Rabu, 30 September 2009

Michelle Obama, 'best weapon deployed'

Video: Unplugged: Olympics Bid Brings Political Risks
Nancy Cordes, Chicago Sun-Times' Lynn Sweet and Washington Post's Ezra Klein discuss President Obama's upcoming Olympics pitch in Copenhagen and the latest on health care. Plus; CBS News' John Bentley reports on Eliot Spitzer's possible second act.
911 Dispatcher Answers Call -- Finds Out Own House is on Fire
ABC's Bradley Blackburn reports from New York: 9-1-1 dispatcher Mike Bowes of Quincy, Massachusetts has handled thousands of emergency calls, with lives on the line every time he picks up the phone. But when he answered a call on Monday...
Michelle Obama, 'best weapon deployed'

by Mark Silva and updated

Air Force One will take off for Copenhagen tomorrow night, but the White House says it already has "deployed our best weapon'' in Chicago's bid for the 2016 Olympic Summer Games:

The first lady.

Asked how the president, who will have only a few hours on the ground in Copenhagen on Friday as the International Olympic Committee weighs the bids of Chicago, Rio de Janeiro, Madrid and Tokyo for the '16 games, will lobby a committee as large as the IOC, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs today said:

"The president will approach this in selling the American bid as he approached selling America around the world.

"It's some time on the phone, some time on meetings,'' Gibbs told reporters at the White House, "and obviously we probably already have deployed our best weapon in Michelle Obama.''

The president at first had said that his wife would be the best representative of the. Obama administration, when it appeared that he would not be traveling to Copenhagen.. The first lady arrived ahead of her husband, as he might say, "all fired up, ready to go.'' .

This is what Michelle Obama had to say tonight at a reception held by Chicago Mayor Richard Daley at a hotel in Copenhagen:

"As my husband would say, we are fired up and ready to go in here. (Applause.) It's a good thing. Well, first let me begin by thanking my dear friend, my chit-chat buddy, Oprah Winfrey. She talks about me coming here without hesitation. This is a woman who's got a pretty busy scheduletaping shows, traveling across the globe, a woman with a full plate. I think that folks out there should understand how Chicagoans, even those who weren't born and raised here, feel a passion about the city, so much so that we dropped everythingdropped everythingto be a part of this team. So I want to give Ms. Winfrey a round of applause as well. (Applause.)

One reporter asked me in a press briefing, "So, what do you think Oprah adds to the team?" I said, "Oprah is Oprah." (Laughter.) What more do you have to say? I said every single city who's bidding wishes they had Oprah on their team, and we have her, and we are grateful that she is a part of this endeavor. (Applause.)

It is so nice to see so many familiar faces. I mean, we really do miss Chicago. We've made a wonderful home in D.C. The girls are great; Grandma is good. Bo is no longer a puppy; he's a big dog now. (Laughter.) But it's wonderful to reconnect to my hometown.

When I looked at the bid initially, I was overwhelmed by what a beautiful concept was presented. You know, everything about this bid speaks to what the city has to offer. Having the Games right along that beautiful, glorious lakefront; using the existing park structure to ensure that we're making the kinds of investments and we'll have the kind of wonderful leave-behinds that will benefit the city over the long run; the notion that Olympic athletes who visit the city will live centrally, they'll be 15 minutes from any competition site, that they'll be able to walk, ride or bus to some of the greatest cultural offerings that this nation, that this world has to offerit will be an athlete's paradise in so many ways, and we will have it at a time in the city's climate that will actually be nice. (Laughter.) The lake won't be frozen over.

So I am thrilled. I am proud of our bid, and I am proud of this team. And I have to ask you, are we ready to go with this, right? You ready to go? (Applause.)

This bid also means a lot to me personally because, as First Lady, as many of you know, I've made it a priority to bridge the gap between the White House and communities across D.C. and across the country. I've spent much of my first nine months trying to open the doors to the White House to kids who might not otherwise see themselves having access to these institutions, because that's where I came fromcommunities like that where kids never dreamed that they could set foot in the White House, let alone live there.

So I've wanted to open the doors of the White House and bring new opportunities to so many young kidskids living in the midst of power and prestige, fortune and fame, but never really seeing their connections to those institutions.

And Barack and I made a point of doing the same thing when we lived in Chicagomaking the concerns of kids in all sorts of communities our own, because we have been on both sides of that bridge. In so many ways, we have lived full lives on both sides of that bridge. And for me, this is one of the best reasons I can think of to bring the Olympics to our city.

We need all of our children to be exposed to the Olympic ideals that athletes from around the world represent, particularly this time in our nation's history, where athletics is becoming more of a fleeting opportunity. Funds dry up so it becomes harder for kids to engage in sports, to learn how to swim, to even ride a bike. When we're seeing rates of childhood obesity increase, it is so important for us to raise up the platform of fitness and competition and fair play; to teach kids to cheer on the victors and empathize with those in defeat, but most importantly, to recognize that all the hard work that is required to do something special.

I remember watching the Olympics when I was little. I remember it to the T, some of those memories. And Nadia Comaneci is here, who(applause)and so many incredible Olympic athletes. But I remember, I told this story, when you scored that perfect 10, you bounced off the balance beam, off the parallel bars. I thought I could do that. (Laughter.) I didn't know then that I would be 5'11". (Laughter.)

But it wasit was an activity in our household when it was time for the Olympic Games, all of us gathered around the TV cheering on and being inspired by people who were doing things that were beyond belief. And I just think, wouldn't it be great if that kind of spirit was happening right down the street in our community? Just think of that. Kids and communities across the city, in Austin, kids who grew up in Cabrini, kids who live so far from the city. Now just imagine if all of that was happening right in their own backyard. That's what I think about. (Applause.)

It does something to a kid when they can feel that energy and power up close and personal. And for some kids in our communities and our city, around the nation, around the world, they can never dream of being that close to such power and opportunity. So that's what excites me most about bringing the Games to Chicagothe impact that it can have on the lives of our young people, and on our entire community.

And I know that's what all of you have been working for for these past few months. As much of a sacrifice as people say this is for me or Oprah or the President to come for these few days, so many of you in this room have been working for years to bring this bid home, and you have put together a phenomenal set of ideas that, no matter what the outcome is, we should be proud of as a city. (Applause.)

So now is the time for us to pull it through, you know. As Barack and I have looked at this, this is like a campaign. (Laughter.) Just like Iowa. (Laughter.) You got toand the international community may not understand that, but Iowa is like a caucus, and you can't take any vote for granted. Nobody makes the decision until they're sitting there.

So the next few days really provide us with a real opportunity to hold some hands, to have some conversations, to share our visions, to make the world understand that this is an opportunity for the United States to connect to the world in a really important way at a very critical time, and for each of us to show them our passion and sincerity to be part of the world in a very special way, and to let people know that we understand that sports saves lives, that it makes dreams come true, that it creates visions in kids' heads to make them think they can be the next David Robinson, the next Barack Obama, the next Nadia Comaneci, the next Oprah Winfrey. Those dreams have to start somewhere, and for so many, they start when they watch the Olympics. And if we can show people that we understand that power and that possibility, then they will have the confidence that not only will we have the citythe Olympics in a city that works, but will execute this thing with the kind of passion and openness and sincerity that the world so greatly wants to see in us.

So let's get it done. Thank you so much.''


U.S. Speeds Up Military Withdrawal From Iraq

During testimony before the House Armed Services Committee, Army Gen. Ray Odierno called for "strategic patience" during the withdrawal and the transition of responsibilities to Iraq's security forces. The U.S. is sending 4,000 more troops home next month.


Selasa, 29 September 2009

The Financial Collapse of 2008: One Year Later

Congress Weighs Regulating Supplements
Illegal Steroids Found in Over-the-Counter Bodybuilding Supplements Prompts Congressional Attention
The Financial Collapse of 2008: One Year Later
On this day one year ago, September 29, 2008, the House of Representatives voted down the $700 billion Paulson financial rescue package. As a result, the stock market plummeted by 777 points -- the biggest one-day point-drop in Dow history....
Senators nix 'public option' in health care

by Mark Silva

The Senate Finance Committee, working through amendments to a sweeping health-care overhaul, today flatly rejected the concept of a "public option,'' a government-run insurance plan for people who cannot find coverage privately.

The committee's 15-8 vote against the option today underscores the depth of division among Democratic leaders pressing for health-care legislation as well as solid Republican opposition to an option that President Barack Obama has promoted while conceding he is open to negotiation.

The public-option, however, remains an essential element to any legislation ultimately adopted, in the eyes of some of the Senate's Democratic leaders as well as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), who has said the House cannot pass a health-care bill without the government-run choice.

In the short run, however, the vote today represents a victory for Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.), as he pushes the legislation through his committee. He hopes to get a committee vote on his package by the end of the week.

"My job is to put together a bill that gets to 60 votes" in the full Senate, the Montana Democrat said before joining the majority on the committee in opposing the public option.

"No one shows me how to get to 60 votes with a public option," Baucus said.

In the Democratic-run Senate, it still takes 60 votes to bypass a Republican attempt to stall a floor vote on a bill.

The committee is in the second week of debate on Baucus' bill.

The legislation includes much of what the White House has been seeking, without the public option at this stage.

It includes consumer protections, including a ban on insurance companies denying coverage on the basis of pre-existing conditions. It also provides government subsidies to help lower-income Americans pay for coverage that they cannot afford.

Both the Senate and House appear to be on track toward votes on contrasting versions of a health-care bill in October. Senate and House votes will lead to negotiations on a compromise, with the White House pressing for final action on a bill by the end of the year.



Sen. Kerry On Afghan Strategy

In an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal on Monday, Democratic Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, urged against committing more troops to Afghanistan without clear goals or a timetable. Kerry discusses the direction of U.S. strategy in Afghanistan.


Senin, 28 September 2009

Stacks Of Medical Bills Afflict The 'Underinsured'

Obama to Front Chicago's Olympics Bid
President to Travel to Denmark this Week to Back Hometown's Quest to Host 2016 Summer Games
Sex Offenders Living in a Campground
There has been a lot of attention paid to a group of Florida sex offenders who have served their time but have no place to live. Because communities have laws restricting where in a community convicted sex offenders live, the...
Obama: Copenhagen-bound for IOC


by Mark Silva and updated again at 3:45 pm EDT

Let the games begin:

President Barack Obama, who initially planned to let First Lady Michelle Obama represent the United States in Copenhagen this week, when the International Olympic Committee chooses a site for the 2016 summer games, plans to travel there too. The first couple will appear together at the venue-choosing summit, where Chicago will compete with three other cities for the '16 games.

The White House, which earlier had announced that an advance team was headed to Copenhagen to prepare for a possible presidential trip to Copenhagen, confirmed this morning that Obama will travel Thursday night. The IOC meets Friday.

"He hopes that he can make a strong case for Chicago and America's bid for the Olympics in 2016,'' White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said this afternoon. " Obviously any Olympics showcases the country that those Olympics are in and there's a tangible economic benefit to those Games being here. And the president wants to help out America's bid.''

Was the president's late-breaking decision to travel prompted by any hint that his appearance in Copenhagen will help? "Well, I certainly hope that an appearance wouldn't hurt it,'' Gibbs said. "But we have gotten no intelligence on it.''

A senior administration official first told the Tribune Washington Bureau this morning that Obama will travel to Copenhagen Thursday night, and return following the Friday meeting. The first lady plans to travel Tuesday, and meet with individual members of the IOC on Wednesday and Thursday to make Chicago's case for the games. The president will join her at the full committee meeting on Friday.

"President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama will both make presentations to the IOC during Friday's session,'' the White House said later this morning, in formally announcing the overnight trip. "They will discuss why Chicago is best to host the 2016 Summer games, and how the United States is eager to bring the world together to celebrate the ideals of the Olympic movement.''

Gibbs voiced confidence in Chicago's bid for the games this afternoon.

Gibbs says Copenhagen.jpg

"Obviously the president has mentioned this at meetings when we were at the U.N. and G-20,'' Gibbs said, asked about Obama's own "behind the scenes'' lobbying for the games. "He's going to continue to talk to people, in an effort to bring the 2016 games...

"Having spent some time in Chicago, it is a perfect place to hold the Olympics,'' Gibbs said. "It offers a great place for the world to see... I think, far and away, it's the strongest bid of the four that are out there.''

What if the U.S. is not chosen? Call his assistant on Saturday, the press secretary suggested.

And as for that perennial "tomato-tomahto" question, Gibbs was asked about his own pronunciation of Obama's destination: "I say Copen-HAYGEN, but I'm not sure I should be the arbiter.''

Obama saber rattling.jpg

Chicago is competing with Madrid, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo for the 2016 summer games.

Obama isn't the only head of state going to Copenhagen

Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, confident in Rio's bid, will travel to the Danish capital ahead of the IOC's vote.

"This is a fight," Silva said on his weekly radio program today. "And if we don't win, we'll have to prepare for another one. But I think we're going to return from Copenhagen with a victory." Brazil deserves the Olympics, Silva says, because South America has never hosted the games. "For the other nations, it would just be one more Olympics.''

When in Denmark...

The American president and first lady also plan to meet with Queen Margrethe II and His Royal Highness, the Prince Consort. The president also plans a meeting with Danish Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen.

The Danish media are chasing suggestions that Obama might get out for a walk-around as well, though the time-frame of the president's planned overnight trip for meetings and return Friday afternoon don't leave a lot of room for tourism. They're hearing that the president's whole presence there may be limited to five hours.

It's big news in Denmark: Obamas besøg er skåret ned til fem timer

Promoters of Chicago's bid for the 2016 games have pressed the president to take the United States' case to Copenhagen personally. And prromoters today praised the president's decision to join the first lady at the IOC meeting.

(Copen-HAYGEN, says Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, pictured above, today, at press briefing. Photo by Gerald Herbert / .) And President Barack Obama toyed with a light saber and Olympic fencer Tim Morehouse, who won a silver medal in Men's Saber Fencing at the Beijing Olympics, during a recent event at the White House to promote Chicago's bid for the '16 games. (Photo by Charles Dharapak / )

"President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama symbolize the hope, opportunity and inspiration that makes Chicago great, and we are honored to have two of our city's most accomplished residents leading our delegation in Copenhagen," Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley said in a statement released this morning.

"Who better to share with members of the International Olympic Committee the commitment and enthusiasm Chicago has for the Olympic and Paralympic Movement than the President and First Lady,'' the mayor said.

"There is no greater expression of the support our bid enjoys, from the highest levels of government and throughout our country, than to have President Obama join us in Copenhagen for the pinnacle moment in our bid," said Chicago 2016 Chairman and CEO Patrick G. Ryan.

"We are honored that President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama will be with us to extend a hand of friendship on behalf of our nation and the City of Chicago as we seek to welcome the world for the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games,'' Ryan said in a statement issued today.

In addition to the president, first lady and Mayor Daley, other senior governmental officials in the Chicago 2016 delegation to Copenhagen will include White House Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood and Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn.



Stacks Of Medical Bills Afflict The 'Underinsured'

Martha Martin and her husband spent nearly 45 percent of their income on medical costs for their family last year. Like millions of other Americans, they have some insurance, but it doesn't cover enough of their needed care.


Minggu, 27 September 2009

Clinton: Obama's problems 'manageable'

Video: Face The Nation, 09.27.09
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warns that Iran faces additional sanctions if they do not show full transparency; Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-S.C.) said that the international community has 18 months to decisively act against Iran.
Climate Week Raises Consciousness, but Negotiations Fall Short
ABC News' Carrie Halperin reports: The United Nations Environmental Programme’s (UNEP) first ever Climate Week has officially ended. From Sept. 21 to 25 there was a whirlwind of events in more than 100 cities around the world including a high...
Clinton: Obama's problems 'manageable'

by Mark Silva

Is that "right wing conspiracy'' that the Clintons complained about still alive and well, and is President Barack Obama feeling some of that heat today?

"Oh you bet,'' former President Bill Clinton said in an appearance this morning on NBC News' Meet the Press. "Sure it is... It's not as strong as it was, because America has changed, demographically.. But it's as virulent as it was. They're saying things about him, like when they accused me of murder....

"They can take his numbers down, they can run his opposition up,'' Clinton said of the president's critics. "But fundamentally, he and his team have a positive agenda for America... Their (opponents') agenda seems to be of one for him to fail. And that's not a good prescription for America.''

A good debate is needed about economic stimulus and restoring a budgetary balance, suggested the former president, who presided over four annual budget surpluses during his second term as president, handing the budget off to President George W. Bush and eight years of budget deficits, which have reached a new record high on Obama's watch. Obama has pledged to cut the annual deficit in half by the end of his term.

Does Clinton worry about a repeat of 1994, when Republicans took control of Congress midway through his first term?

"There's no way they can make it that bad,'' Clinton said. The country has changed, he said, viewing it as "more ... They've seen this movie before, because they had eight years under George Bush when the Republicans finally had the whole government, and they know the results were bad....

"Whatever happens, it will be manageable,'' Clinton predicted of the midterm.


Social Security Likely To Go Into Red Next Year

Big job losses and a spike in early retirement claims from laid-off seniors will force Social Security to pay out more in benefits than it collects in taxes the next two years, the first time that's happened since the 1980s.


Sabtu, 26 September 2009

Health care, debt and taxes: GOP

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Howdy folks-Clem Lane here. Hope you have a nice restful weekend. Here's some of what's going on this evening....... US/IRAN-A day after the UN Security Council unanimously passed a nuclear non-proliferation resolution, word that Iran has built a secret nuclear...
Health care, debt and taxes: GOP

by Mark Silva

Debt and taxes.

That's what Americans stand to get from the health-care reform that Democrars are pressing, Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson says in his party's weekly address.

"Americans have been calling us and e-mailing us,'' the senator says..

"They've packed our town hall meetings.

"They've even marched on the National Mall in Washington.

"Their message has been loud, and it has been clear: They don't like the direction this healthcare debate is headed inm,'' Isakson says. "They get anxious when they see the word billions and trillions to describe the cost because they know Washington doesn't have that kind of extra cash lying around.

They know that can only mean one thingmore debt and higher taxes.

See the Republican address above and read the text below:

Hello, I'm Senator Johnny Isakson from Georgia.

First, I want to send my condolences to the families of those who have lost their lives in the floods that have devastated my home state this past week. I am working with Senator Saxby Chambliss, Governor Sonny Perdue and the administration to bring federal assistance to those who have suffered damages.

I'd like to now discuss the healthcare debate in Washington that folks in my state and people all across this country have been watching very closely. Americans have been calling us and e-mailing us.

They've packed our town hall meetings.

They've even marched on the National Mall in Washington.

Their message has been loud, and it has been clear: They don't like the direction this healthcare debate is headed in.

They get anxious when they see the President and the Democrats in such a rush to pass a 1,000-page bill to overhaul our healthcare system.

They get anxious when they see the word billions and trillions to describe the cost because they know Washington doesn't have that kind of extra cash lying around.

They know that can only mean one thingmore debt and higher taxes.

They get anxious when they hear Democrats want to cut hundreds of billions from Medicare because they know you can't cut costs without cutting benefits for our seniors.

They get anxious when they hear public option, trigger or co-op because they know those are just different labels that can lead to the same thing -- government control of our healthcare system.

They know government-run healthcare doesn't work in Canada or in England, and it won't work in America either.

How did the Democrats respond to all these concerns this week when they unveiled their latest version of this bill?

They didn't. They ignored them altogether.

The Senate Finance Committee took up yet another healthcare bill that looks an awful lot like the Democrats' earlier proposals. It would still result in a major expansion of government into our healthcare, and the cost will be $1 trillion, $700 billion over 10 years when the bill is fully implemented.

It would still cut Medicare benefits for our seniors.

It would still expand Medicaid dramatically, forcing my state and states across the country to pay billions for their share of the expansion.

And it would still impose taxes on virtually every American and small business.

If you have insurance, you get taxed.

If you don't have insurance, you get taxed.

If you're an employer who cannot afford to provide health insurance to your employees, you get taxed.

Manufacturers of medical devices such as hearing aids will get taxed. That means anyone who needs these devices will pay higher prices.

I ran a small business in Georgia for 22 years, and I know what it's like to have to make payroll during tough times.

The kind of massive tax increases proposed by the Democrats is exactly the wrong approach for our families, our small businesses and our economy, especially in a recession.

Republicans believe the key to reforming healthcare is strengthening the doctor-patient relationship by using choice and competitionrather than rationing and restrictionsto contain costs and ensure access to affordable healthcare.

And Republicans want common-sense medical liability reform to eliminate frivolous lawsuits against doctors and hospitals.

This latest proposal from the Democrats calls for only a non-binding 'Sense of the Senate' on medical liability. This is lip service that will do nothing to lower healthcare costs.

Americans are rightly concerned about the rush to pass a massive overhaul that will raise their taxes, lower their quality of care and put government between them and their doctor.

They also are concerned about the heavy-handed approach the Democrats have taken, such as demonizing regular citizens for asking questions about their plans and imposing a gag order on insurers for suggesting anyone might lose benefits under the Democrats' plan.

The American people expect us to get this right and to do it in an open, honest and bipartisan debate. That's what they deserve. But, that's not what they're getting from the Democrats on Capitol Hill.

Thank you and God bless you and God bless the United States of America.


NATO Head On Afghanistan: 'We're Winning'

This has been the deadliest year for NATO troops in Afghanistan since the 2001 invasion. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, commander of U.S. and NATO forces there has said in a private memo that the mission there will fail unless more troops are sent. NATO Sec. Gen. Anders Fogh, however, takes a more optimistic view of the situation.


Jumat, 25 September 2009

Joe Wilson: Nancy Pelosi's House

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Joe Wilson: Nancy Pelosi's House

by Mark Silva and updated

Payback is fundraising.

The Republicans have tapped a potentially powerful fundraising tool in Rep. Joe Wilson, the South Carolinian who accused the president of lying about his health-care plans. Wilson apologized to the White House, but not to the House, which in turn admonished him for his behavior.

The GOP has not only President Barack Obama and his health-care plans, but also House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, in its cross-hairs with a fundraising appeal in Wilson's name.

Democrat Paul Begala takes note in his own fundraising appeal for his party: "'You Lie!' That was one Republican Congressclown's response to President Obama's call for action on health insurance reform. Classy. But now the very liars who heckled President Obama for calling them out are raising millions of dollars off of their rude, dishonest attack.''

"There has been a lot of debate on what is true in the debate over government-run healthcare,'' Wilson writes in a fundraising email circulated by the National Republican Congressional Committee. "But Democrats continue to spin and mislead the public in an attempt to stifle honest and open debate about what this bill will do, what it will cost and how it will change your healthcare.

"To remedy this, my Republican colleagues have introduced legislation requiring Nancy Pelosi to post all major legislation online for a minimum of 72 hours before it can be brought to a vote,'' he writes. "While this seems like common sense, Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats have continually rushed major legislation to a vote to ensure little to no public scrutiny. This means, you as a taxpaying citizen, cannot read the legislation before your representatives vote on it. ''

And this is what taxpayers can do about it, Wilson suggests: Follow the link in his email to the GOP "to support the NRCC and return the people's House to you.''

Consider this Wilson's own resolution of disapproval.

"Imagine what would happen if Nancy Pelosi is required to post the Democrats' healthcare bill online for public scrutiny,'' Wilson writes. "If we succeed, Americans can finally separate fact from fiction. The level of discourse would most certainly rise due to such transparencya concept promised by Democrats on the 2008 campaign trail.

"It's up to us to hold the Democrats accountable and that's why I'm turning to you for your immediate help. We have an important fundraising deadline approaching at the end of the month where the money raised by the Republicans will be compared to the money raised by the Democrats to determine our strength going into next fall's elections. If we can raise more money than the Democrats, we'll send a message to Pelosi, Obama, and their friends that the American people are firmly behind the Republicans in opposition to government-run healthcare.''


This is from Begala's fundraising appeal:


""You Lie!" That was one Republican Congressclown's response to President Obama's call for action on health insurance reform.

Classy.

But now the very liars who heckled President Obama for calling them out are raising millions of dollars off of their rude, dishonest attackand they're even claiming victory in the media for it!

They understand that this is the make or break month for health insurance reform. There's only four more days left to act. We're $531,161 shy of beating them by passing our million dollar goal.

September 30th marks an important deadline where the amount of money Democrats have in the bank will be a judgment on President Obama's support of health care. ''



Boehner: Slow Down Health Overhaul Negotiations

Republicans argue that President Obama hasn't done enough to forge a bipartisan solution. House Minority Leader John Boehner says there is common ground on the legislation but the president needs to hit the "reset button" on the negotiations.


Kamis, 24 September 2009

Paul Kirk 'superb steward:' Kennedy seat

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"I want, not for personally for me, but for working Americans, to have a option, that if they don't like their health insurance, if it's too expensive, they can't afford it, if the government can cobble together a cheaper insurance...
Paul Kirk 'superb steward:' Kennedy seat

by Mark Silva

The governor of Massachusetts today named Paul Kirk Jr., a former Democratic National Committee chairman and close friend and former aide of the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, to serve as a temporary replacement for the deceased senator until a special election for the seat is held in January.

Kirk's appointment will restore a crucial 60th vote for the Senate's Democratic leadership as the party presses for the health-care legislation that the White House is demanding.

Kennedy, who succumbed to brain cancer last month, had asked state officials to appoint a successor swiftly, arguing that the state cannot afford the vacancy at a critical time.

His passing also had denied the Senate's Democrats a filibuster-proof 60-vote bloc, which the party had only recently obtained with the long-disputed election of Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota. Two other senators, independents Joe Lieberman of Connecticut and Bernie Sanders of Vermont, meet with the majority party's caucus.

State law calls for a special election to fill a Senate vacancy, and that will be held in January. But the state Legislature this week passed a bill permitting the governor, Democrat Deval Patrick, to appoint an interim successor until the election is held.

"This appointment is a profound honor, and I accept it with sincere humility,'' Kirk said, thanking the state's legislature for fulfilling the former senator's dying wish in enabling the governor to appoint an interim senator, adding: "I shall not be a candidate in the special election for the United States Senate.''

President Barack Obama, pressing Congress for action on a sweeping health-care overhaul, praised Kirk's appointment.

"I am pleased that Massachusetts will have its full representation in the United States Senate in the coming months, as important issues such as health care, financial reform and energy will be debated,'' Obama said in a statement issued by the Whtie House. "Paul Kirk is a distinguished leader, whose long collaboration with Senator Kennedy makes him an excellent, interim choice to carry on his work until the voters make their choice in January.''

Republicans quickly denounced the move as a Democratic "power play'' to ram the president's health-care bill through Congress.

"The Democrats' power play in Massachusetts has nothing to do with principle, and everything to do with politics,'' said Rob Jesmer, executive eirector of the National Republican Senatorial Committee. "With their unpopular government-run health care bill on the brink of failure, Democrats in Washington desperately need another vote in the U.S. Senate, and it is clear that this administration will stop at nothIng to ram through the Congress.''

Kirk, 71, is a Boston attorney and was a close friend of the former senator. He and his wife, Gail, live on Cape Cod, and Kirk was among the few who visited Kennedy often at his Hyannis Port home before his death after nearly 47 years in the Senate.

"During our years together, I was personally privileged to have had Sen. Kennedy's friendship, his trust and his confidence,'' Kirk said. "I hope to retain the talented, hardworking and most effective staff of Sen. Kennedy's office.''

Kirk, a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, served on Kennedy's Senate staff from 1969-77. He ran the DNC in the run-up to former Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis' unsuccessful campaign for president in 1988.

Kirk also co-founded the Commission on Presidential Debates, which sponsors the series of presidential and vice presidential debates every four years. And he serves as chairman of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation.

.Kennedy's sons, Edward Kennedy Jr. and Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) both lobbied for Kirk's appointment in phone calls to the governor, according to the Associated Press. Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), and Kennedy's widow, Vicki Kennedy attended the morning announcement at the state capitol.

"We are blessed in Massachusetts to have an enduring surplus of political and civic talent,'' Kerry said. "This was no easy call, but I'll you, I believe the choice the governor has made is completely in keeping with the change of the law that the legislature undertook.... Including Sen. Kennedy.,

"This is a caretaker appointment, a gentle and difficult transition,'' Kerry said, calling Kirk "a superb steward.''

Kirk never has served in political office, and will be seated for only a short time. The state will hold a special election to fill the seat in January. The Democratic field includes state Attorney General Martha Coakley and Rep. Michael Capuano (D-Mass.)

.Kirk has been involved in fundraising for a Senate institute to be created in Kennedy's name. Organizers have faced criticism for accepting donations from the health care industry. Kirk also has been a board member for Hartford Financial Services, known as "The Hartford,'' which sells life and property insurance.

His home state's Democratic leaders have given Gov. Patrick an authority that they had denied a former Republican governor.

State lawmakers had revoked the governor's power to fill Senate vacancies by appointment in 2004, fearing that then- Gov. Mitt Romney might appoint a fellow Republican should Kerry, the Democratic nominee for president that year, was successful. The legislature set a five-month period for special elections instead.

On Aug. 20, five days before he died, Kennedy had sent the governor and state legislative leaders a letter urging a revision of the law. Patrick called Kennedy's request "reasonable,'' in light of the health-care legislation and other important bills in the Senate.

"Congress is debating our future, right now,'' Patrick said today citing the health care legislation, energy legislation and other issues under debate in the Senate. "The issues... are simply too important... for us to be one voice short.''

Kirk "was a close and loyal adviser and confidante of Sen. Kennedy,'' Patrick said. "He is a distinguished lawyer, volunteer and citizen.... In the next few weeks he will carry on the work of Sen. Kennedy.... mindful of his values.''


Michael Moore's New Target: 'Capitalism' Itself

Michael Moore is famous for skewering the excesses of American industry — and in his latest film, he goes looking (mostly on Wall Street) for the source of the trouble. Critic Kenneth Turan says that while Capitalism certainly has spirit, the pop-culture polemicist may have taken on more than he could chew.


Rabu, 23 September 2009

House Closer to Vote on Gay Rights at Work

House Closer to Vote on Gay Rights at Work
Two Openly Gay Representatives Speak Out for Passage of Bill to Ban Workplace Discrimination Based on Sexual Orientation
In Cold Blood in Beason, Illinois
It’s hard to make sense of certain news stories. The killing of an entire family in the small farm town of Beason, Illinois, is one of them. A neighborhood boy stopped by the Gee family’s home on Monday. He knocked...
Joe Wilson action figure: 'You lie'

by Mark Silva

We were saving this one for a slow afternoon:

New, in time for Christmas stockings:

Joe Wilson, the action figure.

Joe Wilson action figure.jpg

The talking doll delivers an infamous line: "You lie.''

The action figure molded in the likeness of the South Carolina congressman who called out the president in an address to a joint session of Congress does not, however, say it's sorryat least not to the House.

The newest entry in the line of action figures at Herobuilders joins a growing lineup that includes the Sarah Palin action figure, the Jon and Kate dolls, "Beach Blanket Obama," Mrs. Obama and Nancy Pelosi -- which comes with a surf-board sized water-board -- Joe the Plumber, Joe the Vice President and, well, from the Bush years, a sidekick with a T-shirt reading: "You Don't Know Dick.''

There's a Bernie Madoff action figure, and Rod Blagojevich too.

The talking Larry Craig says: "I am not gay."

Emile Vicale, owner of Herobuilders, has a price for all of this actionable offensive material, of course, but this is no product endorsement. In fact, the more one looks at each of the dolls, the more they look alike..


Sen. Dodd On Super-Regulator Proposal

President Obama's attempt to tighten the government's reins on Wall Street is running into opposition from key lawmakers. Senator Christopher Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, is one of the lawmakers who has been cool to the proposals. He wants to combine current banking regulators into a single super-regulator. Dodd discusses his proposal.


Selasa, 22 September 2009

Tom DeLay: Wild Thing

Obama to Mideast Leaders: Time to Do More
President Holds Meeting With Israeli and Palestinian Leaders; Breakthrough Seen as Unlikely
Where or Where Will Gaddafi Stay?
Highlighting a story today on ABC News dot com by Kirit Radia and Russell Goldman...Where will Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi stay when visiting this week for the UN General Assembly? Turns out he may be overnighting in a Bedouin tent...
Tom DeLay: Wild Thing

by Mark Silva

Tom DeLay is one Wild Thing.

"One thing I liked in politics was the challenge and the competition,'' the former Republican House Whip and Majority Leader says of his cha-cha-cha on Dancing With the Stars, "and this is just like that.''

Seasoned political watchers may be hard-pressed, however, to recall the Texan political enforcer sliding across the floor on his knees and raising a microphone to his mouth for a Karaoke-worthy howl of "Wild Thing,'' the way DeLay did on national television this week.

"One thing I wasn't prepared for in learning to dance was getting in touch with my feminine side,'' DeLay said of his training for the ABC dance show, and some of the steps just didn't fit him: "Going left for me is absolutely outrageous.''

DeLay, 62 and among eight celebrity male contests making their debut on the show Monday, bounced and swayed to the tune of a cover of the old Troggs standard -- "Wild thing, you make my heart sing. You make everything... groovy''with a bikini-clad professional dance partner Cheryl Burke.

"You are crazier than Sarah Palin,'' judge Bruno told DeLay.

"I just busted out laughing,'' Burke said, "because I was, like, I can't believe this old man is here on his one knee playing the guitar and doing exactly what I told him to do, no questions asked.''

""Parts were magic, parts were tragic," judge Len Goldman said.

DeLay was "The Hammer'' in the House, known for ruling his party's ranks, before resigning in 2006 after indictment on charges of campaign finance law violations, and "the Exterminator,'' for the pest control company he owned in Texas.

Last night, he was simply "Wild Thing.''

"I have to say I nailed it," said DeLay, wearing orthopedic shoes for his wild cha-cha-cha. "I felt good. My hips were working. Cheryl held me up and I really, I did it. I nailed it."

DeLay finished with 20 pointsbetter than Ashley Hamilton, son of actor George Hamilton, or football star Michael Irvin, the two tied with the night's low of 19 points. Singer Donny Osmond placed second with 30. Singer Aaron Carter carried the night, with 32 of a possible 40.

DeLay, assessing the score-cards, exclaimed: "Next week.''


Who's Representing The Uninsured On Capitol Hill?

Of the 100 congressional districts with the highest uninsured rates, 53 are represented either by Republicans — who are fighting Obama's attempt to overhaul health care — or by Blue Dogs — conservative Democrats who have slowed down and diluted overhaul proposals.


Senin, 21 September 2009

Chicago landmark: Stimulus a promise

CIA Torture Just Bad Science, Report Says
Interrogation Techniques May Have Damaged Suspects' Ability To Provide Vital Information, Scientist Finds
Your Kids and the Swine Flu Vaccine
ABC's Brian Hartman reports: The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases released a new report today about the H1N1 vaccine and children. The upshot of the report, according to NIAID Director Anthony Fauci, is that children 10-17 years old...
Chicago landmark: Stimulus a promise

by Mark Silva

When they talk about "shovel-ready'' work for that $787-billion economic stimulus that President Barack Obama signed into law, they aren't talking about the landmark high-rise in Chicago where Obama staged his transition to the White House and where the senior senator from Illinois, Dick Durbin, maintains an office.

Our good friend John McCormick, who covered the presidential campaign and the transition, notes that the John C. Kluczynski Federal Building, which holds architectural significance as a Ludwig Mies van der Rohe skyscraper, is still waiting for more than $100 million of work promised by the federal goverment.

Kluczynski Building.jpg

President-elect Obama had his transition offices there, on the 38th floor. And, as a state senator in Illinois, staged his 2002 speech against the U.S. invasion of Iraq from the plaza outside the building, notes McCormick, a Bloomberg News correspondent with a good memory as an erstwhile correspondent for the Chicago Tribune.

Seven months after the president signed the stimulus bill into law, the General Services Administration tells McCormick that they have let work on the $10.7-million design and construction management piece of the overhaul of the 43-story building. But he couldn't say when the rest of the $102.8-million project would get underway. The remodeling will generate 480 to 872 jobs.

"That's too long -- the economy is hurting now," says Karen Barnes, laid off this month as a health-care auditor and helping to set up the Berghoff Oktoberfest in the Kluczynski plaza for $10 an hour. "People need jobs."

(The Kluczynski Federal Building is pictured above, at a time when President-elect Barack Obama was holding meetings in his Chicago transition office there. (Photo by Charles Dharapak) / )

The 1975-vintage building is significant in a city renowned for architecture, McCormick notes, "because it's a prime example of Mies van der Rohe's mid-century modernist style. While the tower has amenities such as rapid elevators and motion sensors for restroom lighting, the renovation will boost its efficiency.

"The idea is to upgrade the stock of buildings in our inventory to better energy performance," says David Wilkinson, a spokesman for the GSA. "We are very conscious of the fact that things are not moving as quickly as people would like them to.''

Across the country, Bloomberg reports, only transportation projects have lived up to the stimulus package's promise, according to Stephen Sandherr, CEO of the Associated General Contractors of America, a trade association based in Arlington, Virginia. "The expectation was that these projects were going to hit the ground in short order," he says. "For various, sundry reasons, they haven't."


Race: The Non-Issue That Is

In her weekly commentary, host Michel Martin revisits former President Jimmy Carter's recent suggestion that President Obama is being heavily scrutinized in part because some are uncomfortable with a black president. Martin says to Carter's critics that time spent on pretending that race is not an issue could be better used thinking about how to bring about a colorblind reality.


Minggu, 20 September 2009

Video: Face The Nation, 09.20.09
President Obama on details of his health care reform; RNC Chairman Michael Steele on the President's interview; Plus, Bob Schieffer on being a journalist during presidential interviews.
Obama: White Sox not out yet

by Mark Silva

President Barack Obama is a die-hard White Sox fan.

How hard?

The president wore a Sox jacket as he tossed the ceremonial opening pitch at the All Star game, he was reminded in an interview that aired on NBC News' Meet the Press today.

But, NBC's David Gregory told the president at the close of a serious session on health-care and much more, part of a five-network media blitz that Obama was making on the Sunday news shows this morning: "Hate to break it to you, but doesn't look so good for your White Sox here.'''

How die-hard?

Who is the president picking for a World Series winner?

"I think mathematically, the White Sox can still get in the playoffs.,'' Obama said.

"You're an optimist,'' Gregory said.

"So... until they are eliminated, I will make no predictions,'' the Chicagoan said.

"Oh, come on.''

"I've got say, though, that the-- the Cardinals have been-- been coming on strong. And Pujols is unbelievable,' Obama added. "But -- this is tough to say. The Yankees are also doing pretty well. And a shout out to Derek Jeter for breaking Lou Gehrig's record. He's... a classic.''


Ron Paul: Leave Government Out Of Insurance Plan

One of the strongest opponents of government intervention in reforming the health care industry is Congressman Ron Paul — a Republican from Texas. He's known to some as "Dr. No" for his opposition to tax hikes and refusal to vote for spending bills. He tells Weekend All Things Considered host Guy Raz that he doesn't believe health care is a right.


Sabtu, 19 September 2009

Rival Networks Fire Back Over Fox News Ad

Rival Networks Fire Back Over Fox News Ad
News Outlets React After Fox News Claims It was the Only Station to Cover Protests in D.C.
Clem's Chronicles: Obama & Health Care Reform/NY Terror Plot/Iran Protest
Happy Friday folks. Hope you have a swell weekend. Here's what's happening- PRESIDENT OBAMA/RACE & HEALTH CARE REFORM-President Obama sat down with THIS WEEK’s George Stephanopoulos today to pre-tape an interview for use Sunday morning, one of five interviews the...
Obama Olympic travel eyed: Advance

by Christi Parsons

President Obama is dispatching an advance team to Copenhagen to pave the way for a possible personal appearance before the Olympic committee next month.

The decision doesn't necessarily mean Obama will be able to make an in-person appeal for his adopted hometown of Chicago, which is bidding to to host the Olympics in 2016, a senior advisor to the president said this afternoon.

But the president wants to make sure he has the option to go, in case he can get away from the health care discussions to make the trip.

Before any presidential trip, the White House advance teams need time to size up the security situation and make arrangements for accomodations -- even for travel the president doesn't end up undertaking. The advance team will travel Monday.

"He wants to preserve his options," the advisor said in an interview today.

Ten days ago, Obama told Chicago Mayor Richard Daley that he might not be able to get away, because of the ongoing effort to pass a health care bill. But Obama still hopes to make the trip if he can do so without jeopardizing the reform bill, aides say.

Whatever happens, First Lady Michelle Obama will still go and make the case for her hometown to host the games.

The White House considers her a persuasive salesperson.

"She is regarded as an essential strength of the strategy, because she was born and raised in Chicago and her life story embodies the Olympic spirit," the Obama advisor said.

Chicago is competing with Madrid, Tokyo and Rio de Janeiro to host the Olympics. The 100-plus member International Olympic Committee will vote on a winner early next month.


Dinner With Palin? $63,500

The charity auction held on eBay to have dinner with Sarah Palin ended Friday night with a winning bid of $63,500. Cathy Maples of Huntsville, Ala., offered a small fortune to have dinner with the former governor, beating another bidder by $100.


Jumat, 18 September 2009

What's Your Favorite Summer Blockbuster? Our Reporter Rates the Summer Hits...

Video: Congress Grills Big Insurance
Executives from six of the nation's largest insurers were grilled about their company's policies before members of Congress. Nancy Cordes reports.
What's Your Favorite Summer Blockbuster? Our Reporter Rates the Summer Hits...
Ever rated a movie that you haven’t seen? ABC's John Berman has -- watch his video below to see what he thought of this summer’s blockbusters (that he hasn’t had a chance to watch -- yet). And chime in below...
Obama: Lies, trust, action'tis season

by Mark Silva

With all the fuss this week over the congressman who accused the president of lying, all the apologies, the rebukes and the morning-afters, the unanswered question when all is said and done might be who believes whom.

Charles Krauthammer, the conservative, prize-winning Washington Post columnist, says President Barack Obama "doesn't lie... He's too subtle for that.'' And the columnist rolls out a litany of examples today examining Obama's "relationship with truth.''

Yet much of the American public apparently still places a lot of confidence in the president's penchant for telling it like it is.

For all the "TelePrompTer President" criticism that Obama draws from detractors, eight in 10 Americans say he is a good communicator.

And nearly two-thirds of those surveyed by the Pew Research Center say that Obama is trustworthy. A similar number view him as a strong leader, according to the survey of 1,006 adults conducted Sept. 10-15.

The president's overall job-approval rating in this survey has held at 55 percent, little changed since July, but well below the 63 percent mark that Pew measured at the 100th day of the Obama presidency.

But it's not only the president's approval ratings that have slipped since his inauguration (down from a peak of 69 percent to a near-low of 51 percent in the latest Gallup track, which measured a low of 50 not long ago. It's also these measures of trustworthiness and leadership.

If 83 percent viewed Obama as a good communicator in the latest, September, survey from Pew, 92 percent had in February. If 69 percent viewed Obama as "well-organized'' this month, 81 percent had in February. If 65 percent viewed him as a strong leader in the latest poll, 77 percent had in February. And if 64 percent viewed the president as trustworthy in the latest survey, 76 percent had in February.

There's also a slide in the share of people who view Obama as being able "to get things done.'' It's 58 percent of those surveyed, in the September Pew poll, down from 70 percent in the February survey.

" In most cases,'' Pew President Andrew Kohut writes, "the falloff in positive views mirrors the decline in his job approval ratingfrom 64% in February to 55% today.''

Chalk it up to relations with Congress, perhaps, that haven't gone as smoothly as Obama had hoped they would when he promised a new era of cooperation. Chalk it up to Obama's own insistence on confronting some of the toughest issues in townholding off on the most volatile one, immigration reform, until he can get through health-care reform first.

Then again, some, such as Krauthammer, may chalk up declining confidence in the Obama White House to the president attempting to sell a pig in a poke. That's what Rep. Joe Wilson, the South Carolina Republican who yelled, "You lie,'' during Obama's speech to Congress, was trying to say.

Wilson ultimately had to apologize for the way he said it.

This is how Krauthammer says it:

The president promises not to sign a health-care bill that "adds one dime to our deficits... period.'' Yet the proof that the president offers of that promise cannot be delivered, Krauthammer argues: The promise that the president made in his speech to a joint session of Congress last week to require further spending cuts if the savings envisioned in the health-care initiative don't materialize.

"Every Congress is sovereign,'' Krauthammer writes. "Nothing enacted today will force a future Congress or a future president to make any cuts in any spending, mandatory or not. ''

Obama promises that illegal immigrants will not be covered by the health-care reforms he is seeking. "The problem is that laws are not self-enforcing,'' the columnist writes. "If they were, we'd have no illegal immigrants because, as I understand it, it's illegal to enter the United States illegally. We have laws against burglary, too. But we also provide for cops and jails on the assumption that most burglars don't voluntarily turn themselves in.''

Obama promises to eliminate hundreds of billions of dollars of waste and fraud. "That's not a lie,'' Krauthammer writes. "That's not even deception. That's just an insult to our intelligence. Waste, fraud and abuse -- Meg Greenfield once called this phrase "the dread big three" -- as the all-purpose piggy bank for budget savings has been a joke since Jimmy Carter first used it in 1977.''

Speaking of Jimmy Carter: He attempted to speak some truth this week, too, and was roundly denounced for lying about the motivation behind the most extreme criticism for the president, the inability of people to accept the fact that a black man is president.

The White House said the president doesn't accept thatcriticism for him is not tied to "the color of his skin.'' Obama is attempting to keep a focus on health-care reforms.

Obama, still widely viewed as a great communicator, runs much of the table of the Sunday talk shows this weekend: ABC News' This Week, CBS News' Face the Nation, NBC News' Meet the Press, CNN's State of the Union and the Spanish-language Univision. He is sitting for a series of interviews with the hosts of these shows this afternoon at the White House.

The president heads into this "media blitz'' with a solid majority of Americans viewing him as trustworthynot a bad perch for a president making an unprecedented public appeal.

The ratings aren't what they were in February. But this is not February. This is what the president is calling 'the season for action'' on health care.

How the season plays out will have a lot to do with what all these numbers look like at the end of the yearnot only in the way people view his communicative skills, leadership and trustworthiness, but also his ability to get things done.


Ex-CIA Directors Seek To Halt Interrogations Probe

In a letter to President Obama, seven former chiefs warned that investigations into harsh interrogation techniques during the Bush administration could discourage CIA officers from doing the kind of intelligence work needed to counter terrorism and could inhibit foreign governments from working with the U.S.


Kamis, 17 September 2009

House Votes To Cut Off Federal Funding To ACORN

Video: Unplugged: Changing Missile Defense
President Obama announced he wants to deploy a different missile defense strategy, moving away from plans created by the Bush administration. Bob Orr spoke with CBS' Chip Reid and David Martin; The Heritage Institute's Mackenzie Eaglen provides analysis.
Coach on Trial: Is He Responsible for His Player's Death?
ABC's Eric Horng reports from Louisville: The defense for coach Jason Stinson delivered its closing first. Attorney Alex Dathorne spoke for about an hour and a half and said Stinson "did nothing different than any other coach…in this commonwealth" during...
ACORN trapped, congressmen cornered

by Mark Silva

Sometimes Washington moves in mysterious ways.

A 20-year-old, scantily-clad woman from Florida, Hannah Giles, a Florida International University student whose father is a conservative pastor and TownHall.com columnist, walks into an ACORN office with James O'Keefe, a 25-year-old conservative activist wearing outlandish fur-trimmed pimp-garb carrying a concealed video camera for BigGovernment.com, and within days two houses of Congress are voting to yank federal funding from a national organization that helps impoverished people find housing.

It isn't just any national organization, of course. It's one that worked to register tens of thousands of people to vote last yearand, in the process, had some of its more overzealous registration-gatherers accused of faking forms with names as specious as Mickey Mouse. It's an organization whose voter-drive may have helped turn out some winning votes for the new, Democratic president, Barack Obama.

Glenn Beck book cover.jpg


And so, after months of somewhat below-the-radar controversy over the federally-supported organization's conduct during the election, a pair of conservative vigilantes with a video camera ensnaring a few ACORN employees in some bizarre conversations has jeopardized the federal funding of a group that aids the poor, with more than 700 employees.

Giles is a self-styled "journalist behind the ACORN prostitution/tax evasion sting.'' Find her at Townhall.com, along with conservative columnists such as Michelle Malkin, who suggests that the dynamic video-duo of Giles and O'Keefe are simply the right-wing equivalent of 60 Minutes.

"Undercover journalism is only acceptable when it fits a liberal agenda,'' Malkin suggests at TownHallwhich offers a free copy of Glenn Beck's book, Arguing with Idiots, the one with a cover picturing him in some sort of military officer dress, for ordering a 12-issue subscription to TownHall magazine.

"That is the message from "professional" reporters and left-wing activists outraged about three successful video stings targeting President Obama's old friends at the left-wing tax-subsidized outfit ACORN,'' Malkin writes. "Conservative documentarian James O'Keefe and writer Hannah Giles, working for the BigGovernment.com website, posed as a pimp and prostitute,'' she writes, just as major news networks have worked undercover.

The videosshot in Baltimore, Washington, New York and San Bernadino, Calif.became an overnight sensation on the Internet, and on FOX News, which reports today that ACORN is "on its heels.''

The Senate voted 83-7 on Monday to block any housing grants to ACORN. And the House today adopted, as an amendment to a student loan bill, legislation that Republican Leader John Boehner proposed to defund ACORN. The House vote was 345-75the two votes suggesting few see any gain in risking rising to the defense of an organization victimized by some video vigilantes.

While the two sides haven't agreed on anything yet, a lot of people have been put on the record this week on votes that they will be hearing about again next year.

As FOX News.com reports, with some apparent glee today: "Republicans now have the firepower to run ads highlighting this vote, saying: "This lawmaker voted against defunding ACORN."

Neither vote means anyone has lot their federal funding yet. However, the Census Bureau decided last week to count ACORN out of any canvassing next year.

Even the White House is walking away from ACORN, with Press Secretary Robert Gibbs saying this week of the videotaped conversations among the posing "prostitute'' and "pimp'' and ACORN workers "completely unacceptable.'' ACORN's president said the same thing of the employees, in firing them, and has ordered a 'top to bottom'' review of conduct within the organization, which has received a reported $53 million in federal money over the last 15 years/

The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now largely offers housing assistance and income tax preparation for minorities and the poor.

ACORN's Florida director, Stephanie Porta, says that Giles, 20, showed up at the group's Miami office alone in July or August claiming to be a prostitute seeking housing assistance. An ACORN staffer suggested a domestic-violence shelter that she might visit, Porta says, but didn't offer any financial advice.

Giles and O'Keefe, a self-styled filmmaker attempting to do good, landed some more willing participants in their other video expeditions.

"I cannot and I will not defend the actions of the workers depicted in the video, who have since been terminated," ACORN Chief Organizer Bertha Lewis has said, with the group suspending new admissions to its programs and going through some staff training.

A thumbnail biography of Giles at the conservative Townhall.com Website calls her an "aspiring journalist" and the oldest daughter of Townhall contributor Doug Giles, who is senior pastor at the Clash Church in Aventura, Fla., whose Web-site bills it as "Bold. Wild. Free." Townhall is notable for the contributions of enlightened voices such as those of Malkin, Ann Coulter, Chuck Norris and Oliver North.

Prosecutors in Miami have charged several ACORN workers with actual violations of law in the gathering of voter registrations. But it was not the real, or officially alleged, acts of ACORN workers that have put the organization's federal funding in jeopardy, but rather the surreptitious videotapes of a couple of conservative young crusaders posing as a pimp and a prostitute.

And FOX News reports:

House Minority Whip Eric Cantor, R-Va., applauded the vote.

"ACORN has violated serious federal laws, and today, the House voted to ensure that taxpayer dollars would no longer be used to fund this corrupt organization," he said in a written statement. "All federal ties should be severed with ACORN, and the FBI should investigate its activity... This united Republican effort to defund ACORN is a victory for the rule of law and taxpayers across the country."

"The vote was essentially symbolic because the student aid bill did not actually provide any funding to ACORN,'' FOX notes.

"But it does give Republicans more momentum as they continue to keep the pressure on ACORN, which is on its heels. On a procedural tactic known as "motion to recommit," Republicans essentially forced Democrats, who control the House, to vote on an issue that may leave some of them vulnerable in next year's mid-term elections.''


House Votes To Cut Off Federal Funding To ACORN

The 345-75 vote came several days after the Senate took a similar vote to block the Housing and Urban Development Department from giving grants to ACORN. Employees of the community-organizing group were videotaped offering advice to conservative activists posing as people interested in buying a home to use for their prostitution business.


Rabu, 16 September 2009

Quotes of the Day

House Panel Delays Jesse Jackson Jr. Probe
Federal Prosecutors Asked Ethics Committee to Put Off Investigation Into Illinois Rep.'s Ties to Blagojevich Scandal
Quotes of the Day
"It’s only taken until mid-September to get six members of one Senate committee to not agree on a draft of a health care bill. Remind us of why this is difficult again?" -- Rick Klein, ABC News “Baucus Compromise Bill...
Rudeness reigns in health-care debate

by Mark Silva

"You lie!''

"I wouldn't dignify you by peeing on your leg.''

Is everyone getting all "wee-weed up?"

Or just plain "un-American?"

They're finger-biting!

It's "rude,'' is what it is -- the health-care debate.

Or, at least, that's the way most Americans paying attention say they see it.

"Most Americans say the tone of the debate has been negative,'' Andy Kohut, president of the Pew Research Center, reports today.

Pew's News Interest Index survey, conducted Sept. 11-14 among 1,003 adults, found 53 percent saying the tone of the debate over health care reform has been generally rude and disrespectful -- just three in ten see it as generally polite and respectful.

Who are the offenders?

"Among those who say the debate has been rude and disrespectful, most believe that opponents of the health care legislation under consideration are to blame,'' Kohut reports. "By a 59 percent to 17 percent margin, more blame opponents than supporters of the legislation; 17 percent volunteer that both groups are to blame.''

Among Democrats who view the debate as rude, 85 perccent blame opponents of health care legislation. By contrast, 18 percent of the Republicans put the blame on opponents, while many more (45 percent) say supporters are to blame.

What do you say? In printable form, please.


Selasa, 15 September 2009

Obama: Automakers Getting Back In Game

Obama: Automakers Getting Back In Game
In Youngstown, Ohio, President Praises Cash for Clunkers program, Rallies Workers at GM Plant
Inside the Last Months of W.
ABC's Hanna Siegel reports from New York: Matt Latimer worked as one of George W. Bush’s speechwriters for the better part of his last two years in office. In his new book "Speech-Less Tales of a White House Survivor," Latimer...
Obama: Late-night with Letterman

by Mark Silva

Never mind that Sunday morning run of the news talk shows that President Barack Obama will make this weekend.

Monday night, Obama's doing Letterman.

The president's planned appearance Monday night will mark the first by a sitting president on the Late Show and Obama's first since election.

This also will mark Obama's sixth appearance on Letterman's set -- he last appeared on Sept. 10 (see the photo above).

Back then, he was facing an election contest with Republican John McCain and running mate Sarah Palin and raising eyebrows with talk about lipstick on pigs.

"Have you ever actually put lipstick on a pig?" Letterman asked then.

"The answer would be no,'' Obama said. "But I think it might be fun to try."

He took a turn at explaining himself: "This is sort of silly season in politicsnot that there's a non-silly season in politics,'' he said. "But, you know, it's a common expression in at least Illinois, I don't know about New York City. I don't know where you put lipstick on here... But in Illinois, the expression connotes the idea that if you have a bad idea, in this case I was talking about John McCain's economic plans, that just calling them change, calling it something different, doesn't make it better, hence, lipstick on a pig is still a pig."

The president probably will be attempting to generate a similar, generally good feeling about himself as he presses Congress for health-care reform -- the purpose of his Sunday news show stints -- when he sits down with Letterman again, sans lipstick.


Senin, 14 September 2009

Spitzer: Reforms Needed to Corral Wall St.

Spitzer: Reforms Needed to Corral Wall St.
Disgraced Former Gov. and "Sheriff of Wall Street" Insists He's Not Returning to Politics
Serena Williams: 'I want to sincerely apologize'
Serena Williams is apologizing. In her initial statement Williams said she "handled the situation poorly." Now she's going further: "I want to sincerely apologize first to the lines woman, Kim Clijsters, the USTA (U.S. Tennis Association) and mostly tennis fans...
Obama up, health-care opposition softens

by Mark Silva

Another new read on President Barack Obama's post-address-to-a-joint-session-of-Congress public-approval ratings:

58 percent, in a survey conducted by CNN/Opinion Research on Friday through Sunday. That's up from 53 percent at the end of August.

The president's disapproval rating was down to 40 percent, from 45 percent in the Aug. 28-31 survey.

The trend, if not the number, mirros what Gallup has found (Obama's approval rating up from 51 percent on the day of the president's speech to Congress to 53 percent today, in the latest results of daily tracking), and similar to what ABC News and the Washington Post have found, up from 51 in the last survey to 54 percent in a poll released today.

The president gets higher ratings for his handling of the economy in the new CNN/Opinion Research poll54 percent, compared with 49 percent two weeks ago.
But perhaps more significant, from the White House's perspective, will be the president's rating on handling of health care policy: 51 percent in the new survey, up from 44 percent at the end of August.

The poll also asked: "From everything you have heard or read so far, do you favor or oppose Barack Obama's plan to reform health care?''

And the needle hasn't moved much here: 51 percent said they favor it in the latest survey, up from 48 percent two weeks ago.

Opposition, however, had turned from 51 percent two weeks ago to 46 percent in the latest survey.

The CNN-sponsored survey of 1,012 adults conducted Sept. 11-13 carries a possible margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.


Minggu, 13 September 2009

Axelrod: Obama Firm on Public Option

Axelrod: Obama Firm on Public Option
Senior White House Adviser "Not Willing to Accept" Removal of Gov't Alternative from Health Care Bill
Durbin: Health care with or w/out GOP

by Mark Silva

Sen. Dick Durbin, No. 2 leader in the Senate and one of President Barack Obama's political mentors, maintains that large-scale health-care reform is achievable this year

"I think we can pass health-care reform,'' Durbin said this morning on NBC News' Meet the Press. "Those who are opposing us, those who are criticizing us, really don't have an alternative....

"Just taking small steps at this point won't stop the increases in health insurance premiums,'' said Durbin, supporting the White House's goal of getting a bill passed by Thanksgivingsee the video above.

"I'm not going to presume any Republican senators at this point,'' said Durbin (D-Ill.), asked about the potential vote count and the possibility of getting 60 in the Senatesee the video below. "We're going to work closely with our members too... We invite Republicans to join us for this historic opportunity. If they do not, we still are going to go forward.''

And, Durbin suggested, the "public option'' which is causing the president so much trouble is not off the table. What about the contention that it cannot pass the Senate?

"I wouldn't go that far,'' Durbin says.

Sen. John Cornyn, the Texas Republican who delivered the party's response to Obama's weekly address this week, maintains that his party wants to work with the president and the Democrats "to try to come up with a common sense... solution.''

Eighty percent of what's on the table is something that everyone can agree upon, he suggestedthe other 20 percent is the problem. (see the video above)

Cornyn has accused Obama of paying "lip service'' to bipartisanship in his determination to get a bill passed.

"I think he has,'' Cornyn said, calling the president's address to a joint session of Congress last week "a good speech...'' But "there's a difference between campaigning, giving a good speech and actually governing, and I think we're seeing that disconnect here.''


Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy


Sabtu, 12 September 2009

Minnesota battlefield: Obama, Pawlenty

Obama Speaks Out on Health Care
While Reform Opponents Hold D.C. March, Obama Tells Minn. Rally That Health Care and Coverage Will Worsen Without Action
Clem's Chronicles: 9/11 Anniversary/Coast Guard Scare/Afghanistan/ACORN
Howdy folks Clem Lane here. Hope you all have a great weekend. The news follows......... 9/11 ANNIVERSARY & COAST GUARD SCARE-It was eight years ago today that our lives were forever changed. This year, like the anniversaries preceding it, were...
Minnesota battlefield: Obama, Pawlenty

by Mark Silva and updated with RNC response

How much of the White House calculus behind President Barack Obama's pitch for health care reform at a rally in Minnesota today involves who lives there?

Not the voters -- Obama carried the state by 10 points.

The governor -- the retiring Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty, who says he is considering running for president in 2012.

The Republican National Committee staged its convention there last year, nominating John McCain and Sarah Palin in St. Paul. The Democratic National Committee is lashing out at Pawlenty today with a Web-ad accusing him of extremism and peddling misinformation about the president's health plans.

Republican leaders complain that Obama is the one peddling bad medicine.

"One thing that's already apparent in this debate is that the problem isn't the administration's sales pitch,'' Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell says of the president's trip to Minnesota today. "The problem is what they're selling.

"Americans are rightly concerned about a rush to hike taxes on small businesses, cut seniors' Medicare benefits, and add trillions of dollars in more government spending and debt,'' says McConnell (R-Ky). "The status quo is unacceptable. But so are the alternatives that the administration and Democrats in Congress have proposed.''

And RNC spokesman LeRoy Coleman said this today of the DNC attack:

"Once again, the Democrats are desperately trying to shift attention away from their extraordinarily unpopular health care planespecially on a day when the president is bringing his traveling road show to Minnesota in an attempt to sell his floundering government-run health care proposal. Minnesotans, however, aren't fooled by the rhetoric. The president's government-run health care plan would increase costs, increase taxes, increase the deficit and reduce health care choice and quality.''

The White House is planning a big rally today in Minnesota, and the DNC is characterizing the host governor as "way out of the mainstream.''

"The harder Tim Pawlenty tries to appeal to the far-right wing of the Republican Party, the more ludicrous his arguments get,'' says Brad Woodhouse, DNC spokesman. " In the past week alone, he has strengthened his already vocal support for the absurd and debunked claim that health insurance reform could lead to death panels.''

Obama has complained that so many town hall arguments against health care are staged for a YouTube. Well, see the YouTube the DNC has staged for Pawlenty, a 2012 hopeful. It's up above.


Jumat, 11 September 2009

CNN Statement Regarding Morning Coast Guard Scare

Video: Chertoff: 'Clearly Safer'
Former Secretary of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff asseses the safety of the U.S. eight years after 9/11.
CNN Statement Regarding Morning Coast Guard Scare
It was a tense morning in Washington, D.C. CNN has now released a statement about their coverage this morning of what turned out to be a Coast Guard training exercise: CNN STATEMENT: CNN staff were monitoring law enforcement activity this...
Joe Wilson has a race on his hands now

by Mark Silva

Rep. Joe Wilson, the Republican congressman from South Carolina who called President Barack Obama a liar in publicand later apologized to the White Houseprivatelyis turning to his supporters for backing as a Democratic rival attempts to make hay.

"I let my emotions get the best of me,'' Wilson says in a Website video soliciting campaign contributions. "It was wrong, and I apologized to the president shortly afterward, and he acknowledged my sincerity.''

Suddenly, Wilson may have a race on his hands.

His Democratic rival back home, Marine veteran Rob Miller, has been raking in his own campaign contributions online since Wilson yelled out, "You lie,'' at Obama during the president's address to a joint session of Congress. The president was maintaining that illegal immigrants will not benefit from the health-care reform that he is seeking. Opponents insist that he cannot guarantee that.

Wilson and Miller are virtually tied in a new survey run by Public Policy Polling44-43in the aftermath of the shout-out. Nearly two-thirds of voters in Wilson's district say they disapproved of Wilson's action.

"In a matter of seconds Joe Wilson turned himself from a safe incumbent into one of the most vulnerable Republicans in the country for 2010," said Dean Debnam, president of Public Policy Polling.

"I will not be muzzled'' on the health-care bill, however, the Republican says. "I will speak up and speak loudly.''

In his fundraising pitch, Wilson insists that he needs help to fight "government-run health care.''

"Health care is a matter of life and death for so many,'' the congressman says. "I choose life.''


Kamis, 10 September 2009

Video: Obama Forgives Wilson

Video: Obama Forgives Wilson
Though they may not be getting a beer together anytime soon, President Obama did accept Rep. Joe Wilson's (R-S.C.) apology for his outburst at Wednesday's health care address.
Museum Searches for New 9/11 Videos, Photos and Stories
ABC's Bradley Blackburn reports from New York: As we approach tomorrow's anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, the National September 11th Memorial and Museum has a new way to look back at the tragedy that unfolded eight years ago. The museum...
Mark Sanford: Fighting 'kangaroo court'

by Mark Silva

Mark Sanford, the governor of South Carolina facing a state Ethics Commission inquiry into his spending of state money on travel since his extramarital affair was exposed, also has faced growing calls for his resignation.

The latest comes from the state speaker of the House -- a fellow Republican.

"I think it's alarming,'' Sanford said today.

A lawyer for Sanford says the commission plans to give a report of its preliminary inquiry into probable cause for a broader investigation to the state's General Assemblywhich is something not directed under state law.

"The General Assembly is not a prosecutorial body.... Even if we get down the road to impeachment,'' the governor's attorney said today.

"We have a real problem if members of the General Assembly are'' using information from the Ethics Commission to " try to use that for impeachment,'' Sanford said today. "If you go this route, you're setting up a kangaroo court.''

Sanford, who is at odds with many members of his own party and once was viewed as a potential candidate for the GOP's presidential nomination, has faced a spiraling cloud of controversy since he first admitted traveling to Argentina to see his mistress.

His use of state travel funds has come under state scrutiny since that revelation. He has reimbursed the state for some of the money he spent on a Commerce trade mission to South America. Now the Republican speaker of the South Carolina House has called on the Republican governor to resign.

Sanford is fighting.

"You have 30 years of history of people buying Business Class tickets with state money,'' the governor complained, and no one has complained before. "Democrats and Republicans alike have consistently used Business Class tickets.''

He should have stuck to the Appalachian Trail.