown in Kiev.


“According to the White House, Biden urged Yanukovych to “pull back government forces and to exercise maximum restraint.”” http://bit.ly/1oRjvY0


– From the NY Times: “Secretary of State John Kerry urged Mr. Yanukovych to stop the bloodshed. “We call on President Yanukovych and the Ukrainian government to de-escalate the situation immediately, and resume dialogue with the opposition on a peaceful path forward. Ukraine’s deep divisions will not be healed by spilling more innocent blood,” he said in a statement.” http://nyti.ms/1fdcy0B


TUESDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Something interesting happened with yesterday’s trivia that will result in two winners. When Mark Twain wrote “Congress doesn’t know anything about religion… You religious people there are too feeble, in intellect, in morality, in piety—in everything pretty much.” he was writing for Sen. Nye of Nevada in response to a constituent seeking help to incorporate the Episcopal Church in Nevada. Jim Sims of Molycorp chimed in with that answer, pointing to the recently published book by John Mueller “Mark Twain in Washington.” (See excerpt here: http://bit.ly/1bIqG1s)


But the Senate historian had a different answer on their website. In an article on their website (http://1.usa.gov/1bhYNNg), they stated that Twain was working for Sen. William Stewart, also of Nevada. Michael Brumas, in Sen. Mitch McConnell’s office, was the first one to respond with that answer.


Since there were conflicting responses, I went to the Senate Historian to try to get to the bottom of this piece of Twain trivia. Turns out, Mueller was correct and Nye was Twain’s employer when he penned those words. Twain blew through several jobs during his brief stint in Washington. They are changing their website. And now we can say Huddle changed history.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Michael Brumas has today’s trivia question. On at least two occasions, what former member of the Senate Judiciary Committee prefaced his opposition to Supreme Court nominees with the adage, ‘When in doubt, don’t.’ The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at ggibson@politico.com.


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POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS ONGOING SAGA, More House Dems retire, CBO: MINIMUM WAGE HIKE WOULD COST THOUSANDS OF JOBS

Monday, February 17, 2014

OBAMA, BIDEN AT HOUSE DEMS" RETREAT – Obama to vow millions in drought aid in CA – Members channel Frank Underwood – DOC HASTINGS TO RETIRE – Issa heads to N.H.


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


THE DAY AHEAD – Vice President Joe Biden is rallying the troops this morning at House Democrats’ annual issues conference at the Hyatt Regency Chesapeake Bay in Cambridge, Md. President Obama takes over the microphone at 10:40 a.m., then flies to Fresno, Calif., with Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer and Rep. Jim Costa to discuss his administration’s response to the drought.


OBAMA TO VOW MILLIONS IN AID FOR DROUGHT – Roger Runningen reports for Bloomberg: “U.S. President Barack Obama is offering millions of dollars in aid and other assistance to California farmers, ranchers and communities beset by one of the worst droughts in the state’s history. The federal help will be detailed today by Obama when he’s joined by California Governor Jerry Brown in Fresno, in the state’s fertile Central Valley. The drought is forcing farmers there to leave idle thousands of acres of fields in the state that supplies almost half of the nation’s fruits and vegetables. It has also left 17 rural towns so low on drinking water that the state may need to start trucking in supplies. …


– “The administration plans to accelerate distribution of as much as $ 100 million in aid to ranchers to help feed livestock and offer compensation for losses. The Agriculture Department is also making available $ 15 million in conservation aid for the worst drought regions in California and five other drought-stricken states to reduce wind erosion on damaged fields and improve livestock access to water. The White House said $ 60 million has been made available to California food banks for families affected by the drought, and plans are under way to establish 600 summer meal sites in hard-hit regions this summer.” http://bloom.bg/1iVnlf0


– The president will also ask Congress to create a $ 1 billion “Climate Resiliency Fund” in his budget request next month, reports our own Alex Guillen.  http://politi.co/1gfoEVC


FEDERAL OFFICES will open two hours late this morning as the Washington, D.C., region digs out from a second wave of snow in as many nights. OPM: http://1.usa.gov/1bw9GbZ


NOBODY DOES ALERTMAGEDDON LIKE D.C., writes the Wall Street Journal’s Elizabeth Williamson: “Finally, Washington had a blizzard worthy of seven days of storm tracking, closures, cancellations and widespread hoarding. Nobody does snow-related Alertmageddon like D.C. The capital city, with its legions of warm-weather transplants and a workforce largely inexperienced in manual labor, approaches every forecast of snow, no matter how sketchy, with an orgy of meteorological modeling, thousands of words of commentary and a run on the dairy section. Hurricanes, by comparison, don’t get much attention. …


– “The House moved up its vote on increasing the nation’s debt ceiling—legislation responsible for three years of controversy—from Wednesday to Tuesday because of the potential for snow. On Wednesday, the Senate quickly passed the debt ceiling bill, as legislators tweeted their intent to blow town. Also canceled: Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen’s appearance before the Senate Banking Committee, hearings on the minimum wage and Food and Drug Administration drug approvals … Finally, the whole federal government shut down, followed by the city government, followed by most of the White House.” http://on.wsj.com/1lNU4UP


PROGRAMMING NOTE – There will be no Huddle on Monday due to the Presidents’ Day holiday. My able colleagues Ginger Gibson and Seung Min Kim will be filling in for the remainder of the week. Send them your news tips and trivia questions at ggibson@politico.com and skim@politico.com.


MOVE OVER eHARMONY … The Democratic-aligned Americans United for Change is having some fun with Valentine’s Day this year. The group is out with a mock online dating site with a profile video for ‘Minny Mumwage,’ who says she would love nothing more than getting a date with Speaker Boehner on the House floor, as she depressingly hasn’t been on one since 2009. See it here at www.CongressMingle.com. Watch the video here: http://youtu.be/ACvigtaTevo


D.C.’S VALENTINE TO ITSELF: BELTWAY CELEBRATES ‘HOUSE OF CARDS’ – Andrea Drusch reports for POLITICO: “D.C. is in love this Valentine’s Day — with itself. Netflix released the second season of its original series House of Cards on Friday, and media and politicos can’t wait to settle into thirteen straight hours of a show that centers on the very industry in which they work and live every day. Whether they’re planning to power through the whole season in a single night or space it out over the coming weeks, the show’s loyal fans can’t stop talking about the next chapter for D.C.’s shadow cast. ‘It’s a fun escape from what day-to-day life on the Hill is actually like,’ said Alex Conant, press secretary for Sen. Marco Rubio, in an interview. He plans to dive into the show right away. ‘It makes politics in Washington appear even worse than it is, which is a feat.’


– “Conant was among many to take to Twitter on Wednesday night encouraging Netflix to release the series a day early when the federal government was closed for bad weather. While it might seem ironic for people working in politics and journalism to ‘escape’ to a show about, well, politics and journalism, Conant isn’t alone in the sentiment. … ‘I hope to be totally entertained, to completely dragged out of my world and into a fantasy of what goes on Capitol Hill,’ said Fox News host Greta Van Susteren in an interview, of her expectations for the new season.” http://politi.co/1jgkHQL


AND WATCH REAL MEMBERS OF CONGRESS do their best Frank Underwood impressions here in this video by NowThis News. Cameos by Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), Rep. Donna Edwards (D-Md.), Rep. Jim Clyburn (R-S.C.), Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.) and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.). http://nowth.is/NFoUU0


**A message from POWERJobs: Jobs on our radar this week: Regional Political Director at AIPAC, Southeast Program Director at the Junior Statesmen Foundation and Associate Analyst at Height Analytics.  Interested? Apply to these jobs and more at www.POWERJobs.com; finally, a career site made for YOU!**


GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, FEB. 14, 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 @lizmargolis and @CesarConda.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – Both the House and Senate have adjourned through next week for the Presidents’ Day holiday. House Democrats wrap up their annual conference today in Cambridge, Md., with visits from Vice President Joe Biden and President Barack Obama.


THE WSJ EDITORIAL BOARD is calling Sen. Ted Cruz “The Minority Maker” for forcing Republicans to break his filibuster on the debt-ceiling bill: “We’re all for holding politicians accountable with votes on substantive issues, but Mr. Cruz knew he couldn’t stop a debt increase the House had already passed. He also had no alternative strategy if the bill had failed, other than to shut down the government again, take public attention away from ObamaCare, and make Republicans even more unpopular. Democrats beat the odds and retained their Senate majority in 2010 and 2012 in part because they stuck together. If Republicans fail again this November, a big reason will be their rump kamikaze caucus.” http://on.wsj.com/LYTBSg


COMCAST READIES FOR WAR IN WASHINGTON – Tony Romm and Anna Palmer report for the hometown paper: “Cable giant Comcast started the day with a call to arms, hosting its lobbyists and consultants, along with Time Warner Cable’s, on a private conference call to begin building a strategy to beat back threats in Washington that could jeopardize its $ 45 billion merger. Comcast’s top congressional lobbyist Melissa Maxfield ran the call, laying out the company’s Washington outreach strategy for its in-house government affairs team and for its hired guns. Consultants for Comcast and Time Warner Cable were sent the press release announcing the merger and talking points to use on Capitol Hill and at federal agencies.


– “K-Streeters also began reaching out to Capitol Hill and agency staffers to report back on how the merger proposal was being received, according to sources familiar with the strategy. … The activity lays the groundwork for what’s shaping up to be an aggressive campaign by Comcast to sell the Time Warner Cable deal in Washington. Sources familiar with the company said they expect Comcast to try to sway lawmakers, community organizations, agencies and other groups in advance of public hearings most observers expect will be scheduled in the coming months.” http://politi.co/1buJy3W


HASTINGS NOT SEEKING REELECTION – Mike Faulk reports for the Yakima (Wash.) Herald-Republic: “In a decision that surprised some, longtime U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings said Thursday he’ll retire at the end of the year after 20 years in Congress representing the 4th Congressional District. ‘It’s been a great privilege,’ said Hastings, a Pasco Republican, in an interview with the Yakima Herald-Republic. Retirement has been on his mind for several years, said Hastings, 73, adding that his family — wife Claire, three adult children and eight grandchildren — influenced his decision. ‘It’s been 20 years. I have to say that my family played a big part of (the decision).’ … Hastings, a small businessman before he entered politics full time, was first elected in 1994 when he defeated then-Rep. Jay Inslee of Selah, now Washington’s governor. Over time, his seat became one of the safest in the country as he handily defeated Democratic challengers and never faced a serious threat from far-right elements of the Republican Party.” http://bit.ly/1kH2ejL


– SPEAKER BOEHNER: “For nearly two decades, Doc Hastings has served in the House with honor, humility and distinction.  In addition to being a skilled legislator and leader, he’s the epitome of grace and class, and he’s a very dear friend.  I’m grateful for Doc’s service to our institution and our nation, and for his friendship and support throughout our many years together in the House.”


FOR ISSA, RED MEAT = BIG MONEY – Paul Singer reports for USA Today: “As chairman of the House Oversight Committee, Rep. Darrell Issa is discovering a powerful political equation: red meat = money.  At the close of 2013, the California Republican had raised more campaign money than nearly all of the other House committee chairmen, trailing only Budget Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, who was the party’s vice presidential nominee in 2012. According to FEC records, Issa’s campaign brought in $ 2.15 million in 2013, while Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp, R-Mich., brought in $ 2.05 million and Financial Services Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, and Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman Bill Shuster, R-Pa., both brought in $ 2.08 million.  Not the biggest war chests in the House – for example, Majority Leader Eric Cantor posted a $ 3.93 million haul for the non-election year – but robust totals. (None of this counts receipts of the members’ leadership PACs or related fundraising entities.).” http://usat.ly/1lNY5Zp


– Issa makes two stops in New Hampshire next week before heading back to California for more events, aides said: The Concord/Merrimack County GOP Lincoln Day Dinner (2/17) and the Committee to elect House Republicans (New Hampshire State House) Breakfast in Manchester (2/18).


WARNER’S FLEETING ‘SNOWBAMACARE’ TWEET – Tal Kopan writes for POLITICO: “Call it a snow-pas. Sen. Mark Warner’s office blamed a staff snow day ‘#fail’ for a deleted tweet Thursday morning that made a joke about the Virginia GOP and the winter storm that shut down Washington. ‘Just a matter of time: waiting for the @VA_GOP to claim this winter storm was caused by The Affordable Care Act. #Snowbamacare,’ the account tweeted, deleting it 26 seconds later, according to an archive of deleted tweets kept by the Sunlight Foundation. … Warner’s Senate account bio says tweets come from both the senator and staff. Warner’s communications director took responsibility for the errant tweet. ‘It was my mistake. I acknowledged it as quickly as possible, and I apologize,’ Kevin Hall said in an email to POLITICO.” http://politi.co/1buKpS5


THURSDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Jim Brewer was first to correctly answer that the Marquis De Lafayette, the French military officer, was the first foreign dignitary to address the House of Representatives in its chamber. http://1.usa.gov/1eVuvAO


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Claude Marx sends us into the long weekend with a follow-up to this week’s orchestra question: Name the president whose wife was the main founder of a major symphony orchestra? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


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POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



OBAMA, BIDEN AT HOUSE DEMS" RETREAT – Obama to vow millions in drought aid in CA – Members channel Frank Underwood – DOC HASTINGS TO RETIRE – Issa heads to N.H.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

PA House Race Previews 2016 for Dems


Sometimes the smallest races tell the biggest stories.


Take Pennsylvania Democrats’ primary race to replace Allyson Schwartz in suburban Philadelphia’s 13th Congressional District. (Schwartz is campaigning for the Democrats’ nomination to challenge Gov. Tom Corbett in November.)


Unless the bad election year projected for Democrats has been vastly underestimated, this House seat was designed to be held comfortably by a Democrat — which means the battle for it essentially occurs in the party’s primary.


Those vying for the seat include political newcomer Dr. Val Arkoosh, state lawmakers Daylin Leach and Brandon Boyle, and Marjorie Margolies, who held the seat from 1993 to 1995. She is considered the frontrunner because of her name recognition and her unique connection to the Clinton family. (She is Chelsea’s mother-in-law.)



At its core, this race is for the soul of the party in a post-Obama political landscape. In a year in which Democrats have had a hard time attracting quality candidates for House races — a common occurrence for both parties when they know their chances are slim to win a majority — this race has attracted four qualified candidates.


All of them have a legitimate political argument and a path to victory.


All of them are very different types of Democrats, too.


Boyle is a young state representative, popular with big labor and very much the old-fashioned Catholic Democrat; he comes from a hardworking neighborhood and is proud of his working-class roots. In fact, he’s the only candidate who isn’t a millionaire or married to one.


Leach is the classic Netroots fighting progressive. If he can make this race about ideology, he can win.


Arkoosh is a doctor, the classic outsider, running as a mainstream liberal; she has some implicit support from the incumbent, although it is doubtful that Schwartz will outwardly support her in the primary. She also has raised a lot of money.


Then there’s Margolies, an establishment Democrat. She has a perceived edge, not because of previously holding the seat — retreading alone wouldn’t put her in that position — but because the Clintons’ influence in Pennsylvania Democrat primaries should never be underestimated.


Their support in 2012 helped to lift Kathleen Kane, an unknown assistant prosecutor from Scranton, over well-liked, union-backed Congressman Patrick Murphy in the state attorney general’s race. They also helped former Congressman Mark Critz to defeat fellow Congressman Jason Altmire for a House seat that was combined in redistricting.


If Margolies flubs her frontrunner status by deliberately missing debates and burning her campaign money, it’s not difficult to imagine Bill Clinton coming into town to hold a glitzy fundraiser for her, then chasing it with an ad full of nostalgia about how her decisive vote on his budget cost her seat in 1993 but saved his presidency — and how he is ready to return the favor.


That stuff works, folks. All of the Democrats in this race, or watching it, realize that.


But Margolies’ campaign style is tying Philadelphia-area Democrats in knots, especially her decision not to debate. For many Democrats still sitting on the political fence, her decision helps to perpetuate a feeling that she is running out of validation and vindication; they would rather hear her robustly debate with her competitors about the Affordable Care Act, the NSA’s surveillance of Americans, and other pressing issues that drive “super-D” primary voters to the polls.


This race is the country’s first glimpse of what a post-Obama Democratic Party could become. Despite all of its post-2012 proclamations, Organizing for America — Obama’s campaign machine — probably will not run the world, let alone a very twitchy party that is ready to break away from the Obama years and stretch out on its own.


Obama has disappointed many progressive Democrats; he’s lost the connection with many blue-collar Democrats; he’s done no favors for many establishment Democrats on a host of issues, including helping to lose their House majority. As for Democrat outsiders, his presidency only emboldens their chances to be authentic change-agents.


Keep your eye on this race: It’s a small but telling glimpse of what 2016 will look like for the party.



Salena Zito is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review editorial page columnist. E-mail her at szito@tribweb.com



RealClearPolitics – Articles



PA House Race Previews 2016 for Dems

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Dems push Capitol e-cigarette ban


An e-cigarette is shown. | AP Photo

The Democratic senators say the ban is an ‘appropriate precautionary step.’ | AP Photo





A group of Democratic senators are calling for a ban of e-cigarettes on Capitol grounds.


Citing the House and Senate’s existing ban on smoking in public spaces, Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), and Rep.Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) are calling for the same restrictions to be extended to e-cigarettes and their vapor.







In a letter sent Tuesday to the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration as well as the House Office Building Commission — which consists of Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) — the lawmakers acknowledge the lack of evidence regarding the harmful effects of e-cigarettes and their vapor, however say this would be an “appropriate precautionary step.”


(Earlier on POLITICO: E-cigarettes reignite tobacco wars)


Durbin, Blumenthal, Brown and Markey criticized both NBC Universal and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association in January for glamorizing the use of e-cigarettes as props during the broadcast of the Golden Globes.




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Dems push Capitol e-cigarette ban