Showing posts with label Bachmann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bachmann. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Rep. Bachmann says she won"t run for re-election


ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Michele Bachmann, the Minnesota congresswoman whose sharply conservative views on social and fiscal issues elevated her to a leader of the tea party movement, announced Wednesday she will not seek a fifth term but insisted the decision was unrelated to ethics inquiries or her near-loss last fall.


It was a sudden turn for the foster-mom-turned-politician. She left the door open to other, unspecified political options.


Bachmann was traveling in Russia as part of a congressional delegation and was not available for interviews. In a lengthy video message to supporters, she said her decision “was not influenced by any concerns about my being re-elected.”


Ron Carey, a former chief of staff to Bachmann, said he suspects she was anticipating a tough battle ahead and seemed to be stuck in place in Congress.


“This is a great chance to exit stage right rather than have a knockdown, drag-out re-election fight,” said Carey, also a former state GOP chairman. “The reality also set in that she is not a favorite of Republican leadership, so she is not going to be rising up to a committee chair or rising up in leadership.”


Her departure next year is part of a larger shift involving the leading personalities of the tea party. Stalwarts like former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, former Rep. Allen West of Florida and former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint have left elected office to move into conservative organizations and commentary roles.


They’ve been replaced by a new round of tea party-backed lawmakers such as Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah and Rep. Raul Labrador of Idaho.


“The movement had moved past her to a new round of leaders in Congress and the states around the country,” said Dick Wadhams, a Colorado-based Republican strategist. “In a short period of time, a new generation has stepped forward since the last election.”


Bachmann also said her decision “was not impacted in any way by the recent inquiries into the activities of my former presidential campaign” last year. In January, a former Bachmann aide filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission, claiming the candidate made improper payments to an Iowa state senator who was the state chairman of her 2012 presidential run. The aide, Peter Waldron, also accused Bachmann of other FEC violations.


Bachmann had given few clues she was considering leaving Congress. Her fundraising operation was churning out regular pitches for the small-dollar donations that she collected so well over the years. She also had an ad running on Twin Cities television promoting her role in opposing President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. The early timing of the ad suggested she was preparing for a tough fight against Democrat Jim Graves, a hotel chain owner who narrowly lost to Bachmann in November.


Without the polarizing Bachmann on the ticket, Republicans could have an easier time holding a district that leans more heavily in the GOP direction than any other in Minnesota. A parade of hopefuls was expected.


By Wednesday morning, state Rep. Matt Dean, a former House majority leader, said he was inclined to run.


“It is something I have thought about in the past if Michele were to not run again,” Dean said. “It’s not something that I just started thinking about this morning.”


Graves said he thought Bachmann had “read the tea leaves.”


“The district is changing,” the Democrat said in an interview Wednesday with Minneapolis television station KARE. “They want somebody who really does have some business background and understands the economy and can get things done in Washington and back in the district.”


Andy Aplikowski, who has long been active in the district’s Republican Party chapter, said he expected Bachmann to run again but can understand why she didn’t.


“It’s a grueling thing to be in Congress. It’s a grueling thing to be Michele Bachmann in Congress,” he said. “Every move you make is criticized and put under a microscope.”


Bachmann’s strongly conservative views propelled her into politics, and once there, she never backed down.


She was a suburban mother of five in 1999 when she ran for a Minnesota school board seat because she thought state standards were designed to teach students values and beliefs.


She lost that race, but won a state Senate seat a year later. Once in St. Paul, she seized on gay marriage as an issue and led a charge to legally define marriage in Minnesota as between one man and one woman. That failed, but Bachmann had laid the foundation with social conservatives to help propel her into Congress in 2006.


In Washington, she turned to fiscal issues, attacking Democrats and President Barack Obama for government bailouts and the health care overhaul. Even in her early years in Congress, Bachmann frequently took those views to right-leaning cable talk programs, cultivating her national image as she built a formidable fundraising base with like-minded viewers outside Minnesota.


But her penchant for provocative rhetoric sometimes backfired. She was hammered in 2008 for saying Obama might have “anti-American views,” a statement that prompted a rare retreat by Bachmann and made her race that year closer than it would have been. She was also criticized by her fellow Republicans last July for making unsubstantiated allegations that an aide to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had family ties to Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood.


Her White House bid got off to a promising start, with a win in an Iowa GOP test vote. But Bachmann quickly faded and finished last when the real voting started in Iowa’s leadoff caucuses, a result that caused her to drop out. Saddled with debt, she opted to campaign again for her Minnesota seat and squeaked through.


But the failed presidential campaign continued to dog her. Allegations of improper payments prompted ethics inquiries. Bachmann also faced a lawsuit from a former aide that alleged someone on the congresswoman’s team stole a private email list of home-school supporters for use in the campaign. That case is pending.


On Wednesday, Bachmann promised supporters she would “continue to work overtime for the next 18 months in Congress defending the same Constitutional Conservative values we have worked so hard on together.”


As for her plans beyond Congress, she said, “There is no future option or opportunity, be it directly in the political arena or otherwise, that I won’t be giving serious consideration if it can help save and protect our great nation.”


Bachmann’s success in the talk media world led industry analysts to say she could easily move into a gig as a host. She has been mentioned as a potential challenger to first-term Democratic Sen. Al Franken but has given little indication that she would take that step.


___


Thomas reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Lou Kesten contributed.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Rep. Bachmann says she won"t run for re-election

Rep. Bachmann says she won"t run for re-election



(AP) — Michele Bachmann, the Minnesota congresswoman whose sharply conservative views on social and fiscal issues elevated her to a leader of the tea party movement, announced Wednesday she will not seek a fifth term but insisted the decision was unrelated to ethics inquiries or her near-loss last fall.


It was a sudden turn for the foster-mom-turned-politician. She left the door open to other, unspecified political options.


Bachmann was traveling in Russia as part of a congressional delegation and was not available for interviews. In a lengthy video message to supporters, she said her decision “was not influenced by any concerns about my being re-elected.”


Ron Carey, a former chief of staff to Bachmann, said he suspects she was anticipating a tough battle ahead and seemed to be stuck in place in Congress.


“This is a great chance to exit stage right rather than have a knockdown, drag-out re-election fight,” said Carey, also a former state GOP chairman. “The reality also set in that she is not a favorite of Republican leadership, so she is not going to be rising up to a committee chair or rising up in leadership.”


Her departure next year is part of a larger shift involving the leading personalities of the tea party. Stalwarts like former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, former Rep. Allen West of Florida and former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint have left elected office to move into conservative organizations and commentary roles.


They’ve been replaced by a new round of tea party-backed lawmakers such as Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah and Rep. Raul Labrador of Idaho.


“The movement had moved past her to a new round of leaders in Congress and the states around the country,” said Dick Wadhams, a Colorado-based Republican strategist. “In a short period of time, a new generation has stepped forward since the last election.”


Bachmann also said her decision “was not impacted in any way by the recent inquiries into the activities of my former presidential campaign” last year. In January, a former Bachmann aide filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission, claiming the candidate made improper payments to an Iowa state senator who was the state chairman of her 2012 presidential run. The aide, Peter Waldron, also accused Bachmann of other FEC violations.


Bachmann had given few clues she was considering leaving Congress. Her fundraising operation was churning out regular pitches for the small-dollar donations that she collected so well over the years. She also had an ad running on Twin Cities television promoting her role in opposing President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. The early timing of the ad suggested she was preparing for a tough fight against Democrat Jim Graves, a hotel chain owner who narrowly lost to Bachmann in November.


Without the polarizing Bachmann on the ticket, Republicans could have an easier time holding a district that leans more heavily in the GOP direction than any other in Minnesota. A parade of hopefuls was expected.


By Wednesday morning, state Rep. Matt Dean, a former House majority leader, said he was inclined to run.


“It is something I have thought about in the past if Michele were to not run again,” Dean said. “It’s not something that I just started thinking about this morning.”


Graves said he thought Bachmann had “read the tea leaves.”


“The district is changing,” the Democrat said in an interview Wednesday with Minneapolis television station KARE. “They want somebody who really does have some business background and understands the economy and can get things done in Washington and back in the district.”


Andy Aplikowski, who has long been active in the district’s Republican Party chapter, said he expected Bachmann to run again but can understand why she didn’t.


“It’s a grueling thing to be in Congress. It’s a grueling thing to be Michele Bachmann in Congress,” he said. “Every move you make is criticized and put under a microscope.”


Bachmann’s strongly conservative views propelled her into politics, and once there, she never backed down.


She was a suburban mother of five in 1999 when she ran for a Minnesota school board seat because she thought state standards were designed to teach students values and beliefs.


She lost that race, but won a state Senate seat a year later. Once in St. Paul, she seized on gay marriage as an issue and led a charge to legally define marriage in Minnesota as between one man and one woman. That failed, but Bachmann had laid the foundation with social conservatives to help propel her into Congress in 2006.


In Washington, she turned to fiscal issues, attacking Democrats and President Barack Obama for government bailouts and the health care overhaul. Even in her early years in Congress, Bachmann frequently took those views to right-leaning cable talk programs, cultivating her national image as she built a formidable fundraising base with like-minded viewers outside Minnesota.


But her penchant for provocative rhetoric sometimes backfired. She was hammered in 2008 for saying Obama might have “anti-American views,” a statement that prompted a rare retreat by Bachmann and made her race that year closer than it would have been. She was also criticized by her fellow Republicans last July for making unsubstantiated allegations that an aide to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had family ties to Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood.


Her White House bid got off to a promising start, with a win in an Iowa GOP test vote. But Bachmann quickly faded and finished last when the real voting started in Iowa’s leadoff caucuses, a result that caused her to drop out. Saddled with debt, she opted to campaign again for her Minnesota seat and squeaked through.


But the failed presidential campaign continued to dog her. Allegations of improper payments prompted ethics inquiries. Bachmann also faced a lawsuit from a former aide that alleged someone on the congresswoman’s team stole a private email list of home-school supporters for use in the campaign. That case is pending.


On Wednesday, Bachmann promised supporters she would “continue to work overtime for the next 18 months in Congress defending the same Constitutional Conservative values we have worked so hard on together.”


As for her plans beyond Congress, she said, “There is no future option or opportunity, be it directly in the political arena or otherwise, that I won’t be giving serious consideration if it can help save and protect our great nation.”


Bachmann’s success in the talk media world led industry analysts to say she could easily move into a gig as a host. She has been mentioned as a potential challenger to first-term Democratic Sen. Al Franken but has given little indication that she would take that step.


___


Thomas reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Lou Kesten contributed.


Associated Press



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Rep. Bachmann says she won"t run for re-election

Bye Bye Bachmann: Reliving Ten of the Tea Party Darling"s Craziest Gaffes



Minnesota Rep. swears she"s not retiring because of that ethics probe.








Minnesota far-right Republican Rep. Michelle Bachmann has declared she will not run for a fifth term in 2014, and is making the dubious claim that her decision has nothing to do with that ongoing ethics probe into her campaign fund-raising in the 2012 race, or her falling poll numbers. No, she is a newfound convert to term limits.


Right. 


This is about as believable as some of the gaffes, misstatements, anti-science positions, conspiracy theories, not to mention wobbly grasp of both American history and world geography, she displayed on her ill-fated quest for the 2012 Republican nomination. She even managed to make Texas Governor Rick Perry look both sane and slightly enlightened.


Let"s relive come of the self-proclaimed Tea Party leaders more colorful, unforgettable gaffes, the first of which may be her assertion that she never made any gaffes.


  1. That Perry Thing: Bachmann attacked Gov. Rick Perry for mandating that young girls get the HPV vaccine, claiming that it caused not just promiscuity but mental retardation.

  2. Unintelligent Design: Bachmann stated her firm support for the teaching of so-called Intelligent Design, and said the scientific community supported it too. She advocated that it be taught in schools so that students could decide which science they want to believe (pseudo or actual).

  3. Headscratcher: During a debate about health-care reform in 2009, Bachmann suggested reform would lead to abortion field trips. Huh?

  4. Turn of Phrase: She also called Planned Parenthood “The Lenscrafters of Big Abortion.” Again, huh? ANyone know what big abortion is?

  5. Mixed Metaphors: Bachmann called the tax code a “weapon of mass destruction” and suggested abolishing it.

  6. Gangsta Rap: Bachmann called the Obama Administration a "gangster government," in the context of healthcare reform, of course.

  7. Karate Kid: On a campaign stop, she bragged of her karate skills and said she could “take out Obama.”

  8. Tea Party Fail: She got her American history mixed up when she told a New Hampshire audience that the Revolutionary War started in their state. (Uh, sorry, that would be in neighboring Massachusetts, also home to the Boston Tea Party.) 

  9. Paranoid Dreams: She said Obama was turning the country into a nation of slaves, and accused him of trying to brainwash our youth with re-education camps. Also, by the way, did you hear? The census is a conspiracy.

  10. Debate Flub: Mentioned both Libya and Africa, pronounced them correctly. Failed to realize that Libya is in Africa.

Okay, that was hard, keeping that to ten. Let"s not forget how she assigned herself the task of responding to the State of the Union address, then spent the whole time disturbingly looking into the wrong camera. 


Bachmann has not ruled out a return to politics some day.


 


 


 


 

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Bye Bye Bachmann: Reliving Ten of the Tea Party Darling"s Craziest Gaffes

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Return of the Culture Wars?, Tim Johnson to announce retirement, Rubio in KY: No retreat, Bachmann denies ethics violations, Vitter outlasts scandal, Giffords" stepdaughter"s dog kills sea lion



(swong@politico.com or @scottwongDC)


RETURN OF THE CULTURE WARS? – Jonathan Allen writes for the hometown paper: “The culture wars are back, but this time with a significant twist: the left is picking the fights and, for the most part, enjoying being on the right side of public opinion. Five years after Barack Obama warned that anxious voters are just ‘clinging’ to guns and religion, wedge issues are cutting differently — more to the liking of Democrats. Gay marriage is the talk of capital city parties. Lawmakers are working across the aisle on immigration reform plans. And New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg just committed $ 12 million to pressure Congress to tighten gun control laws.


– “Activists say the three issues — gay rights, guns and immigration — climbed to national attention after surviving battle-tests in the states and enjoying a shift in public opinion. Now Washington is just playing catch up. On Tuesday, moderate Democrat Mark Warner, of Virginia, became the most recent in a line of public officials to back same-sex marriage. One the same day, Sen. Jay Rockefeller, a Democrat from West Virginia, called the Defense of Marriage Act ‘discriminatory,’ noting that he went through a ‘process’ to arrive at that conclusion. … They join Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, a conservative Republican, who announced recently that he had converted to favor same-sex marriage because his son, Will, is gay.


– “The Supreme Court will hear arguments this week on the federal Defense of Marriage Act and California’s Proposition 8, both of which ban same-sex matrimony. The cases might have been considered long shots even a few years ago, but now gay-rights activists are hopeful that the court will swing along with public opinion, which has moved unequivocally in favor of gay marriage.” http://politi.co/X64tlk


‘GAYS DESERVE EQUAL RIGHTS’ – Attorneys Theodore B. Olson and David Boies, who will argue in favor of gay marriage before the Supreme Court today, write in a Wall Street Journal op-ed: “The central question is whether a state may exclude gay and lesbian Americans from what the Supreme Court has called ‘the most important relation in life’—the institution of marriage. The answer is no. We represent two loving and committed couples. In many ways, our clients’ relationships are indistinguishable from our own: They have lives and homes together, they are raising children, they have jobs, they pay bills, they run errands. They experience together many of the joys and sorrows and laughter of life as a family in America.  But California has locked them out of the institution of marriage because they are gay. …


– “Because of their sexual orientation—a characteristic with which they were born and which they cannot change—our clients and hundreds of thousands of gay men and lesbians in California and across the country are being excluded from one of life’s most precious relationships. … withholding marriage causes infinite and permanent stigma, pain and isolation. It denies gay men and lesbians their identity and their dignity; it labels their families as second-rate.  That outcome cannot be squared with the principle of equality and the unalienable right to liberty and the pursuit of happiness that is the bedrock promise of America from the Declaration of Independence to the 14th Amendment, and the dream of all Americans. This badge of inequality must be extinguished.” http://on.wsj.com/14rRbTC


New York Times, “Cold, Wet Wait for Tickets to Supreme Court’s Same-Sex Marriage Cases,” By Jeremy W. Peters: “Being a witness to history can be messy business. And for those waiting outside the Supreme Court on Monday for one of the few coveted tickets to hear oral arguments in a pair of same-sex marriage cases this week, it was also cold, wet and tedious. … A spring snowstorm that blew through the capital on Monday seemed to do little to deter an eager few dozen people from huddling under soggy sleeping bags, plastic tarpaulins and oversize umbrellas as they counted down the final hours before the arguments began on Tuesday morning (the second case was scheduled for Wednesday morning). With about 20 hours to go, some had been there since Thursday night, moved by a sense of the moment and civic purpose. Others, like the Carters, had a less sentimental reason: They were being paid to wait for someone else. ‘It’s enough,’ Ms. Carter said, declining to say how much she would make.” http://nyti.ms/YR5etX


TEA PARTY SENATORS TO FILIBUSTER GUN-CONTROL BILL – Sens. Rand Paul, Mike Lee and Ted Cruz write in a letter to Majority Leader Harry Reid: “‘We will oppose the motion to proceed to any legislation that will serve as a vehicle for any additional gun restrictions,’ the three conservatives wrote in a copy of the signed letter obtained by POLITICO.”  http://politi.co/X62hu8


– Wayne LaPierre may be the public face of the NRA, but Jim Baker is the group’s man in Washington, POLITICO’s Anna Palmer writes.  “It’s a strategy that plays both the inside and outside games. LaPierre rallies the masses on cable news, Baker works the halls of Congress and behind it all is a grass-roots network of 5-million NRA supporters who mobilize fast. Many big interest groups have the same playbook, in which a fiery front man offers a public face, while a trusted inside-man works the halls of Congress where deals really get made — or blocked. Baker, known as a respected Second Amendment expert, built his power base over decades by working the halls of Congress, earning the trust of Democrats and Republicans — and putting real money behind his word and into the coffers of reelection campaigns.” http://politi.co/14qqzSY                                       


TIM JOHNSON TO ANNOUNCE RETIREMENT TODAY – Reuters’ Margaret Chadbourn reports: “Senator Tim Johnson, the Democratic chairman of the powerful banking committee, does not plan to run for re-election when his current term ends in 2014, two sources familiar with the matter and a Capitol Hill staffer said on Monday. Johnson, 66, a three-term senator from South Dakota, has scheduled a news conference for Tuesday in his home state to discuss what his aides described as ‘his future plans.’ His retirement would leave a vacant seat in a conservative-leaning state that could be difficult for Democrats to defend as they try to protect their majority in the Senate. Political analysts expect Johnson’s son, Brendan Johnson, who is South Dakota’s U.S. attorney, to emerge as a potential Democratic candidate in the 2014 election. The younger Johnson has not announced any formal plans to seek the Senate seat. Former Democratic Representative Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, who lost a bid for reelection in 2010, is another leading choice to run if the incumbent senator retires, analysts said.” http://yhoo.it/10JcPQ3


–Johnson becomes the seventh senator who will not seek reelection in 2014. The others are: Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.), Carl Levin (D-Mich.), Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.), Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) and Mike Johanns (R-Neb.).


RUBIO IN PAUL’S BACKYARD: WE CANNOT RETREAT FROM THE WORLD – POLITICO’s Manu Raju in Louisville, Ky.: “Florida Sen. Marco Rubio swung by Rand Paul’s home state here on Monday where he effectively made one thing clear: He’s no Rand Paul — particularly on foreign policy. In a soaring speech on the University of Louisville campus, Rubio made the case for American military might around the world, vowing that the U.S cannot ‘retreat’ from international conflicts, must encourage democracy and continue spending money overseas aimed at bolstering the country’s image. …Rubio’s remarks come just as Paul has been trying to clamp down on federal dollars spent on foreign aid and as the Kentucky freshman has been pushing for a “less aggressive” American role in the world — as the two prospective 2016 rivals continue to lay out competing visions of the GOP’s future.


– “‘We can’t solve every humanitarian crisis on the planet, we can’t be involved in every dispute, every civil war and every conflict,’ Rubio told a concert hall filled with young adults and middle-aged Kentucky voters. ‘But we also cannot retreat from the world. It’s not that America will continue to function as the world’s police officer. The problem is that like anything in the world: If you pull back from it, a vacuum will be created.’ Rubio added: ‘The alternative to U.S. [engagement] on the global stage is chaos.’” http://politi.co/109oQKS


– For the Senate GOP, the tail is wagging the dog, NYT columnist Frank Bruini writes in a piece titled “Rand Paul’s Loopy Ascent: “Rather than [Ted] Cruz, the junior senator from Texas, humbly taking cues from John Cornyn, the senior senator, Cornyn labors to match the supercilious upstart scowl for scowl, and even followed Cruz’s intemperate lead to cast one of only three Senate votes against John Kerry’s confirmation as secretary of state. And Mitch McConnell, who is not only Kentucky’s senior senator but also the Senate minority leader, seems to worry more about Paul, the state’s junior senator, than vice versa.” http://nyti.ms/13sEQz5


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GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 26, 2013, and welcome to The Huddle, your play-by-play preview of the day’s congressional news. 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 @cdipas and @RepCardenas.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The House and Senate are out for the two-week Passover and Easter recess.


VITTER OUTLASTS SCANDAL – Paul Kane reports in the Washington Post’s Style section: “Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) is suddenly in high demand. His banishment is over, his rehabilitation almost complete. Several years after acknowledging his ‘very serious sin,’ he has successfully adopted a higher profile in the divided U. S. Senate. Vitter is teaming up with Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), the chamber’s leading environmental advocate, to shore up levees and beach fronts from flood risk. He is working with one of the financial industry’s biggest thorns, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), on the latest bill targeting mega-banks and their ‘too big to fail’ status. When he’s not working across party lines, Vitter is throwing his increased seniority around in stronger ways: Last week he vowed to block President Obama’s nominee for Labor secretary until the administration releases documents about voting rights issues in Louisiana. Now Vitter’s name is atop most lists of possible GOP gubernatorial nominees for Louisiana in 2015 when Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) reaches his term limit.” http://wapo.st/ZSYoaD


– “Some senior Democratic and Republican advisers point to Vitter as the latest example of how — if a senator can outlast a scandal and win reelection — the Senate is a forgiving shelter where ‘sin’ is not in small supply. Vitter was lucky that he had almost 3 ½ years after the revelation of his entanglement with an escort service before he had to face voters again— enough time to work town halls and local fairs.”


BACHMANN DENIES CAMPAIGN FINANCE VIOLATIONS – Jon Avlon reports for The Daily Beast: Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) “is embroiled in a litany of legal proceedings related to her rolling disaster of a presidential campaign—including a Office of Congressional Ethics investigation into campaign improprieties that has not previously been reported. The Daily Beast has learned that federal investigators are now interviewing former Bachmann campaign staffers nationwide about alleged intentional campaign-finance violations. The investigators are working on behalf of the Office of Congressional Ethics, which probes reported improprieties by House members and their staffs and then can refer cases to the House Ethics Committee. … Two other former staffers confirmed the existence of the investigation this weekend, and on Monday Bachmann’s campaign counsel, William McGinley, of the high-powered firm Patton Boggs, confirmed that the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE) was looking into the congresswoman’s presidential campaign last year. ‘There are no allegations that the Congresswoman engaged in any wrongdoing,’ McGinley said. ‘We are … confident that at the end of their Review the OCE Board will conclude that Congresswoman Bachmann did not do anything inappropriate.’” http://thebea.st/Yc8nZB


SHELBY SACKS SIX APPROPS STAFFERS – Austin Wright and Jonathan Allen reports for POLITICIO: “Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby has ousted five Senate Appropriations Committee aides with strong ties to Mississippi Sen. Thad Cochran, sources familiar with the purge tell POLITICO. One of the five aides, Rebecca Davies, had worked on Capitol Hill for decades. A sixth staffer, brought onto the committee by former Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas), was also let go, one of the sources said. Shelby succeeded Cochran as the top Republican on the spending panel at the beginning of the year.” http://politi.co/14qhRnM


– It’s not completely unprecedented for a new chairman or ranking member to replace staffers with their own people. When Sen. David Vitter took over as top Republican of the EPW Committee, he let go 12 staffers who had worked under his predecessor, Sen. Jim Inhofe. http://bit.ly/YBHU7f


SENATE DEMS LEAVE OBAMA HANGING ON CLIMATE CHANGE – Andrew Restuccia and Darren Goode report for POLITICO: “More than a dozen Senate Democrats have a message for President Barack Obama: If he wants to take dramatic action on climate change, he’s on his own. The latest evidence came from this weekend’s marathon series of budget votes, in which moderate and conservative Democrats sided with the GOP on the Keystone XL oil pipeline and against any prospects for a tax on carbon. In the two Keystone votes, the Democrats helped the Republicans prevail by filibuster-proof majorities — a clear sign that Obama will have little political cover from his party’s middle if he chooses to reject the Canada-to-Texas pipeline, as climate advocates are urging him to.” http://politi.co/14qmdLA


– National Journal’s Coral Davenport looks at five small pieces of energy legislation that could pass Congress, from energy efficiency and offshore drilling to ethanol reform. http://bit.ly/10eTRhC


DOG BELONGING TO GIFFORDS’ RELATIVE KILLS CALIF. SEA LION – Alisha Gomez reports for the L.A. Times: “A dog that belongs to a relative of former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords attacked and killed a sea lion along the Laguna Beach shoreline, police said Monday. A video of the violent encounter shows Giffords’ stepdaughter and husband trying to pull the canine from the limp mammal as the surf rolls in. A copy of the video was sent to The Times. Laguna Beach police received a call at 2 p.m. Saturday and arrived to find that the 65-pound American bulldog mix had broken free from its 18-year-old owner and attacked a beached sea lion on a public beach near the exclusive Montage Laguna Beach, Capt. Jason Kravetz said in an email. The video taken by a local resident shows Giffords’ stepdaughter struggling to free the sea lion.


– “Giffords’ husband, Mark Kelly, appears later in the video, running down and pulling the dog off the sea lion, both police and a senior advisor to Giffords confirmed. Kelly and Giffords, an Arizona Democrat, are vacationing in Laguna Beach.” http://lat.ms/X9jfsw


MONDAY’S TRIVIA – Wyeth Ruthven was first to correctly answer that Peter Fitzgerald of Illinois was the only U.S. senator to succeed and be succeeded by an African American senator. Fitzgerald beat Carol Moseley Braun and then retired and was succeeded by Barack Obama.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – David Heymsfeld has today’s question: Name two U.S. presidents who, four years before they were elected, lost a vote to become the vice presidential nominee of their party. First 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/


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POLITICO – Top 10 – The Huddle



Return of the Culture Wars?, Tim Johnson to announce retirement, Rubio in KY: No retreat, Bachmann denies ethics violations, Vitter outlasts scandal, Giffords" stepdaughter"s dog kills sea lion