The Commentariat -- Dec. 31, 2014
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Jackie Calmes & Jonathan Martin of the New York Times: "Speaker John A. Boehner on Tuesday expressed 'full confidence' in Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the No. 3 Republican leader in the House, as he sought to quell a racially charged controversy shaking the party after Mr. Scalise confirmed that he had addressed a white supremacist group a dozen years ago.... At nearly the same time, Mr. Scalise released a statement disavowing the group of white supremacists he spoke to in 2002, when he was a state representative.... The spokesman for Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the House Democratic leader, [earlier in the day] wrote on Twitter that Mr. Boehner's 'silence on Scalise' was 'another example of his consistent failure to stand up to extreme GOP elements.'" ...
... Ed O'Keefe & Robert Costa of the Washington Post: "Some Republicans praised Boehner for his actions, expressing their eagerness to start the new Congress in a position of strength to fully exploit their gains in the midterm elections. But others worried about the potential political fallout...." ...
... Jeff Singer of Daily Kos: "There's a good reason why Boehner would want Scalise to stick around, warts and all. As Politico's Jake Sherman notes, Boehner has his own leadership election a week from now. While he is favored to stay on as speaker, conservative activists are making noise about unseating him. RedState's Erick Erickson is claiming that anti-Boehner forces in the House have close to the number of votes they need to deny him another term, or at least embarrass the speaker by sending him to a second ballot. Even if Erickson is bluffing, Boehner won't want to take any chances, especially after his surprisingly close call in the 2013 speakership race." ...
... Alex Pappas of the Daily Caller: "Though ousting Boehner is seen as a long shot endeavor, the hope of the [ultra-conservative] anti-Boehner bloc is for enough Republicans to deny Boehner a majority of the vote, which would cause him to drop out of the race." ...
... Brian Beutler: "There's a problem with southern Republican politics if an up-and-coming star stumbles heedless into a white supremacist convention in the course of his constituent outreach, and then doesn't notice the mistake for more than a decade." Beutler also reminds us why Scalise is in a top leadership position: "... by beating [then-Majority Leader Eric] Cantor [(R.Va.), Tea Partier David] Brat shook up the leadership hierarchy in the House, and spooked the remaining leaders into welcoming one of those hardliners into their ranks as a token. That token was Steve Scalise." ...
... Charles Pierce: "... the Republican party — and the Movement conservatism that is its only life force -- once again faces the same choice it has faced since that day in 1964, when Strom Thurmond blew the trumpet and led his supporters out of the bondage of the party of equal rights. It can look at Steve Scalise and see that its success is that of the Political Party Of Dorian Grey. Steve Scalise is the public face. But, up in the corner of the attic, there's a portrait of the rotting, decomposing corpse of Strom Thurmond, the decay deepening with every election won by the tactics he so completely pioneered." ...
... Tail Wags Dog. CW: John Boehner, dear friends, has made his choice. He's going with Strom. Never has a "leader" been so afeard of his followers. ...
... Yay! Hannity Has My Back. Cliven Bundy's former BFF Sean Hannity, told Breitbart News that John Boehner should "step aside for the good of the country and the conservative movement." Hannity prefers to see the House speakership go to the fellow to the right -- way to the right -- here. Via Mediaite. ...
... Up Jumped the Devil in a White Nightgown. Brett Logiurato of Fusion: "Duke was rather flabbergasted by the new focus on Scalise. He said he has hosted both Democratic and Republican legislators at everything from conferences to his children's birthday parties. He said he has met with Democratic legislators at least 50 times in his political life. And he delivered a warning to both Republicans and Democrats: Treat Scalise fairly, and don't try to make political hay out of the situation. Or he said he would be inclined to release a list of names of all the politicians -- both Republicans and Democrats -- with whom he has ties." Via Mediaite. ...
... Here's a new & different narrative. Betsy Woodruff of Slate: "Kenny Knight is a longtime associate of David Duke..., said on Tuesday that it's 'totally incorrect' to say Scalise spoke at that convention.... According to Knight, the EURO conference was slated to start in the early afternoon," but he rented the room beginning earlier in the day & arranged for Scalise, a parish firefighter & a Red Cross rep to address the Jefferson Heights Civic Association, which "was largely comprised of elderly people who lived in his and Scalise's neighborhood.... Though that event was in the conference's hospitality room, it wasn't at all related to the EURO event, he said." ...
... Nonetheless, Knight told the Washington Post, "Now, at the time, I was a prominent person in state politics. I was on the radio, I was doing campaigns. Steve knew who I was, but I don't think he held it against me. He knew I lived by his street and that I was active in our community." And according to David Duke, "I think Scalise would talk to Kenny because he recognized how popular I was in his own district. He knew that knowing what I was doing and saying wouldn't be the worst thing politically. Kenny would keep Scalise up to date on my issues." CW: If these guys are telling the truth, Scalise is either a flat-our liar himself, or -- to put him the best light -- he was using his association with these reprehensible men to advance his own political career. This is the person in whom John Boehner has "full confidence."
Ross Barkan of the New York Observer: (Link here.) "The balcony threat. The time spent in the bar bathroom. The guilty plea. House Speaker John Boehner, who reportedly pressured Congressman Michael Grimm to announce his resignation early this morning, said he still appreciated what Mr. Grimm, a fellow Republican, brought to the table in his brief, chaotic tenure as Staten Island's representative in Washington. 'Rep. Grimm made the honorable decision to step down from his seat in Congress,' Mr. Boehner said in a statement today. 'I know it was made with the best interests of his constituents and the institution in mind, and I appreciate his years of service in the House.'" CW: If only David Duke had showed more support for Grimm, Mikey might not have had to resign. ...
... The Continued Excellence of the Grand Old Party. Ross Barkan: "Congressman Michael Grimm's resignation is set to clear the way for a controversial Staten Island District Attorney to run for office with the Republican establishment's support, GOP sources say. Daniel Donovan, the Staten Island district attorney who most recently failed to secure an indictment in the Eric Garner case, is lining up support behind-the-scenes for a bid to replace Mr. Grimm. And Mr. Donovan, well-liked by the borough's Republican machine, is a front-runner to win the backing of the Staten Island Republican Party in a special election that will likely be held sometime next year, sources say." ...
... Patrick McGeehan & Jason Horowitz of the New York Times name some others who may run for Grimm's seat.
Luckily Republicans Still Have the Same Great Ideas They've Had for Decades. John Harwood of the New York Times runs down a number of ways various liberals & conservatives propose to reduce income inequality. "... the most popular conservative idea for boosting incomes is overhauling corporate taxation." You got that right: cutting corporate taxes is the GOP's plan for reducing income & wealth inequality. Thirty years after trickle-down economics theory proved as disastrous as its critics predicted, Republicans are still trying to sell the policy as a great equalizer. (That's partly what Paul Ryan's "dynamic scoring" is about -- pretending that cutting taxes on the rich will boost the economy so much that tax revenues will actually increase.)
New York Times Editors: "Many members of the New York Police Department are furious at Mayor Bill de Blasio and, by extension, the city that elected him. They have expressed this anger with a solidarity tantrum, repeatedly turning their backs to show their collective contempt. But now they seem to have taken their bitterness to a new and dangerous level -- by walking off the job.... This action is repugnant and inexcusable. It amounts to a public act of extortion by the police.... The Police Department ... needs to police itself. Rank-and-file officers deserve a department they can be proud of, not the insular, defiant, toxically politicized constituency that [Police Benevolent Association president Patrick] Lynch seems to want to lead." ...
... Joan Walsh of Salon: For the NYPD, & for a lot of white New Yorkers, 2014 is the 1970s all over again. "O'Reilly, Hannity and a defiant NYPD are fighting battles of 50 years ago. The chaos [of the 70s] ended but the backlash endures." ...
... If you want to see what's wrong with the NYPD, watch this video Haley S. linked in today's comments. You can watch the first 30 seconds or so to get a flavor of the gag, which is cute, then cursor to 2:25 min. in if you don't have time to watch the whole thing:
... P.S. Cops white, performer black. Pure coincidence. ...
... TMZ: "TMZ has learned NYPD has opened an investigation into the incident. What's unclear is why Alexander chose to pull this stunt four days after two NYPD officers were assassinated. Not a bright move." ...
... CW: Really? Two officers were murdered days before, & that's a justification for police brutality? I'll admit I probably wouldn't pull this around law enforcement officers on the chance I might interfere with their duties. But the video suggests these cops were doing what my husband always said NYPD cops did best: "Standing around talking about their girlfriends."
Burgess Everett of Politico: "President Barack Obama will not renominate controversial Georgia judicial nominee Michael Boggs to the federal bench in 2015, according to the state's two Republican senators. Boggs drew widespread opposition from Senate Democrats, including Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, for his record as a Georgia state legislator on gay marriage, abortion and the Confederate flag." The GOP senators still support Boggs. Of course.
Kate Zernicke & Jesse McKinley of the New York Times: "It may amount to little more than ceremony, but efforts are underway in New York and New Jersey to try to override vetoes by the governors of legislation that sought to curb patronage and political interference at the Port Authority.... While Republicans supported the legislation, they have never supported an override of Mr. Christie, who is known for enforcing strict party discipline."
Washington Post Editors: "Having convincingly made that principled case against capital punishment, it's time for [Gov. Martin] O'Malley [D-Md.] to follow through by commuting the sentences of the four men who remain on Maryland's death row before he leaves office Jan. 21.... Ever since a state court ruled in 2006 that Maryland's procedures for lethal injections were unconstitutional, the state has lacked a valid regulatory scheme to carry out executions. And, having abolished capital punishment last year, it cannot now implement regulations to carry out a punishment that no longer is authorized by law."
Today in American Greed
Heart of Darkness. Marianne Levine of Politico: Former Enron trader and Texas billionaire John Arnold is the dark money go-to guy on efforts to "reform" public pensions; i.e., turn them into decidedly less generous 401(k) plans. "Arnold's critics ... question his fitness to evangelize for pension austerity, given that he made his fortune at a company that in its 2001 collapse wiped out $2 billion of its own employee pension funds and cost public employees whose pension funds invested in Enron an additional $1.5 billion. 'We're talking about a former Enron executive who profited off a bankruptcy that destroyed the retirement savings of millions of hard-working Americans,' says Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers." CW: Unfortunately, Arnold, like the billionaire Koch brothers, et al., will never have a Scrooge moment where he confronts the errors of his ways. By today's standards, "Dickensian" is a term of great expectations that will go unrealized.
Marc Tracy & Tim Rohan of the New York Times: "After taking a sociology exam, Cardale Jones, a quarterback at Ohio State, posted a message on Twitter that echoed across college sports: 'Why should we have to go to class if we came here to play FOOTBALL, we ain't come to play SCHOOL, classes are POINTLESS.' Two years after publishing that provocative statement, Jones will be the starting quarterback on Thursday against Alabama in the Sugar Bowl, the second semifinal game of college football's new playoff system -- and his words have renewed relevance. Never has the sport been so awash in money, a growth industry on campuses that some observers believe increasingly resembles professional football more than higher education."
Slacktivist Nation. Dana Milbank: "I watched the Christmas Day opening of 'The Interview,' to show North Korea that I wasn't afraid of its threats to blow up theaters that screen the parody of Kim Jong Un.... My patriotic gesture was a form of Slacktivism -- a uniquely American form of engagement in which statements are made without any real sacrifice.... This can be traced back to September 2001, when President George W. Bush launched wars without calling for sacrifice from Americans -- other than to spend money." Milbank suggests expanding youth national service. "... most service programs have been frozen or cut in recent years, as Congress refuses President Obama's requests for them."
Today in Gun Violence. NBC News: "A two-year-old child fatally shot his mother at an Idaho Walmart after the toddler reached into the woman's purse and discharged a concealed weapon, police said." A somewhat more detailed Los Angeles Times story, by Lauren Raab, is here. CW: It is heartbreaking to see someone die just for being stupid, but that is what happened here.
Annals of "Journalism," Ctd., Gaffe Edition. Chuck Todd explains Sunday Show "journalism" to comedians:
Lewis Black: I have watched you and everybody else where somebody comes on. I don't know how you do it. Because I would be barking at them. Because they sit there and go 'glib glib [blah blah]' and you sit there.
Chuck Todd: We all sit there because we all know the first time we bark is the last time we do the show.... All of a sudden, no one will come on your show.
... CW: That's right. If the host insults guests -- no matter how big a lie the guests tell -- the "journalist"/host lets it pass because s/he wants these lying dirtbags to appear on the show again. By design, then, the Sunday Showz eschew rudimentary journalism. Yes, we knew that. But isn't it nice to hear a Sunday Show star admit that these shows are shams? Via Egberto Willies of Daily Kos.
News Ledes
oston Globe: "The trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, accused of orchestrating the Boston Marathon bombings, will begin January 5 after a federal judge rejected the defense's request to postpone the trial. US District Judge George A. O'Toole also denied the defense's request to move the trial to another district."
CCTV: "At least 35 people are dead, and 43 are injured during a New Year's celebration on the Bund, a waterfront area in central Shanghai. Sina News has reported that masses of crowds in Chen Yi Square on the Bund led to the stampede. The Shanghai government reported that the stampede started at 11:35 pm local time. Authorities are working now to rescue and aid wounded."
New York Times: "The United States transferred five detainees from the military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, to Kazakhstan, the Defense Department announced late Tuesday. It was the last in a flurry of year-end moves as President Obama sought to fulfill his promise to close the American-run prison. The five former detainees -- three Yemenis and two Tunisians -- are 'free men' for all intents and purposes after the transfer, a senior official in the Obama administration said. Officials declined to disclose the security assurances reached between the United States and Kazakhstan or detail how the men would be prevented from returning to battlefields in Afghanistan or Pakistan."