Author: HL

  • One Year of Obama

    One Year of Obama

    President Cool Gets Hot
    John Heilemann, New York Magazine
    Barack Obama is not unfamiliar with delivering big-stakes, high-pressure, bet-the-farm speeches—but the challenges presented by Wednesday’s State of the Union are of a different kind and order of magnitude than he has ever confronted before. In the wake of the smack-upside-the-head loss of Ted Kennedy’s Senate seat last week in Massachusetts, with its dire implications for health-care reform and dark portents for November’s midterm elections, Democrats in Washington and around the nation will be looking for more from Obama than mere eloquence or even…

    Earth to President Obama
    Sherman Frederick, Las Vegas Review-Journal
    We're now way beyond the cliche of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.In a remarkably short period, President Barack Obama and the Democrat Party screwed up history. They told the world they had a romantic date with destiny and instead took the opportunity for the equivalent of a quickie at the Chicken Ranch.Even after feeling the fury of voters in Virginia, New Jersey and Massachusetts, the White House continues to demonstrate a jaded comprehension of reality.The night after Republican Scott Brown beat anointed Democrat Martha Coakley in Massachusetts' special Senate…

  • Haiti: A View From the Middle East

    Haiti: A View From the Middle East
    How are Middle Eastern media outlets reporting the crisis in Haiti? Mosaic Intelligence Report analyzes how some TV networks are seeing parallels between Port-au-Prince and Gaza, or pointing to the hypocrisy of the U.S. sending aid to one country while bombing others.

    How are Middle Eastern media outlets reporting the crisis in Haiti? Mosaic Intelligence Report analyzes how some TV networks are seeing parallels between Port-au-Prince and Gaza, or pointing to the hypocrisy of the U.S. sending aid to one country while bombing others.

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    Obama Assails Court Decision
    In his weekly radio address, President Obama showed his dismay at the Supreme Court’s decision to remove corporate campaign finance limits, warning of a pending deluge of special interest money into our democracy—a subject he knows quite well as he continues to fight for health care reform. —JCL Reuters: Obama’s broadside was triggered by a 5-4 ruling by the court’s justices on Thursday that removed long-standing campaign finance limits and allowed corporations to spend freely in campaigns for president and Congress. In the ruling, the court’s conservative majority said the limits had violated corporations’ constitutional right to free speech. The ruling is expected to unleash a flood of money into this year’s congressional elections. Obama’s fellow Democrats face a struggle to retain control of the Congress amid voter unhappiness over double-digit unemployment, a record deficit, political gridlock in Washington and other matters. “This ruling opens the floodgates for an unlimited amount of special interest money into our democracy,” Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address. “It gives the special interest lobbyists new leverage to spend millions on advertising to persuade elected officials to vote their way—or to punish those who don’t. This ruling strikes at democracy itself,” Obama said. Read more

    In his weekly radio address, President Obama showed his dismay at the Supreme Court’s decision to remove corporate campaign finance limits, warning of a pending deluge of special interest money into our democracy—a subject he knows quite well as he continues to fight for health care reform. —JCL

    Reuters:

    Obama’s broadside was triggered by a 5-4 ruling by the court’s justices on Thursday that removed long-standing campaign finance limits and allowed corporations to spend freely in campaigns for president and Congress. In the ruling, the court’s conservative majority said the limits had violated corporations’ constitutional right to free speech.

    The ruling is expected to unleash a flood of money into this year’s congressional elections. Obama’s fellow Democrats face a struggle to retain control of the Congress amid voter unhappiness over double-digit unemployment, a record deficit, political gridlock in Washington and other matters.

    “This ruling opens the floodgates for an unlimited amount of special interest money into our democracy,” Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.

    “It gives the special interest lobbyists new leverage to spend millions on advertising to persuade elected officials to vote their way—or to punish those who don’t. This ruling strikes at democracy itself,” Obama said.

    Read more

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  • Ginny Dougary: Who is David Cameron?

    Ginny Dougary: Who is David Cameron?
    The past year has been a momentous one for David Cameron. As Gordon Brown’s Government stumbles from crisis to crisis, Cameron has reaped the political…

    Chris Dodd And Judd Gregg Confident Of Bernanke Confirmation
    “Based on our discussions with our colleagues, we are very confident that Chairman Bernanke will win confirmation by the Senate for a second term,” Senators…

    White House Seeks To Take Greater Control Over Midterm Elections
    WASHINGTON — President Obama is reconstituting the team that helped him win the White House to counter Republican challenges in the midterm elections and recalibrate…

    Bristol Palin Child Support: Palin Seeks Support From Levi Johnston
    ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Sarah Palin’s oldest daughter, Bristol, is seeking child support from the young man who fathered her 1-year-old son. Documents filed Thursday in…

    Obama Endorses Deficit Task Force
    WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama Saturday endorsed a bipartisan plan to name a special task force charged with coming up with a plan to curb…

  • George Will’s torrent of global warming misinformation continues with distortion of glacier data

    George Will’s torrent of global warming misinformation continues with distortion of glacier data

    In a Washington Post column, serial global warming misinformer George Will said that the “menace of global warming” is “elusive” and claimed that an acknowledged error about Himalayan glaciers in a report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) constituted “another dollop of evidence of the seepage of dubious science into policy debate.” In fact, scientists routinely present strong evidence of long-term global warming and its consequences, including evidence of “[w]idespread mass loss from glaciers.”

    Will cites glaciers to claim evidence of global warming is “elusive”

    Citing WSJ article on IPCC glacier error, Will mentions “elusive menace of global warming.” In a statement:

    The Synthesis Report, the concluding document of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (page 49) stated: “Climate change is expected to exacerbate current stresses on water resources from population growth and economic and land-use change, including urbanisation. On a regional scale, mountain snow pack, glaciers and small ice caps play a crucial role in freshwater availability. Widespread mass losses from glaciers and reductions in snow cover over recent decades are projected to accelerate throughout the 21st century, reducing water availability, hydropower potential, and changing seasonality of flows in regions supplied by meltwater from major mountain ranges (e.g. Hindu-Kush, Himalaya, Andes), where more than one-sixth of the world population currently lives.”

    This conclusion is robust, appropriate, and entirely consistent with the underlying science and the broader IPCC assessment.

    It has, however, recently come to our attention that a paragraph in the 938-page Working Group II contribution to the underlying assessment refers to poorly substantiated estimates of rate of recession and date for the disappearance of Himalayan glaciers. In drafting the paragraph in question, the clear and well-established standards of evidence, required by the IPCC procedures, were not applied properly.

    The Chair, Vice-Chairs, and Co-chairs of the IPCC regret the poor application of well-established IPCC procedures in this instance. This episode demonstrates that the quality of the assessment depends on absolute adherence to the IPCC standards, including thorough review of “the quality and validity of each source before incorporating results from the source into an IPCC Report” 3. We reaffirm our strong commitment to ensuring this level of performance.

    U.N.’s Yvo de Boer: Error “does not alter the inevitable consequences, unless rigorous action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is taken.” In a January 20 Associated Press article, Yvo de Boer, the head of the U.N. Convention on Climate Change, said of the error: “What is happening now is comparable with the Titanic sinking more slowly than expected,” adding, “But that does not alter the inevitable consequences, unless rigorous action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is taken.” The AP further reported: “The climate panel and even the scientist who publicized the errors said they are not significant in comparison to the entire report, nor were they intentional. And they do not negate the fact that worldwide, glaciers are melting faster than ever.”

    “Glacier expert” Michael Zemp: “Glaciers are the best proof that climate change is happening.” From a January 20 CNN.com article:

    A glacier expert interviewed by CNN explained that the data published was flawed.

    Michael Zemp from the World Glacier Monitoring Service said: “There are simply no observations available to make these sorts of statements.”

    Zemp says that the figures quoted in the report are not possible because 500,000 square kilometers is estimated to be the total surface area of all mountain glaciers worldwide.

    “The other thing is that the report says the glaciers are receding faster than anywhere else in the world. We simply do not have the glacier change measurements. The Himalayas are among those regions with the fewest available data,” Zemp said.

    In defense of the IPCC, Zemp says “you can take any report and find a mistake in it but it’s up to the next IPCC report to correct it.”

    Zemp also believes that the errors shouldn’t shake people’s belief in climate science.

    “Glaciers are the best proof that climate change is happening. This is happening on a global scale. They can translate very small changes in the climate into a visible signal,” he said.

    Ohio State glaciologist Lonnie Thompson: “The issues under discussion are very specific ones, but do not detract from the overall conclusions of the IPCC, which are backed by many lines of evidence.” A USA Today blog post quoted Ohio State glaciologist Lonnie Thompson defending the 2007 IPCC report: “[W]e’re good at what we do, but we’re human beings. The issues under discussion are very specific ones, but do not detract from the overall conclusions of the IPCC, which are backed by many lines of evidence.”

    Scientists routinely present evidence that global warming is real

    Will previously distorted U.N. report to claim: “Warnings about cataclysmic warming increase in stridency as evidence of warming becomes more elusive.” In an October 1, 2009, Washington Post report from the United Nations Environment Program predicts an enormous 6.3 degrees Fahrenheit increase by the end of the century even if nations fulfill their most ambitious pledges concerning reduction of carbon emissions” [italics in original].

    U.N. report Will previously cited actually provides evidence for warming and its consequences. In that October 1, 2009, Post column, Will cited a September 2009 United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) report as evidence that “[w]arnings about cataclysmic warming increase in stridency as evidence of warming becomes more elusive.” But Will ignored actual evidence in the report that undermines his claim. Indeed, in presenting the findings — which were “based on the wealth of peer reviewed research published by researchers and institutions since 2006″ — Achim Steiner, UNEP executive director, stated, “The findings indicate that ever more rapid environmental change is underway with the pace and the scale of climate change accelerating along with the confidence among researchers in their forecasts.” Will also Synthesis Report — which concluded that “[m]ost of the observed increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic [human-caused] GHG [greenhouse gas] concentrations” — other scientific organizations, including NASA’s repeatedly misrepresented arctic sea ice data. In the Post and in Newsweek, Will has also forwarded the fallacy that there has been “no global warming since 1998.”

  • Ye Olde Scribe’s Incredible, Barely Edible, Quote Machine

    Ye Olde Scribe’s Incredible, Barely Edible, Quote Machine
    “Dems don’t eat Rocky Mountain Oysters. They eat their own.” “I’d ask how I got into this party of eunuchs, but that’s SO unfair. Eunuchs have more balls.” -A-Non-E-Moose

  • What Would Ted Do? It’s Time for House Dems to Follow Their Lion and Pass Health Care

    What Would Ted Do? It’s Time for House Dems to Follow Their Lion and Pass Health Care
    No doubt Senator Ted Kennedy is rolling in his grave — but if you listen very closely — he isn’t sighing — he is saying "sign it."

    No doubt Senator Ted Kennedy is rolling in his grave — but if you listen very closely — he isn't sighing — he is saying "sign it."

  • A TPMCafe post on the Senate floor

    A TPMCafe post on the Senate floor
    For those of you who don’t always make it to the Editors Blog on the front page: Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND) displayed a giant TPM posterboard on the Senate floor today, featuring a post from Cafe contributor Dean Baker. Watch…


    Kent ConradUnited States SenateDean BakerSenateTalking Points Memo

    Jeff Goldberg Offended At Comparisons Between Haiti & Gaza
    Jeff Goldberg of the Atlantic finds Israel’s left “dreary” because it sees similarities between the suffering in Gaza and the suffering in Haiti. What I find “dreary” is the inability of Jeff Goldberg and those who think like him to…


    IsraelGazaOrganizationsHamasAid and Development

    Podhoretz: Limbaugh Can’t Be An Anti-Semite, He’s Pro-Israel
    Well, at least there is some good news this week. Rush Limbaugh is clearly stung by the accusations that he is an anti-semite. This is after he employed the old National Socialist canard that Jews and bankers are one and…


    AntisemitismJewRush LimbaughAnti-Defamation LeagueRace-Ethnic-Religious Relations

  • SC Lt. Gov. compares people getting gov?t help to ‘stray animals? who ?breed? because they don?t know better.

    SC Lt. Gov. compares people getting gov?t help to ‘stray animals? who ?breed? because they don?t know better.
    South Carolina Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer, who is running for the Republican nomination for governor, held a town hall meeting yesterday where he argued government should be tougher on families whose children receive free and reduced-price lunches. Bauer said that parents should be required to “pass drug tests or attend parent-teacher conferences or PTA […]

    Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer South Carolina Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer, who is running for the Republican nomination for governor, held a town hall meeting yesterday where he argued government should be tougher on families whose children receive free and reduced-price lunches. Bauer said that parents should be required to “pass drug tests or attend parent-teacher conferences or PTA meetings.” To make this argument, however, he compared people receiving government assistance to stray animals:

    My grandmother was not a highly educated woman, but she told me as a small child to quit feeding stray animals. You know why? Because they breed. You’re facilitating the problem if you give an animal or a person ample food supply. They will reproduce, especially ones that don’t think too much further than that. And so what you’ve got to do is you’ve got to curtail that type of behavior. They don’t know any better,” Bauer said. […]

    Later in his speech, Bauer said, “I can show you a bar graph where free and reduced lunch has the worst test scores in the state of South Carolina,” adding, “You show me the school that has the highest free and reduced lunch, and I’ll show you the worst test scores, folks. It’s there, period.

    Bauer later insisted that he “wasn’t saying people on government assistance ‘were animals or anything else.’” (HT: Jamie Sanderson)

  • Former Obama campaign manager to be White House adviser

    Former Obama campaign manager to be White House adviser
    David Plouffe, the political strategist who managed Barack Obama’s presidential campaign, is taking on an expanded role as an outside adviser to the White House, a move that comes amid legislative and electoral setbacks for the president and his party.

    President Obama endorses bipartisan deficit-reduction panel
    Bowing to the concerns of senators of both political parties, President Obama endorsed legislation Saturday that would create a bipartisan commission to develop a plan to address the nation’s soaring budget deficits.

    Obama goes populist as Democrats lick their wounds
    The populist drumbeat emanating from the White House is a predictable reaction to the shellacking Democrats took in Massachusetts last week and the drop that began some months ago in President Obama’s poll numbers. It is at best a partial answer to what ails the president and Democrats in Congress.

    the talk shows
    Guests to be interviewed Sunday on major television talk shows:


  • Public Employee Unions Are Sinking California

    Public Employee Unions Are Sinking California
    Steven Greenhut, WSJ
    SacramentoAn old friend of mine has a saying, “Even the worm learns.” Prod one several hundred times, he says, and it will learn to avoid the prodder. As California enters its annual budget drama, I can't help but wonder if the wisdom of the elected politicians here in the state capital equals that of the earthworm. The state is in a precarious position, with a 12.3% unemployment rate (more than two points higher than the national average) and a budget $20 billion in the red (only months after the last budget fix closed a large deficit). Productive Californians are leaving for…

    How Democrats Can Win Again
    David Plouffe, Washington Post
    The Democratic Party got a resounding wake-up call from the voters of Massachusetts on Tuesday. But it's long been clear that 2010 would be a challenging election year for our party. With few exceptions, the first off-year election in a new president's term has led to big gains for the minority party — this was true for Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. After two election cycles in which Democrats won most of the close races and almost all of the big ones, Democrats have much more fragile turf to defend this year than usual. Add to that a historic…

    Court Strikes Down Vital Restrictions on Corporations

    Court Vindicates Proper Understanding of 1st Amendment

    Supreme Court’s Dishonest Power Grab
    Ruth Marcus, Washington Post

  • War Looms Between Israel and Hezbollah

    War Looms Between Israel and Hezbollah
    It looks like a hop, skip and a jump. There’s the first electrified fence, then the dirt strip to identify footprints, then the tarmac road, then one more electrified fence, and then acres and acres of trees. Orchards rather than tanks. Galilee spreads beyond, soft and moist and dark green in the winter afternoon—a peaceful Israel, you might think.

    By Robert Fisk

    It looks like a hop, skip and a jump. There’s the first electrified fence, then the dirt strip to identify footprints, then the tarmac road, then one more electrified fence, and then acres and acres of trees. Orchards rather than tanks. Galilee spreads beyond, soft and moist and dark green in the winter afternoon—a peaceful Israel, you might think.

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  • Geithner’s Treasury May Help Banks Avoid Obama’s Proposed Limits

    Geithner’s Treasury May Help Banks Avoid Obama’s Proposed Limits
    Only a year after the government stepped in to aid Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley by granting them access to the federal safety net, policy…

    Huff Radio: Left, Right & Center: The MA election, Obama v. Wall St., and what has the Supreme Court done?
    With the Supreme Court declaring that “free speech” equals “free spending for all,” has the course of American Democracy been changed forever?

    GOP Candidates Latch On To Scott Brown
    Republican candidates for Congress are latching onto Scott Brown’s bolt-from-the-blue win this week in the Massachusetts Senate race, with political outsiders and longtime office-holders alike…

    Christine Pelosi: After Citizens United – The Money is the Message
    Once upon a time, the medium was the message – now, the Supreme Court Citizens United decision to increase corporate dollars in political campaigns means…

    Sen. Michael Bennet: Corporations and Democracy
    Usually, when some new political development is called “a threat to democracy,” I consider it a bit of an exaggeration. But in the case of the Citizens United decision, I must make a major exception,

  • Quick Fact: IBD again pushing discredited claim that affordable housing caused financial collapse

    Quick Fact: IBD again pushing discredited claim that affordable housing caused financial collapse

    An Investor’s Business Daily editorial advanced the discredited claim that efforts to “facilitate homeownership among minorities” and the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) “undermined the financial system” and “started” the “financial collapse.” Numerous experts, including Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, have said that the CRA did not contribute to the crisis “in any substantive way.”

    IBD claim that CRA “started it all” echoes previously debunked claim that the law “forced banks to make many more subprime loans”

    IBD states that minority homeownership initiatives and “the Community Reinvestment Act … started it all.” From the January 21 IBD editorial:

     But Wall Street didn’t cause the collapse — government did . And this call for tougher rules is yet another attempt to escape blame. All Glass-Steagall did was let bank holding companies buy into investment banks. What undermined the financial system was a fanatical application of rules aimed at getting banks to lend as much money as possible to facilitate homeownership among minorities.

    It was the government, not Wall Street, that created the subprime market by compelling banks to make bad loans and urging Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to cash out the banks by putting more and more of the toxic mortgages on their balance sheets.

    The administration apparently hasn’t given a thought to limiting, let alone blocking the proposed expansion of, the Community Reinvestment Act that started it all. Or to reining in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-created monsters that aided and abetted the meltdown.

    Echoing numerous other conservatives, previous IBD editorial claimed that CRA “forced banks to make many more subprime loans.” A September 25, 2008, Investor’s Business Daily editorial claimed the CRA “forced banks to make many more subprime loans.” As Media Matters for America has documented, numerous media conservatives have advanced the discredited claim that the CRA was responsible for the financial crisis.

    FACT: Experts say CRA did not contribute to financial crisis “in any substantive way”

    Bernanke: Experience “runs counter to the charge that CRA was at the root of, or otherwise contributed in any substantive way to, the current mortgage difficulties.” In a November 25, 2008, letter, Bernanke stated: “Our own experience with CRA over more than 30 years and recent analysis of available data, including data on subprime loan performance, runs counter to the charge that CRA was at the root of, or otherwise contributed in any substantive way to, the current mortgage difficulties.”

    SF Reserve Bank’s Yellen: “[S]tudies have shown that the CRA has increased the volume of responsible lending to low- and moderate-income households.” Janet Yellen, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, stated in a March 2008 speech that “studies have shown that the CRA has increased the volume of responsible lending to low- and moderate-income households.”

    Slate’s Gross: “[t]he notion that the Community Reinvestment Act is somehow responsible for poor lending decisions is absurd.” In an October 7, 2008, Slate article, Daniel Gross, a business columnist for Newsweek and author of Dumb Money: How Our Greatest Financial Minds Bankrupted the Nation, criticized the notion that affordable housing initiatives caused the financial crisis, writing that “the notion that the Community Reinvestment Act is somehow responsible for poor lending decisions is absurd” and that “lending money to poor people and minorities isn’t inherently risky. There’s plenty of evidence that in fact it’s not that risky at all.” Gross further explained, “On the other hand, lending money recklessly to obscenely rich white guys … can be really risky. In fact, it’s even more risky, since they have a lot more borrowing capacity.”

  • A Rumble with Wall Street … That’s a Fight We Should Welcome

    A Rumble with Wall Street … That’s a Fight We Should Welcome
    One of the lessons of Tuesday’s election is that voters don’t want to see their elected leaders capitulating to the very people who brought the economy down.

    One of the lessons of Tuesday's election is that voters don't want to see their elected leaders capitulating to the very people who brought the economy down.

  • Podhoretz: Limbaugh Can’t Be An Anti-Semite, He’s Pro-Israel

    Podhoretz: Limbaugh Can’t Be An Anti-Semite, He’s Pro-Israel
    Well, at least there is some good news this week. Rush Limbaugh is clearly stung by the accusations that he is an anti-semite. This is after he employed the old National Socialist canard that Jews and bankers are one and…


    AntisemitismJewRush LimbaughAnti-Defamation LeagueRace-Ethnic-Religious Relations

    An Orwellian Moment: NYT Editors Declare 60 Votes a “Majority” of 100
    We’re told on the front page of today’s NYT that “Democrats lost a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate.” We’re told inside that Scott Brown’s election “deprived Democrats of their 60-vote majority.” Also inside, we’re told that “Democrats lost their filibuster-proof…


    DemocraticUnited States SenateScott P. BrownUnited StatesScott Brown

    Obama Foreign Policy: Lackluster or Courageous?
    GlobalPost’s John Aloysius Farrell has a fascinating survey up of perspectives on Obama’s year in foreign policy. Read the entire piece, but I’ve put some of the zinger quotes below — including my own. What stands out is that perhaps…


    Foreign PolicyUnited StatesAfghanistanWarfare and ConflictPakistan

  • ThinkFast: January 22, 2010

    ThinkFast: January 22, 2010
    Some conservative House Democrats are pushing to extend the Bush tax cuts, likely earning themselves favor with “Republican-leaning business associations.” Pat Garofalo writes, “There’s absolutely no reason to extend these cuts, which this year will give millionaires more in tax breaks than 90 percent of Americans will earn in income.” Ben Bernanke’s confirmation for a second […]

    George W. Bush

    Some conservative House Democrats are pushing to extend the Bush tax cuts, likely earning themselves favor with “Republican-leaning business associations.” Pat Garofalo writes, “There’s absolutely no reason to extend these cuts, which this year will give millionaires more in tax breaks than 90 percent of Americans will earn in income.”

    Ben Bernanke’s confirmation for a second term as Federal Reserve chairman “could be a closer vote than seemed likely just a few weeks ago.” Three senators have publicly said they will vote against Bernanke and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) said there are other Dems who are quietly planning to do the same.

    In the wake of yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling on corporate involvement in elections, the Colorado Republican Party plans to sue “to overturn voter-approved state limits on some campaign contributions.” “Our firm will be bringing a challenge to this law in the coming days,” said Ryan Call, a lawyer whose firm will represent the state GOP. The 2002 law banned direct corporate or union expenditures in state races.

    “The nation’s mayors are asking the federal government for a second wave of stimulus money,” saying the first round hasn’t done enough to combat urban unemployment. More than 230 mayors are in Washington for a conference and warn that they will be forced to impose more layoffs without a second stimulus.

    Liberal radio network Air America announced yesterday that it was declaring Chapter 7 bankruptcy and shutting down after six years on air. The company raised the profile of Al Franken and Rachel Maddow and “helped build a new sense of purpose and determination among American progressives” at a time when dissent on issues was “often denounced as ‘un-American.’” Despite yesterday’s news, progressive radio remains alive and well.

    In a speech on internet freedom yesterday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, “Those who disrupt the free flow of information in our society or any other pose a threat to our economy, our government and our civil society.” The Chinese Foreign Ministry lashed out today saying Clinton’s speech was “harmful to Sino-American relations.”

    “A bill that would ban abortions in Nebraska during the second trimester or later would be the first law of its kind in the nation if passed by the Legislature,” according to the bill’s sponsor. The legislation would ban abortion after the fetus has the “physical structures necessary to experience pain” and would “require a doctor to determine the gestational age of the fetus before performing an abortion.”

    The Obama administration “has decided to continue to imprison without trials nearly 50 detainees at the Guantanamo Bay military prison in Cuba because a high-level task force has concluded that they are too difficult to prosecute but too dangerous to release,” an administration official told the press Thursday. There are currently nearly 200 detainees left at the prison.

    Several European governments reacted positively to a new Obama plan “to curb banks’ size and trading activities” yesterday. “They see that regulation, which was a taboo word that was difficult to use in financial circles in the United States, is vital to contain … banking excesses,” said French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde.

    Continuing his “White House to Main Street” jobs tour, President Obama will travel to the Cleveland suburb of Elyria, Ohio today, one of the hardest hit areas in the country in terms of unemployment. The president will visit the Riddell sporting goods factory to witness the production of baseball and football helmets.

    And finally: Washington now finds itself in the middle of the NBC controversy between Jay Leno and Conan O’Brien: The White House Correspondents’ Association has reportedly chosen Leno to headline its annual dinner on May 1.

    Follow ThinkProgress on Twitter.

  • Scott Brown carries the weight of great GOP expectations to D.C.

    Scott Brown carries the weight of great GOP expectations to D.C.
    Scott Brown left the truck back in Massachusetts. At 9:30 on Thursday morning, the Republican state senator arrived by US Airways shuttle at Reagan National Airport, though he rode a GMC-driving everyman image and a wave of Tea Party-stoked, establishment-financed frustration into the U.S. Senate…


    Rep. Edwards: Public option now optional in health reform vote
    After pledging not to vote for any health care bill that did not contain a public option, Rep. Donna F. Edwards (D-Md.) now says she “may” do just that.

    Scott Brown’s Senate win boosts GOP campaign efforts
    Emboldened by Scott Brown’s stunning win in Massachusetts, Republicans are convinced this is their year to climb out of the political abyss and capture congressional seats and governor’s offices held by Democrats across the country.

    In Ohio, Obama says he won’t ‘walk away’ from health-care fight
    ELYRIA, OHIO — Offering both a passionate defense of his policies and a populist pitch, President Obama told audience members in this economically struggling region Friday that he will continue fighting for them even in the face of stiffening political opposition.


    Populist backlash puts Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke under siege
    The populist brushfire that has burned through Democratic fortunes this week threatened Friday to claim Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, imperiling his nomination for a second term and sending an unsettled stock market tumbling for the third straight day.

  • Senate 2010: More Shocks on the Way?

    Senate 2010: More Shocks on the Way?
    Larry Sabato, Center for Politics
    With Tuesday night's upset by Republican Scott Brown in Massachusetts, the GOP gained more than just a 41st vote to disrupt the Obama agenda. As attention turns to the midterm elections in November, the Republican Party has strong momentum. A few months ago, even GOP leaders said that taking over the Senate was a pipe dream, and it is still not probable. But as some independents sour on the Democratic Party, the possibility for a GOP majority can no longer be dismissed out of hand. More likely, next year's Senate will still have a Democratic majority but be much more closely…

    The Supreme Court’s Blow to Democracy

    How Democrats Missed the Memo
    Charles Krauthammer, Washington Post
    On Jan. 14, five days before the Massachusetts special election, President Obama was in full bring-it-on mode as he rallied House Democrats behind his health care reform. “If Republicans want to campaign against what we've done by standing up for the status quo and for insurance companies over American families and businesses, that is a fight I want to have.”The bravado lasted three days. When Obama campaigned in Boston on Jan. 17 for Obamacare supporter Martha Coakley, not once did he mention the health care bill. When your candidate is sinking, you don't throw her a…

  • Obama Talks Tough on Banking Reform

    Obama Talks Tough on Banking Reform
    In case you hadn’t noticed, not a heck of a lot has changed on Wall Street in the last year, despite various banking behemoths’ successful pleas for federal aid to float them out of the recession they were instrumental in creating. Well, that’s about to change—or so President Barack Obama says, at least. The president sent a message to the financial industry Thursday, talking reform in sweeping strokes and claiming that he’s ready to do battle—tough talk from a president who might just need to prove his mettle after suffering some sizable political setbacks of late.  —KA BBC: “While the financial system is far stronger today than it was one year ago, it is still operating under the exact same rules that led to its near collapse,” Mr Obama said. His proposals also include a ban on retail banks from using their own money in investments – known as proprietary trading. Instead, banks would be limited to investing their customers’ funds. “Banking reforms do not come bigger than those proposed by President Obama,” the BBC’s business editor Robert Peston said. This may mean that some of the US’ biggest banks, such as Bank of America and JP Morgan, whose shares were badly hit, may have to be broken up. Read more

    Obama

    In case you hadn’t noticed, not a heck of a lot has changed on Wall Street in the last year, despite various banking behemoths’ successful pleas for federal aid to float them out of the recession they were instrumental in creating. Well, that’s about to change—or so President Barack Obama says, at least.

    The president sent a message to the financial industry Thursday, talking reform in sweeping strokes and claiming that he’s ready to do battle—tough talk from a president who might just need to prove his mettle after suffering some sizable political setbacks of late.? —KA

    BBC:

    “While the financial system is far stronger today than it was one year ago, it is still operating under the exact same rules that led to its near collapse,” Mr Obama said.

    His proposals also include a ban on retail banks from using their own money in investments – known as proprietary trading. Instead, banks would be limited to investing their customers’ funds.

    “Banking reforms do not come bigger than those proposed by President Obama,” the BBC’s business editor Robert Peston said.

    This may mean that some of the US’ biggest banks, such as Bank of America and JP Morgan, whose shares were badly hit, may have to be broken up.

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    If President Obama has decided to give up on health care reform, he should just come out and say so. Then we could all get on with our lives—those of us with health insurance, that is.

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