Rabu, 20 Januari 2010

Scott Brown: Win Sends "Powerful Message"

Scott Brown: Win Sends "Powerful Message"
Newly Elected Massachusetts Senator Says Obama Should "Recalibrate How He Wants to Govern"
Obama: Anger management and outrage

by Mark Silva

President Barack Obama gets it, both he and the White House are saying todayhe gets the "anger and frustration" exposed by the special election in Massachusetts that cost his party a filibuster-proof Senate.

That said, a reporter asked the White House today: "When does President Obama get angry?"

"I've seen.... uh, look...'" replied a cautious press secretary, who appeared interested in dispelling the "No-drama" myth surrounding a cool and collected president but not in sharing any family secrets.

The press, spokesman Robert Gibbs noted, has pointed out that "the president seemed exercised' when he has spoken of the excesses of Wall Street. That gets the people going, Gibbs said, and it gets the president going, too.

"I can assure the American people that there are things that get him going," Gibbs said of Obama, adding. "You don't see the president pounding on the desk for the sake of political theater."


Does Mass. Result Imperil Democratic Majorities?

What does last night's big upset by the GOP in Massachusetts portend for the 2010 midterm elections? The Democrats have lost their filibuster-proof super-majority in the Senate, and could be losing quite a few more seats in both the Senate and the House come November. Amy Walter, editor in chief of Hotline, offers her insight.


Massachusetts: Revolt of the middle

GOP's Scott Brown Wins Mass. Senate Race
GOP Candidate, a Dark Horse a Month Ago, Represents Crucial 41st Senate Vote for Republicans
Massachusetts: Revolt of the middle

by Mark Silva and updated

A little over a year ago, President Barack Obama carried Massachusetts by about 25 percentage points in an election that signalled a readiness for "change '' -- yet about what one would expect from the only state tthat backed George McGovern in 1972.

Less than one month ago, Martha Coakley, the Democratic attorney general in Massachusetts, held an apparent 15-percentage point advantage in her contest with Republican state Sen. Scott Brown in a special election for the Senate seat of the late and long-serving Sen. Edward M. Kennedy -- about what one would expect in a state that sent Kennedy to Washington for nearly five decades.

Yet tonight, the Bay State went Republican.

This, however, is not a tale of Democrats versus Republicans.

This is a story about the vast middle ground of voters who have no real use for either party. Tonight, they rejected the party in power.

They voted for "change.''

Massachusetts: This is a state where one's political affiliation, like one's religion, or one's ethnicity, might as well have been embossed in one's birth certificate in the old days.

In the new day, more than 2 million of Massachusetts' registered voters are "unenrolled'' in any political party -- more than the roughly 1.5 million registered Democratic, more than the roughly 500,000 registered Republican.

This much is clear: Republicans did not elect Brown, the Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate.

The unenrolled did.

The implication for the president's party is less clear.

It will be tempting for the president's party to write off the loss in Massachusetts as a lesson in bad campaigning: Coakley's lackadaisacal, take-it-for-granted approach to the race until, too late, recognzing the trouble she was in and calling on the president to help bail her out. But Brown and his pickup truck didn't come from nowhere.

It will be much easier for voters, particulary all of those middle-ground, unenrolled voters whom national polls have portrayed as moving to the right during the past year, to take the Massachusetts vote as a measure of how unhappy Americans are with an agenda that is notable for one thing: Big spending.

Everything that Obama has promoted during his first year in ofice -- an anniversary arriving the day after the election in Massachusetts -- has relied upon big spending. The $787-billion economic stimulus. The $1-trillion-or-so, depending on whose version prevails, health-care bill. The cap-and-trade energy bill. And now, even education, albeit a mere $1.35-billion price tag on Obama's plan to expand the "Race to the Top."

And then there are the wars.

Brown campaigned, at the end, as "the 41th vote'' for the Republicans in the Senate -- a bloc sufficient to stop the Democratic agenda in its trakcs. But he is not so much the GOP's 41st vote as he is the middle-ground's key vote.

The president, whose party faces midterm congressional elections in November that threaten an even deeper erosion of his party's control over Congress, will have to assess in coming days how seriously he takes the message of the unenrolled in Massachusetts. He can take advantage of a slow certification of the vote in the Bay State to propel his health-care legislation in the waning days of a Democratic super-majority. He can push the Senate's passed bill through the House.

Yet, that too, could carry a toll.

The president telephoned both of the Senate contenders tonight. He told Brown, the newest and Republican member of the Senate that he looks forward to working with him.

The president will not have a lot of time to reframe his agenda in the terms of the benefits that Americans stand to gain from it, as opposed to what it will cost them. But if there is any hope for the president's agenda in the coming months, it will take some recasting.

Around the nation, the unenrolled are waiting to vote this fall.


California Dreaming? Governor To Ask Feds For Funds

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger says California residents pay more in federal taxes than they receive. He travels to Washington, D.C., on Wednesday to make a long-shot request for $7 billion in new federal money for his state.


Selasa, 19 Januari 2010

Massachusetts Election Brings High Turnout
Republican Scott Brown, Democrat Martha Coakley in Tight Senate Battle that Could Alter Balance of Power
White House: 'Frustration and anger' real

by Mark Silva

The White House, for now, is avoiding any post-mortem analysis of the special election in Massachusetts.

And mortem could be the operative word, as it applies to the White House's agenda, if the vote goes the way Republicans hope it will in Massachusetts

At the same time, the administration is providing something of a preview of how it is likely to attempt to explain any loss of the Massachusetts Senate seat, the 60-vote hold that the party has in the Senate, and with that much of the president's hopes for a successful domestic agenda this year

"We're going to have plenty of time to get into the back and forth of all this,'' Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary, said just now, here at the White House press briefing. "I'd prefer to do that when we know what the result is...

"We'll have a chance to discuss the outcome of the election when we know the outcome of the election,'' Gibbs said with a sober tone and insistence on averting any debate at this stage. "I think there is, obviously, and there isn't something that's known simply because there is an election in one state, I think there is a trremendous amount of upset and anger in this country about where we are economically...

"In many ways, we're here because of that upset and anger,'' Gibbs said of the Obama administration. "I think the president, who reads letters from people everyday, will be in Ohio doing a town-hall meeting later this week -- I think there is no doubt that people will express anger and frustration about where we are...'

"The president understands that there is frustration out there, and is frustrated himsef.''

The White House, however, is not ready to concede its health-care agenda to a potential loss in Massachusetts and loss of the 60th Senate vote. The president wants health care passed today, Gibbs said, and he will want it passed tomorrow.

Gibbs alllowed, too, that the president himself has voiced some surprise at how close today's special election appeared to be in a reliably Democratic state. "He was both surprised and frustrated,'' Gibbs said of Obama -- "not pleased.''


7 Things At Stake In Massachusetts Senate Race

The outcome of Tuesday's special election in Massachusetts has turned into a cliffhanger, with Democrats facing the possible loss of a Senate seat held by Kennedys for nearly 60 years. From the Obama agenda to the Tea Party's momentum, here's a look at what's at stake.


Senin, 18 Januari 2010

Obama Volunteers on MLK Day
Obama Joins Honors for Slain Civil Rights Leader
Obama's first-year approval: 57 percent

by Mark Silva

Only one president in modern times has ended his first year in office with lower approvalviewed as an average for the yearthan the rating with which President Obama concludes his year.

Bill Clinton.

In the Gallup Poll's measures of job approval since the 1950s, Clinton's average approval during his first year was 49 percent.

With an average first-year approval of 57 percent, Gallup reports today, Obama ties Ronald Reagan for second-lowest first-year average.

It's important to remember in this context that both Clinton and Reagan went on to win second terms.

It' may not be so much Obama's first year, however, as it is his second year that presents a fuller picture of the president's performance..

It starts with Tuesday's special election in Massachusetts, on the eve of the president's anniversary in office. If pre-election polls are rightand special elections, with notoriously low voter-turnout, are difficult to predictthe president's party is in trouble there.

Losing the seat of the late and longtime senator from Massachusetts, Ted Kennedy, champion of the health-care reforms which Obama is now attempting to push through Congress, will certainly be taken as a comment on the presidency itself. Obama put his chips on the table with an 11th-hour campaign appearance in Boston.

Throughout the country, independent voters who have a way of deciding contests have grown restless during the past yearand any revolt in Massachusetts, the bluest of blue states, will be seen as an ominous precursor of the 2010 midterm elections.

It's not only health-care that's at stake for Obama this week. It's financial regulation, energy legislation, immigration reform and more, an ambitious domestic agenda for which a second-year president heading into volatile midterm elections will need all the help he can get.

Saving that seat, however, won't get the president's party out of the woods. Even if Democrats can hold their 60-vote grip on the Senate, pushing the final agreement that leaders reach on health-care through the Congress could be the highest hurdle Obama has faced yet.

It's not so much popularity as performance that clinches a second term.

Clinton was elected with less than 50 percent of the vote during his first bid for officebenefitting from the vote-splitting presence of the third-party Ross Perot candidacy. Obama was elected with an Electoral College landslide, albeit a modest majority of the popular vote.

George W. Bush was elected without the majority of the popular vote his first time running, yet, thanks largely to the impact that the attacks of 9/11 had on the public's view of him after a year in office, he enjoyed an average approval rating of 68 percent his first year. Public concern for national security carried him to a second term.

First-year measures of popularity may not amount to much in the long run. Performance, however, counts. And the outcome of this week's special election in the Bay State, at the threshold of Obama's second year in office, will have a great bearing on this president's performance the rest of this year.


Opponents Threaten Court Battle On Health Mandate

A major component of the health bills grinding through Congress right now is a new requirement that nearly everyone buy health insurance — a so-called individual mandate. But conservatives who oppose the health care overhaul have threatened to challenge this mandate on constitutional grounds.


Minggu, 17 Januari 2010

Video: Obama Remembers Dr. King
President Obama spoke at services at the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church in Washington, remembering Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and how faith has guided him through troubling times.
Obama: Faith keeps him calm

by Mark Silva and updated with service

President Barack Obama, speaking today from the pulpit of a church where the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. sometimes spoke, called on the congregation to rally around the spirit which had helped their ancestors pursue a long road to freedom.

"It's that progress that allowed me to be here today,'' said Obama, the first African American president.

The president, who doesn't frequently attend Sunday church services in Washington and has not found a permanent congregation for his family in the capital, joined in the services this morning at the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church. The president arrived with First Lady Michelle Obama and daughters Malia and Sasha.

The church, founded in 1866 by seven freed slaves, originally was known as the Fifth Baptist Church of Washington, DC.

"It feels like a family,'' Obama told the congregation.

There are at least a couple of occasions which might have prompted today's outing -- the deaths of tens of thousands of Haitians in an earthquake which has shaken all of the Americas, as well as the birthday of the slain civil rights leader, King, whose birthday is celebrated on Monday with a national holiday.

"We gather here on the Sabbath at a time of extreme difficulty for our nation and the world,'' the president said, speaking much like a preacher from the church pulpit. "We are not here just to ask the Lord for his blessing. We're also here to call on the memory of one of his servants, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.''

Obama said he had come to "a church founded by freed slaves... whose congregants set out for marches... from whose sanctuary King himself would sermonize from time to time.''

This was as much of a sermon as it was a speech. King "trusted God,'' the president said. "He had faith that God would make a way out of now way...

"Folks ask me sometimes, 'Why do you look so calm?'' Obama said on a particularly personal note, with his voice rising in a crescendo.

"I have a confession to make here,'' he said. "There are times when I am not so calm... There are times when the words spoken about me hurt. There are times when the barbs hurt... During that time, it is faith that brings me calm.''

With a recitation of the history of the modern civil rights moment, the president spoke today of the "despair about whether the movement they had placed so many of their hopes... could actually deliver on its promise...

"Here we are more than a half century later, once again facing the challenges of a new age... once again marching toward an unknown new future,'' Obama said.

"We've inherited the progress of unjust laws which are now overturned...
We've enjoyed the fruits of prejudice and bigotry being lifted.... From human hearts.''
Noting that this progress had made his own election possible, Obama said: "There were some who said that somehow we had entered into a post-racial Americaall of those problems would be solved... There were some who said we had entered into an era of post-partisanshipthat didn't work out so well...

"We know the promise of that moment has not been fully fulfilled,'' the president told the congregation.

This is a president who hasn't quickly found a new sanctuary for his family in a town far from home, a town where the president's former longtime association with one church -- particularly one pastor -- became a problem for his campaign for the White House.

Since severing his ties with the United Trinity Church of Christ in Chicago where the now-retired Rev. Jeremiah Wright delivered sermons which, by the president's own admission, were racially "incendiary,'' Obama has been in search of a new church.

Time magazine once reported that the Obamas had chosen the chapel at Camp David, the Maryland mountain retreat that presidents have used since the 1950s. The White House said Time got the story wrong.

Observers thought the president had signaled his intentions in visiting the little St. John's church across the park across the street from the White House, a sanctuary that his predecessor often used. But Obama hasn't attended services there very much.

"Folks are wondering, where do we go from here?'' Obama said to a larger question about economic hardships today.

"Yes, we're passing through a hard winterit's the hardest in some time,'' Obama said. "But let's always remember that, as a people, the American people, we've weathered some hard winters before.''

Obama cited the slaves who escaped via the Underground Railroad"they weathered a hard winter.''

"What we need to do is to just ask what lessons we can learn from those earlier generations,'' Obama said. "Let us, in this Joshua Generation learn how that Moses Generation overcame.... They did so by remaining firm in their resolve...

"The economy is growing again,'' Obama said. "We are making progress.''

The president also made a pitch for his health-care initiative, to applause from the congregation. "This will be a victory not for Democrats,'' he said. "This will be a victory for decency and dignity.''

It is "tempting,'' Obama said, "to give up on the political process... Progress is possible. Don't give up on voting. Don't give up on advocacy. Don't give up on activism.''

As King had said, Obama said today, "progress must come from within.'' Obama, noting that people are wont to say that he is addressing the black community on occasions such as this, said, "No, no, no -- I'm talking to the American community.''



Sabtu, 16 Januari 2010

Video: Trying to Keep Haiti Alive

Video: Trying to Keep Haiti Alive
Some reports indicate that the death toll could reach over 100,000 in Haiti. CBS News' Jeff Glor, Kelly Cobiella, and David Martin provide coverage of this historic disaster.
Obama, Bush, Clinton: U.S., Haitian unity

by Mark Silva

Three presidents from opposing parties stood united outside the White House this morning to signal the launch of an aggressive private fundraising drive for the earthquake-stricken nation of Haiti.

"These two leaders send an unmistakable message to the people of Haiti and the world,'' Obama said of the former presidents flanking him in the Rose Garden. "In a moment of need, the United States stands united.''

Obama Clinton Bush two.jpg

Obama, in turning to his Republican predecessor, George W. Bush, and Democratic predecessor, Bill Clinton, has borrowed a page from the Bush playbook in the aftermath of a South Asian tsunami that claimed a massive toll in 2004: Bush tapped Clinton and the president's father, former President George H.W. Bush, to spearhead fundraising.

"This is a model that works,'' Obama said.

Bush spoke bluntly of the challenge posed by an earthquake that has claimed tens of thousands of lives and left the Haitian capital in ruinsand he spoke even more bluntly about what Americans can do.

"Our hearts are broken when we see the scenes of little children struggling without a mom or dad, or the bodies on the ground or the physical damage of the earthquake,'' Bush said. "The most effective way for Americans to help the people of Haiti is to contribute money...

"I know a lot of Americans want to send blankets and water,'' Bush said, with a knowing nod, looking at the cameras: "Just send your cash.''

Clinton, who also already is serving as the special United Nations envoy to Haiti, said of the earthquake's survivors: "Right now, all we need to do is get food and medicine and water and a secure place for them to be.'' But in the long-term, he said, the rebuilding of Haiti will require a sustained effort to capitalize on what could be an opportunity.

"I believe that, before this earthquake, Haiti had the best chance in its history to escape their history,'' Clinton said. "I still believe it... But it's going to take a lot of help and a long time.''

Obama, making his fourth public address on the Haitian crisis in four days, also suggested that the intense media attention focused on the island nation now soon will shift to other areas. It will be the job of Bush and Clinton, he said, to keep American generosity focused.

(Photo approaching Rose Garden by Mark Wilson / Getty Images.)

"In times of great challenge in our country and around the world, Americans have always come together,'' Obama said today, standing with Bush and Clinton in an overcast Rose Garden.

"At this moment, we are moving forward with one of the largest relief efforts in history,'' Obama said, and his predecessors will ensure that the U.S. government's own commitment of $100 million and rising will be matched by contributions from "beyond the government.''

The White House has created a Web-site for the fundraising effort that the two presidents will lead: www.clintonbushhaitifund.org.

Obama, citing "destruction and suffering that defies comprehension, said "we also know that our longer term effort will not be measured in days and weeks. It will be measured in months and even years.''

"Here at home, Presidents Bush and Clinton will help Americans do their part,'' the president said. "This time of suffering can and must be a time of caring and compassion.''

When he had spoken this week with each of his predecessors, Obama said today, "They each asked the same simple question: 'How can I help.'' In the days ahead, he said, they will be enlisting the help of many more Americans.

Following a half-hour private meeting in the Oval Office this morning, Bush stood to Obama's left during a brief appearance outside. Clinton stood to Obama's right.

The two former presidents each spoke of their personal involvement with HaitiBush citing his wife's journey there to oversee U.S.-sponsored efforts at AIDS prevention, Clinton complimenting the Bush administration for its work on disease prevention.

"The Haitian people have got a tough journey,'' Bush said, suggesting that catastrophes "bring out the best of the human spirit... President Clinton and I are going to work to help tap that spirit.''

Clinton, in 1975, celebrated his wedding in Haiti, traveling there for a delayed honeymoon with a wife who is now Secretary of State Hillary Clintonmaking her own first journey to the earthquake-stricken nation today.

"I have no words for what I feel,'' Clinton said today. "I was in those hotels that collapsed. I had meals with people who are dead. The cathedral church that Hillary and I sat in 35 years ago.... is rubble. It is still one of the most remarkable places that I have been.''


Obama Pitches Bank Tax To Recover Bailout Costs

President Barack Obama on Saturday pitched his proposed tax on banks to recover the cost of bailing them out during the financial crisis, saying if they can afford billions more in bonuses, they can pay back the taxpayers, too.


Jumat, 15 Januari 2010

Census Finds More Moms Bringing Home Bacon
Number of Working Mothers as Family's Sole Breadwinners Reaches All-Time High; More Dads Staying at Home
Obama Massachusetts-bound: 60th vote

The president has recorded "robo-calls'' and appeared in a Web-based video for the Democratic candidate, and now will campaign in person in a close Senate race.


by Mark Silva and updated

Earlier this week, the White House said that President Barack Obama had no plans to campaign in Massachusetts for the Democratic Senate candidate, Marha Coakley.

That was before a new poll showed a virtual tie between the Democrat and Republican Scott Brown in the special election for the seat of the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, a contest that could deprive the Democrats of their 60-vote hold on the Senate at a time when Obama appears on the verge of winning his health-care initiative.

Now Obama is Bay-State bound Sunday.

"The president sees a pretty clear distinction" between the candidates,'' White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said at today's press briefing. "It's an important Senate seat," Gibbs added. "That's why the president's going."

The Hill's Aaron Blake notes: "The trip represents an unprecedented role for Obama in a special election. He didn't appear during the runoff in Georgia's Senate race in December 2008 or in an early 2009 New York special House election.''


Poll: GOP's Brown Leads Massachusetts Senate Race

As momentum shifts in the direction of the Republican candidate in Tuesday's special Senate election in Massachusetts, President Obama will campaign on Sunday for Democrat Martha Coakley.


Kamis, 14 Januari 2010

Geithner's Bailout E-mails Subpoenaed

Geithner's Bailout E-mails Subpoenaed
House Panel Probing New York Fed Decisions that Funneled Billions of Dollars to Big Banks
White House: Robertson words 'stunning'

by Mark Silva and updated at 3:45 pm EST

A senior advisor to President Barack Obama today said the Rev. Pat Robertson's remark that the earthquake-stricken Haitian people had made "a pact to the Devil'' long ago was "stunning.''

"I'm kind of speechless about that kind of remark," Valerie Jarrett, presidential advisor and friend, said in an appearance on ABC News' Good Morning America. "Our heart goes out to the people of Haiti. ... That's not the attitude that expresses the spirit of the president or the American people, so I thought it was a pretty stunning comment to make."

Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary, said this today, when asked about Robertson's comment: "It never ceases to amaze that in times of amazing human suffering, somebody says something that could be so utterly stupid. But it, like clockwork, happens with some regularity.''

"You know ... something happened a long time ago in Haiti. ... They got together and swore a pact to the Devil," Robertson said on his Christian Broadcasting Network's 700 Club on Wednesday. ""They said, 'We will serve you if you get us free from the French.' True story...And so, the Devil said, 'OK, it's a deal.' And they kicked the French out... You know, the Haitians revolted and got themselves free. But ever since, they have been cursed by one thing after another."

In a statement on its Web site, the Christian Broadcasting Network said Robertson was speaking objectively about Haiti's history that has led "countless scholars and religious figures over the centuries to believe the country is cursed. "Dr. Robertson never stated that the earthquake was God's wrath,'' spokesman Chris Roslan says. "If you watch the entire video segment, Dr. Robertson's compassion for the people of Haiti is clear."

Clear as could be, right?

This isn't the first time Robertson has linked natural disasters and terrorism to the wrath of God. Ever-ready in the hyperbole department, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann has suggested that Robertson is the devil.

The president, for his part, made something clear today:

" Few in the world have endured the hardships that you have known,'' Obama said in directing remarks from the White House to the Haitian people from the White House.

"Long before this tragedy, daily life itself was often a bitter struggle,'' Obama said. "And after suffering so much for so long, to face this new horror must cause some to look up and ask, "Have we somehow been forsaken? ' To the people of Haiti, we say clearly, and with conviction, 'You will not be forsaken. You will not be forgotten.'''

And Bill Clinton, the former president and special U.N. envoy to Haiti, says in his own Time magazine essay: "Haiti isn't doomed.''


Obama's Senate Point Man Is In Trouble

Harry Reid's African-American supporters meet Thursday, in the wake of a brouhaha over racial comments he made about President Obama back in 2008. But his troubles may run deeper: Polls show the Democratic Senate majority leader trailing three would-be GOP opponents.


Rabu, 13 Januari 2010

Barack Obama: 'Back on track in 2010'

SEC Names Heads of New Investigative Units
Financial Commission's Enforcement Division Encourages Companies, Investors to Provide Information More Freely
Barack Obama: 'Back on track in 2010'

by Mark Silva

President Barack Obama, who famously has given himself a "solid B-plus'' for his first year in office, was asked if he would like to reconsider that in the aftermath of a Christmas Day bombing attempt on a U.S.-bound airliner that exposed a lapse in U.S. intelligence.

"When you look at what we've done this year on national security, we've performed at a very high level in as difficult an environment as you can imagine,'' Obama says in a White House interview with the first couple about the first year that People magazine has conducted. "Sadly, the intelligence, law enforcement and homeland security communities don't get credit when they stop things.... I'm holding myself and my team responsible for fixing that situation.''

Obamas alone.jpg

His inauguration "was such a time of hope,'' People interviewers Larry Hackett and Sandra Sobieraj Westfall reminded the president -- what does he say "to the people who now are feeling a little deflated?''

"They have every right to feel deflated because the economy was far worse than any of us expected,'' Obama replies. "The economy is now growing. We're on the rebound. Some of the steps we took are now paying off and people should feel great confidence that we are going to be back on track in 2010.''

One must get past the cover story of Heidi Montag's "addiction to plastic surgery,'' and the "torment" of Tiger Woods tp get to the exclusive interview with the Obamas, their first of the new year, in the Jan. 25 issue of People: People interview.pdf

But once there, we find the president's two proudest moments of the past 12 months:

"Having a health-care bill through the House and the Senate is a potentially historic accomplishment. I'll be that much prouder when I actually sign it.'' The other: "Happens every single night when I have dinner with my girls and see how well they've adjusted.''

"We've tried to keep their day-to-day life pretty ordinary,'' First Lady Michelle Obama says in the interview, though meeting the Pope and walking through the Kremlin were hardly ordinary experiences. The president recalls Sasha strolling through the Kremlin on a cold and rainy day with a trenchcoat. "She looked like a little spy,'' the president jokes. "We called her Agent 99.''

Inasmuch as the president had given himself that B-plus in a Christmas special with Oprah Winfrey, how about the first lady's self-assessment? "No way am I grading myself,'' she says in the interview. "I'll give her an A,'' her husband says. "Way to go.''

They talk about their favorite movies -- he liked Avatar and Away We Go. And they talk about their iPods...

(President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama are pictured in the Blue Room of the White House before a Presidential Medal of Freedom ceremony in August, in a White House photo by Pete Souza.)

She likes "this young woman Ledisi. She's got that really pretty voice. I always put on oldies. I put on some Motown remix, going back to the roots.''

"My iPod is kind of stuck,'' the president says. "I just haven't had time to sit down at a computer.'' Pressed on that: Isn't there someone who can take care of that for him? Reggie Love, his personal aide, is always there, the president says. "But then all I get is Jay-Z, and I love Jay-Z, but once in a while I might want some Yo-Yo Ma or something.''

So has he found the White House a lonely life?

"I still have not adjusted, and I hope never to adjust entirely, to being in the bubble,'' the president says. "Day-to-day spontaneous interactions are missing from my life. And there's the aspect of loneliness that just has to do with the fact that sending young men and women to war -- ultimately that's your decision. If there's an attempted terrorist attack, you've got to fix it.

"That side of the loneliness of the job is what I signed up for,'' Obama says, "and I actually think I'm pretty good at.''


Standard & Poor's Lowers California's Debt Rating

Standard & Poor's on Wednesday lowered its rating on California's $64 billion general obligation debt from "A" to "A-." That's the lowest rating for any state. The move puts pressure on Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and lawmakers to tackle the state's deficit.


Selasa, 12 Januari 2010

Top Bankers Set for Washington Grilling

Top Bankers Set for Washington Grilling
As Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Prepares to Kick off, Wall Street Honcho Complains of "Constant Vilification"
Obama: Republican address planned

by Mark Silva and Rich Simon

Republicans have been accused of just saying no to the president.

But President Barack Obama is saying yes to an invitation to address the House Republican conference later this month.

Rep. Mike Pence (R-Ind.), chairman of the House Republican Conference, said this today about the president addressing the party conference.

"House Republicans are grateful that the president of the United States has accepted our invitation to meet with the Republican Conference later this month.

"House Republicans look forward to presenting the president with our proposals to protect our nation, create jobs, control federal spending, lower the cost of health care, achieve energy independence and strengthen families."


Study Shows Blacks Optimistic In Obama Era

Optimism among black Americans has surged more in the past two years than at any time in the past quarter century, according to a new survey from the Pew Research Center. African-Americans remain upbeat about economic and social progress, despite the deep recession.


Senin, 11 Januari 2010

Sarah Palin: FOX News contributor

Protection of Food Supply Faces Problems
Every Year, 25 Percent of Americans Become Sick From Food; FDA Fighting to Increase Power Unchanged Since Great Depression
Sarah Palin: FOX News contributor

by Mark Silva and updated

Sarah Palin has contributed to civic service in Wasilla, Alaska, the ex-mayor has contributed service to the state of Alaska, and now the ex-governor will be contributing something to the nation's No. 1-rated cable news network, FOX.

Howard Kurtz, the Washington Post media critic with reliable sources, first reported word from a FOX executive today on Palin's hiring.

Bill Shine, executive vice president of programming for FOX, has announced the news with a note that "Gov. Palin has captivated everyone on both sides of the political spectrum and we are excited to add her dynamic voice to the FOX News lineup."

In addition to commentary across the news network's programming, Palin will host periodic episodes of FNC's "Real American Stories," a series exploring inspirational real-life tales of overcoming adversity throughout the American landscape starting this year.

, "I am thrilled to be joining the great talent and management team at FOX News,'' Palin said in a statement released by the network. "It's wonderful to be part of a place that so values fair and balanced news."

That will put two erstwhile 2008 candidates for national office on the FOX lineup. Mike Huckabee, the former governor of Arkansas who sought the GOP nomination for president, has his own weekly show.

Huckabee and Palin both are viewed as potential candidates for 2012.

FOX, Kurtz notes, will provide Palin with a farther-reaching forum than her Facebook page, which has gathered some one-million followers in the aftermath of her resignation as governor. Palin, who studied journalism in her youth, had wanted to be a television sportscaster, but was dismayed that ESPN was based in Bristol, Conn. So instead she named her first daughter Bristol

Palin's recruitnment for Sen. John McCain's presidential ticket in 2008 was part of "God's plan,'' Palin reportedly said at the time -- this tidbit from that new book, Game Change, reporting on intel from Steve Schmidt, McCain's former campaign manager.

Her new TV career, it appears, is part of Rupert Murdoch's plan.


Op-Ed: Reid's Word Choice Reveals Character Flaw

Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) has apologized for referring to President Obama, while he was running for president, as "light-skinned" with "no Negro dialect." The comments prompted many Republicans to call on Reid to resign. But political analyst Keli Goff says that although she's not ready to label Reid a racist, his poor choice of words reveal a great deal about his character.


Minggu, 10 Januari 2010

Feinstein: Reid Comments a "Closed" Matter

Feinstein: Reid Comments a "Closed" Matter
Sees No Double-Standard in Senator's Remarks About Obama; GOP's Hoekstra Says Dems Should Decide if Reid Keeps Post
Reid's Obama apology: Post-racial land?

by Mark Silva, on Saturday, updated noon EST Sunday

We suppose it's sadly inevitable, in the land that is not quite post-racial America, that we're learning, in retrospect, about how some of the white powers of the nation viewed the ascendant, some-say meteoric, political career of President Barack Obama.

Sen. Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader, apologizing siwftly for freshly reported remarks which he made during the bid of the junior senator from Illinois for the Democratic Party's nomination for president. And the president has swiftly accepted the apology.

Reid's Republican challenger is making some hay today. Noting that Reid once spoke of "vaporizing" her, Republican Sue Lowden suggested on the FOX News Channel today that he "start on my hips.''

Obama and City News.jpg

Reid, a Nevada Democrat facing political problems back home these days, had once described Obama in a private conversation as "light skinned''and one who spoke "with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one.''

"I deeply regret using such a poor choice of words. I sincerely apologize for offending any and all Americans, especially African-Americans for my improper comments," Reid said in a statement released after his remarks were reported on the Web site of The Atlantic on Saturday. "I was a proud and enthusiastic supporter of Barack Obama during the campaign and have worked as hard as I can to advance President Obama's legislative agenda."

The White House released this statement from the president:

"Harry Reid called me today and apologized for an unfortunate comment reported today. I accepted Harry's apology without question because I've known him for years, I've seen the passionate leadership he's shown on issues of social justice and I know what's in his heart. As far as I am concerned, the book is closed."

The book has barely been opened, however. Reid's regretted remarks come from a book that will be released Monday, Game Change, by political writers Mark Halperin of Time magazine and John Heilemann of New York magazine.

Sue Lowden.jpg

Tim Kaine, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, was asked if Reid should step down over this flap. "I do not believe he should,'' Kaine said in an appearance on FOX News Sunday. "And I think Sen. Reid did a very big thing yesterday by saying, you know, 'I used language that, looking back on it, wasn't the right language.'

"I don't think this is an issue that's going to affect his leadership at all,'' Kaine said. "In fact, he's doing some very heavy lifting, wonderful lifting right now, to get this health care bill over the goal line, and... I think he will continue."

With Reid fighting for reelection back home, Kaine also confronted a question about how much trouble the Democrats are in during the midterm elections:

"We know we're running up a hill,'' Kaine said. "If you actually go back to 1900, the average president in their first mid-term loses 28 House seats, four Senate seats and governors' races. So we're running up a hill.

"But the great thing about the Obama team is we don't mind running up a hill.,'' Kaine said. "We climbed Everest in 2008 and we're going to climb Pike's Peak this year."

Lowden, a Republican candidate for Senate Candidate and former Nevada Republican Party chairwoman, appeared on FOX's America's News HQ today (photo here courtesy of FOX) and said that Reid faces a difficult, "ugly'' campagn of his own.

"It's not about this comment; it's about the next comment and the comment after that,'' Lowden said. "I don't think that Harry Reid is going to step down, there is no chance of that...I think he is looking forward to a very difficult campaign, it's going to be a very ugly campaign. And, he is in for the long haul....

"It's a pattern with Sen. Reid -- he has very offensive comments throughout the years, this is not the first time this has happened,'' Lowden maintained. "He has said that the TEA Party protestors, especially here in Nevada, were 'evil mongers' because they they want to protest the policies of Washington... He called our former president a 'loser' in a high school class here in Nevada.... He told the public that they smelled when they visited the capital...last summer...and it goes on and on."

Lowden added of Reid: "He said he was going to "vaporize" me...Words are very, very important and I think he is going to try to do that in with a very negative campaign... When I heard that he said he was going to vaporize me, I said, 'Start on my hips.'''

Reid had been neutral during the divisive Democratic primary campaign in 2008. Someone else had been a lot less neutral in that protracted contest between Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New YorkBill Clinton, the former president of the United States known in some circles as "the first black president.''

And Bill Clinton, we're also learnng now, had once irked the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, an early supporter of Obama, with his own reference to the junior senator from Illinois.

Politco, which also has gotten its hands on the forthcoming Game Change, reports that Halperin and Heilemann write:

"Bill's handling of Ted was even worse. The day after Iowa, he phoned Kennedy and pressed for an endorsement, making the case for his wife. But Bill then went on, belittling Obama in a manner that deeply offended Kennedy. Recounting the conversation later to a friend, Teddy fumed that Clinton had said, A few years ago, this guy would have been getting us coffee.''

In the nation that is not quite post-racial America, there is at least one publication which is proud of what Obama has achieved with election as the first African American president: City News, a weekly publication for the African American community in southern Cook County and Kankakee, Ill., for some time now has been running promotional ads featuring Obama, then a candidate for president, holding a copy of the paper with a broad smile.

At a time when the president's image is gracing billboards in Times Square and the Long Island Expresswaywith an ad that the Weatherproof coat company has promised to take downthis is one ad that the publishers haven't heard a peep about, and say they'll continue to run. (See the photo above, printed with permission.)

"He was visiting here, and I was doing a story,'' publisher James Taylor Sr., told The Swamp this weekend. "I asked him if we could take the picture of him to promote the paper, and he said, 'No problem.'''

The picture promoting the weekly paper with a reported circulation of about 50,000 was taken at Kankakee Community College, the publisher says.

"This is the first black president,'' Taylor explains of his paper's pride in the promotional photograph of the 48-year-old president, "and we've got a 42-year-old black newspaper.''


Sizing Up Obama's Measured Response To Terrorism

The fallout from the failed attack on a Detroit-bound airliner Christmas Day continued throughout the past week. Host Liane Hansen talks with NPR news analyst Juan Williams about the Obama administration's moves on terrorism prevention and national security.


Sabtu, 09 Januari 2010

Chokehold Sought on EPA Over Carbon Rules

Chokehold Sought on EPA Over Carbon Rules
N.D. Rep's Bill Would Reverse Supreme Court Ruling, Remove Authority From EPA to Regulate Greenhouse Gases
Obama: Health care, decade of promise

by Mark Silva

The health-care overhaul which Congress is "on the verge of passing'' will be part of a new decade of economic promise, President Barack Obama maintains.

The Republians are focusing on something else today, the trial of detentention of captives in the war on terror on American soil, with Rep. Pete King, the New York Republican and ranking minority member of the House Homeland Security Committee calling a prison in Illinois where many detainees are to be moved "Gitmo North.''

Acknowledging the newest tally of joblessness -- with more jobs lost last month and unemployment holding at 10 percent -- the president says in his weekly radio and Internet address today that "too many of the folks I've talked with this year, and whose stories I read in letters at night, tell me that they've known their own private recessions since long before economists declared oneand they'll still feel the recession long after economists have declared it over.''

Emerging from the crisis, Obama says, "we will not return to the complacency that helped cause it. Even as we focus on putting America back to work today, we're building a new foundation for our economy to create the good, lasting jobs and shared prosperity of tomorrow.''

This includes fixing a health insurance system "that's crushing families, eating away at workers' take-home pay, and nailing small businesses with double-digit premium increases... The worst practices of the insurance industry will be banned forever. And costs will finally come down for families, businesses, and our government...

"We enter a new decade, now, with new perilsbut we're going to meet them,'' the president says today, as Democratic leaders of the House and Senate are starting to negotiate the differences between their two passed plans. "It's also a time of tremendous promiseand we're going to seize it. We will rebuild the American Dream for our middle class and put the American economy on a stronger footing for the future.''

King is address a more immediate concern today, the lapse in intelligence and security that enabled a known threat to board a U.S.-bound airliner on Christmas Day carrying explosives. The White House has concluded that the several signals missed by intelligence authorities beforehand was a failure of proper analysis.

""This is about whether we've learned our lesson,'' King says in his address. "Terrorists still have innocent people in their sights and the will to murder them. They are always working on the next attack, refining their methods, searching the globe for new recruits. In other words, September 11th is not ancient historyit's all too real.

"So, the people in my community certainly get it. American families get it. And now it's time for the administration in Washington to stop sending mixed messages and get it too.''

For King, that means keeping terrorists such as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed out of New York, where the Obama administration plans to try the architect of the 9/11 attacks, and keeping prisoners from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, out of a prison in Illinois, where the administration plans to move many detainees as it closes Guantanamo.

"One of the first things we need to do is pass the Keep Terrorists Out of America Act, a common-sense bill Republicans have proposed to prevent terrorists from being brought on to our soil.,'' King maintains. "This bill would help stop the misguided plan to put Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other 9/11 terrorists on trial in downtown Manhattan. It's an enormous, unnecessary risk, as is housing terrorists at the proposed 'Gitmo North' facility near Chicago.''

See the president's address above, the Republican address below, and read them both below the fold, here in the Swamp

Here is the text of the president's address:

"A year ago, when I took office in the midst of the worst recession since the Great Depression, I promised you two things. The first was that there would be better days ahead. And the second was that the road to recovery would be long, and sometimes bumpy.

"That was brought home again yesterday. We learned that in November, our economy saw its first month of job gains in nearly two yearsbut last month, we lost more than we gained. Now, we know that no single month makes a trend, and job losses for the final quarter of 2009 were one-tenth what they were in the first quarter. But until we see a trend of good, sustainable job creation, we will be relentless in our efforts to put America back to work.

"That task goes even deeper than replacing the seven million jobs that have been lost over the past two years. We need to rebuild our economy in such a way that our families can feel a measure of security again. Too many of the folks I've talked with this year, and whose stories I read in letters at night, tell me that they've known their own private recessions since long before economists declared oneand they'll still feel the recession long after economists have declared it over.

"That's because, for decades, Washington avoided doing what was right in favor of doing what was easy. And the result was an economy where some made out well, but the middle class too often took a beating.

"Over the past decade, the income of the average household actually declined, and we lost as many jobs as we created. Hardworking folks who did everything right suddenly found themselves forced to downscale their dreams because of economic factors beyond their control. We're talking about simple dreams. American dreams. A good job with a good wage. A secure and dignified retirement. Stable health care so you don't go broke just because you get sick. The chance to give our kids a better shot than we got.

"That's why, as we begin to emerge from this crisis, we will not return to the complacency that helped cause it. Even as we focus on putting America back to work today, we're building a new foundation for our economy to create the good, lasting jobs and shared prosperity of tomorrow.

"We're making historic investments in science and in a clean energy economy that will generate and keep the jobs and industries of the future right here in America.

"We're reforming our education system, so that our kids are fully prepared to compete with workers anywhere in the world and win the race for the 21st century.

"We're fixing our broken health insurance system that's crushing families, eating away at workers' take-home pay, and nailing small businesses with double-digit premium increases.

"And that's what I'd like to focus on for a minute. After a long and thorough debate, we are on the verge of passing health insurance reform that will finally offer Americans the security of knowing they'll have quality, affordable health care whether they lose their job, change jobs, move, or get sick. The worst practices of the insurance industry will be banned forever. And costs will finally come down for families, businesses, and our government.

"Now, it'll take a few years to fully implement these reforms in a responsible way. But what every American should know is that once I sign health insurance reform into law, there are dozens of protections and benefits that will take effect this year.

"Uninsured Americans with a pre-existing illness or condition will finally be able to purchase coverage they can afford.

"Children with pre-existing conditions will no longer be refused coverage, and young adults will be able to stay on their parents' policy until they're 26 or 27 years old.

"Small business owners who can't afford to cover their employees will be immediately offered tax credits to purchase coverage.

"Early retirees who receive coverage from their employers will see their coverage protected and their premiums go down.

"Seniors who fall into the coverage gap known as the donut hole will receive discounts of up to 50 percent on their prescriptions as we begin to close that gap altogether.

"And every patient's choice of doctor will be protected, along with access to emergency care.

"Here's what else will happen within the first year. Insurance plans will be required to offer free preventive care to their customersso that we can start catching preventable illnesses and diseases on the front end. They'll no longer be allowed to impose restrictive annual limits on the amount of coverage you receive or lifetime limits on the amount of benefits you receive. They'll be prohibited from dropping your coverage when you get sick and need it most. And there will be a new, independent appeals process for anyone who feels they were unfairly denied a claim by their insurance company.

"In short, once I sign health insurance reform into law, doctors and patients will have more control over their health care decisions, and insurance company bureaucrats will have less. All told, these changes represent the most sweeping reforms and toughest restrictions on insurance companies that this country has ever known. That's how we'll make 2010 a healthier and more secure year for every Americanfor those who have health insurance, and those who don't.

"We enter a new decade, now, with new perilsbut we're going to meet them. It's also a time of tremendous promiseand we're going to seize it. We will rebuild the American Dream for our middle class and put the American economy on a stronger footing for the future. And this year, I am as hopeful and as confident as ever that we're going to rise to this moment the same way that generations of Americans always have: as one nation, and one people. Thanks for listening.'

Here is the text of the Republican address:

"Hi, I'm Republican Congressman Pete King, I serve as the Ranking Member on the House Homeland Security Committee and I'm also a member of the House Intelligence Committee. I have the privilege to represent New York's Third Congressional District, on Long Island in the suburbs of New York City.

"Two weeks ago, the terrorist plot to bring down Northwest Airlines Flight 253 in the skies over Detroit was thwarted by a combination of luck and vigilance. But as President Obama has rightly said, it should never have even gotten to that point. Last year, this terrorist's father, a widely respected member of his community, went to our embassy in Nigeria and shared his concerns that his son was becoming a radical jihadist. That should have been more than enough to trigger a red flag that would prevent this terrorist from ever setting foot on a plane bound for the U.S. with explosives.

"Both parties recognize the need for answers, so bureaucratic reviews will take place and congressional hearings will be held. And while that's all well and good, this is about much more than whether the no-fly list gets longer or it takes more time to get through the security line at the airport.

"This is about whether we've learned our lesson. Terrorists still have innocent people in their sights and the will to murder them. They are always working on the next attack, refining their methods, searching the globe for new recruits. In other words, September 11th is not ancient historyit's all too real.

"So, the people in my community certainly get it. American families get it. And now it's time for the Administration in Washington to stop sending mixed messages and get it too.

"One of the first things we need to do is pass the Keep Terrorists Out of America Act, a common-sense bill Republicans have proposed to prevent terrorists from being brought on to our soil. This bill would help stop the misguided plan to put Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other 9/11 terrorists on trial in downtown Manhattan. It's an enormous, unnecessary risk, as is housing terrorists at the proposed 'Gitmo North' facility near Chicago.

"There's a good reason why the government has had such a hard time transferring these terrorist detainees to other countries. They are the worst of the worst. No one should want them. That's why we put in place a process by which these terrorists should be held and triedas enemy combatants, by military commissions.

"The Keep Terrorists Out of America Act will also help to ensure that we're treating terrorism as what it isa war crime, not a law enforcement issue. We can't gather the intelligence we need to foil future attacks if we are blindly granting terrorists the right to remain silent. But for some reason, we've already done that with the terrorist who tried to bring down Flight 253.

"We are a nation at war, and we should act like it. We need to pull together, remain vigilant, and send a clear signalboth to our friends and our enemiesthat this government will stop at nothing to protect our homeland. That's how America sets an example for the world.

"Thank you for listening."



Sen. Harry Reid Apologizes For Remark About Obama

During the 2008 presidential campaign, he described then-Sen. Obama as 'light skinned' and 'with no Negro dialect.' Obama later said he accepted the Senate majority leader's apology.


Jumat, 08 Januari 2010

Christmas Terror Suspect Pleads Not Guilty
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab Appears In Court on Charges He Tried to Blow Up Detroit-Bound Airliner
Oh 'Bama: 'Roll Tide'

by Christi Parsons

Hours after the Alabama Crimson Tide national championship win, President Barack Obama was on the phone with Coach Nick Saban this afternoon offering congratulations and inviting the team to the White House for a visit.

Alabama Texas.jpg

The president told Saban he was "proud" of how the team played all year, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs says, and the president predicted a strong 2010 season with key players set to return.

Obama may have also agreed to shoot hoops with Saban and/or the team -- which includes Heisman Trophy winner Mark Ingram -- possibly on the White House court.

The phone call took place as Gibbs, a native of Auburn, Ala., was conducting his daily news conference in the White House briefing room, where he was obliged to acknowledge -- if not celebrate -- the Tide victory.

"I did get a few e-mails from friends wondering if I would mention my excitement at the newly crowned national champions," said Gibbs, who was pulling against the Tide in the championship game. "So consider that having checked that box."

(The scoreboard, above, at the end of the national championship game between the Texas Longhorns and Alabama Crimson Tide at the Rose Bowl: 37-21. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images)


Obama Takes Responsibility For 'Systemic Failure'

The Obama administration has released its report detailing security failures that allowed a Nigerian man to board a U.S.-bound plane carrying explosives. The president said that improving the flow of information within the intelligence community will be the way to prevent more attacks. And he said he ultimately bore responsibility for what he's calling a systemic failure leading up to the attempted bombing.


Kamis, 07 Januari 2010

McCain vs. Obama's 'Left-wing crusade'

Analysis: Dems Face Difficult 2010
Washington Post: After Two Big Elections, Democrats Are Due for a Setback
McCain vs. Obama's 'Left-wing crusade'

by Mark Silva

John McCain has run against Barack Obama before.

He's running against him again.

With campaign radio ads billing the five-term Republican senator as "Arizona's last line of defense,'' the GOP's nominee for president in 2008 is attempting to bolster his 2010 campaign for reelection to the Senate with a slam at the president.

"President Obama is leading an extreme left-wing crusade to bankrupt America,'' McCain says in one of the radio ads his campaign is airing.

McCain after meeting with Obama.jpg

"I stand in his way every day,'' McCain says. "If I get a bruise or two knocking some sense into heads in Washington, so be it.''

McCain got his own head-knocking in the 2008 presidential election, and now he could be facing a party primary contest from a former Republican congressman, J.D. Hayworth, who is an outspoken critic of immigration reform -- an issue which McCain has championed in the Senate, and an issue on which McCain, Obama and some of the Senate's leading Democrats happen to agree. They support a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants.

But on the radio, McCain and Obama could not be further apart.

"He's lived through a battle or two, vanquished many a foe,'' a narrator says of the retired Navy pilot and admiral's son who spent five and a half years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam. "But perhaps no battle in our lifetime is more vital than the one John McCain fights now... a battle to save America, save our jobs...

"John McCain leads the charge to slash government spending, bloated bureaucracies and ridiculously unaffordable ideas like government run health care.''

In another ad playing on a battle-tested McCain campaign tactic of invoking his days as a POWreminding voters in Arizona that he could have come home to the U.S. earlier from that prison camp than he did (though Arizona was not home at the time)the narrator says:

"John McCain is leading the fight against President Obama every day.''

It could get interesting when they get to that immigration bill.

(Sen. John McCain is pictured above after a meeting between President Barack Obama and the Democratic Caucus to push the health care reform plan at the Capitol in December, in a photo by Nicholas Kamm / AFP / Getty Images. And McCain is pictured above with President Barack Obama, meeting with members of Congress to discuss immigration in June at the White House in a photo by Haraz N. Ghanbari / )


Retirements Highlight Perils For Democrats

Democratic activists say the departures of Sens. Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and Byron Dorgan (D-ND) should be a wake-up call for the party as it heads into this year's midterm elections. In the year since Barack Obama was elected president and Democrats took over both houses of Congress, the party has been steadily losing ground with voters.


Rabu, 06 Januari 2010

Obama: Times Square (drafted) pitchman

W.H. Defensive over Health Care Fast Track
Obama and Congressional Leaders Agreed to Speed Up Progress Toward a Final Bill by Bypassing Formal Conference Committee
Obama: Times Square (drafted) pitchman

by Mark Silva

The president has been known to throw the first pitch at the start of baseball season. But a presidential pitch in Times Square?

The White House has tried to curb the use of Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama and the Obama children as tools of advertising. But the president's protests are a no-sale on Madison Avenue. Or Times Square.

The fur-less first lady is featured at the moment in a "Fur-free, Fabulous'' ad that PETA has posted around Washington.

Now the president, appearing atop the Great Wall of China in a Weatherproof overcoat, is pictured by the company on its Times Square billboard.

White House spokesman Bill Burton says the administration has a long-standing policy against the use of Obama's name and likeness for commercial purposes.

The photo of the president touring China's best-known landmark, a rugged pose captured by the Associated Press' Charles Dharapak in the line of journalistic duty, caught the attention of Weatherproof President Freddie Stollmack. The coat looked familiar, so Stollmack got out his magnifying glass -- Yureeka!

The company bought the photo rights from Images, and did not seek permission from the White Housenor does it believe that necessary, because Obama is not endorsing the product.

"He didn't come to us. It's just a great looking jacket on a great looking president," Stollmack explains.

The president's job approval may be off nationally, but he has a ready following in Manhattan, where Democrats outnumber Republicans by about five-to-one. And Stollmack figures Obama should thank them for making him look so good.

"We did this in good faith," Stollmack says. "This is an image that we thought would enhance the president of the United States."

And, oh yes, the coats. (Fur-less).


Republicans Hope For Gains In 2010

Two Democratic Senators, Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and Byron Dorgan of North Dakota, have announced they will not seek re-election this fall. Also, the failed attack on Northwest flight 253 continues to have political ramifications.


Selasa, 05 Januari 2010

Video: Yemen Focus Of Politics On Terror
The weather in Washington might be cold, but the heat is on for President Obama as he returns from Hawaii and faces a growing crisis with al-Qaeda in Yemen. John Dickerson spoke with CBS News Pentagon Correspondent David Martin and Politico Senior Writer Jonathan Martin.
Florida GOP chief out, twine unwinding?

Crist at crossing.jpg

by Mark Silva

Jim Greer -- and the Swamp will remember him today as the fellow who criticized President Barack Obama's back-to-school speech to students last fall as a platform for the president's "socialist ideology'' -- resigned today as chairman of the Florida GOP.

This alone may not sound very significant.

But when taken as another piece of the unraveling twine which is the career of the long-popular Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (pictured here), it is significant. Greer, chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, was Crist's man. And some complained that Greer was playing favorites in his role as party chairman in the midst of an increasingly heated party primary for an open Senate seat.

Crist, the former state legislator known as "chain-gang Charlie'' for his promotion of hard-time for prison inmates, the former attorney general known for environmental and antitrust-busting activities popular with consumers and the Republican governor perhaps best remembered lately for wrapping his arm around Obama as the president promoted his economic stimulus spending plans in Florida last year, is having some trouble with a GOP Senate primary which, a year ago, would have seemed his for the taking.

Crist is a moderate to progressive Republican, criticized in some circles for bending to whatever the popular wind is. A conservative Republican from Miami, former state House Speaker Marco Rubio, is giving the governor a run for his life in the primary for a seat vacated by former Sen. Mel Martinez -- a Republican who had forfeited his own co-chairmanship of the RNC when his own political fortunes were failling -- a seat that is being held by a Crist-appointed place-holder, Sen. George LeMieux, until November's elections.

The conservative Club for Growth has weighed in against Crist in the primary, in another match pitting the farthest-right wing of the party against its center. And Greer, who steps down on Feb. 20, called himself a victim of that fight today.

"As you know, there is a great debate in our party on the direction, moderates vs. conservatives, whether we should have a big tent or a small tent," Greeer said. "And while I have made it my utmost concern to try and keep those arguments and discontents out of the Republican Party of Florida, over the last six months there has been a very vocal group within our party that has become very active in seeking an effort to oust me as chairman. They have distorted facts, they have talked about misspending of money, when the facts have been shown over and over and over that that's not true. They have talked about my support of Gov. Crist for the U.S. Senate race. They have, as they say, thrown everything up against the wall as they possibly can, to either embarrass me or embarrass the Republican Party of Florida."

Crist himself has conceded in an interview with reporters that he has not been "on my game'' all the time lately.

Greer wasn't always on his game, either. "As the father of four children,'' he said of the president's plans to address school-children nationally last fall, "I am absolutely appalled that taxpayer dollars are being used to spread President Obama's socialist ideology.''

Early handicapping for Greer's replacement: State Sen. John Thrasher, a former House speaker there (they term-limit their lawmakers to eight years, which sends a lot of House leaders into the Senate, and vice versa) and ex-lobbyist for the Florida Medical Association. He's a gregarious, moderate fellow. And he campaigned against Crist.

(Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, long-popular but now fighting for his party's Senate nomination, is pictured above at a crossroad. Photo by Joe Raedle / Getty Images)


In Texas House Speaker, GOP Sees A Star

When Republicans go looking for leaders, Texas has long been one of their first stops. One of the newest stars there is Joe Straus, who is just finishing his first year as speaker of the Texas House. But whether he will appeal to a party pushed further to the right remains to be seen.


Senin, 04 Januari 2010

Clinton: Yemeni Extremists a Global Threat
Top Diplomat Praises Yemeni Government's Recent Steps to Curb Terrorism, Promises U.S. Backing
State Dinner 'gate-crashers' not alone

by Mark Silva

It turns out that Tareq and Michaele Salahi, the Virginia couple who made their way into the White House's first State Dinner without invitations, weren't alone.

A third attendee arrived without an invitation, and entered with the official delegation of Indian Prime Manmohan Singh, for whom the dinner was held in November.

The Secret Service said today that an investigation into the security breach that enabled the Salahis to waltz into the White House and shake hands with the president and pose for pictures with other White House officials "has revealed that a third individual, who was not on the White House guest list, entered the State Dinner.''

There is no indication, however, that the individual had any contact with President Obama, the agency said.

The publicly unidentified person, who traveled with Indian officials from the hotel where they were staying, "went through all required security measures along with the rest of the official delegation at the hotel, and boarded a bus/van with the delegation guests en route to the White House," the Secret Service said in a statement.

Ed Donovan, Secret Service spokesman, declined to "get into all the particulars" on the discovery of a third gate uninvited guest. The Service already has disciplined some officers involved in the Salahi's now-notorious gate-crashing of the Indian dinner.

Congress is looking into the Salahis' far more public appearance. The couple have maintained that they thought they were entitled to attend the dinner, based on email correspondence with a friend at Defense who was attempting to help them attend an arrival ceremony. They have taken the "Fifth,'' however, in declining to appear before Congress. And the White House has cited executive privilege in declining to let Social Secretary Desiree Rogers appear before a congressional committee.

Wire services contributed.


Minggu, 03 Januari 2010

CBS News' Predictions for 2010

CBS News' Predictions for 2010
Correspondents Offer Their Forecasts on What to Expect Over the Coming Year
White House: 'No smoking gun'

by Jim Tankersley

President Obama's leading counterterrorism advisor said this morning that human errorbut not turf battles between federal intelligence officialsallowed an al Qaeda-trained operative to carry out an attempt to bomb a Detroit-bound airplane on Christmas Day.

Deputy National Security Advisor John O. Brennan, in appearances on several Sunday morning television news programs, also said there was "no smoking gun" of intelligence gathered by American officials that would have directly suggested the Flight 253 attack by Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab was imminent.

"There was no piece of intelligence that said, 'this guy's a terrorist. He's going to get on a plane'," Brennan said. Later, he added: "It was the failure to integrate and piece together those bits and pieces of information."

Brennan is leading the Obama-ordered review of intelligence-gathering and watchlisting efforts, which failed to block Abdulmutallab from boarding the plane despite several red flags known to U.S. officialsincluding a personal warning from Abdulmutallab's father that the young man was displaying extremist tendencies.

Brennan said the review had so far yielded no evidence that various agencies withheld that intelligence from one another, as was the case with rival agencies in the lead-up to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

"There is no indication whatsoever that any agency or department was not trying to share information" on Abdulmutallab, Brennan said. "There (were) some lapses. There was some human error."

Brennan defended the sophistication of the government's anti-terror system, after one interviewer questioned if it could stack up to Facebook, the popular Internet social networking site.

More broadly, he defended the Obama administration's anti-terror efforts, including its decision to charge Abdulmutallab in criminal court and its plans to close the Guantanamo Bay detention facility. He said Obama would still consider returning ex-Guantanamo prisoners to Yemen.

He explained the decision to close the U.S. embassy in Yemen today by saying intelligence officials believe there is threat of another al Qaeda attack there.

And he said there was evidence that al Qaeda is training new operatives in Yemen to send "to the West" for possible attacks.

"We are doing everything possible to scour all the intelligence to see if there is another Abdulmutallab out there," Brennan said.Brennan spoke on "Fox News Sunday," CNN's "State of the Union," ABC's "This Week" and NBC's "Meet the Press."

In several instances, Brennan was followed by congressional Republicans who criticized his comments and the administration's national security policies.

The top Republican on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Sen. Christopher Bond of Missouri, said on Fox that he was "very disturbed" that Obama would consider releasing Guantanamo detainees to any other country, in light of reports that several al Qaeda leaders in Yemen are former Guantanamo prisoners released during the Bush administration.

"If we don't stop the practice of releasing Gitmo detainees, to Yemen or to other countries ... we're asking for even more trouble," Bond said.On CNN.

Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), said Brennan "seems to have a hard time saying (the bombing attempt) was an act of terror.""This threat is real," DeMint said, "and we need to make some very real changes."

Other Republicans were more measured. On CNN, former New Jersey Gov. Thomas Kean, the chairman of the 9/11 Commission, praised Obama's reaction to the Flight 253 attack. But he said it was clear that until Christmas, the administration was "distracted" by health care, the economy, global warming and other issues and not "focused as it should be on terrorism."

In his interviews, Brennan rebutted one Republican charge repeatedly: former Vice President Dick Cheney's accusation last week that Obama is "pretending" that the United States is not at war with terrorists.

Cheney is either "willfully mischaracterizing" Obama's position, Brennan said, or "ignorant of the facts." The administration, he said, is "determined to destroy al Qaeda, whether it's in Pakistan, Afghanistan or in Yemen. We will get there."


Sabtu, 02 Januari 2010

Clinton Charity Draws Eclectic Donors

Clinton Charity Draws Eclectic Donors
Funders of Foundation Include Norway, Bill and Melinda Gates, Conservative Who Bankrolled Anti-Clinton Campaigns
01022010, 12:00:00, 0*, Full moon waning

by Mark Silva

It's high noon, with a leftover blue moon, on the cold day of the new year (and decade, we hold here) noted as 01/02/2010.

There's a certain equilibrium here at the moment.

What's past is passed, what's ahead will unfold.

We're trusting that 01022010 is not a midpoint.

The clock and the calendar do not roll backward.

But for now, all is in balance. The blue moon of New Year's Eve shone brightly overhead here, and we'll see it waning tonight.

iI's freezing in Washington as well:

Zero Celsius.

If you'd like to drop off your favorite palindrome here, we'll take it.


Obama: Al-Qaida Link To Christmas Bomb Suspect

President Barack Obama laid blame Saturday on an al-Qaida affiliate for a Christmas Day terrorist attack that has prompted a top-to-bottom review of how the nation's intelligence agencies failed to prevent the botched bombing aboard a Detroit-bound airliner.


Clinton Charity Draws Eclectic Donors

Clinton Charity Draws Eclectic Donors
Funders of Foundation Include Norway, Bill and Melinda Gates, Conservative Who Bankrolled Anti-Clinton Campaigns
01022010, 12:00:00, 0*, Full moon waning

by Mark Silva

It's high noon, with a leftover blue moon, on the cold day of the new year (and decade, we hold here) noted as 01/02/2010.

There's a certain equilibrium here at the moment.

What's past is passed, what's ahead will unfold.

We're trusting that 01022010 is not a midpoint.

The clock and the calendar do not roll backward.

But for now, all is in balance. The blue moon of New Year's Eve shone brightly overhead here, and we'll see it waning tonight.

iI's freezing in Washington as well:

Zero Celsius.

If you'd like to drop off your favorite palindrome here, we'll take it.


Obama: Al-Qaida Link To Christmas Bomb Suspect

President Barack Obama laid blame Saturday on an al-Qaida affiliate for a Christmas Day terrorist attack that has prompted a top-to-bottom review of how the nation's intelligence agencies failed to prevent the botched bombing aboard a Detroit-bound airliner.


Jumat, 01 Januari 2010

Iraq Dismayed by Blackwater Dismissal
Relative of Civilians Among 17 Killed by U.S. Contractors Calls Judge's Decision to Dismiss Charges a "Farce"
TSA: Questions of screening and memory

by Mark Silva

The blocked nominee for chief of the Transportation Security Administration may face more than controversy over the unionization of the nation's airport screenershe now finds himself explaining his own only recently refreshed memory of some screening that he had undertaken on his own:

Background checks on his then-estranged wife's boyfriend some 20 years ago.

Erroll Southers, a former FBI special agent and now assistant chief of the Los Angeles World Airports Police Department, had informed senators reviewing his nomination by President Barack Obama to head the TSA of a regrettable incident long ago for which he had been rebuked.

He also said he'd only done so once.

Until following up with another letter to senators after his committee confirmation hearing acknowledging that there was one other time, too.

The White House is standing by its delayed nominee.

Republican Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina had put a hold on Senate confirmation of Southers, contending that he is more interested in fulfilling an Obama campaign promise to unions than protecting national security. In the aftermath of the near-catastrophic lapse in intelligence and security that enabled a known threat to board a U.S.-bound airliner with explosives on Christmas Day. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has vowed to push Southers' confirmation as soon as the Senate returnshe will invoke cloture.

Southers had given senators a letter in Novemberit was revealed just this week on the Washington Post's Web-sitecorrecting what he called a distortion in his record.

"I am distressed by the inconsistencies between my recollection and the contemporaneous documents, but I assure you that the mistake was inadvertent, and that I have at all times taken full responsibility for what I know to have been a grave error in judgment," Southers wrote in a letter to Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Susan Collins (R-Me.) chairman and ranking Republican member of the Senate Homeland Security Committee.

"This incident was over 20 years ago, I was distraught and concerned about my young son, and never in my career since has there been any recurrence of this sort of conduct."

In an October affidavit for the Senate committee, the nominee initially had said that he asked a San Diego police employee to run a background check on his then-estranged wife's boyfriend and was censured by his FBI superiors. He called it an isolated instance. But a day after the committee approved his nomination and sent it to the full Senate, he wrote that he twice had run checks himself.

He said he had forgotten the incident in 1987 or '88.


The letter was first reported by he Post on Thursday. It was dated Nov. 20.

Lieberman aide Leslie Phillips said the senator supports Southers.

"Twenty years ago, Mr. Southers committed a serious error in judgment," Phillips said. "He admitted that error and was disciplined for it. He went on to develop broad knowledge and build an excellent reputation in the areas of security and law enforcement. Mr. Southers was forthcoming about his past censure during his nomination process and about errors he made in recalling the details."

White House officials also are backing him up.

"Southers has never tried to hide this incident and has expressed that these were errors he made in judgment that he deeply regretted and an error that he made in an account of events that happened over 20 years ago," said Nick Shapiro, a White House spokesman traveling with Obama on vacation in Hawaii. ""Southers' nomination has not been held up over this as he has been entrusted with significant and increasing responsibilities in the area of homeland security over the years since, but he is being held up by Sen. (Jim) DeMint over a political issue."

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger also is behind him.

"Erroll brings vast homeland security experience at the federal, state and local levels, along with hands on airport security expertise," Schwarzenegger said in a statement. "California is safer and better prepared because of his hard work and dedication. Erroll is a committed public servant and highly qualified for the role."



To Avoid Raising Taxes, States Try To Rack Up Fees

Many states want to avoid raising taxes on residents during a recession. But with widespread budget deficits, states are trying to increase revenue by turning to special fees — on hunting and fishing licenses, for example — or by increasing taxes paid by visitors on hotel rooms and rental cars.


Iraq Dismayed by Blackwater Dismissal

Iraq Dismayed by Blackwater Dismissal
Relative of Civilians Among 17 Killed by U.S. Contractors Calls Judge's Decision to Dismiss Charges a "Farce"
TSA: Questions of screening and memory

by Mark Silva

The blocked nominee for chief of the Transportation Security Administration may face more than controversy over the unionization of the nation's airport screenershe now finds himself explaining his own only recently refreshed memory of some screening that he had undertaken on his own:

Background checks on his then-estranged wife's boyfriend some 20 years ago.

Erroll Southers, a former FBI special agent and now assistant chief of the Los Angeles World Airports Police Department, had informed senators reviewing his nomination by President Barack Obama to head the TSA of a regrettable incident long ago for which he had been rebuked.

He also said he'd only done so once.

Until following up with another letter to senators after his committee confirmation hearing acknowledging that there was one other time, too.

The White House is standing by its delayed nominee.

Republican Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina had put a hold on Senate confirmation of Southers, contending that he is more interested in fulfilling an Obama campaign promise to unions than protecting national security. In the aftermath of the near-catastrophic lapse in intelligence and security that enabled a known threat to board a U.S.-bound airliner with explosives on Christmas Day. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has vowed to push Southers' confirmation as soon as the Senate returnshe will invoke cloture.

Southers had given senators a letter in Novemberit was revealed just this week on the Washington Post's Web-sitecorrecting what he called a distortion in his record.

"I am distressed by the inconsistencies between my recollection and the contemporaneous documents, but I assure you that the mistake was inadvertent, and that I have at all times taken full responsibility for what I know to have been a grave error in judgment," Southers wrote in a letter to Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Susan Collins (R-Me.) chairman and ranking Republican member of the Senate Homeland Security Committee.

"This incident was over 20 years ago, I was distraught and concerned about my young son, and never in my career since has there been any recurrence of this sort of conduct."

In an October affidavit for the Senate committee, the nominee initially had said that he asked a San Diego police employee to run a background check on his then-estranged wife's boyfriend and was censured by his FBI superiors. He called it an isolated instance. But a day after the committee approved his nomination and sent it to the full Senate, he wrote that he twice had run checks himself.

He said he had forgotten the incident in 1987 or '88.


The letter was first reported by he Post on Thursday. It was dated Nov. 20.

Lieberman aide Leslie Phillips said the senator supports Southers.

"Twenty years ago, Mr. Southers committed a serious error in judgment," Phillips said. "He admitted that error and was disciplined for it. He went on to develop broad knowledge and build an excellent reputation in the areas of security and law enforcement. Mr. Southers was forthcoming about his past censure during his nomination process and about errors he made in recalling the details."

White House officials also are backing him up.

"Southers has never tried to hide this incident and has expressed that these were errors he made in judgment that he deeply regretted and an error that he made in an account of events that happened over 20 years ago," said Nick Shapiro, a White House spokesman traveling with Obama on vacation in Hawaii. ""Southers' nomination has not been held up over this as he has been entrusted with significant and increasing responsibilities in the area of homeland security over the years since, but he is being held up by Sen. (Jim) DeMint over a political issue."

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger also is behind him.

"Erroll brings vast homeland security experience at the federal, state and local levels, along with hands on airport security expertise," Schwarzenegger said in a statement. "California is safer and better prepared because of his hard work and dedication. Erroll is a committed public servant and highly qualified for the role."



Clinton Donor List Doesn't Say Who Gave In '09

The donor list disclosed by the William J. Clinton Foundation did show that conservative Richard Scaife, who bankrolled anti-Clinton investigations in the 1990s, pitched in money. Several other foreign governments, including Kuwait, Norway and Saudi Arabia participated. The biggest donors included the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which gave more than $25 million.