Showing posts with label McConnell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McConnell. Show all posts

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Mitch McConnell fundraiser: Wives in bad ‘mood’ still have sexual ‘obligation’ to husbands

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Mitch McConnell fundraiser: Wives in bad ‘mood’ still have sexual ‘obligation’ to husbands

Thursday, March 6, 2014

McConnell to Conservatives: "I Won"t Let You Down"



Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who is currently facing a primary challenge from his right, delivered a simple message to activists present at this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference: If Republicans retake the Senate, you can trust me.


“If I’m given the opportunity to lead the U.S. Senate next year, I won’t let you down,” McConnell assured those in attendance at the gathering outside Washington, D.C. “I will lead with integrity. We will fight tooth and nail for conservative reforms.”


After coming on stage with an antique firearm in hand, which he handed to retiring conservative favorite Sen. Tom Coburn, McConnell offered critiques of Obamacare; controversial recess appointments; the EPA; the IRS; big business taking advantage of government; and the Obama administration’s handling of Benghazi.


“President Obama and the Democratic Senate have literally failed American families. … Under this president and Harry Reid, the rich have gotten richer, the poor have gotten poorer, and the middle class is being squeezed like never before,” he said applause.


McConnell did not reference Kentucky businessman Matt Bevin, whom he is favored to easily beat in the May primary. Nor did he mention his likely general election challenger, Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes. Instead, McConnell’s remarks were aimed well past Election Day in November.


He vowed, “The U.S. Senate will be a place that Tom Coburn can be proud of again.” 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



McConnell to Conservatives: "I Won"t Let You Down"

Friday, February 21, 2014

Ted Cruz Won"t Commit To Supporting McConnell For GOP Leader


Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) declined to tell an inquiring reporter if he’d vote for Mitch McConnell to remain Senate Republican leader next year.


“I’m going to leave that election and every other incumbent Republican election to the voters of their respective states,” he told Betsy Woodruff of the National Review in Beaumont, Texas, according to an article published Thursday.




Cruz, a leader of the GOP’s tea party wing, and McConnell have been locked in a feud over tactics ahead of the 2014 elections, when the Kentucky senator is defending his seat and eying the majority.




All TPM News



Ted Cruz Won"t Commit To Supporting McConnell For GOP Leader

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Poll: McConnell trails Grimes by 4


Mitch McConnell (left) and Alison Lundergan Grimes (right) are pictured in this composite image. | AP Photos

Only 27 percent of those surveyed view McConnell favorably. | AP Photos





Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell trails his Democratic opponent, Alison Lundergan Grimes, by 4 points in a new poll published Thursday night by Kentucky’s largest newspaper.


The survey also found President Barack Obama to be slightly more popular than the longtime incumbent senator in the red state.







The Louisville Courier-Journal poll, a robo-poll conducted by SurveyUSA, gave McConnell 42 percent to Grimes’ 46 percent, adding to Democrats’ hopes of a competitive race.


(PHOTOS: Senators up for election in 2014)


The poll also found that only 27 percent of registered voters view the Republican incumbent favorably. Fifty percent view him unfavorably.


According to the paper, most of the poll questions used a sample of 1,082 registered voters in Kentucky and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. The survey was conducted Jan. 30 through Feb. 4.


The poll found that the president’s approval rating is 34 percent in the Bluegrass State, compared to 32 percent who approve of McConnell’s performance.


McConnell leads his Republican primary challenger, Matt Bevin, by 26 points, 55 percent to 29 percent, in the poll. The Courier-Journal attributed some of McConnell’s weakness to conservative frustration, noting that these voters would come home after a primary victory.


Grimes, the Kentucky secretary of state, remains largely undefined: 27 percent view her unfavorably; 26 percent view her favorably; 29 percent have a neutral opinion; and 18 percent had no opinion.


“We’re very comfortable about where this race stands and extremely confident that Senator McConnell will earn the votes of Kentuckians this fall,” McConnell spokeswoman Allison Moore said. “The contrast between Mitch McConnell’s conservative accomplishments for Kentucky and Alison Lundergan Grimes’s alliance with President Obama’s agenda of Obamacare and the war on coal will become very clear to everyone over the next nine months.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Poll: McConnell trails Grimes by 4

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Ditch Mitch – New Kentucky Poll Shows Trouble For Mitch McConnell

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Ditch Mitch – New Kentucky Poll Shows Trouble For Mitch McConnell

Friday, November 22, 2013

McConnell Campaign Calls Senate Conservatives Fund Attack "Profoundly Stupid"


Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-KY) re-election campaign has a response for the Senate Conservatives Fund’s (SCF) accusation that McConnell rolled over as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) changed Senate filibuster rules: that’s “profoundly stupid.”


“That argument is so profoundly stupid that it is hard to fully ascertain whether their deficiency is in math or logic,” McConnell campaign spokeswoman Allison Moore told TPM on Friday. “It does however help further illuminate why SCF is so bad at what they do.”




Moore’s statement on Friday is in response to a fundraising email from SCF, which is backing McConnell primary challenger Matt Bevin, arguing that Reid was able to enact the “nuclear option” removing the filibuster option from judicial and executive nominees.


“Harry Reid did this because he knows Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) will let him get away with it,” Senate Conservatives Fund executive director Matt Hoskins wrote in an email to supporters Friday. “The only way to deter a nuclear attack is to make it clear that the response will be equally devastating. Unfortunately, weakness is the only message Mitch McConnell has sent the Democrats on this issue.”


The statements by both Moore and Hoskins come a day after the Senate rules change. Right after the rules change Bevin’s campaign released a similarly critical statement of McConnell.


“Kentuckians deserve better than a pretend leader who does nothing more than wave his arms for the cameras,” Bevin said in a statement referring to McConnell.




All TPM News



McConnell Campaign Calls Senate Conservatives Fund Attack "Profoundly Stupid"

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Mitch McConnell Attacks Conservative Group for Endorsing Primary Opponent


Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s campaign spokeswoman Allison Moore attacked the Senate Conservatives Fund for endorsing McConnell’s primary challenger Matt Bevin on Friday.


“Matt Bevin now has the dubious honor of standing with a self-serving D.C. fundraising group that made its name by recruiting and promoting unelectable candidates that ensured Barack Obama a majority in the Senate,” Moore said in a statement to the Washington Post. “They clearly care less about Kentuckians than they do about their reputation for supporting laughably bad candidates. Now they can add a New England bailout recipient who claims he went to MIT to their roster of notable failures.”

The Senate Conservatives Fund (SCF), the group Moore was referring to, was instrumental in helping Sens. Rand Paul (R-KY) and Ted Cruz (R-TX) win their races for the U.S. Senate against establishment candidates.


“Matt Bevin is a true conservative who will fight to stop the massive spending, bailouts, and debt that are destroying our country,” SCF executive director Matt Hoskins said in a Friday morning statement. 


He is not afraid to stand up to the establishment and he will do what it takes to stop Obamacare. We know that winning this primary won’t be easy. Mitch McConnell has the support of the entire Washington establishment and he will do anything to hold on to power. But if people in Kentucky and all across the country rise up and demand something better, we’re confident Matt Bevin can win this race.



When then-Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) headed the organization in 2010 and endorsed Paul over McConnell’s hand-picked Senate candidate Trey Grayson, DeMint said in a statement at the time: “Senator McConnell and I are on different sides in this race but I support him as our leader.”


“I’m endorsing Rand Paul because he’s a true conservative who will stand up to the Washington establishment,” DeMint said in his endorsement on May 5, 2010. 


McConnell had supported Grayson over Rand Paul in that race. “I know Trey Grayson and trust him,” McConnell said in a radio ad at the time. “We need Trey’s conservative leadership to help turn back the Obama agenda.”


Now, a few years later, McConnell is up for re-election, and Paul has endorsed him in that bid.


In the 2012 cycle, Cruz was one of SCF’s first endorsements, and the group came in to help Cruz topple the establishment-connected David Dewhurst before most other conservative groups helped. Cruz and McConnell have been at odds as of late over how to go about attacking Obamacare.


This attack on the SCF, which was instrumental in electing Paul and Cruz, and calling candidates the SCF has supported like them “laughably bad candidates” comes after McConnell’s campaign rankled Kentucky Tea Parties by calling those which supported Bevin “fringe.”


In addition to now-Sens. Paul and Cruz, SCF’s endorsed candidates who have won general elections also include now-Sens. Jeff Flake (R-AZ), Deb Fischer (R-NE), Marco Rubio (R-FL), Pat Toomey (R-PA), Ron Johnson (R-WI), and Mike Lee (R-UT).






    








Breitbart Feed



Mitch McConnell Attacks Conservative Group for Endorsing Primary Opponent

Friday, October 18, 2013

Video: McConnell wants an end to budget standoffs


posted at 12:01 pm on October 18, 2013 by Ed Morrissey



Mitch McConnell has had enough of shutdowns and standoffs, in large part because they don’t work to Republican advantage in the current political environment.  When National Review’s Robert Costa asked whether Republicans will push the next budget deadlines to another shutdown, McConnell explicitly rejected the idea, and said, “There’s no education in the second kick of a mule.”  Instead, the Senate Minority Leader plans to protect the sequester savings and look for other ways to cut deficit spending in the next round without giving Democrats a PR opportunity closer to the midterms:


COSTA: You said we’d be back here in January and February dealing with the same issues. Is another shutdown possible?


MCCONNELL: No. One of my favorite sayings is an old Kentucky saying, “There’s no education in the second kick of a mule.” The first kick of the mule was in 1995; the second one was the last 16 days. A government shutdown is off the table. We’re not going to do it. …


COSTA: How does the party get beyond this mess? It seems like you’re having a civil war over tactics.


MCCONNELL: Well, for one, we’re not going to do this again in connection with the debt ceiling or with a government shutdown. Look, it’s unlikely the Democratic Senate or Democratic president will do much on Obamacare. We did a minor little income-verification thing, an anti-fraud thing, but beyond that, it’s unlikely. That’s the bad news. The good news is that it’s front and center for the 2014 election. Of the things we can predict for 2014, Obamacare will be front and center, especially in the red states where we could pick up seats.



That will take some expectation-setting, and not just among Republicans on Capitol Hill:


COSTA: Looking ahead, what’s your message to your colleagues about reasonable expectations for divided government?


MCCONNELL: Thanks to the nature of the Senate, unless you’re at 40, you’re not irrelevant. We were irrelevant a few years ago, frankly, except for keeping unity for things we opposed, like Obamacare. But since then, we’ve been a consequential minority. But you’re only a consequential minority if you can hold together 41 people. Thanks to my colleagues, we’ve had the ability at these critical moments to try to get as good an outcome as we could, given the cards that we’ve been dealt. But one thing that’s made it hard is the inability of the House of Representatives, on these occasions, to send us legislation that’s more robust, proposals that have more of the things that I and my colleagues would prefer. We’d have been in a much stronger position if they had been able to do that.



The question might be whether there was education in the first kick. Heritage Action, one of the groups that pushed the defund/shutdown strategy, isn’t so sure that Republicans should take it off the table.  Conn Carroll interviewed Heritage Action communications director Dan Holler, who didn’t want to get pinned down on that strategy:


Townhall: So are you going to push to defund and shutdown the government again in January?


Holler: You know one of the things I think that became clear over the past several weeks is that Democrats have tremendous political unity. And somehow, contrary to what the politics of their state would dictate, these guys held together.


They need to feel pressure so they can begin to crack. I don’t think you can apply real pressure to them without some sort of legislative strategy, because the grassroots outside of Washington are not going to be engaged without real action. So there has to be a legislative component to that.


I think it is too early to say what that strategy should look like. There is a lot of stuff in flux right now. The Ryan-Murray budget conference. What comes out of that, if anything. That puts things in a holding pattern right now. But we’ll see.


There will undoubtedly be opportunities where leverage exists to do something about Obamacare. And when they arise, we have to take them.


Townhall: So, that’s a “we’ll see” on a shutdown in January?


Holler: Yeah, I mean I don’t think anybody has really figured out beyond this week what is going to happen. If there is an opportunity to leverage a situation, to try and protect the American people from Obamacare, I think that is worth doing.


Before you can do that though, you have to move opinion and put pressure on these red state Democrats. Maybe over the next 90 days they will hear so many horror stories from constituents that they will realize their position is unsustainable. Hopefully that is the case. We don’t know.



Larry Kudlow notes in this interview with Costa that the sequester is the Republican ace in the hole — and one authored in part by McConnell himself, so he’s not likely to fold on it.  Costa reaffirms, though, that McConnell has no desire to do another shutdown, either in the near future or even further out:


Heading into the midterms, Republicans have to re-establish their bona fides as a responsible governing party.  The shutdown wasn’t so much of the problem as flirting with the debt ceiling was, in terms of perception — and that’s what counts in elections.  One can argue that a shutdown can demonstrate the arbitrary nature of federal power, as well as the ways in which it can be maliciously wielded for its own sake, and this shutdown certainly did that much.  But a return engagement won’t play well for Republicans, and Democrats are simply not going to dismantle ObamaCare under any conditions, not through defunding or repeal. By that time, though, they may wish they could.




Hot Air



Video: McConnell wants an end to budget standoffs

OHIO CLOCK TICK-TOCK: ANATOMY OF A SHUTDOWN – The Shutdown Winners Club – McConnell: No repeat in January – COOK REPORT SHIFTS 14 RACES IN DEMS" DIRECTION – Panda Cam is back!


(swong@politico.com or @scottwongDC)


OHIO CLOCK TICK-TOCK: ANATOMY OF A SHUTDOWN – POLITICO’s John Bresnahan, Manu Raju, Jake Sherman and Carrie Budoff Brown spoke to dozens of sources on Capitol Hill and at the White House for this behind-the-scenes account: “House Speaker John Boehner just wanted to sneak out of the White House for a smoke. But President Barack Obama pulled him aside for a grilling. Obama wanted to know why they were in the second day of a government shutdown that the speaker had repeatedly and publicly pledged to avoid. ‘John, what happened?’ Obama asked, according to people briefed on the Oct. 2 conversation. ‘I got overrun, that’s what happened,’ Boehner said. …


– “It became clear almost from the moment the government closed Oct. 1 that it would stay that way for awhile. The White House received intelligence from an unlikely source: Boehner’s former chief of staff Barry Jackson. A lobbyist who spoke with Jackson passed on a detailed download to top administration officials. Chief among the insights was that Boehner would have to fight right up to the Oct. 17 debt limit deadline. Shortly after the White House meeting Oct. 2, a ragged Boehner filled in his closest allies about his talk with Obama, telling them that the president had confronted him in the room that former President George W. Bush called the ‘Lewinsky suite.’ …


– “Sitting around a conference table in the Roosevelt Room, Obama hammered the Republicans about reopening the government, demanding repeatedly to know ‘what is it going to take’ to get it done. A frustrated Ryan finally stood up and urged them to come together and craft something lasting. But what senior administration officials aides heard was a Freudian slip. ‘We’re going to have six weeks to negotiate the debt limit,’ Ryan said. Nobody challenged him, but White House aides mentally filed it away. …


– “Even though [Sen. Susan] Collins was picking up support, she never had the full buy-in of party leaders from either side. It was a veteran Republican senator, Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, who McConnell instead leaned on closely for some critical advice. Several sources said that Collins was upset when she learned Alexander was given this role, given that she had been working aggressively to cut a deal. McConnell aides later said Collins was critical to the end-result and nothing was meant as a slight against her. But Alexander was important because his politics are more conservative than Collins’ and he has a tight relationship with Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Reid’s closest ally.” http://politi.co/H4RcE8


– POLITICO Editor in chief John Harris declares President Obama and the Democratic and Republican leaders of the House and Senate as members of the “Shutdown Winners Club.” “The past three weeks are widely, and correctly, understood as a reflection of the weakness of Washington leaders, who in both parties hoped to avoid the confrontation that just ended but proved powerless to prevent it. At the same time, however, the episode clearly highlighted that these leaders got to their positions for a reason — through skill at partisan maneuver and acutely sensitive instincts for self-protection.”  http://politi.co/18s33Wp


– The end of the shutdown means the Senate’s beloved Ohio Clock is ticking again: http://politi.co/19b7yEv


– And the National Zoo’s Panda Cam is back: http://wapo.st/15LVLfb. Watch the pandas here: http://bit.ly/1dQ9PEI


** A message from TransCanada: Tired of the U.S getting energy from unfriendly countries halfway around the  world?   The TransCanada Keystone XL pipeline can provide  energy from a  friendly, reliable neighbor, and with increased domestic production can end reliance on unstable energy sources.  Learn more at www.Keystone-XL.com.


McCONNELL: CRUZ STRATEGY ‘WAS NOT A SMART PLAY’ – Manu Raju caught up with the Senate Republican leader a day after the deal: “At the end of the day, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell says he had no good option in the 16-day government shutdown fight. House Speaker John Boehner’s strategy collapsed. Ted Cruz’s push to use a shutdown to defund Obamacare was ‘not a smart play’ and a ‘tactical error,’ he said. And the country was staring at the threat of a prolonged shutdown and a potentially disastrous default on a nearly $ 17 trillion national debt. Using a football analogy, McConnell said he got the ball on his own two-yard-line with a ‘shaky’ offensive line and had to cut a last-ditch deal with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to end the crisis, no matter how unappealing to many in his party. Despite acting as a chief deal-maker in recent years during government crises, it was unclear the role McConnell would play until the final days of the bitter fight.


– “‘Given the card I was dealt at that point, what I had hoped to have achieved was to punt the ball to a better place on the field without raising taxes or busting the [spending] caps,’ McConnell told POLITICO in a phone interview Thursday. ‘We got off track with a tactical error earlier starting in July and August that diverted our attention away from what was achievable,’ McConnell said bluntly of the defund Obamacare push. ‘And so we’ll be back at it in January and February, which is why the best you can say is, ‘It’s a punt.’’” http://politi.co/1atqJar


– McConnell told National Review’s Robert Costa that Republicans will not push another shutdown in another few months: “One of my favorite sayings is an old Kentucky saying, ‘There’s no education in the second kick of a mule.’” http://bit.ly/19UvQW3


BUT TED CRUZ refused to rule out another shutdown in an interview with ABC News’ Jonathan Karl: http://bit.ly/1i1t9Rz


– National Journal’s Beth Reinhard and Alex Roarty have dueling stories titled: “Ted Cruz is Finished” and “Ted Cruz is Just Getting Started”: http://bit.ly/18qaa1M and http://bit.ly/18qacGN


MINORITY LEADER NANCY PELOSI asks if the GOP “temper tantrum” was worth a $ 24 billion hit to the economy. The Hill: http://bit.ly/17wsoLv


CAN BUDGET CONFERENCE DELIVER? – Jonathan Weisman and Jackie Calmes write on A1 of the New York Times: “Congressional negotiators on Thursday plunged into difficult budget talks to avoid a repeat crisis within months, and quickly agreed to lower their sights from the sort of grand bargain that has eluded the two parties for three years. After approval late Wednesday of the agreement ending the standoff, the deal-making mantle shifted overnight from the leaders of the Senate to the Budget Committee leaders, Senator Patty Murray, Democrat of Washington, and Representative Paul D. Ryan, Republican of Wisconsin, two less senior lawmakers who nonetheless could make very effective salespeople since they command loyal followings in their parties. The political pressure lifted as well, for now.  … The question of what a new House-Senate budget conference can deliver by its Dec. 13 deadline — in time for Congress to act by Jan. 15 on funding to keep the government open — remained the subject of deep skepticism, well earned by past failures at reaching so-called grand bargains for deficit reduction and spending investments in the past three years.” http://nyti.ms/1c1BHdP


GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, OCT. 18, 2013, 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 @LaurenTrager and @jamesoliphant.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The House is out and will return next week. The Senate is on recess until Monday, Oct. 28.


COOK REPORT SHIFTS 14  HOUSE RACES IN DEMS’ DIRECTION – Cook’s David Wasserman writes: “Mostly as a result of the damage House Republicans sustained during the 16-day government shutdown, we are making changes to our ratings in 15 House seats, all but one in Democrats’ direction. Democrats still have a very uphill climb to a majority, and it’s doubtful they can sustain this month’s momentum for another year. But Republicans’ actions have energized Democratic fundraising and recruiting efforts and handed Democrats a potentially effective message.”


Ratings Changes: CA-31 Gary Miller (R) Toss Up to Lean D; CA-41 Mark Takano (D) Likely D to Solid D; CO-06 Mike Coffman (R) Lean R to Toss Up; FL-22 Lois Frankel (D) Likely D to Solid D; MI-03 Justin Amash (R) Solid R to Likely R; MI-07 Tim Walberg (R) Likely R to Lean R; MT-AL Steve Daines (R) Solid R to Likely R; NE-02 Lee Terry (R) Likely R to Lean R; NJ-02 Frank LoBiondo (R) Solid R to Likely R; NJ-03 Jon Runyan (R) Solid R to Likely R; NM-02 Steve Pearce (R) Solid R to Likely R; NY-23 Tom Reed (R) Likely R to Lean R; OH-06 Bill Johnson (R) Likely R to Lean R; PA-08 Mike Fitzpatrick (R) Likely R to Lean R; WV-03 Nick Rahall (D) Lean D to Toss Up. Subscription required: http://bit.ly/19V18w4


DCCC CITES SHUTDOWN IN RECORD SEPTEMBER HAUL – Alex Isenstadt reports for the hometown paper: “The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee raised an eye-popping $ 8.4 million in September, the month preceding the government shutdown, according to figures provided to POLITICO and to be made public Friday. The figure stands as the DCCC’s best September ever in a year before an election, and is nearly double the committee’s August haul. Of the total, $ 3 million came from online donations — making it the top off-year online month for any party committee in history. Some $ 2 million alone came in the six days after Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) launched his 21-hour anti-Obamacare marathon speech.” http://politi.co/H1kOC9


HUDDLE FIRST LOOK: NRSC HITS LANDRIEU FOR OBAMACARE SPEECH – Republicans will blast a news release later this morning knocking Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) for a floor speech this week in which she suggested her 2014 race will be a referendum on Obamacare – a law she voted for. “We did not wake up one morning and declare this the law. The people of the United States declared this through us as their Representatives. If they do not like it, they can unelect us. Believe me, they will have a great chance because I am up for reelection right now. They will be able to do that. But that is the way you do it,” she said. The NRSC cites polls that show more than 60 percent of Louisianans oppose Obamacare. Here’s the release: http://bit.ly/1bDcTo5.


CONSERVATIVE GROUPS RALLY AROUND COCHRAN TEA-PARTY CHALLENGER – The Washington Post’s Sean Sullivan: “A trio of conservative groups announced Thursday they will back Mississippi state Sen. Chris McDaniel (R), who is running for the seat held by Sen. Thad Cochran (R). The Club For Growth, Senate Conservatives Fund and the Madison Project each announced endorsements. ‘Chris McDaniel is a constitutional conservative who will fight to stop Obamacare, balance the budget, and get America working again,’ said Senate Conservatives Fund executive director Matt Hoskins. Added Club For Growth President Chris Chocola: ‘Senator Chris McDaniel represents the next generation of conservative leadership that Mississippi Republicans are waiting for.’ Cochran has not yet definitively said whether he will run for reelection.”


THE ROGERS REPORT: RETURN OF THE CHAIRMEN? – David Rogers explains how we got into this big mess in the first place: “The rise of the modern House speaker began 40 years ago as party caucuses became more unified and members demanded stronger central leadership — often at the expense of committee chairmen. The late Tip O’Neill, the first of the modern speakers, approached this task with caution. Newt Gingrich went a huge step further, even channeling Oliver Cromwell. Nancy Pelosi created her own global warming panel. And upon becoming speaker in 2011, John Boehner wasted no time before kicking the House Appropriations Committee out of its Capitol offices.


– “But this concentration of power in the speakership comes at a price. It diminishes not just the chairmen but the speaker’s identity as a constitutional officer for the whole House. It tilts the scales more in favor of party interests and away from the institution. Instead of presiding over legislation, speakers take ownership. More and more, measures are rewritten on the second floor of the Capitol, not committee offices. … All this history comes to bear, looking back at the bedlam of the past few weeks. And what Washington saw was the concentrated power of the modern speakership turned onto itself — reduced to dysfunction by deep divisions inside the GOP.” http://politi.co/1gpD1ZW


PAUL’S SOFTER SIDE EMERGES IN SHUTDOWN FIGHT – Katie Glueck reports for POLITICO: “Rand Paul is no wacko bird. Just ask Lindsey Graham. ‘Rand Paul’s been incredibly responsible,’ Graham (R-S.C.), who has clashed with Paul in the past, said just before the Senate voted to end the government shutdown. ‘I’ve seen a side of Rand I haven’t seen before. That’s one of the pluses of this whole deal. He’s been great.’ According to many moderate GOP observers, the Kentucky Republican and likely 2016 contender has deftly maneuvered the past several weeks of shutdown politics, toeing the conservative line without alienating the rest of the party — especially compared to his frequent sidekick, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas). A key challenge for Paul if he runs would be to make himself acceptable to — if not win over — traditional Republicans. His low-key approach to the shutdown and debt limit drama could help that cause.” http://politi.co/1gQGvm3


OBAMA TO TAP EX-PENTAGON LAWYER AS HOMELAND SECURITY CHIEF – The AP’s Alicia Caldwell writes that the pick marks a shift from immigration to national security: “President Barack Obama’s selection of a former top Pentagon lawyer to head the Homeland Security Department suggests the agency will be stepping back from its preoccupation with immigration to focus more on protecting the nation from attack. Jeh C. Johnson, if confirmed by the Senate, would replace Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, who left the DHS last month to become president of the University of California system. Obama was expected to announce Johnson’s nomination [at 2 p.m.] Friday. Unlike Napolitano, Johnson has spent most of his career dealing with weighty national security issues as a top military lawyer. Issues he handled included ending the military’s don’t-ask-don’t-tell policy for gay service members and changing military commissions to try terrorism suspects rather than using civilian courts. He also oversaw the escalation of the use of unmanned drone strikes during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as general counsel at the Defense Department.” http://bo.st/17Q7aHE


THURSDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER Neil Townsend was first to correctly answer that the brother of President William Howard Taft, former Rep. Charles Phelps Taft, was an owner of the Chicago Cubs the last time they won the World Series in 1908.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Claude Marx has one more question for this week: The son of President Theodore Roosevelt’s secretary went on to become a newspaper publisher and power broker. Name the father and son, as well as the newspaper? 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/


** A message from TransCanada: Along with increased domestic energy production, the TransCanada Keystone XL pipeline can help end America’s reliance on energy from  unfriendly countries.  It will also create thousands of jobs and boost the American economy by $ 20 billion.  All with 21,000 remote sensors and 24/7 monitoring that can cut off the flow of oil within minutes. The choice is clear: the TransCanada Keystone XL pipeline means a more secure energy future for the United States.  Let’s get it done.  Learn more at  www.Keystone-XL.com




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



OHIO CLOCK TICK-TOCK: ANATOMY OF A SHUTDOWN – The Shutdown Winners Club – McConnell: No repeat in January – COOK REPORT SHIFTS 14 RACES IN DEMS" DIRECTION – Panda Cam is back!

Monday, October 14, 2013

Pressure is on Reid, McConnell to make a deal

Harry Reid (left) and Mitch McConnell are shown in this composite photo. | AP Photos

On Sunday, Reid said he and McConnell had a ‘productive’ discussion. | AP Photos





Time is running out.


All eyes are on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) as they hold last-minute talks to prevent the U.S. government from defaulting on its $ 16.7 trillion debt and potentially plunging the country back into a recession.







Any bipartisan agreement needs to come together very soon – either Monday or Tuesday – or else the nation runs a serious risk of running out of the ability to borrow money. In 2011, a last-minute deal to lift the debt limit resulted in a credit downgrade of U.S. debt.


(PHOTOS: 25 great shutdown quotes)


After a weekend legislative session in the Senate and House, talks appear to be at a standstill, largely because of disagreements over future spending levels. That’s leading to a sharp downtick in the U.S. market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened down nearly 100 points. Overseas markets were down slightly overnight, but the chorus of calls from foreign governments for U.S. leaders to end their fiscal infighting is getting louder by the day.


That the federal government is closed for the 14th straight day is getting lost in this debate, as hundreds of thousands of federal workers remained furloughed until Congress and the White House can reach a deal to end the partisan stalemate.


On Sunday, Reid said he and McConnell had a “productive” discussion, but no deal was reached. Some Senate Democrats are pushing to end the sequester spending levels enacted under the 2011 Budget Control Act, a non-starter for McConnell and House Republicans.


McConnell is also aiming to change President Barack Obama’s signature health care law, but Republican efforts to repeal or defund Obamacare have largely ended.


(Also on POLITICO: The ire next time)


On another track, House Republican leadership is readying itself to lift the debt ceiling for six weeks. House GOP aides stress that no decisions have been made, but this legislation is unlikely to be “clean” – meaning it will contain a number of conservative policies attached. Options under consideration include language to cancel health insurance subsidies for members of Congress, their aides and the White House, and an amendment to tighten requirements for health-insurance related subsidies.


House Republicans are expected to meet Tuesday morning to discuss their options. A topsy-turvy day in financial markets could create some pressure to act. The Senate will hold a vote on judicial nominations Monday afternoon, in order to have all senators in one place at one time.


If something comes out of the Senate, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) will be in a difficult spot. The House and Senate have been miles apart all year, and Boehner will likely have to put something on the floor that will pass with minimal Republican support.


Boehner has a few options. He could pass his own bill, which would face an uncertain future in the Senate. He could pass a Senate deal, if it comes together — a legislative defeat for House Republicans. Or he could change what comes up in the Senate, and send it back — that scenario seems most likely, since House Republicans will want their imprimatur on whatever becomes law.




POLITICO – Congress



Pressure is on Reid, McConnell to make a deal

Pressure is on Reid, McConnell to make a deal

Harry Reid (left) and Mitch McConnell are shown in this composite photo. | AP Photos

On Sunday, Reid said he and McConnell had a ‘productive’ discussion. | AP Photos





Time is running out.


All eyes are on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) as they hold last-minute talks to prevent the U.S. government from defaulting on its $ 16.7 trillion debt and potentially plunging the country back into a recession.







Any bipartisan agreement needs to come together very soon – either Monday or Tuesday – or else the nation runs a serious risk of running out of the ability to borrow money. In 2011, a last-minute deal to lift the debt limit resulted in a credit downgrade of U.S. debt.


(PHOTOS: 25 great shutdown quotes)


After a weekend legislative session in the Senate and House, talks appear to be at a standstill, largely because of disagreements over future spending levels. That’s leading to a sharp downtick in the U.S. market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened down nearly 100 points. Overseas markets were down slightly overnight, but the chorus of calls from foreign governments for U.S. leaders to end their fiscal infighting is getting louder by the day.


That the federal government is closed for the 14th straight day is getting lost in this debate, as hundreds of thousands of federal workers remained furloughed until Congress and the White House can reach a deal to end the partisan stalemate.


On Sunday, Reid said he and McConnell had a “productive” discussion, but no deal was reached. Some Senate Democrats are pushing to end the sequester spending levels enacted under the 2011 Budget Control Act, a non-starter for McConnell and House Republicans.


McConnell is also aiming to change President Barack Obama’s signature health care law, but Republican efforts to repeal or defund Obamacare have largely ended.


(Also on POLITICO: The ire next time)


On another track, House Republican leadership is readying itself to lift the debt ceiling for six weeks. House GOP aides stress that no decisions have been made, but this legislation is unlikely to be “clean” – meaning it will contain a number of conservative policies attached. Options under consideration include language to cancel health insurance subsidies for members of Congress, their aides and the White House, and an amendment to tighten requirements for health-insurance related subsidies.


House Republicans are expected to meet Tuesday morning to discuss their options. A topsy-turvy day in financial markets could create some pressure to act. The Senate will hold a vote on judicial nominations Monday afternoon, in order to have all senators in one place at one time.


If something comes out of the Senate, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) will be in a difficult spot. The House and Senate have been miles apart all year, and Boehner will likely have to put something on the floor that will pass with minimal Republican support.


Boehner has a few options. He could pass his own bill, which would face an uncertain future in the Senate. He could pass a Senate deal, if it comes together — a legislative defeat for House Republicans. Or he could change what comes up in the Senate, and send it back — that scenario seems most likely, since House Republicans will want their imprimatur on whatever becomes law.




POLITICO – Congress



Pressure is on Reid, McConnell to make a deal

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Sen. McConnell to vote "no" on Syria resolution


(AP) — Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell says he will oppose President Barack Obama’s resolution authorizing a military strike against Syria.


The Kentucky Republican says no vital national security risk is at play and there are too many unanswered questions about the United States’ long-term strategy in Syria.


McConnell says the proposal is, quote, “utterly detached from a wider strategy to end the civil war” in Syria.


McConnell becomes the first congressional leader to oppose Obama on his plans to punish Syria’s President Bashar Assad. The White House accuses Assad of using chemical weapons against his own people.


Congressional support for a strike has been weakening even as lawmakers scramble to respond to a Russian proposal to secure Assad’s chemical arsenal.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Sen. McConnell to vote "no" on Syria resolution

Friday, August 16, 2013

McConnell: "Handful Of Things" In Obamacare Are "Probably OK" (VIDEO)


Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said in an interview published Wednesday that a “handful of things” in Obamacare “probably are OK.”


“I mean, there are a handful of things in the 2,700 page bill that probably are OK,” he told the Kentucky TV station WYMT. “But that doesn’t warrant a 2,700 page takeover of all American health care.”


McConnell, who is spending the month at home campaigning for his 2014 re-election bid, called Obamacare “single worst piece of legislation passed in the last 50 years in the country. We need to get rid of it, and I think we get rid of it piece by piece.”


In an ordinary political environment, McConnell’s remarks would hardly be newsworthy. A bill as long and complicated as the Affordable Care Act, which despite its maze of regulations is fundamentally modeled on free-market ideas and includes many Republican amendments, will surely have some elements a GOP lawmaker can support.


While he didn’t explain which provisions are acceptable to him, last year various Republicans voiced support for popular Obamacare components such as protections for people with preexisting conditions, letting Americans under 27 remain on a parent’s insurance plan and closing the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap for seniors.


But the political environment surrounding Obamacare is anything but ordinary — with the ferocious Republican assault on the bill, the party’s exaggerated warnings that it will ruin American freedom, and the base’s determination to scrap every last bit of it. So McConnell’s remarks quickly became fodder for his conservative primary challenger, Matt Bevin, who accused the GOP leader’s of “flip-flop[ping] on repealing Obamacare in its entirety.”


“We have to do whatever it takes to repeal Obamacare, and if we can’t repeal it, we have a responsibility to the American people to defund it,” Bevin said in a statement Thursday, responding to McConnell’s remarks. “If Mitch McConnell had ever worked in the private sector, he might understand that. If Senator McConnell is not willing to act to end Obamacare, he needs to get out of the way.”


That McConnell is being attacked for his remark illustrates the box Republicans have put themselves in while feeding conservatives’ greatest fears about the Affordable Care Act. That same dynamic is evident as right-leaning groups mount an all-out push to defund Obamacare in a resolution to keep government open after Sept. 30 — an idea that veteran Republicans like McConnell recognize is politically infeasible and self-defeating.



Sahil Kapur

Sahil Kapur is TPM’s senior congressional reporter and Supreme Court correspondent. His articles covering politics and public policy have been published in The Huffington Post, The Guardian and The New Republic. He can be reached at sahil [at] talkingpointsmemo.com.





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TPM News



McConnell: "Handful Of Things" In Obamacare Are "Probably OK" (VIDEO)

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

McConnell: Gov"t Shutdown Won"t Stop Obamacare


A government shutdown won’t stop the nation’s new healthcare law, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday.


At a healthcare forum in Corbin, Ky., the Republican leader insisted, “I’m for stopping Obamacare, but shutting down the government will not stop Obamacare,” according to WYMT reporter Tanner Hesterberg, who attended the event and tweeted the remark.


Republicans are divided over whether to threaten or force a government shutdown over funding for controversial Affordable Care Act, and McConnell has come under attack from his 2014 primary challenger, Matt Bevin, for not going after Obamacare forcefully enough.


Several conservative senators — including Ted Cruz of Texas, Mike Lee of Utah and Marco Rubio of Florida — have said the GOP shouldn’t vote to fund the government unless they can stop money from flowing to Obamacare, though North Carolina Republican Richard Burr last month called the move the “dumbest idea” he’d ever heard.


And House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) last week conceded conservatives don’t have the votes to force a defunding of Obamacare in legislation to avoid a shutdown by Oct. 1.


McConnell’s stance is the first public position he’s taken on the shutdown threat, The Hill reported.


But his statement affirms what the Congressional Research Service has found — that a government shutdown would not impact major portions of the law that will continue to get implementation funding that the law provides outside the appropriations process.


McConnell also told the healthcare forum the U.S. has “the greatest healthcare in the world — unless we [legislators] mess it up,” Hesterberg tweeted.


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



McConnell: Gov"t Shutdown Won"t Stop Obamacare

Sunday, August 11, 2013

McConnell demands unity on fiscal issues

Mitch McConnell is pictured. | AP Photo

He sees a winning political message heading into the fall before the 2014 midterms. | AP Photo





On guns, immigration and controversial nominees, Senate Republicans’ story this year is one of division.


But on fiscal issues, GOP leadership is demanding a different ending — one of harmony rather than discord.







Ahead of fall fiscal talks that already have Washington nervous about a government shutdown, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is clamping down on Republicans with a firm message to stick with him on spending.


(WATCH: Candy Crowley talks post-vacation agenda for Congress, Obama)


With the nearly unanimous GOP rejection last week of Senate Democrats’ transportation funding bill, McConnell senses an opportunity to dig in on an issue that highlights the most elemental difference between the two parties: the size of government.


The GOP leader sees a winning political message heading into the fall before the 2014 midterms. Showing himself as the leader of a conference bent on spending cuts as he runs for reelection in conservative Kentucky won’t hurt either.


To McConnell, Republicans are simply following the law established by the Budget Control Act — which created the sequester’s automatic spending cuts — to trim billions in spending each year while Democrats are the party of “tax and spend,” turning their backs on the last big bipartisan budget deal. A vote for the transportation bill would have violated Congress’s promise to stick to the agreed-upon spending levels, Republicans say.


(Also on POLITICO: Senate THUD battle pitted Mitch McConnell against Susan Collins)


“The story line would have been that Congress on a bipartisan basis walked away from the Budget Control Act,” McConnell said.


But GOP unanimity while staring down a government shutdown won’t be easy.


A small group of Senate Republicans are participating in open-ended budget talks with the White House. A number of Republicans in both chambers, including House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), want to replace the sequester before further cuts hit in January. And voting records show that Senate Republicans are more fractured than Democrats.


After GOP splits on guns, immigration, the farm bill, an Internet sales tax bill and some of President Barack Obama’s most controversial nominees, Democrats doubt Republicans can coalesce around anything anymore. Top McConnell aides argue those are issues for which the “breakdowns are not traditional” — or strictly along party lines. In comparison, fiscal issues offer a chance to draw a “very clear line” between the two parties, an aide said.


(Also on POLITICO: Congress leaves with big problems unsolved)


The fall spending showdown is of utmost importance to Republican leaders because it involves must-pass legislation, pegged to the hard deadline of Sept. 30. Immigration, farm and the sales tax bills are all stalled in the House with no clear path forward — but they lack the urgency of government funding or raising the debt ceiling, two issues Republicans may try to pair together in order to increase their leverage for more spending cuts.


“The spending one is not in doubt: There will be a law,” said a top McConnell aide.


The strategy of presenting a united front on spending smells of desperation given months of division, Democratic Senate aides say. They believe six to 10 Republicans can be wooed to support levels higher than the $ 967 billion in discretionary spending that GOP leadership prefers, especially if a spending bill is tailored to some of their interests and replaces some or all of the sequester. Arizona Sen. John McCain is worried about the sequester hurting fire preparedness. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham frets about national security. Democrats see the unease as an opportunity.


“There are a number of senators who have broken away here who are trying to do the right thing,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said last week.




POLITICO – Congress



McConnell demands unity on fiscal issues

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points -- Harry Reid Has a Good Week, Mitch McConnell Does Not




As usual this week, there were several stories the mainstream media was obsessing over which I am just largely going to ignore. The most inane of these was, of course: “This just in! It gets hot in the summer! Who knew?!?” The most ridiculous one was the foofaroo over Rolling Stone using a photograph on its cover which many other media outlets had used for front-page stuff, but which somehow Rolling Stone wasn’t supposed to use, for some inexplicable reason. Even though — on the same cover — they called the guy “a monster.” Lots of out-of-context outrage ensued, including one call to buy the magazine and then burn it. Um, yeah, that’ll show them! Just hand over your money, in protest!


There was one big story this week that even President Obama chimed in on, but I really feel that just about everything that could be said about the Trayvon Martin / George Zimmerman case already has been said by a multitude of others (see: the entire rest of the media universe), already.


I guess the real prize in “media chasing shiny, shiny idiocy instead of reporting the news” this week, however, was the continuing coverage (“No news yet, but we’re not going to let that get in the way of our continuing updates!”) of a royal heir who is about to be born in Great Britain — while all but ignoring the newsworthy thing the currently-reigning monarch actually did this week. With little fanfare and little fuss, the Queen signed the legalization of gay marriage in Britain. But you wouldn’t know it, watching the teevee. Sigh.


Speaking of media idiocy, a television station in San Francisco broadcast an incredibly tasteless and racist bit about the deadly airline crash, and has yet to announce that anyone’s been fired over the incident. How many editors or producers or, for that matter, human beings with a brain read that list of names, before it went on the air? All of them should be now looking for work, since it was so obvious that someone was punking them. Too bad Saturday Night Live is off for the summer, they would have had a field day with this one.


In other news you missed on television, the former leader of Mexico is teaming up to launch an international effort to legalize marijuana.


Pro-immigration Republicans seem to be getting ready to do battle during Town Hall Season next month, since the House has pretty much decided to punt on immigration until after August. This could get interesting, as the pros and the antis scream at each other all summer long.


New York released some very good news on Obamacare this week, while the House voted for the eleventy-zillionth time to repeal Obamacare. Since the vote (like all the others) was meaningless, New Yorkers who buy insurance on the open market will still be able to get a reduction of over fifty percent, starting this October. President Obama is starting to tout the successes of Obamacare, too, which will likely intensify as we get closer to the opening of the insurance exchanges later this year.


What else? Liz Cheney’s running for Senate in Wyoming, which I actually applauded earlier this week. Oh, and there was some pretty big news in the Senate….


Most Impressive Democrat of the Week


Which brings us to our awards portion of the program. While Elizabeth Warren provided an amusing takedown of some talking heads on CNBC, she then had to literally take down the clip from her website. She still deserves an Honorable Mention for attempting to educate the public, though.


But there was really only one obvious candidate this week for the coveted MIDOTW “Golden Backbone” award. Because Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid had a very good week indeed. Monday, he held an extraordinary political meeting (meaning it was off the record) with 98 members of the Senate attending. Reid did not “blink.” Instead, he told them he was fully prepared to use what has been called the “nuclear option” to move President Obama’s non-judicial nominees forward, by changing the rules of the filibuster. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell didn’t budge, but a deal was struck behind McConnell’s back by none other than John McCain. Choose your metaphor: McCain drank McConnell’s milkshake, or maybe handed McConnell his ass, perhaps? However you choose to put it, the nuclear threat was averted, and Republicans agreed to let the nominees go forward — starting gloriously with Richard Cordray becoming the first confirmed leader of the newly-formed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Republicans had vowed not to confirm anybody to this post, continuing their tantrum over the agency being created in the first place. So Cordray’s confirmation was an enormous victory in a fight that has lasted over two years now.


For that alone, Harry Reid deserves the Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week award. But the fun didn’t stop there. A bipartisan deal on student loans was reportedly struck as well, and will be voted on next week. Only about three or four weeks late, but hey, this is the Senate we’re talking about. But breaking the logjam on appointments seems to have also broken the “obstruct everything forever” Republican strategy, which certainly gives some optimism for all the work they have left to do this year. OK, maybe not an overwhelming amount of optimism, but still: the weaker McConnell gets, the better.


Of course, for Democrats, this is the really good news making the conventional wisdom rounds on the Washington cocktail party circuit — that Mitch McConnell is losing his grip on his own party’s caucus. Nothing shows this more than the fact that during a meeting McConnell held in order to explain how the filibuster deal went down, Senator Bob Corker — one of McConnell’s fellow Republicans — literally called “bullshit” on him.


So, all around, a pretty good week both for Democrats in general and for Harry Reid in particular. And for the Senate, as an institution. They’re certainly looking better right now than the House, where John Boehner is currently twisting himself in knots in an attempt to explain why Congress isn’t getting anything done, while The Huffington Post helpfully points out that this is right before they’re going to take a month off and then return to work a strenuous nine whole days in September.


For getting his chamber to accomplish some things, and for showing the House how it’s supposed to work, though, our Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week is none other than Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Well done, Harry. The moral of the story is: this is the type of week you can enjoy again, if you continue to show some backbone when dealing with Republicans. Food for thought.


[Congratulate Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on his Senate contact page, to let him know you appreciate his efforts.]


Most Disappointing Democrat of the Week


While San Diego mayor Bob Filner is still hanging on to his job as tightly as he can hug it (so to speak), Nancy Pelosi was apparently horrified to hear him (accurately) described as her former colleague.


But in fresher disappointing news, Eliot Spitzer showed a stunning amount of hypocrisy this week. Now, in politics, there is a general rule. That rule states that when you use an issue as a weapon against an opponent in a campaign, you had better be squeaky-clean on the issue yourself. “Family values” types caught in sex scandals deserve a whole lot of scorn, to use but one example. Spitzer never was “holier than thou” on the issue, however, so his own sexcapades may possibly be forgiven by New York voters — because there wasn’t all that big an element of hypocrisy.


On the subject of tax returns, however, Spitzer deserves all the scorn he is now getting. Spitzer’s opponent has released five years of tax returns to the public, and called on Spitzer to do the same. Spitzer was one of those who heavily criticized Mitt Romney for not releasing his tax returns publicly, a few years ago. But now that he made big bucks as a media darling, Eliot Spitzer doesn’t feel it’s appropriate to release his full tax returns. He did let reporters look at a heavily-edited and incomplete version of his last two years’ taxes, but that’s as far as Spitzer is now willing to go, it seems.


This is beyond disappointing — it is nothing more than craven hypocrisy. Because you can’t wield an issue like a bludgeon against others and then shrug and say it’s not that important when it comes to yourself. It doesn’t pass the smell test, sorry.


For not putting his tax returns where his mouth was, not so long ago, Eliot Spitzer is our Most Disappointing Democrat Of The Week this week.


[As a rule, we do not link to campaign websites, so you"ll have to find Spitzer"s contact information yourselves in order to let him know what you think of his actions.]


Friday Talking Points


Volume 265 (7/19/13)


Because we are getting close, as mentioned, to Town Hall Season, I thought it’d be a good week for Democrats to support Obama’s renewed push to educate the public about the benefits of his signature legislation. The first four of these strike the same note, over and over, while the fifth is just pure snark for the fun of it. The last two veer off to other subjects, however.


Enjoy, and as always, use responsibly (heh).


1
   Thank Obamacare


This is a very basic talking point, but also a very necessary one. If you want people to support the program, first you need to specifically point out what it does for them. These connections may seem obvious, but there are many who haven’t yet made them.


“Many people don’t think Obamacare has even started yet. But while the last major piece — the insurance exchanges — won’t begin until October, there are plenty of other things contained within the law which have already made a big difference to millions of Americans. For instance, over twenty million rebate checks have gone out to American consumers from their insurance companies in the past two years. The reason these rebates exist is Obamacare. Obamacare mandates that insurance companies are no longer allowed to have obscenely large profit margins. If they’re charging too much, then money is returned to the consumers. Every recipient of those rebate checks should thank Obamacare for getting them in the mail, because without it, those checks would not exist.”


2
   Parents, thank Obamacare


Once again, point out the positive things which have already happened.


“Parents across the country — millions upon millions of them — have been able to keep their children on their health insurance policy up until age 25, instead of worrying about pre-existing conditions pricing them out of the marketplace. Every parent who has taken advantage of this to keep their children insured should thank Obamacare for allowing them to do so, because without it this would not have been possible. Ask any parent who has taken advantage of this whether it’s a good thing or not — they’ll tell you.”


3
   Fade into history


This same theme should also be used to tout the upcoming benefits of Obamacare, as well.


“As America’s children grow up and enter into the health insurance marketplace on their own, they will be the first generation who simply will not understand what the terms ‘pre-existing condition’ and ‘lifetime cap’ mean — because they are about to become obsolete words. They’ll never be denied insurance because they were sick once in the past, and they will never have to worry that after some arbitrary dollar amount is reached, they won’t be insured or even insurable ever again in their lives. The very concept of ‘pre-existing conditions’ and ‘lifetime caps’ are — later this year — about to become a thing of the past for every American. They are about to fade from our consciousness and be consigned to the ashcan of history. That is an enormous change, and I thank the fact that Obamacare will remove these terms from the lexicon, personally.”


4
   Competition works


This used to be a Republican tenet of their party’s faith. Point this out.


“Obamacare’s insurance exchanges were built around a simple concept that Republicans used to have unwavering faith in: marketplaces work. Competition works. It’s a core belief of capitalism, in fact, which is why I scratch my head when they badmouth the concept now. In state after state, premiums will go down as different insurers have to compete on a level playing field. Insurance will be compared and purchased by consumers just like any other product — on price and on its merits. These will be laid out for all to see in the exchanges. Such an exchange was signed into law by Mitt Romney, and seems to be working quite well in Massachusetts. In New York, prices are going to come down for individually-purchased insurance plans by at least fifty percent. Note, that’s not ‘up to fifty percent’ or ‘somewhat less than fifty percent for most people,’ but at least fifty percent. Some will see their costs go down by seventy percent, in fact. And all of that is before you even calculate in the subsidies for low-income Americans. Competition works. Marketplaces work, when the playing field is level. Why don’t Republicans believe in this anymore?”


5
   The definition of insanity


OK, I’m certainly not the first one to use this, but it truly has gotten ridiculous.


“I see that the House of Representatives, rather than spending its time on something productive like voting on the Senate immigration bill, spent last week repealing Obamacare once again. Maybe in another few weeks, they’ll repeal it for the 40th time and it’ll be somehow better than the other 39 times they’ve done so. Maybe if they vote to repeal it another 40 or 50 times people will re-elect them, who knows? It does seem to be a classic case of doing something over and over and expecting a different result, though, doesn’t it?”


6
   Anti-consumer Republicans


Might as well paint with a broad brush, eh?


“It’s not only on Obamacare that Republicans have suddenly become so anti-consumer. This week — finally — Harry Reid was able to break a two-year logjam in the Senate and get a head of the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau confirmed. Why have Republicans been blocking this confirmation so long? It is a mystery. They have stood squarely on the side of Wall Street and showed their utter disdain for Main Street by their actions. They didn’t think the Bureau should even exist, and they thought they could block it from ever having a properly-confirmed leader. But who did this hurt, ultimately? Consumers. It’s right there in the name of the Bureau, in fact. Republicans were incensed that the federal government should even try to do a single thing for American consumers, if it would force big banks to clearly explain their products. That’s the ‘principle’ they fought so long for — screwing the consumer. Why has the Republican Party become so anti-consumer? It’s a mystery to me, personally.”


7
   Call BS!


Not since the “Bowles/Simpson” commission has the time been so ripe for a (cleaned up) use of these two initials.


“Of course, I can’t repeat on a family program exactly what one Republican senator had to say about Mitch McConnell this week — suffice it to say that Senator Bob Corker ‘called BS’ on his party’s Senate leader. I found this story refreshing, especially after watching John McCain channel his inner maverick one last time on the filibuster deal struck with Democrats. I think it’s important for Republicans to speak up and call ‘BS’ on where their party’s leadership wants to take them in all sorts of situations. In fact, I’m hoping that this starts a trend among Republicans. I look forward to other examples of fed-up Republicans who just can’t take the steaming piles of nonsense from their leaders anymore, and loudly and proudly call BS. I can’t think of anything which could better improve the way Congress operates, in fact.”


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Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points -- Harry Reid Has a Good Week, Mitch McConnell Does Not