Showing posts with label Already. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Already. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

DINGELL, "BABE RUTH" OF LEGISLATORS, HANGS UP HIS CLEATS – GOP frets over tax reform – McCain, Flake: Veto anti-gay AZ bill – Why Al Franken already spent $15M


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


DINGELL, ‘BABE RUTH’ OF LEGISLATORS,’ HANGS UP HIS CLEATS – Our own David Nather looks back at the dean of the House’s record 59 years on Capitol Hill: “Congress is losing a lot of policy heavyweights this year, but there’s only one whose career spans from the creation of Medicare to the passage of the Affordable Care Act. In his nearly six decades in Congress, John Dingell has played a central role in more issues than most ordinary lawmakers ever get to touch — everything from health care to energy, environmental laws, food safety and telecommunications policy, and an aggressive oversight approach that cut across even more issues that affect Americans daily. He’s worked on just about every environmental law on the books, from the Clean Water Act and the Endangered Species Act to the National Environmental Policy Act — the law that requires agencies to write environmental impact statements about their upcoming actions. He also played a crucial role in the Clean Air Act amendments of 1990, the biggest rewrite of that law.


– “And Dingell is the Democrat who introduced a universal health care bill in every new session of Congress, keeping the cause alive until the passage of President Barack Obama’s signature legislative achievement in 2010. He rallied Democrats to keep going, urging them not to let another health care reform effort end in failure. And at the signing ceremony, it was Dingell who sat next to Obama, grinning broadly as his cause became the law of the land. When Dingell announced his retirement Monday, his colleagues didn’t dwell on whether all of his legislative accomplishments will stand the test of time — especially with the ongoing fights over Obamacare. Instead, they mourned the loss of someone who had mastered both politics and policy as thoroughly as Dingell had.”


– “… [W]orking on legislation with Dingell was ‘like playing baseball with Babe Ruth,’” said former Rep. Rick Boucher, a Virginia Democrat who served with Dingell for many years on the House Energy and Commerce Committee. “‘He’s the most accomplished legislator that the House has seen in the latter half of the 20th century and the first part of the 21st century,’ said Boucher, who now runs the government strategies group at the Sidley Austin lobbying firm. …


– “He had plenty of clashes along the way, especially with environmentalists who thought he weakened too many laws to protect Detroit’s auto industry — one of the conflicts that led to his ouster as chairman by Rep. Henry Waxman of California in 2009. And his oversight style sometimes struck critics as too heavy-handed — especially in the case of a 1980s investigation into allegations of scientific fraud that damaged careers, including that of a scientist who was later exonerated. But his legislative skills, and his sheer virtuosity in the range of subjects he took on, won him the respect of his colleagues and even some of his opponents.” http://politi.co/1c3UTrU


IN HIS OWN WORDS – Dingell tells the Detroit News: “I’m not going to be carried out feet first. I don’t want people to say I stayed too long. … I find serving in the House to be obnoxious. It’s become very hard because of the acrimony and bitterness, both in Congress and in the streets.” http://bit.ly/1k46pTC


DAVID MARANISS in the Washington Post: “One could say that Dingell outlasted the two institutions he loved most, Congress and Detroit. Which went bankrupt first is as much a theological question as a political or economic one, as is the question of which might have the better chance of returning to past glory, but there is no question about Dingell’s place in congressional history.” http://wapo.st/NtRabG


Detroit News, A1, “Dingell, Levin departures will shift Michigan’s clout: Lawmakers are longtime allies to carmakers, had key Capitol Hill roles,” By David Shepardson: http://bit.ly/1esA6c4


** 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 Speaker Boehner and President Obama will meet at 11:30 today in the Oval Office to discuss a “broad set of topics.” Roll Call: http://bit.ly/1foAXAA CHAIRMAN PATRICK LEAHY has set a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing for March 26 to explore the impacts of the proposed merger of Comcast Corp. and Time Warner Cable Inc. Reuters: http://reut.rs/1cKWnp3


GOP FRETS OVER TAX REFORM – POLITICO’s Jake Sherman and Lauren French report: “It should be a moment of uncontrolled glee for House Republicans: The chamber’s top tax writer Wednesday will release his vision for reforming the antiquated 4,000-page code. Instead, many of them are fretting. From moderates to conservatives, senior Republican aides to rank-and-file legislative hands, there are serious concerns about Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp’s plans to unveil politically sensitive plans to restructure the Tax Code just a touch more than eight months before Election Day. …[P]ut bluntly, Republicans think they will expand their majority in the House — and perhaps take the Senate — by spending the remainder of 2014 concentrating on a still struggling-economy, cutting a raft of regulations and Obamacare’s woes. Many senior figures see no need to open up a new policy discussion in February of an election year without a partner in the Senate and White House.” http://politi.co/1eeHVqh


– WaPo’s Lori Montgomery has the nuts and bolts: “The long-awaited simplification of the tax code being drafted by House Republicans would slash the top income tax rate to 25 percent from 39.6 percent and impose a surtax on some of the nation’s wealthiest households. Under the proposal, set for release Wednesday, the vast majority of taxpayers would see little change in the ultimate size of their tax bills, according to a nonpartisan congressional analysis of the legislation. But the tax system would be dramatically simpler, with seven existing brackets collapsed into just two, set at 10 percent and 25 percent.” http://wapo.st/1fQ05eu


McCAIN, FLAKE TELL BREWER: VETO ANTI-GAY BILL – Catalina Camia writes for USA Today: “Arizona’s two U.S. senators want Gov. Jan Brewer to veto a bill that would allow business owners with strongly held religious beliefs to refuse service to gays and lesbians. Sens. John McCain and Jeff Flake, both Republicans like Brewer, sent out similar tweets days apart urging the governor’s action. … Brewer, who is in Washington attending the National Governors Association meeting, is getting pressure from conservative groups to sign the bill, while the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry is seeking a veto.” http://usat.ly/1dqioWY


PENTAGON PLANS TO SHRINK ARMY TO PRE-WWII LEVEL – Thomas Shanker and Helene Cooper write on A1 of the New York Times: “Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel plans to shrink the United States Army to its smallest force since before the World War II buildup and eliminate an entire class of Air Force attack jets in a new spending proposal that officials describe as the first Pentagon budget to aggressively push the military off the war footing adopted after the terror attacks of 2001. The proposal, released on Monday, takes into account the fiscal reality of government austerity and the political reality of a president who pledged to end two costly and exhausting land wars. A result, the officials argue, will be a military capable of defeating any adversary, but too small for protracted foreign occupations.” http://nyti.ms/MSmsJ8


GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, FEB. 25, 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 @BrandieReiner and @ethanpollack.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate is in at 10 a.m. and at 11:15 a.m. will vote on the nominations of several judges. After votes, the Senate will recess until 2:15 p.m. for weekly party caucus luncheons. At 3:15 p.m. the Senate will hold a procedural vote on the Comprehensive Veterans Health and Benefits and Military Retirement Pay Restoration Act.


The House is back in session at 2 p.m. today with votes expected at 6:30 p.m. on bills considered under suspension of the rules, including the FOIA Oversight and Implementation Act, Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act, Taxpayers Right-to-Know Act and a bill making it easier for people to switch cell phone providers.


AROUND THE HILL – Reps. Doug Collins and Hakeem Jeffries speak on intellectual property songwriters legislation at 10 a.m. at the House Triangle. Rep. Michael Michaud and Veterans’ Affairs Committee Democrats speak on veterans legislation at noon at the House Triangle. Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer holds a pen and pad session with reporters at noon at H-144.  Sen. Marco Rubio gives a speech on U.S. policy toward Russia at 12:30 p.m. at the Heritage Foundation, 214 Massachusetts Ave. NE. Reps. Raul Grijalva and Jan Schakowsky speak on the Keystone XL pipeline at 1 p.m. at the House Triangle. Rep. Tim Griffith and the Cong. Friends of Wales Caucus host a welcoming reception First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones at 5:30 p.m. in Rayburn 2168.


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 2 p.m. at the Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress. At 3:30 p.m. Tim Scott speaks to Howard University students about his Opportunity Agenda and America’s bright future tomorrow in the Howard School of Business Auditorium.


TRANSITIONS – KAT SKILES has been named vice president of marketing and communications for NGP VAN, a leading technology provider to Obama for America and many Democratic campaigns and progressive organizations. She formerly served as the press secretary and director of online strategy for the House Democratic Caucus.


– CHRIS HARRIS, former communications director and senior adviser at American Bridge 21st Century, has moved to Denver to serve as communications director of Sen. Mark Udall’s reelection campaign.


– BETSY SCHMID has joined the Aerospace Industries Association as vice president for national security and acquisition policy, POLITICO’s Jonathan Topaz reports. Schmid had been staff director for the Senate Defense Appropriations Subcommittee. Earlier, she worked in the Office of the Secretary of Defense on defense strategy and the Quadrennial Defense Review.


TEA PARTY TAKES ON BOEHNER, GOP LEADERS – The NYT’s Jeremy W. Peters reports from Dallas: “There is the Tea Party Patriots ‘Fire the Speaker’ petition, which is not to be confused with the FreedomWorks ‘Fire the Speaker’ petition, or the websites variously urging people to ‘Fire John Boehner’ and ‘Pledge to Fire Boehner.’ A new one, ‘Replace the Speaker,’ appeared after Speaker John A. Boehner, Republican of Ohio, allowed a vote on raising the country’s debt ceiling to move forward. Katrina Pierson would sign them all, but she hardly needs to put her name on a petition to validate her anti-Boehner credentials. Ms. Pierson, a local Tea Party leader here who has never sought public office, is aggressively campaigning to unseat one of the speaker’s top lieutenants in the House, Representative Pete Sessions, a nine-term Republican who is chairman of the influential Rules Committee. … — “Primary campaigns against party leaders are often more of a nuisance than a serious threat, token challenges waged by local gadflies. But what is startling to Republicans this year is the sheer number of candidates who are willing to take on the party’s most powerful players in Washington, and the backing they are receiving from third-party groups.” http://nyti.ms/OxDtJK Wall Street Journal, A1 below the fold, “Tea Party Faces Test Of Its Clout In Primaries,” By Janet Hook: http://on.wsj.com/1lirn4w CLUB FOR GROWTH GIVES CRUZ, PAUL, LEE PERFECT SCORE – Michael R. Crittenden writes for the WSJ: “Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Rand Paul of Kentucky were among the top Republicans receiving high ratings from the influential antitax Club for Growth, which released its annual scorecard of House and Senate lawmakers on Monday. Mr. Cruz , along with Sen. Mike Lee (R., Utah) and Rep. Matt Salmon (R., Ariz.), make up a select group of lawmakers from either the House and Senate who can boast of a perfect 2013 and lifetime score from the group. Those three, along with Reps. Trent Franks (R., Ariz.), Tom McClintock (R., Calif.) and David Schweikert (R., Ariz.) were the only lawmakers to receive a perfect 100% score for 2013, according to the group.” http://on.wsj.com/1cjlP1w JOLLY ACKNOWLEDGES FATAL 1989 CRASH – Alex Isenstadt writes for POLITICO: “Florida congressional candidate David Jolly acknowledged Monday that as a 16-year-old driver, he struck and killed a pedestrian. Jolly, who is now 41, discussed the 1989 accident in a Monday interview with 10 News Tampa, saying: ‘It took several years for me to get to a place of peace, but not something anybody would ever get over.’ The disclosure comes a little more two weeks before the high-profile March 11 special election between Jolly and his Democratic opponent, former state Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink. Jolly, a Republican, is a former Washington lobbyist. The race, for the House seat of the late GOP Rep. Bill Young, has drawn extensive national attention. … The report also said that Jolly was not cited by police in the incident, and Jolly said in the interview that he was ‘exonerated of any culpability.’ He also said he rushed to get emergency help and then returned to the scene.” http://politi.co/1eeDQCB


WHY AL FRANKEN HAS ALREADY SPENT $ 15 MILLION – Michael Catalini reports for National Journal: “A handful of scary political possibilities worry Minnesota Democrats. They fret that the base won’t turn out this year, that conservative groups will blanket the state in negative ads, and that the Affordable Care Act will weigh down the ticket. But Sen. Al Franken is not taking chances, pouring millions of dollars into his reelection campaign even though his seat is widely considered safe and a formidable Republican opponent has yet to emerge. Franken’s campaign has spent more than $ 15 million so far, making the Minnesota race one of the most expensive contests this cycle, ahead of closely watched campaigns in Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, and North Carolina, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. In fact, Franken has already spent 46 percent more than the average amount that it cost to win a Senate seat in 2012—and the election is still more than half a year away.” http://bit.ly/1cKYmJK


MONDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Ross Kapilian was first to correctly answer that Joan Whitney Payson, the granddaughter of presidential aide-turned-secretary of State John Hay, became the owner of the New York Mets.


CORRECTION TO FRIDAY’S TRIVIA – Huddle reader Jonathan Priest points out that there is a second Cabinet member with a degree from Boston College: Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz. Secretary of State John Kerry was the other.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – John Dingell’s retirement means that another Michigan Democrat, Rep. John Conyers, will become the most senior member and the next dean of the House. But who is the most senior woman serving in the House? 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



DINGELL, "BABE RUTH" OF LEGISLATORS, HANGS UP HIS CLEATS – GOP frets over tax reform – McCain, Flake: Veto anti-gay AZ bill – Why Al Franken already spent $15M

FBI Report Once Again Confirms What We Already Knew About Guns







BELLEVUE, Wash., Feb. 25, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ – The FBI’s semi-annual uniform crime data for the first half of 2013 confirms once again what the firearms community already knew, that violent crime has continued to decline while gun sales have continued to climb, the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms said today.


The report, issued last week, says murders declined 6.9 percent from the first half of 2012, while aggravated assaults dropped by 6.6 percent nationwide and robberies were down 1.8 percent. Forcible rapes declined 10.6 percent from the same period in 2012 and overall, violent crime fell by 10.6 percent in non-metropolitan counties and 3.6 percent in metropolitan counties.


“This new information reinforces the notion that not only do guns save lives, their presence in the hands and homes of law-abiding citizens just might be a deterrent to crime,” observed CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb. “The National Shooting Sports Foundation has been reporting a steady increase in firearm sales for the past few years. Taken as a whole, one cannot help but conclude that the predictions from gun prohibitionists that more guns leads to more crime have been consistently wrong.”


Gottlieb said the tired argument from the anti-gun lobby that more firearms in the hands of private citizens would result in sharp increases in violence have run out of traction. Not only has the decline in crime corresponded with an increase in gun sales, it also coincides with a steady rise in the number of citizens obtaining concealed carry licenses and permits, he noted.


“The FBI report says burglaries and auto theft have also decreased,” Gottlieb said, “and it is impossible to look at this pattern and not suggest that increased gun ownership just might be one contributing factor. Gun prohibitionists would, of course, dismiss that suggestion as poppycock, but you can bet your life savings that if the data was reversed, and violent crime had risen, the gun control lobby would be rushing to every available microphone declaring that guns were to blame.


“This continuing pattern brings up a pertinent question,” he concluded. “If the gun ban lobby has been so wrong about more guns resulting in more crime, what else have they been wrong about? The word ‘everything’ comes to mind.”


With more than 650,000 members and supporters nationwide, the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms  is one of the nation’s premier gun rights organizations. As a non-profit organization, the Citizens Committee is dedicated to preserving firearms freedoms through active lobbying of elected officials and facilitating grass-roots organization of gun rights activists in local communities throughout the United States.



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FBI Report Once Again Confirms What We Already Knew About Guns

Monday, January 20, 2014

GAMES: Urgent Search for "Black Widow" Suicide Bomber, May Be Already in Sochi...

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GAMES: Urgent Search for "Black Widow" Suicide Bomber, May Be Already in Sochi...

Wait A Minute, Didn’t I Take Your Mug Shot Already

At Those Damn Liars, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Those Damn Liars and how it is used.

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Those Damn Liars does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.

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  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Those Damn Liars.
  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Those Damn Liars and other sites on the Internet.
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Wait A Minute, Didn’t I Take Your Mug Shot Already

Thursday, January 9, 2014

There"s Already 17 Times More Coverage on Chris Christie Scandal Than in Last Six Months of IRS Scandal

NewsBusters.org:

In less than 24 hours, the big three networks have devoted 17 times more coverage to a traffic scandal involving Chris Christie than they’ve allowed in the last six months to Barack Obama’s Internal Revenue Service controversy. Since the story broke on Wednesday that aides to the New Jersey governor punished a local mayor’s lack of endorsement with a massive traffic jam, ABC, CBS and NBC have responded with 34 minutes and 28 seconds of coverage. Since July 1, these same networks managed a scant two minutes and eight seconds for the IRS targeting of Tea Party groups.

In contrast, journalists such as Good Morning America’s George Stephanopoulos pounced on the developing Christie story. The GMA host opened the program on Thursday by announcing, “Chris Christie in crisis. Calls at this hour for the feds to step in, investigate the explosive e-mails.”

Stephanopoulos later wondered, “One of the big questions right now, how much has it hampered his White House prospects?” Guest Matt Dowd insisted that, on a scale from one to ten, the controversy was already at a “four or five.”



On the CBS Evening News, anchor Scott Pelley sounded a similar alarm: “Tonight, a potential presidential candidate caught up in scandal. E-mails show massive New Jersey traffic jams were engineered by aides to Governor Chris Christie as political payback.”



  NBC Nightly News host Brian Williams immediately spun the story as a political pitfall for the possible presidential contender: “In a jam. A big problem for a man with big ambitions. Tonight, how a traffic nightmare on the world’s busiest bridge has spilled into a full blown scandal with the power to damage Chris Christie’s political future.”



Politik Ditto



There"s Already 17 Times More Coverage on Chris Christie Scandal Than in Last Six Months of IRS Scandal

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Blame already being cast over budget fight







Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, left, and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, during a news conference with conservative Congressional Republicans at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Cruz and Lee stand as the Senate’s dynamic duo for conservatives, crusading against President Barack Obama’s health care law while infuriating many congressional Republicans with a tactic they consider futile, self-serving and detrimental to the party’s political hopes in 2014. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, left, and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, during a news conference with conservative Congressional Republicans at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. Cruz and Lee stand as the Senate’s dynamic duo for conservatives, crusading against President Barack Obama’s health care law while infuriating many congressional Republicans with a tactic they consider futile, self-serving and detrimental to the party’s political hopes in 2014. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)













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(AP) — Even before a budget deadline arrives, leaders from both parties are blaming each other — and some Republicans are criticizing their own — for a government shutdown many are treating as inevitable.


The top Democrat in the House says Republicans are “legislative arsonists” who are using their opposition to a sweeping health care overhaul as an excuse to close government’s doors. A leading tea party antagonist in the Senate counters that conservatives should use any tool available to stop the Affordable Care Act from taking hold. President Bill Clinton’s labor secretary says the GOP is willing “to risk the entire system of government to get your way,” while the House speaker who oversaw the last government shutdown urged fellow Republicans to remember “this is not a dictatorship.”


The unyielding political posturing on Sunday comes one week before Congress reaches an Oct. 1 deadline to dodge any interruptions in government services. While work continues on a temporary spending bill, a potentially more devastating separate deadline looms a few weeks later when the government could run out of money to pay its bills.


“This is totally irresponsible, completely juvenile and, as I called it, legislative arson. It’s just destructive,” House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said in an interview that aired Sunday.


The Republican-led House on Friday approved legislation designed to wipe out the 3-year-old health care law that President Barack Obama has vowed to preserve. But the House’s move was more a political win than a measure likely to be implemented.


Across the Capitol, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid said he would keep the health law intact despite Republicans’ attempts, in his words, “to take an entire law hostage simply to appease the tea party anarchists.”


One of those tea party agitators, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, showed little sign on Sunday that he cared about the uphill climb to make good on his pledge to derail the health care law over Obama’s guaranteed veto.


“I believe we should stand our ground,” said Cruz, who already was trying to blame Obama and his Democratic allies if the government shuts down.


Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat, said Cruz’s efforts were destructive and self-serving as Cruz eyes a White House campaign.


“I cannot believe that they are going to throw a tantrum and throw the American people and our economic recovery under the bus,” she said.


“This is about running for president with Ted Cruz. This isn’t about meaningful statesmanship,” she added later.


The wrangling over the budget comes as lawmakers consider separate legislation that would let the United States avoid a first-ever default on its debt obligations. House Republicans are planning legislation that would attach a 1-year delay in the health care law in exchange for ability to increase the nation’s credit limit of $ 16.7 trillion.


Obama, speaking to political allies on Saturday evening, showed little patience for the GOP efforts to undermine his legislative accomplishment by either avenue.


“We will not negotiate over whether or not America should keep its word and meet its obligations,” Obama told the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation dinner. “We’re not going to allow anyone to inflict economic pain on millions of our own people just to make an ideological point.”


Congress doesn’t seem eager to help Obama, although there are deep divides — both between parties and within them — over who deserves blame.


Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga., said the goal was to defund the president’s health care legislation for at least one more year if not forever.


“We do have eight days to reach a resolution on this, and I propose an idea that kept the government operating and opened for an entire year while delaying and defunding Obamacare for a year so that we could work out those differences,” Graves said.


Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, whose faceoff with Clinton led to government shutdowns that inflicted significant damage on the GOP and helped resurrect the then-president’s political fortunes in time for his 1996 re-election bid, said his GOP colleagues should not yield.


“This is not a dictatorship. Under our constitution, there should be a period of tension and there should be a compromise on both sides,” Gingrich said.


Robert Reich, who was Clinton’s labor secretary, said that works only if both parties are willing to negotiate.


“Sorry, under our constitutional system you’re not allowed to risk the entire system of government to get your way,” Reich said.


It is likely that when the House legislation arrives in the Senate, Democrats there will strip off the health care defunding mechanism. Democrats plan to send back to the House a bill that prevents disruptions in government services but not the health provision they championed.


Cruz, however, said Senate Republicans cannot allow that to happen and should mount every procedural hurdle available. Cruz, who pushed lawmakers to tie a budget bill with health care hurdles, said Republicans should mount a procedural roadblock that would require 60 votes for any changes to the House bill.


“You know what? If Senate Republicans stand together, we can stop Harry Reid from doing it,” Cruz said.


But within his own party, Cruz faced skepticism.


“It’s not a tactic that we can actually carry out and be successful,” said Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. “The answer now in the Senate, by those who propose this strategy, is to filibuster the very bill they said they wanted.”


Pelosi spoke to CNN’s “State of the Union.” Cruz and McCaskill were interviewed on “Fox News Sunday.” Reich, Gingrich and Graves appeared on ABC’s “This Week.” Coburn was on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”


___


Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/philip_elliott


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Blame already being cast over budget fight

Monday, September 16, 2013

OFA Hits House GOP: "Enough Already" With Opposition To Obamacare


“Forty times. That’s how often a group of Republicans have voted against Obamacare just to prove their allegiance to their party’s right wing,” the ad from Organizing For Action, President Obama’s advocacy group says.


“Okay, they’ve said their piece. But now they’ve gone even further, threatening to shut down the government if ObamaCare isn’t dismantled,” it continues. “It could disrupt Social Security and veterans’ benefits, hurt job growth and undermine our economic recovery. Tell these House Republicans: Enough already.”




RealClearPolitics Video Log



OFA Hits House GOP: "Enough Already" With Opposition To Obamacare

OFA Hits House GOP: "Enough Already" With Opposition To Obamacare


“Forty times. That’s how often a group of Republicans have voted against Obamacare just to prove their allegiance to their party’s right wing,” the ad from Organizing For Action, President Obama’s advocacy group says.


“Okay, they’ve said their piece. But now they’ve gone even further, threatening to shut down the government if ObamaCare isn’t dismantled,” it continues. “It could disrupt Social Security and veterans’ benefits, hurt job growth and undermine our economic recovery. Tell these House Republicans: Enough already.”




RealClearPolitics Video Log



OFA Hits House GOP: "Enough Already" With Opposition To Obamacare

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Rivals to Hillary Corleone Already Sleeping With the Fishes



Barack Obama’s favourite movie is The Godfather. He once said of his aide Robert Gibbs that “I’ve seen a little bit of Sonny in him once in a while”, referring to the most violent and unstable of Don Corleone’s sons. His former chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, once sent a dead fish to a pollster who had disappointed him.


But Obama himself, with his cooler-than-thou mien and disdain for the transactional nature of governing, is an unlikely Family head. He is from Al Capone’s Chicago but somehow not of it. For that aspect of politics, no one does it better than the Clintons.


Doug Band, Bill Clinton’s right-hand man, is said to keep a list on his BlackBerry of people who are “dead to us” because they dared to cross the Clintons in the 2008 campaign. Back then, Bill Richardson, a second-rate former cabinet secretary, endorsed Obama after initially promising fealty to the Clintons, to whom he owed his career, during a Super Bowl game.


Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign manager, James Carville, immediately denounced Richardson as a Judas Iscariot who had betrayed the Clintons in return for Obama’s 30 pieces of silver. Richardson’s career was essentially over. Carville, like the Clintons, has never taken prisoners. One of his campaign adages is: “When your opponent is drowning, throw the son of a bitch an anvil.” And Emanuel was with the Clintons long before Obama appeared on the scene.


All this is worth remembering now that Hillary Clinton is preparing for a 2016 presidential bid. Sure, she could opt to spend more time with her family or baking cookies, but no one close to the Clinton political family believes she won’t run. It would be like Don Corleone retiring to an allotment.


While Hillary is temporarily absent from the fray, Clinton loyalists have set up a Ready for Hillary super-Pac (political action committee) on her behalf — legally, she cannot associate with them. It’s a clever move. The group has been busy signing up top Democratic donors and enlisting the best operatives.


As well as Carville, backers include former Clinton capos Thomas “Mack” McLarty, Harold Ickes and Ann Lewis. It’s also been an opportunity for some to make amends. A prominent supporter has been Senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri, an Obamaite in 2008 who was on the “dead to us” list after saying Bill Clinton was “a great leader but I don’t want my daughter near him”. On Friday she was at a “Madam President” event in Iowa saying she was dreaming of Hillary’s “moment”.


The first casualty of the Ready for Hillary effort appears to have been Vice-President Joe Biden. Old Joe (his teeth and hair are considerably younger but he turned 70 last year) had reckoned, as the incumbent vice-president, that he had a strong claim to be the next Democratic nominee. That was before his 2008 pollster Celinda Lake signed up with Ready for Hillary and the top two grassroots organisers for the Obama-Biden 2012 campaign went to work for the outfit.


Now, Biden is intimating he won’t run if Hillary does. Other potential Democratic rivals are also withering on the vine. Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York, another former Clinton cabinet secretary, is likely to sit out 2016. So, too, is Newark mayor Cory Booker, sometimes described as America’s second black president. It looks as if the field is clear for Hillary.


Usually it is the Republicans who plump for the previous runner-up — Bob Dole in 1996, John McCain in 2008 and Mitt Romney last year. This time, they look set for a bloody, chaotic campaign. New Jersey governor Chris Christie and Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky are already tearing lumps out of each other while Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, former Romney running mate Paul Ryan and George W. Bush’s younger brother Jeb are biding their time for now.


Ironically, Obama’s 2008 win has persuaded other newly elected Republican senators that they too could be commander-in-chief. It may well be, however, that after choosing an untested Obama in 2008, America will be looking for a known quantity next time. Hillary’s campaign will be framed as a historic one to elect the first female president. Just as Republicans have found it hard to attack Obama without appearing racist, running against Hillary means the cry of sexism is never far away.


For more than a decade, she has been shedding her old image as a radical Lady Macbeth and crafting a centrist reputation. McCain recently described her as a “rock star” who did a “fine job” at the state department. An easy primary campaign would mean she could resist moving to the left while watching Republicans having to pander to their conservative base.


Obama emerged stronger from his epic 2008 primary battle with Hillary, but that was the exception and, unlike the Republicans now, the ideological differences between the two were minimal.


At 65, Hillary could be almost a generation older than a Republican opponent. Attacking a woman on age grounds, however, could appear distinctly unchivalrous and while the hefty, trash- talking Christie is often portrayed as a Sopranos character, few Mob aficionados would bet on a Soprano against a Corleone.


The Clintons are making it plain they will not tolerate anyone messing this up for them. Anthony Weiner, the weasel-faced New York mayoral candidate, is already in trouble for disrespecting his wife Huma Abedin, Hillary’s senior aide and a beloved sister in the Clinton world.


After the latest revelations of his sexts to a young woman, it was made known the Clintons were displeased. Aides leaked that Philippe Reines, Hillary’s consigliere, had launched an expletive- laced tirade against Weiner during a conference call, threatening to “pull out” his throat. When Abedin visited Doug Band at his apartment, Weiner was ordered to wait outside while his wife took their son in.


The comic drama of the Weiner campaign, not to mention the inevitable dragging up of Bill’s Monica Lewinsky escapade in the 1990s, has given Republicans hope that the new, shiny Clinton brand can be tarnished again. If Weiner should win the New York mayoral primary next month, expect to hear of his body floating in the Hudson shortly afterwards. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Rivals to Hillary Corleone Already Sleeping With the Fishes

Sunday, June 2, 2013

UN Expert Worries About Killer Robots, Ignores The Ones That Already Exist


Autonomous war robots are coming. Panicking about them will only make things worse.



Fictional F/A-37

Fictional F/A-37 A fictional autonomous robot fighter plane from the 2005 movie “Stealth.” Wikimedia Commons



Yesterday, a United Nations expert called for a halt and moratorium on developing “lethal autonomous robotics,” or, in layman’s terms, “killer robots.”


His argument: once killer robots take part in war, there will be no going back. Christof Heyns, the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, told the Human Rights Council that now is the time to regulate and stop killer robots, arguing that “decisions over life and death in armed conflict may require compassion and intuition.” He also urged the council to form a panel that would study whether international laws in place today adequately address the use of killer robots.


Thing is, killer robots already exist. And they’re about the least compassionate machines we could imagine.


Actual killer robots

Actual Killer Robots: a pile of landmines in Cambodia.  Neil Rickards, via Wikimedia Commons



I’m talking about land mines, those notorious explosives that explode when walked over. Land mines are programmed to kill when certain conditions are met. That is the same principle guiding a killer robot.


But there are some key differences: A killer robot might make a decision based on algorithms and inputs, internal coding and pre-programmed combat behaviors. It might be programmed to understand the laws of war, and it might use surveillance technologies to make distinctions between unarmed civilians and armed combatants. The same principles that power facial recognition software could apply to robots targeting their weapons at other weapons, so they fire to disable guns and not to kill people.


Land mines, on the other hand, fail to distinguish between civilians and soldiers, between soldiers of different nations, and between animals or large children or small soldiers. Land-mine triggers cannot be easily shut off and are designed for durability not intelligence. At their worst, killer robots could be as deadly and as indiscriminate as landmines. Chances are, though, they will be much more sophisticated.


The task before lawmakers is not to ban a technology out of fear but to adapt the law to the technology once it exists. Making legislative decisions about new technology is tricky business. In the United States, electronic communication is governed by a law passed well before email was a regular fixture of life. Provisions that made sense to congressmen in 1986 trying to imagine email led to great weaknesses in privacy and personal security, all because the technology wasn’t understood when the law was written. The stakes are much lower in governing electronic communications than in authorizing robots to kill.


Killer robots are coming. Efforts to halt their introduction or ban their development are not only likely to fail, but they’ll drown out legitimate concerns about the safest way to implement the technology with Luddite fear-mongering.




Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now



UN Expert Worries About Killer Robots, Ignores The Ones That Already Exist

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Elizabeth Warren to Obama Administration: Take the Banks to Court, Already!


On Tuesday, fierce consumer advocate and needler of banks Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) called out Wall Street regulators for their habit of giving tepid punishments to misbehaving banks, and asked the agencies to justify their policy of settling with the wrongdoers out of court.


Warren sent a letter to the Justice Department, as well as to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Reserve, asking them for evidence on how a settlement that doesn’t require a bank to admit guilt would be better policy than taking the bad apple to trial. If regulators at least show that they are willing to play tough, she argued, it will help deter bad behavior and allow regulators to negotiate bigger fines in the event of a later settlement.


Continue Reading »


Politics | Mother Jones



Elizabeth Warren to Obama Administration: Take the Banks to Court, Already!

Elizabeth Warren to Obama Administration: Take the Banks to Court, Already!


On Tuesday, fierce consumer advocate and needler of banks Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) called out Wall Street regulators for their habit of giving tepid punishments to misbehaving banks, and asked the agencies to justify their policy of settling with the wrongdoers out of court.


Warren sent a letter to the Justice Department, as well as to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Reserve, asking them for evidence on how a settlement that doesn’t require a bank to admit guilt would be better policy than taking the bad apple to trial. If regulators at least show that they are willing to play tough, she argued, it will help deter bad behavior and allow regulators to negotiate bigger fines in the event of a later settlement.


Continue Reading »


Politics | Mother Jones



Elizabeth Warren to Obama Administration: Take the Banks to Court, Already!

Elizabeth Warren to Obama Administration: Take the Banks to Court, Already!


On Tuesday, fierce consumer advocate and needler of banks Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) called out Wall Street regulators for their habit of giving tepid punishments to misbehaving banks, and asked the agencies to justify their policy of settling with the wrongdoers out of court.


Warren sent a letter to the Justice Department, as well as to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Reserve, asking them for evidence on how a settlement that doesn’t require a bank to admit guilt would be better policy than taking the bad apple to trial. If regulators at least show that they are willing to play tough, she argued, it will help deter bad behavior and allow regulators to negotiate bigger fines in the event of a later settlement.


Continue Reading »


Politics | Mother Jones



Elizabeth Warren to Obama Administration: Take the Banks to Court, Already!