The Commentariat -- Sept. 10, 2014
Internal links, photo removed.
Julie Pace of the AP: "President Barack Obama will ask Congress to quickly authorize the arming and training of Syrian opposition forces but will press forward without formal sign-off from lawmakers on a broader military and political effort to combat militants in Syria and Iraq, administration officials said Tuesday. Obama was to outline his plans Wednesday in a rare prime-time address to the nation, a format that underscores the seriousness of the threat posed by the Islamic State militants. The president's broader strategy could include more wide-ranging airstrikes against targets in Iraq and possibly in Syria, and hinges on military and political commitments from allies in Europe, the Middle East and elsewhere." ...
... Mark Landler & Jonathan Weisman of the New York Times: "President Obama is prepared to authorize airstrikes in Syria, a senior administration official said on Tuesday, taking the military campaign against the Sunni militant group, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, into new and unpredictable terrain. But Mr. Obama is still wrestling with a series of challenges, including how to train and equip a viable ground force to fight ISIS inside Syria, how to intervene without aiding President Bashar al-Assad, and how to enlist potentially reluctant partners like Turkey and Saudi Arabia." ...
... Josh Rogin & Tim Mak of the Daily Beast: "When the president calls for Congress to approve his new counterterrorism fund in his speech Wednesday, it's unlikely he'll mention that for the last four months his administration has stifled calls from inside and outside the government for the White House to specify exactly what the money is for."
... Lara Jakes of the AP: "U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Baghdad Wednesday to press Iraq's Shiite leader to quickly deliver more power to wary Sunnis -- or jeopardize any hope of defeating the Islamic State group. Kerry landed in the Iraqi capital just two days after newly sworn Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi seated his top government ministers, a crucial step toward restoring stability in a nation where security has spiraled out of control since the beginning of the year." ...
... Steve Benan: "... Dick Cheney was on Capitol Hill once again today, delivering yet another round of advice to congressional Republicans on foreign policy as if he still has credibility on the subject. The failed former vice president was reportedly 'greeted with affection,' and received standing ovations from the assembled GOP lawmakers.... Even now, years later, as the world struggles with the consequences of a disastrous war, which the Bush/Cheney team handled in the most incompetent, dishonest, and corrupt ways possible, congressional Republicans look back and think, 'Yep, that was a smart move.'" ...
... Ben Jacobs of the Daily Beast: "According to Rep. John Fleming of Louisiana, Cheney said Obama 'has actually done things that have supported the Muslim Brotherhood.' The former vice president then went on to name the Muslim Brotherhood as 'the beginning of all the Islamist groups that we're dealing with now like Hamas and ISIS.'" CW Translation: ISIS did not arise out of the unnecessary, disastrous, poorly-planned war I started (as experts contend), but out of Obama's deep & abiding faith in & support for radical Islam.
Paul Kane & Robert Costa of the Washington Post: "House Republican leaders Tuesday unveiled a temporary government funding bill that includes a short-term extension of a trade-promotion agency that has been targeted by conservative activists, eliminating a key sticking point in the effort to avoid a government shutdown. The bill would keep the government running on this year's budget levels from the start of the new fiscal year, Oct. 1, until mid-December, when negotiators would prefer to approve detailed spending plans for the federal agencies through 2015." See also Cruz News below.
Jeremy Herb of Politico: "The House condemned President Barack Obama on Tuesday for swapping five Taliban commanders at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl without notifying Congress. The House approved a resolution, 249-163, that condemned the president for breaking the law since he did not give Congress 30 days notice of the transfer."
Lindsay Abrams of Salon: House Republicans think curbing fake "government overreach" is way more important than ensuring Americans have clean water. "House bill, H.R. 5078, overrides a rule proposed in March by the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers, which sought to clarify two Supreme Court decisions that had made it difficult to determine whether waterways that are dry for part of the year are protected by the Clean Water Act -- confusion that polluters have Obama's senior advisers would recommend he veto the bill....."
Dan Roberts of the Guardian: "US police forces that use military equipment earmarked for counter-terrorism to handle public order disturbances instead could be forced to repay millions of dollars in grants, under a review revealed during the first congressional hearings into this summer's riots in Ferguson, Missouri.... The Department of Homeland Security, one of three US agencies primarily responsible for providing the equipment, said it was now considering whether to demand that its grants be repaid if police are found to have broken a little-known rule prohibiting its use in riot suppression.... Senator Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat, said committee investigators had found there were now more MRAPs in the hands of local police forces than the national guard and that 36% of all surplus equipment received direct from the military was brand new or unused." ...
... The Guardian liveblogged Tuesday's Congressional hearing on police use of military equipment.
Molly Ball of the Atlantic: "To understand why [immigration reform] advocates are so hurt and angry [by President Obama's decision not to take executive action until after the elections], you have to understand the meandering road immigration reform has taken over the course of the last decade -- a road littered with false starts, broken promises, and a community repeatedly left in the lurch. Latinos feel that they have been jerked around by politicians who alternately pander for their votes and shunt them aside when their priorities become inconvenient -- like now. Obama in particular has made a series of pledges on immigration, only to abandon them all."
Sorry, Wrong Number. Alexander Bolton of the Hill: A top aide to Eric Holder accidentally calls Darryl Issa's (RTP-Calif.) office -- he meant to call Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) -- & asks to have the Congressman's staff leak documents to "interested reporters" re: the IRS investigation favorable to the administration....
... CW: Just massively stupid. Of course, Issa -- who has a history of leaking parts of reports that misrepresent the totality of actual findings -- was in high dudgeon over the very idea that Democrats would leak favorable information, & that there would be coordination between the Democratic administration & Democrats in Congress. What I do find troubling, though not surprising, was that it was the DOJ -- which is supposed to be a impartial (though it never is), law-enforcement operation -- that is doing the "coordinating." Why not the political wing of the White House?
Katie McDonough of Salon: NFL Commissioner "Roger Goodell ... explains that he needs to see a woman get knocked out to know domestic violence is bad.... It has long been clear that the NFL is indifferent to violence against women. This incident was just too much of a media headache to ignore, so the NFL acted -- belatedly, inadequately, cynically. Rice is not the only man in the NFL who has abused women, though Goodell really wants the public to believe that's the case."
Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Jim Newell of Salon writes a very good analysis of Tim Russert's interview methodology, & explains why it sucked. "Had Russert lived and continued hosting the show, he could have ended up like Thomas Friedman: someone whose 'brand' kept him going, but whose style and techniques had long ago become mockable shtick. David Gregory's failure was in trying to continue the Russert shtick without ever having built up the brand." I quit watching the Sunday shows regularly because the interviewers, including Russert, seldom challenged the wildly inaccurate claims guests and panelists made. But I had forgotten that Russert enjoyed "challenging" guests with "gotcha" assaults highlighting inconsistencies on often inconsequential aspects of an issue.
Cruz News
House Speaker Holds Late-night Tea Party Strategty Session. Matt Fuller of Roll Call: "Sen. Ted Cruz again met with a small group of House Republicans late Tuesday night, this time to discuss over pizza a conservative strategy on the continuing resolution.... Earlier in the evening, the [other] House GOP leadership unveiled a bill to keep the government funded through Dec. 11. And the early review from conservatives attending Cruz's meeting in the Texas Republican's office was that Dec. 11 is too soon.... Pushing the next big spending showdown into March, members of the 'Cruz Caucus' said, would give the new 114th Congress, which could include a Republican-controlled Senate, an opportunity to tackle government funding." Via Greg Sargent.
Seung Kim Min of Politico: "Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) called on lawmakers to use 'any and all means necessary' -- including must-pass government funding measures -- to block President Barack Obama from taking executive action on immigration. The tea party hero, who aggressively pushed the anti-Obamacare strategy that spurred last year's 16-day government shutdown, has seized on immigration executive moves from the Obama administration as the root cause of the border crisis this summer." ...
... Alexander Bolton of the Hill: "Setting up a possible confrontation over the funding measure that would keep the federal government open beyond September, Cruz declined to rule out opposing the stopgap bill if it allows the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to continue." CW: Looking forward to some more of those Dr. Seuss readings. Maybe I Can Lick 30 Tigers Today or If I Ran the Zoo.
MEANWHILE. Jonathan Chait: Ted Cruz's ObamaCare nightmare comes true. It's working, & Republicans can't even agree to schedule any more of their "message" repeal votes.
Democrats Conspire to Take Down SNL, Jail Lorne Michaels. Lucy McCalmont of Politico: "Sen. Ted Cruz says the comedy of NBC's 'Saturday Night Live' is at risk and creator Lorne Michaels could be thrown in jail if a proposed Constitutional amendment on campaign finance is passed." Cruz has been in touch with Sen. Al Franken on this. Franken, a former SNL star & co-sponsor of the amendment is oddly untroubled by Cruz's warning. Probably the whole amendment is a Franken plot to bring down his former boss.
Congressional Races
James Hohmann of Politico: "Scott Brown won the New Hampshire Republican Senate primary Tuesday night, setting up a general election showdown with Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen. The former Massachusetts senator, who ... became a New Hampshire citizen last December, easily defeated two main challengers, former state Sen. Jim Rubens and former U.S. Sen. Bob Smith." ...
... Ha Ha. Scott Brown's campaign manager Colin Reed sent Larry Lessig a nasty, threatening letter on accounta Lessig described Brown as a "Washington lobbyist" is a campaign finance reform flyer. Also, Reed cc'ed Lessig's department chair, the president & the provost of Harvard. Larry Lessig: "I take it Mr. Reed's outrage is triggered by the Senate's regulations of what constitutes being a 'lobbyist' for purposes of the Senate rules. I hadn't received the memo that explained that the English language is now regulated by the rules of the United States Senate.... I submit to anyone else in the world, a former Senator joining a 'law and lobbying firm' to help with Wall St's 'business and governmental affairs' is to make him a lobbyist. Because to anyone else in the world, when you sell your influence to affect 'business and governmental affairs,' you are a lobbyist." Via Charles Pierce. CW: Probably Scottie's man should not be trying to match wits with of a Harvard law professor. ...
... CW Note to Jeanne Shaheen: Call Brown a "Washington lobbyist" every chance you get. Apparently he'll go nuts. (And, yeah, in case they missed it, I sent Lessig's post on to Shaheen's campaign.)
Steve LeBlanc of the AP: "U.S. Rep. John Tierney has conceded defeat to former Marine Seth Moulton after a hard-fought Democratic primary in Massachusetts' 6th Congressional District.... Moulton argued he would have a stronger chance of holding off [Republican Richard] Tisei, who lost to Tierney by less than 1 percent of the vote in the 2012 election. Tierney is the first incumbent Democratic congressman from Massachusetts to lose a primary since Chester Atkins in 1992."
Gubernatorial Races
Thomas Kaplan of the New York Times: "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York claimed the Democratic nomination for a second term on Tuesday, but at a considerable price: A liberal challenger with little money or name recognition, Zephyr Teachout, was on track to receive about a third of the vote, a signal of the potent dissatisfaction with Mr. Cuomo in his party's left wing. Mr. Cuomo avoided what could have been a more damaging blow to his prestige, as his choice for lieutenant governor, Kathy Hochul, a former congresswoman from Buffalo, soundly defeated Ms. Teachout's running mate, Tim Wu." CW: Kudos to everybody who voted for Teachout. Too bad her good showing won't teach that Gov. Sleazy a lesson.
Roberto Scalese & Lara Salahi of the Boston Globe: "Treasurer Steve Grossman has conceded to Attorney General Martha Coakley in the [Massachusetts] Democratic gubernatorial primary Tuesday night. With 65 percent of precincts reporting, Coakley has 42 percent of the vote. Grossman has 37 percent of the vote, and former Medicare Administrator Don Berwick has 21 percent of the vote." CW: Let's hope Martha has developed the teensiest familiarity with the top sports teams this time around & also has overcome her aversion to dirtying her hands dirty by shaking the hands of mere voters.
Roberto Scalese: "Charlie Baker is projected to win the Republican primary for governor [of Massachusetts]. At 75 percent, Baker has a massive lead over [Mark] Fisher at 25 percent, with 60 percent of the vote counted."
Beyond the Beltway
Julie Bosman of the New York Times: "The first Ferguson City Council meeting since the police killing of Michael Brown one month ago erupted on Tuesday into an outpouring of grievances -- accusations of racism, police harassment and government incompetence -- as hundreds of residents made angry appeals for change."
Georgia State Senator Angrily Vows to Suppress Black Vote. Really. Daniel Strauss of TPM: Fran Millar, "a Republican state senator in Georgia, has vowed to end Sunday balloting in DeKalb County (includes part of Atlanta) due to the fact that the area is 'dominated by African American shoppers and it is near several large African American mega churches.'" Thanks to safari for the link. ...
... Jim Galloway of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reproduces Millar's full e-mail rant. It begins with a barely-coded racial slur & descends from there: "How ironic! Michele Obama comes to town and Chicago politics comes to DeKalb." ...
... Time to Bring Back Literacy Tests. (Millar later elaborated that he wanted "more educated voters" rather than a greater number of voters." Rick Hasan, a law professor & elections law specialist, offered this erudite analysis: "Holy cow!" ...
... DuBose Porter, chair of the Georgia Democratic party responds, in part, "What have Georgia Republicans come to when they are outwardly admitting to suppressing the African-American vote? Further, his comments about 'educated voters' are reprehensible. I suppose Fran would prefer a return to literacy tests or the poll tax while he's at it." The Rev. Raphael G. Warnock, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, made a similar statement. Both statements reprinted in full at the linked page (AJC).
... Millar complains that church buses taking people to polling places is a violation of the First Amendment "accepted principle of separation of church and state." Steve Benan: I don't think this state lawmaker fully appreciates what 'the accepted principle of separation of church and state' is. If a private institution (a church) has a bus that takes people to another private institution (a shopping mall), this isn't a First Amendment violation. That really doesn't make any sense at all." CW: Also, whaddaya bet Millar would swear on his Holy Bible that this is a "Christian Nation." By which, I suppose he would mean "White Christian Nation."
Anemona Hartocollis & David Goodman of the New York Times: Performer Joan Rivers' "treatment at ... Yorkville Endoscopy, a for-profit center, has drawn attention to a flourishing model of medical treatment, outpatient surgery centers, which have been licensed by the state to replace hospital operating rooms for minor procedures. Their management structure is often explicitly designed to maximize profits for doctors, who are typically the majority owners. They are common in other states, but only now gaining traction in New York, where by law, the traditional hospital model is nonprofit." Rivers went into cardiac arrest during minor surgery at the clinic & died a week later, during which time she was kept alive on life support. Her death is being investigated by the New York State Health Department & New York City medical examiner.
CW: This story is a week old, but since Akhilleus brought it to our attention (see yesterday's Comments for his take), it seems too weird to pass up. Jessica Chasmar of the Washington Times: "Ohio police say they have 'overwhelming evidence' to prove a former Navy SEAL turned prominent TV personality lied when he claimed he was shot during a fight with three black men outside of a Bath shopping plaza. Chris Heben, a former Navy SEAL and current spokesman for Montrose Auto Group, has been charged with misdemeanor counts of falsification and obstructing official business, a local ABC affiliate reported.... In 2008, the former SEAL pleaded no contest to three counts of forgery in Ohio and had his physician's assistant license suspended for writing up fake prescriptions, the Daily Mail reported." ...
Doktor Zoom of Wonkette: "Despite Heben's previous willingness to put himself forward as an expert for TV stories about brave special operators and security and why no Navy SEAL would ever vote for Obama or for Hillary (because Benghazi), he hasn't answered a single Ohio media outlet's request for an interview since he was charged. Go figure!" ...
... CW: The police seem pretty blase about finding out who shot Heben. After all, it's highly likely that -- unless Heben shot himself (not necessarily a wild guess) -- somebody committed a felony when that somebody shot Heben. And Heben himself may have been engaging in some felonious shenanigans that earned him the shot in the gut. Also, a hat tip to those awesome-scary black gangsters who can shoot to kill even when they're imaginary.
... Akhilleus also dug up this story, featuring "Judge Jeanine (Pirro) of Fox "News" interviewing Heben for his expert opinion on threats to the national power grid. Super-hero Heben explains a big problem is that a bunch of wimpy "'desk jockeys' who are not trained in unconventional warfare" -- as he is -- run the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. It is these fat-asses (who are no more expert than a WalMart employee who watches security cameras all day) have approved the crappy power-grid security system. Another problem: power company execs are not buying his sales pitch to sell them an expensive security system. The segment seems to be an infomercial for Heben's security products & services. Meanwhile, you'd better stock up on canned goods because your power will be out for months. ...
... Pirro, by the way, has had plenty of troubles of her own.
News Ledes
New York Times: "Israel’s Military Advocate General Corps has ordered criminal investigations into five incidents of possible misconduct on the part of Israeli forces in the 50-day Gaza war, a senior Israeli military official said on Wednesday. Word of the investigations, coming two weeks after a cease-fire in the conflict, appeared to be the beginning of an Israeli effort to pre-empt the impact of international inquiries into allegations of possible Israeli war crimes in Gaza."
Reuters: "Two senators asked the federal government to investigate a data breach on the payment-card processing systems of Home Depot Inc and five U.S. states launched a probe into the matter on Tuesday as fallout from the attack intensified. The retailer has yet to say what was stolen, though experts fear the attackers may have gotten away with more than 40 million payment cards, which would exceed the number taken in last year's unprecedented attack on Target Corp."
Guardian: "Malaysia Airlines flight 17 was destroyed in an instant when the cockpit and other parts of the fuselage were peppered by 'a large number of high-energy objects,' causing the plane to break apart over eastern Ukraine before anyone could raise an alarm, according to a preliminary report on the disaster which was released on Tuesday.... The findings are consistent with US and Ukrainian assertions the Boeing 777, flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, was brought down by an anti-aircraft missile, which they say was provided by Russia."