Author: HL

  • Armey Accuses ?Destructive? Tancredo Of ‘Alienating’ Hispanics

    Armey Accuses ?Destructive? Tancredo Of ‘Alienating’ Hispanics
    Today, at a luncheon at the National Press Club on the future of the Republican Party in Washington, FreedomWorks chairman and tea party strategist Dick Armey slammed former Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) and other anti-immigration activists for “alienating a ‘natural’ constituency [Latinos] that could help the party win elections.” Armey admitted that as House leader, […]

    tancredoarmeyToday, at a luncheon at the National Press Club on the future of the Republican Party in Washington, FreedomWorks chairman and tea party strategist Dick Armey slammed former Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) and other anti-immigration activists for “alienating a ‘natural’ constituency [Latinos] that could help the party win elections.” Armey admitted that as House leader, he made sure Tancredo didn’t have a stage to speak on. The Daily Caller reports:

    Former Republican House leader Dick Armey said staunch anti-immigration opponents such as Rep. Tom Tancredo are destructive to Republicans — and are alienating a “natural” constituency that could help the party win elections. “Who in the Republican Party was the genius that said that now that we have identified the fastest-growing voting demographic in America, let’s go out and alienate them?” Armey said, referencing Hispanics, during a luncheon in Washington at the National Press Club.

    “When I was the majority leader, I saw to it that Tom Tancredo did not get on the stage because I saw how destructive he was,” Armey said of the Colorado congressman and 2008 Republican presidential candidate known for his opposition to illegal immigration. […]

    Armey also said “the Republican Party is the most naturally talented party at losing its natural constituents in the history of the world.” “This party was born with the emancipation proclamation and can’t get a black vote to save its life. How do they do that?”

    In an interview with Charlie Rose that aired earlier this month, Armey listed Tancredo (R-CO) as representing part of the “tea party tent” that he feels “uncomfortable” with. In 2006, Armey referred to Tancredo as the “cheerleader of jerkiness in the immigration debate.”

    Armey’s remarks have clearly made “nativist-extremist” groups that are trying to exploit the momentum of the tea party movement nervous. Americans for Legal Immigration (ALIPAC) quickly came to Tancredo’s defense and started urging its members to attack Armey’s immigration position. According to ALIPAC, Armey has been fighting to “keep the illegal immigration issue out of the Tea Party movement.” On an organizing conference call hosted by NumbersUSA, callers dismissed Armey as not being a “true tea party patriot,” but also sought tips on how to translate their anti-immigrant views to fit the tea party narrative. “We’ll be a whole lot better off if when [sic] we talk about illegal immigrants we leave off the Hispanic-Latino stuff,” advised NumbersUSA executive director Roy Beck.

    More on The Wonk Room.

  • Concessions on financial reform bill yield few gains in Senate

    Concessions on financial reform bill yield few gains in Senate
    Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), chairman of the Senate banking committee, introduced a revised bill on Monday to overhaul financial regulation that included compromises forged with Republicans in recent months but fell short of winning endorsement from conservatives, including members in his own party.

    Sen. Dodd to introduce plan to overhaul financial regulatory system
    Senate banking Chairman Sen. Christopher J. Dodd will try to strike a delicate balance Monday as he introduces a new measure to overhaul the nation’s financial regulatory system, including provisions aimed at shoring up support among fellow Democrats but also incorporating compromises he reached with Republicans.

    Early races for Congress may give forecast for November
    Circle May 18 on your calendar. What happens that day will tell us much about the mood of the electorate heading into the November midterm elections.

  • Learning Reagan’s Lessons from 1982

    Learning Reagan’s Lessons from 1982
    John Judis, The New Republic
    I have argued that rising unemployment inevitably imperils the political prospects of a president and his party. So I'm not surprised that President Barack Obama's approval ratings have steadily fallen over the last year, or that Democrats have fared poorly in recent elections. And it's fair to say that if unemployment continues to rise, or stays at the same elevated level, the Democrats will have trouble in the midterm elections this November.Still, this is not an iron law. Sometimes other factors have overshadowed rising unemployment or falling wages. In 2002, Republicans…

    Fiscal Responsibility is No Fun
    John Stossel, FOX Business
    March 12, 2010 12:27 PM EST by John StosselAs the Democrats scramble to pass health care legislation, talk still returns to the idea that at least the health care bill is “deficit neutral”. That is, while it spends more than a trillion on a new entitlement, it pays for itself mostly by cuts in Medicare. Of course, the doc fix — scheduled Medicare cuts to doctors which Congress has no intention of making — will dwarf those savings and add $89 billion to the deficit.But leave that aside. Medicare already faces a $30 Trillion deficit. The bigger issue is that Democrats are poised to…

    Are Tea Partiers Changing the GOP?
    Michael Barone, DC Examiner

  • Actor Pete Graves Dies at 83

    Actor Pete Graves Dies at 83
    The actor Peter Graves, star of TV’s Mission: Impossible and utterer of the Airplane! line “Have you ever seen a grown man naked?”, has died at age 83 at his home in Pacific Palisades, Calif.

    Oil Refinery Cutbacks May Raise Gas Prices
    Some of the nation’s biggest oil companies are looking at permanently reducing how much gasoline and diesel fuel they make, a move that analysts say would almost certainly trigger higher prices for drivers. Energy companies are suffering huge losses from refining because of slumping gasoline use — a product of the economic downturn and changing consumer habits and preferences. Energy experts say refining cutbacks have begun and will accelerate as corporations strive for profits.

  • Kucinich: Nader of Health Care – or The Only One with the Guts and Brains to Do the Right Thing?

    Kucinich: Nader of Health Care – or The Only One with the Guts and Brains to Do the Right Thing?
    Dennis Kucinich is getting slammed by the people he once counted among his friends. Why? Because he is sticking to the one thing progressives supposedly had been fighting for – the public option. Radio host Ian Masters talked with Dennis to get his side of the story.

    I taped with Congressman Kucinich for “The Daily Briefing” (5 to 6 PM PT on KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles and at www.kpfk.org). I was about to ask him to answer charges that he was the Ralph Nader of health care but he abruptly bailed to take a vote. My producer then sent him a text: “We just did a quick interview with you. Would you be willing to respond to charges you are the Nader of health care? Call this number.” I was on the air running the incomplete interview when he called in, and we went live with the Congressman.

    I was prepared to dismiss him like Marcos Moulitsas did as a suicidally self-righteous progressive in the Nader mould (see here and here), but after trying to pin him down on what he is up to, it appears Kucinich might be the only Democratic Congressman with the guts and brains to get something done about reforming healthcare, as opposed to health insurance.

    As Kucinich told me, this is a matter of doing what an elected representative should do:

    KUCINICH: I have a responsibility on behalf of all those people who want to see a public option to help the White House cross that divide. . . . If I cave in without any public option, that could kill any hopes of keeping it alive in the Senate.

    I asked him what he thought of the comparisons to Nader. His response showed his appreciation of the consumer activist, but also his continuing loyalty to the Democratic party:

    KUCINICH: If being the Ralph Nader of health care means I’m against consumer fraud and against monopolies, that’s OK. But if being the Ralph Nader of health care means that I’m scuttling the Democratic Party, that’s not true. I’m inside the party. I represent a voice inside the party that has helped to make health care an issue in three successive Democratic Platform committees and two national campaigns . . . I haven’t gone outside the party, and the party still has a chance to be able to deliver to the American people a health care bill that would be worthy of broader support.

    After watching the Democrat’s Progressive Caucus dutifully roll over for the White House, Kucinich’s original House vote against the bill has meaning now, unlike Lynn Woolsey’s and others. Since the House has to vote on the Senate bill as is, without changing a comma, this is the only time to make a deal, not later during reconciliation when some Senate parliamentarian gets to slice and dice it. In taking a stand as the critical vote that the White House needs, Kucinich appears to be giving Democratic Senators cover as more and more of them declare their support for the public option.

    I have a new show in drive time every weeknight at 8pm ET/5pm PT on KPFK, which is available via live stream here.

    Tags: Dennis Kucinich, healthcare, Ian Masters, kpfk pacifica, progressives, public option


    The Appearance of Profitability
    Clarence Thomas finds a way to keep profitability in the family via ‘impartial justice’

    It has become apparent that from Roberts, to Scalia, to Alito, to Thomas there is no such thing as an appearance of impropriety to a conservative justice.

    But how nice for Clarence Thomas that in voting with the 5-4 majority in Citizens United he not only saw no conflict of interest; he managed to give his wife a business opportunity CA-CHING!

    As “an ordinary citizen from Omaha, Neb.” and Teabagger.

    Although the busier Mrs. Thomas stays, the less likely she is to review her husband’s “history” file on the home PC. After all, as long as she thinks “Red-tube” is like You-Tube for monitoring liberal propaganda, as he’s explained to her, the better it is for domestic tranquility.

    Tags: Clarence Thomas, SCOTUS, Virginia Lamp Thomas

    I’m Down With Dennis
    Let me get this straight. The Senate will pass a public option if the House will. And the House will, because it already did. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi won’t allow it. So the mortal enemy of public-option backers is . . . Dennis Kucinich.

    Dennis Kucinich (photo 2007, courtesy of CAPAF)

    Let me get this straight. The Senate will pass a public option if the House will. And the House will, because it already did. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi won’t allow it. So the mortal enemy of public-option backers is . . . Dennis Kucinich.

    Why? Because when Congressman Kucinich said he’d stand for a public option he stupidly thought he was supposed to mean it.

    Let’s review a brief history of the disease known as “health insurance reform.”

    When the president and the speaker of the House thought it would be strategic to censor any talk of single-payer healthcare, almost every member of Congress and almost every astroturfing party-before-country activist group and labor union, and almost every follower of those groups, fell obediently into line. “We’ll open the debate with the least we’ll settle for, a pathetic token public-option,” they thought cleverly, rubbing their hands together. “Then we’ll compromise down from there.”

    But after demanding the “public option,” too many people refused to toss it overboard, and public pressure grew to keep it in. So 60 congress members signed a letter to the speaker last summer insisting that they would not settle for a health insurance bill that lacked a serious public option. When they were presented with a bill that did not meet their demands, almost all of them voted for it anyway.

    Now 51 senators say they will pass a bill including a super-pathetic token public option of the sort passed by the House last summer, but Pelosi wants to pass a bill without anything even called a “public option” in it. Almost all of the congressional public-option stalwarts want to go along with the speaker and the president. And almost all of the astroturfing party-before-country activist groups want to fall obediently into line.

    Meanwhile several states are moving single-payer healthcare bills through their legislatures, but they face likely lawsuits from insurance companies over conflicts with federal law if they try to actually get their residents healthcare. Senator Bernie Sanders is advertising the Senate bill as solving this problem, routinely failing to mention that his solution, if it is one, does not kick in for seven years. But an amendment passed in a House committee last summer would have clearly and unequivocally taken care of states’ concerns. The president told the speaker to strip that amendment out of the bill, and almost no members of Congress complained when she did so.

    Where does Dennis Kucinich fit into this story? He’s the reason the word “almost” appears in it so many times. He didn’t open negotiations by proposing the lowest he’d accept. He pushed for a real single-payer solution. He single-handedly framed the public option as a compromise rather than a communist plot. Kucinich signed the letter committing to take a stand for at least a public option. But he made the mistake of thinking people actually wanted him to mean it. So he took that lonely stand. And he introduced and passed the amendment that would have allowed states to provide their residents with a serious healthcare solution.

    Now, all the astroturfers applauded and encouraged taking a stand for a public option when there were 60 congress members pretending to do it, without apparently giving any thought to how greatly weakened progressives would be in Congress if they didn’t follow through. Did they think the chance that a bluff might work was worth damaging all future campaigns? Did they disbelieve all their own talk about how the bill would be worthless without the “public option.” It’s hard to know. The so-called public option had shrunk to such a token gesture that it was always hard to know what good they imagined it would do if included. And today they talk about passing a bill without even that token included, and passing it “for political reasons,” usually avoiding the question of whether the bill is actually better or worse than nothing.

    But suppose that you honestly thought the public option was worth at least pretending to take a stand for, and now you no longer do, but you think the remaining bill does more good than harm. Why would you have no complaint with Pelosi who could put the “public option” back in and pass the bill? Why would you have no complaint with congress members who oppose the bill on the grounds that it protects abortion rights? Why would your complaints be focused on the one guy who stuck to what you used to want him to stick to? Could embarrassment be a factor here? Shame? Humiliation? Do you feel uneasy about asking that ever congress member be an obedient slave to the president? Do you sense that progressives would then be excluded entirely? Does it worry you that you’re protesting insurance companies in support of a bill that causes insurance companies’ stocks to rise?

    Even the activist groups that have acted on principle throughout this ordeal have fallen short of Kucinich’s actions. Kucinich knew that real progress would come through the states, so he worked to pass an amendment permitting state single-payer. And virtually nobody backed him up. Activist groups either prattled on in a fog about national single-payer, or they focused exclusively on the so-called public option. These two camps wouldn’t talk to each other, but they both agreed on leaving states’ concerns by the wayside.

    If, in stark contrast to what was done, labor unions and activist groups and progressive media had taken their agenda from their membership and brought it to Washington, rather than the reverse, then very quickly Kucinich would not have been alone in demanding single-payer, and the right-wingers would have soon been begging for a token public option as a compromise.

    Healthcare is only one issue. There are dozens of stories like the one above, with different issues but the same characters and plot. When dozens of congress members commit to opposing war funding, Kucinich commits and then follows through. When it comes to ending the wars or impeaching the war criminals, Kucinich leads, in opposition to his political party but in support of his constituents, the American people, the rule of law, and the stated goals of progressives.

    I hope self-loathing partisan sycophants realize that the corporate media will equally depict either passage or nonpassage of a “health insurance reform” bill as a defeat for Democrats. And, in this case, rightly so. But the long-term impact of a reform that doesn’t reform, one that rather compels Americans to pay their hard-earned money to institutions even more hated than Congress, namely health insurance companies — THAT would be the real political loser, with or without a privately run program for 3 percent of us called “the public option.” And, again, rightly so. Kucinich is saving the Democrats from themselves by helping to block their health insurance bill, but they can’t see what’s in front of them through the fog of their constant dreaming about mountains of money and a naked Rahm Emanuel poking them in the chests.

    Tags: Dennis Kucinich, healthcare, progressives, public option, single payer

  • Americans to Lose One Hour to Daylight Saving and the Rest to Facebook, Twitter

    Americans to Lose One Hour to Daylight Saving and the Rest to Facebook, Twitter
    Satire by Andy Borowitz Due to the extraordinary amount of time the average American spends on the two popular social networking sites, he or she is expected to waste 48 hours this weekend out of a possible 47. Satire by Andy Borowitz By Andy Borowitz

    Due to the extraordinary amount of time the average American spends on the two popular social networking sites, he or she is expected to waste 48 hours this weekend out of a possible 47.

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  • MoveOn Fundraising Against Anti-Health Care Dems

    MoveOn Fundraising Against Anti-Health Care Dems
    In a warning shot to wavering Democrats, the progressive action group MoveOn.org is making a major push to raise money on behalf of primary challengers…

    Michael Kieschnick: How to Bribe a Supreme Court Justice
    The Los Angeles Times performed a serious act of journalism by covering the interesting conflict of interest facing Justice Clarence Thomas. Mr. Thomas is married…

    Jeff Danziger: Texas School Board

  • Will, Brooks mislead on deficit reduction in health care reform

    Will, Brooks mislead on deficit reduction in health care reform

    Columnists George Will and David Brooks both claimed that the deficit reduction provisions of the Senate health care bill are, in Brooks’ words, “totally bogus” because “it has 10 years of taxes and six years of benefits.” In fact, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has estimated that the Senate bill will not only reduce budget deficits through 2019, but will continue to reduce deficits in the following decade.

    Will, Brooks claim deficit reduction is “bogus” and due to “10 years of taxes and six years of benefits”

    Brooks: “[A] lot of the deficit control is totally bogus.” Appearing on the March 14 edition of NBC’s Meet the Press, Brooks said he “lean[s] against” health care reform, in part because “a lot of the deficit control is totally bogus.” Brooks added: “We’re [going to] have 10 years of revenue to pay for six years of costs.”

    Will: Legislation’s deficit reduction is due to “accounting gimmicks.” On the March 14 edition of ABC’s This Week, host Jake Tapper said to Will, “[F]ormer Congressman Ray LaHood … has an op-ed in the Chicago Tribune today talking about why, as a member of the House, he would have voted for this bill, because this bill reduces the deficit, and it also brings down health care costs and it will make insurance more affordable. Do you believe that he would have voted for it as a Republican congressman?” Will replied: “Not a bit. It reduces the deficit because you have 10 years of taxes and six years of benefits and other accounting gimmicks.”

    In fact, CBO has estimated Senate and House bills will continue to reduce deficits after 2019

    CBO expects Senate bill to continue deficit reduction during decade after 2019. From the March 11 CBO estimate of the Senate health care bill:

    CBO expects that the legislation, if enacted, would reduce federal budget deficits over the decade after 2019 relative to those projected under current law — with a total effect during that decade that is in a broad range between one-quarter percent and one-half percent of GDP. That judgment is unchanged from CBO’s previous assessment, and the imprecision of that calculation reflects the even greater degree of uncertainty that attends to it, compared with CBO’s 10-year budget estimates.

    CBO estimated the House bill will also result in deficit reductions in the decade after 2019. From the November 6 CBO estimate:

    According to CBO and JCT’s assessment, enacting H.R. 3962 would result in a net reduction in federal budget deficits of $109 billion over the 2010-2019 period (see Table 1) [this estimate was later updated to $138 billion over the same period]. In the subsequent decade, the collective effect of its provisions would probably be slight reductions in federal budget deficits. Those estimates are all subject to substantial uncertainty.

  • Timeline: What Were Dem Leaders Told About Massa?

    Timeline: What Were Dem Leaders Told About Massa?
    After the House vote today to refer to the ethics committee the question of what Democratic leaders knew about former Rep. Eric Massa before news of harassment allegations broke publicly, it’s worth looking at the timeline of what we know so far.

    Presented By:

  • Poll Shows Thompson Leading Feingold

    Poll Shows Thompson Leading Feingold
    A new Wisconsin Policy Research Institute poll shows Tommy Thompson (R) leading Sen. Russ Feingold (D) in a possible U.S. Senate match up, 51% to 39%.

    A Feingold spokesman criticized WPRI as a group with strong Republican ties.

    Mark Blumenthal has a good piece on a controversy with WPRI data and notes that if nothing else, it “demonstrates the increasing difficulty consumers of polling data have in identifying potential conflicts in the sponsorship and funding of public polling.”

    Another Strange Ad from Fiorina
    Swampland has the latest attack ad from U.S. Senate candidate Carly Fiorina (R) — infamous for the “Demon Sheep” attack on primary opponent Tom Campbell (R) — this time aimed at Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA).

    Ben Smith notes the ad, titled “Hot Air,” describes Fiorina as “a 5-foot-6-inch fireball” and attacks Boxer’s record with special ferocity, saying she “spent 18 years in the Senate and only passed three tiny bills.”

    Obama Losing Chance to Reshape Judiciary
    “An early chance for the Obama administration to reshape the nation’s judiciary — and counter gains made in the federal courts by conservatives — appears close to slipping away, due to a combination of White House inattention and Republican opposition,” the Los Angeles Times reports.

    “During President Obama’s first year, judicial nominations trickled out of the White House at a far slower pace than in President George W. Bush’s first year. Bush announced 11 nominees for federal appeals courts in the fourth month of his tenure. Obama didn’t nominate his 11th appeals court judge until November, his 10th month in office.”

    “Moreover, Obama nominees are being confirmed at a much slower rate than those of his predecessor, largely because of the gridlocked Senate.”

    Quote of the Day
    “[Sunday talk shows] will be talking about healthcare not as a presidential proposal but I think as the law of the land.”

    — White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, quoted by The Hill, predicting the passage of health care reform this week.

  • Do Women on the Pill Live Longer? One Study Says Yes?

    Do Women on the Pill Live Longer? One Study Says Yes?

    The birth control pill has been around for fifty years, and in that time, a lot of women have taken a lot of hormones. Indeed, the United Nations Population Division estimates that more than 100 million women around the world are currently taking hormonal contraception. That’s a huge number to be sure, but it’s […]

    The Precious Debates: Stanley Crouch, Sheril Antonio, and Howard Stern Debate if the Oscar Winning Film is ?Pathology Porn?

    I am confounded as I try to make sense of film scholar Sheril Antonio and noted Black public intellectual Stanley Crouch’s debating the merit of what I see as the pseudo-monster movie Precious. And yes, I called that “cultural” document a monster movie because what is Precious, if anything, but monstrous? First random thought: did Stanley […]

    The Woman Who Just Might Save the Planet and Our Pocketbooks
    What if our economy was not built on competition? Nobel Prize winner Elinor Ostrom talks about her work on cooperation in economics.

    What if our economy was not built on competition? Nobel Prize winner Elinor Ostrom talks about her work on cooperation in economics.

    Stop the Deportation of Immigrant Military Veterans
    They put their lives on the line in the service of the United States of America, and ended up being booted out of the country they fought for.

    They put their lives on the line in the service of the United States of America, and ended up being booted out of the country they fought for.

    Will Pro-Choice Catholic Groups Help Thwart Stupak?s Plan to Sink Reform?

    The following post was originally published on Washington Monthly. In order for Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) to succeed in helping kill health care reform over abortion, he needs to convince a bloc of his fellow pro-life Democrats that the already-tough restrictions in the Senate bill just aren’t strong enough. But for those pro-life Dems, mostly Roman […]

  • Bail out our schools

    Bail out our schools
    Any day now, the Obama administration will announce $4.35 billion in extra federal funds for under-performing public schools. That’s fine, but relative to the financial squeeze all the nation’s public schools now face it’s a cruel joke. The recession has…


    Public schoolEducationUnited StatesPresidency of Barack ObamaWall Street

    Presented By:

    Presented By:

  • Rove Falsely Claims Bush Administration Never Said Iraqi Oil Revenue Would Help Pay For War

    Rove Falsely Claims Bush Administration Never Said Iraqi Oil Revenue Would Help Pay For War
    In his new book and in recent media appearances promoting it, former top Bush aide Karl Rove has been revising the history of the Iraq war, particularly regarding the issue of Saddam Hussien’s alleged weapons of mass destruction. Today on NBC’s Meet the Press, Rove continued with his Iraq war history revision campaign. Noting that […]

    In his new book and in recent media appearances promoting it, former top Bush aide Karl Rove has been revising the history of the Iraq war, particularly regarding the issue of Saddam Hussien’s alleged weapons of mass destruction.

    Today on NBC’s Meet the Press, Rove continued with his Iraq war history revision campaign. Noting that the Bush administration had mishandled the management of the war, host Tom Brokaw mentioned that “the cost of the war skyrocketed almost from the beginning. There was not a sharing of the oil revenue that a lot of people had promised.” But Rove flatly denied that the Bush administration said Iraqi oil revenues would help pay for the war:

    ROVE: No, no. Tom with all due respect that was not the policy of our government that we were going to go into Iraq and take their resources in order to pay for the cost of the war. … [T]he suggestion that somehow or another the administration had as its policy, “We’re going to go in to Iraq and take their resource and pay for the war” is not accurate.

    Watch it:

    Rove’s claim is simply not true. In fact, days after the U.S. invasion, then-Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz told a congressional panel that Iraqi oil revenues would help pay for reconstructing the country, i.e. a cost of the war. “The oil revenue of that country could bring between 50 and 100 billion dollars over the course of the next two or three years. We’re dealing with a country that could really finance its own reconstruction, and relatively soon,” he said.

    One month before the war, then-White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said Iraq “is a rather wealthy country. … And so there are a variety of means that Iraq has to be able to shoulder much of the burden for their own reconstruction.”

    Since the start of the Iraq war, the U.S. has spent tens of billions of dollars in reconstruction costs.

    Christian leaders urge Congress to ignore misinformation on abortion provisions and pass health reform.
    In recent weeks, the number of Democratic lawmakers willing to join Rep. Bart Stupak’s (D-MI) crusade to bring down health care reform unless Congress amends the Senate bill’s abortion language keeps shrinking. Stupak began the debate with that 15 to 20 supporters; that number is down to fewer than a dozen now. As Igor Volsky […]

    In recent weeks, the number of Democratic lawmakers willing to join Rep. Bart Stupak’s (D-MI) crusade to bring down health care reform unless Congress amends the Senate bill’s abortion language keeps shrinking. Stupak began the debate with that 15 to 20 supporters; that number is down to fewer than a dozen now. As Igor Volsky notes, “it’s become difficult for Stupak and his gang of four (or five) to perpetuate the fundamentally dishonest claim that the Senate bill spends federal dollars to fund abortions.” Underscoring this point, this week, a group of 25 “pro-life Catholic theologians and Evangelical leaders” sent a letter to Congress urging them to look past the misinformation on abortion and pass health care reform. From their letter:

    As Christians committed to a consistent ethic of life, and deeply concerned with the health and well-being of all people, we want to see health care reform enacted. […]

    We are writing because of our concern about the lack of clear and accurate information regarding abortion provisions in the health care reform bill passed by the Senate on December 24, 2009.

    Reforming our health care system is necessarily complex, and the provisions related to abortion, or any other issue, require careful examination of the facts as they exist in the legislative language. We believe that the provisions below provide extensive evidence that longstanding restrictions on federal funding of abortion have been maintained. Furthermore, this bill provides new and important supports for vulnerable pregnant women.

  • Woman Killed by Car — in Her Kitchen

    Woman Killed by Car — in Her Kitchen
    A woman has died after a speeding truck crashed into her San Bernardino, Calif., home, pinning her in the kitchen, authorities said Friday. The truck smashed about 10 feet into the house shortly after 9:30 p.m. Thursday, pinning the woman between the front bumper and the kitchen stove and sending chunks of a dividing wall into the windshields of parked cars.

  • Google May Close Virtual Doors in China

    Google May Close Virtual Doors in China
    Google is “99.9 percent” certain it will shut down its search engine operation in China after the government in Beijing warned the company that it was flouting the country’s censorship laws, which require limited access to content like “Tiananmen Square” and “democracy.” Google’s decision would close a chapter in a long battle between China and the U.S. regarding censorship and the Internet. Google is the world’s leading search engine, but holds only about a 40 percent market share in China, behind leader Baidu. —JCL Reuters: Talks with China over censorship have reached an apparent impasse and Google, the world’s largest search engine, is now “99.9 percent” certain to shut its Chinese search engine, the Financial Times said on Saturday. It said in a report on its website Google had drawn up detailed plans for closing its Chinese search engine. The newspaper cited a person familiar with the company’s thinking as saying that, while a decision could be made very soon, Google was likely to take some time to follow through with its plans. That would be in order to bring about an orderly closure as the company takes steps to protect local employees from retaliation by authorities, it said. China warned Google on Friday against flouting the country’s laws, as expectations grow for a resolution to a public battle over censorship and cyber-security. Read more

    Robert Reineke of Venezuela stands by the Google booth at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Saturday, Jan. 7.

    Google is “99.9 percent” certain it will shut down its search engine operation in China after the government in Beijing warned the company that it was flouting the country’s censorship laws, which require limited access to content like “Tiananmen Square” and “democracy.”

    Google’s decision would close a chapter in a long battle between China and the U.S. regarding censorship and the Internet. Google is the world’s leading search engine, but holds only about a 40 percent market share in China, behind leader Baidu. —JCL

    Reuters:

    Talks with China over censorship have reached an apparent impasse and Google, the world’s largest search engine, is now “99.9 percent” certain to shut its Chinese search engine, the Financial Times said on Saturday.

    It said in a report on its website Google had drawn up detailed plans for closing its Chinese search engine.

    The newspaper cited a person familiar with the company’s thinking as saying that, while a decision could be made very soon, Google was likely to take some time to follow through with its plans.

    That would be in order to bring about an orderly closure as the company takes steps to protect local employees from retaliation by authorities, it said.

    China warned Google on Friday against flouting the country’s laws, as expectations grow for a resolution to a public battle over censorship and cyber-security.

    Read more

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  • Arianna Huffington: Sunday Roundup

    Arianna Huffington: Sunday Roundup
    Like Jason Voorhees in Friday the 13th, the public option rose from the grave this week (instead of slashing teenage victims, it would slash health care costs). With zero input from the White House, 41 Senators have agreed to support a public option via reconciliation. Ryan Grim lays out how that can easily become 50 — and Dick Durbin has promised to “aggressively whip” a health care bill that includes a public option. But Nancy Pelosi won’t include it in the reconciliation package. Why? She claims it’s because the Senate doesn’t “have the votes” — which could also be said about the House passing the Senate bill (Stupak, anyone?). So the Senate blames the House, the House blames the Senate, the White House acts as if it doesn’t have a say in the matter, and the insurance companies — lacking real competition — keep laughing all the way to the bank.

    Al Franken Mines ‘SNL’ Past In Bid For Google Fiber (VIDEO)
    Drawing on footage from his decades in comedy, Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) has joined the politicians bidding for their constituencies to test Google’s high-speed broadband…

    Scott Brown Bashes Obama’s ‘Bitter’ Push For Health Care Reform (VIDEO)
    WASHINGTON (AP)– Newly arrived Republican Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts accused President Barack Obama and Democrats on Saturday of a “bitter, destructive and endless” drive…

    Taylor Marsh: Poll: Democrats Slipping on National Security
    Here we go again. Democrats are once again losing the narrative to Republicans on national security, according to a poll released by the Democracy Corps….

    Kate Clinton: In The Stuppak Pits
    The Oscars pay homage to violence against women, big Pharma knocks the legs out from under women, and legislators make abortion funding an annoying deal-breaker.

  • Christian leaders urge Congress to ignore misinformation on abortion provisions and pass health reform.

    Christian leaders urge Congress to ignore misinformation on abortion provisions and pass health reform.
    In recent weeks, the number of Democratic lawmakers willing to join Rep. Bart Stupak’s (D-MI) crusade to bring down health care reform unless Congress amends the Senate bill’s abortion language keeps shrinking. Stupak began the debate with that 15 to 20 supporters; that number is down to fewer than a dozen now. As Igor Volsky […]

    In recent weeks, the number of Democratic lawmakers willing to join Rep. Bart Stupak’s (D-MI) crusade to bring down health care reform unless Congress amends the Senate bill’s abortion language keeps shrinking. Stupak began the debate with that 15 to 20 supporters; that number is down to fewer than a dozen now. As Igor Volsky notes, “it’s become difficult for Stupak and his gang of four (or five) to perpetuate the fundamentally dishonest claim that the Senate bill spends federal dollars to fund abortions.” Underscoring this point, this week, a group of 25 “pro-life Catholic theologians and Evangelical leaders” sent a letter to Congress urging them to look past the misinformation on abortion and pass health care reform. From their letter:

    As Christians committed to a consistent ethic of life, and deeply concerned with the health and well-being of all people, we want to see health care reform enacted. […]

    We are writing because of our concern about the lack of clear and accurate information regarding abortion provisions in the health care reform bill passed by the Senate on December 24, 2009.

    Reforming our health care system is necessarily complex, and the provisions related to abortion, or any other issue, require careful examination of the facts as they exist in the legislative language. We believe that the provisions below provide extensive evidence that longstanding restrictions on federal funding of abortion have been maintained. Furthermore, this bill provides new and important supports for vulnerable pregnant women.

    Sen. Tom Udall Calls Reid?s Promise To ?Take A Look At The Filibuster? A ?Warning Shot? To Republicans
    Motivated by unprecedented GOP obstruction this year in the U.S. Senate, Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) recently announced a proposal to revamp the Senate’s filibuster rules at the start of the next Congress. Citing Article I, Section 5 of the Constitution, Udall would like to revamp the 60-vote requirement for cloture and other procedural issues, where […]

    Motivated by unprecedented GOP obstruction this year in the U.S. Senate, Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) recently announced a proposal to revamp the Senate’s filibuster rules at the start of the next Congress. Citing Article I, Section 5 of the Constitution, Udall would like to revamp the 60-vote requirement for cloture and other procedural issues, where the Senate could “legally draft new rules for action,” which could then “only be overturned by a simple majority vote, rather than the 67-vote threshold that accompanies rule change proposals during an ongoing congressional session.”

    Yesterday, Udall spoke at the Center for American Progress in a discussion on “Deliberation, Obstruction or Dysfunction? Evaluating the Modern U.S. Senate and its Contribution to American Governance.” Afterward, he spoke to ThinkProgress and described what he thinks drives the GOP to obstruct the majority’s agenda:

    UDALL: It would appear to me that this is an attempt to deny the President and the party that has the majority any accomplishments. … It looks to me like a strategy to just say, “if they don’t accomplish anything” meaning the majority don’t accomplish anything “then they can’t go to the next election talking about specific things that they’ve done.”

    “If they insist to utilize the rules to block all progress,” Udall said, “then at the beginning of the year, we’re going to have to deal with that and try and make the rules a little more compatible with the majority being able to rule.”

    When ThinkProgress asked if he currently has the 51 votes needed to change the Senate rules, Udall said, “I have no idea.” But Udall did say that he was pleased with Majority Leader Harry Reid’s (D-NV) recent comment that he will move in the next Congress “to take a look at the filibuster” because it has been “abused.” The New Mexico senator called Reid’s comments a “warning shot” to Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY):

    UDALL: Harry Reid came out and said — in just the last couple of days, and I think fired a warning shot over the head of Sen. McConnell — that we may need filibuster reform at the beginning of the next Congress. If you have one of the leaders supporting reform, that’s a significant step forward. … But I was very heartened by his comment that we may very well have to change the filibuster at the beginning of the next Congress. That to me is a very significant thing for him to say.

    Watch the interview:

  • Insurers report on use of abortion riders

    Insurers report on use of abortion riders
    CHICAGO — In North Dakota, where insurers can cover abortions if customers pay a separate premium, the state’s largest provider says it sells no abortion policies because no one has asked to buy one.

    GOP wants Dodd to slow down on financial reform legislation
    Republicans on the Senate banking committee said they remain open to finding a bipartisan agreement on legislation to overhaul financial regulation, but they warned the chairman, Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), against trying to push a bill through too quickly.

    Critics: Military trial of terror suspects could open cases to legal uncertainty
    Using a military commission to try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his co-defendants for their alleged role in the Sept. 11 attacks could open the case to significant legal uncertainty and expose fresh details of detainee abuse in a proceeding that might not get underway for two years or longer, national security experts and plan critics say.

  • Most Americans Want Health Reform

    Most Americans Want Health Reform
    Joel Benenson, Washington Post
    It is ironic that Democratic pollsters Patrick H. Caddell and Douglas E. Schoen felt "compelled" to "challenge the myths" about public attitudes on health care by simply restating one of the most commonly stated — and patently wrong — Republican myths [Washington Forum, March 12]. No pollster, including me, could look at the recent data and responsibly say anything other than that the American public is closely divided when it comes to supporting or opposing various health-care plans. The most recent Washington Post poll (from Feb. 10) shows a narrow gap…

    Shining a Harsh Light on Lehman’s Bankruptcy

    Yellen Is Spellin’ Future Inflation
    Larry Kudlow, RealClearMarkets
    The new Obama Fed is going to be very dovish when it comes to fighting future inflation and defending the value of the dollar.The president has nominated Janet Yellen to be vice chair of the Federal Reserve. Ms. Yellen is a distinguished economist who unfortunately subscribes to the Phillips-curve model that trades off unemployment and inflation. In other words, rather than excess money creation as the cause of rising prices, she focuses on the unemployment rate, the volume of new jobs being created, and the growth of the overall economy. For Ms. Yellen, inflation is caused by too many people…

    EPA Must Act on Climate Change If Congress Won’t

    Scenes From the Massachusetts Revolution
    Michael Moynihan, Reason
    Media Inquiries and Reprint…