The Commentariat -- Oct. 11, 2013
** Eric Schmitt of the New York Times: "Just as Edward J. Snowden was preparing to leave Geneva and a job as a C.I.A. technician in 2009, his supervisor wrote a derogatory report in his personnel file, noting a distinct change in the young man’s behavior and work habits, as well as a troubling suspicion. The C.I.A. suspected that Mr. Snowden was trying to break into classified computer files to which he was not authorized to have access, and decided to send him home, according to two senior American officials. But the red flags went unheeded.... The supervisor's cautionary note and the C.I.A.'s suspicions apparently were not forwarded to the N.S.A. or its contractors...." CW: Just jaw-dropping.
CW: I have been waiting since the debt ceiling crisis of 2011 for a teabagging Constitooshunal scholar to say this out loud, because I had a sneaking suspicion it's what they believe. As Charles Pierce points out, yesterday Rep. Jeb Hensarling (RTP-Texas) went there: " Andrea Mitchell was interviewing Rep. Jeb (Jeb) Hensarling of Texas, and she felt compelled to point out to Congressman Jeb that lifting the debt ceiling meant only that we would be paying bills for bills and programs that Congress already paid for. Congressman Jeb replied that 'this House' didn't vote for the stimulus, and that 'this House' didn't vote for Obamacare." Got that? It's nullification writ large: one Congress does not have to pay for the costs of laws written by previous Congresses. I wish Nancy Pelosi had thought of that; the national debt would have taken a deep dive if she had just written off the Iraq War & Medicare Part D &, well, every debt incurred by previous Congresses. ...
... Thomas Beaumont of the AP: "... veteran Republicans across the country are accusing tea party lawmakers of staining the GOP with their refusal to bend in the budget impasse in Washington. The Republican establishment also is signaling a willingness to strike back at the tea party in next fall's elections. 'It's time for someone to act like a grown-up in this process,' former New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu argues, faulting Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and tea party Republicans in the House as much as President Barack Obama for taking an uncompromising stance. Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour is just as pointed, saying this about the tea party-fueled refusal to support spending measures that include money for Obama's health care law: 'It never had a chance.'" ...
... Paul Kane, et al., of the Washington Post: "House and Senate Republicans offered competing plans Thursday to resolve Washington's debt-limit and government shutdown crises, as President Obama held the latest in a series of meetings aimed at persuading them to accept at least short-term solutions with no partisan strings attached. The White House described President Obama's conversation Thursday afternoon with House Republican leaders as a 'good meeting,' but said no deal was reached to reopen the government. 'After a discussion about potential paths forward, no specific determination was made,' the White House said in a statement to reporters. 'The President looks forward to making continued progress with members on both sides of the aisle.'" ...
... Jackie Calmes & Ashley Parker of the New York Times: "President Obama on Thursday rejected a proposal from politically besieged House Republican leaders to extend the nation's borrowing authority for six weeks because it would not also reopen the government. Yet both parties saw it as the first break in Republicans' brinkmanship and a step toward a fiscal truce." ...
... Update. If Republicans can be believed, the Times story is incorrect. Jonathan Strong of the National Review: "A group of key House Republicans came out of a meeting with President Obama, Vice President Biden and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew saying aides to both parties would begin negotiations this evening over a CR to end the government shutdown. 'The president didn't say yes, didn't say no. We're continuing to negotiate this evening,' House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan told reporters." Etc. Via Digby. ...
... Update 2. Oh. The Times has materially changed it story. Same link. ...
... Here's the AP version, by David Espo. If the Tea Party is in charge of Boehner, maybe Harry Reid is in charge of Obama. ...
... Ken Sweet of the AP: "The Dow Jones industrial average soared more than 300 points Thursday after Republican leaders and President Barack Obama finally seemed willing to end a 10-day budget standoff that has threatened to leave the U.S. unable to pay its bills. The news drove the Dow to its biggest point rise this year and ended a three-week funk in stocks. It also injected some calm into the frazzled market for short-term government debt." ...
... Alexander Bolton of the Hill: "Senate Republicans are unhappy with a House GOP plan to raise the debt ceiling for six weeks without funding the federal government. They are coalescing around their own proposal to pair a short-term debt-ceiling increase with a year-long stopgap to fund the government." ...
... Aaron Blake of the Washington Post: "The White House announced Thursday night that President Obama has signed a bill that ensures the Department of Defense can pay death gratuities and related survivor benefits to the families of military service members who die in the line of duty." ...
... James Warren of the New York Daily News: "It would be 'more expensive for Americans to buy a car, own a home, and open a small business' if the 'chaos' of a debt default comes next week, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew warned Congress Thursday. Lew's early-morning appearance before the Senate Finance Committee was the first head-to-head encounter between an administration official and dubious Republicans since the federal government shutdown began Oct. 1." ...
... Mark Murray of NBC News: "The Republican Party has been badly damaged in the ongoing government shutdown and debt limit standoff, with a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll finding that a majority of Americans blame the GOP for the shutdown, and with the party's popularity declining to its lowest level. By a 22-point margin (53 percent to 31 percent), the public blames the Republican Party more for the shutdown than President Barack Obama -- a wider margin of blame for the GOP than the party received during the poll during the last shutdown in 1995-96." ...
... Nate Silver! weighs in on shutdown polling & related phenomena. Via Jonathan Bernstein. ...
... Fareed Zakaria in the Washington Post: "What's happening today is quite unlike the 'Contract With America' movement of the 1990s. The tea party is a grass-roots movement of people deeply dissatisfied with the United States' social, cultural and economic evolution over several decades. It's crucial to understand that they blame both parties for this degeneration.... This explains why the Republican Party has seemed so unresponsive to its traditional power bases, such as big business." ...
... Paul Krugman dispels a few debt-denier myths. ...
... Humor Break. "John Boehner Is Borrowing a Plan from Homer Simpson." Jonathan Chait: "Here's the best rule for determining what John Boehner will do in any situation: If there is a way for him to delay a moment of confrontation or political risk, he will do it. That's why Boehner's current plan is to raise the debt ceiling for six weeks while keeping the government shut down. Business is freaked out and will be furious with him if he triggers a default. So he's raising the debt ceiling for long enough to get them off his back. And tea-partiers will be furious if he abandons their quest to defund Obamacare by shutting down the government. So he's leaving that part in place.... Basically, his plan is to hide under some coats and hope it all works out somehow:"
Jennifer Medina of the New York Times: "With enthusiastic backing from state officials and an estimated seven million uninsured, California is a crucial testing ground for the success of President Obama's health care law. It is building the country's largest state-run health insurance exchange and has already expanded Medicaid coverage for the poor. Officials hope that the efforts here will eventually attract more than two million people who are currently uninsured." ...
... Lizette Alvarez of the New York Times: "First the [Florida] State Legislature roundly rejected the [Affordable Care Act], refusing to create a state insurance exchange and punting it to the federal government to run the new insurance market. It also rejected $51 billion in federal funds that was available over 10 years to expand Medicaid coverage for the state's poor. As the day neared for consumers to enroll in insurance plans, state officials announced that so-called navigators -- a group assigned to help people sign up -- would be barred from state health offices.... But blame this week shifted to the federal government. Its Web site remains so error-prone that the overwhelming majority of Floridians who have tried to buy affordable health insurance have had little luck. Anecdotal evidence across Florida, which has 3.5 million uninsured residents, the second highest in the country, indicated that few Floridians managed to enroll." ...
... Janine Reid in a Washington Post op-ed: "ObamaCare saved my family from financial ruin.... If I could get John Boehner and Ted Cruz on a conference call, I would explain this to them. I would tell them that, while they were busy trying to derail the Affordable Care Act over the past two years, [my son] Mason has again learned to walk, talk, eat and shoot a three-point basket."
Gubernatorial Race
Elizabeth Titus of Politico: "A chaotic episode erupted in the Virginia gubernatorial race late Wednesday, as The Associated Press published and then retracted a story that said court documents alleged Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe had lied to a federal official."
News Ledes
Reuters: " U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Afghanistan on Friday to advance negotiations with President Hamid Karzai on a bilateral security pact which have hit a wall over two issues that have become deal breakers for the Afghan government."
Washington Post: "The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the Hague-based agency responsible for destroying Syria's chemical weapons, has won the Nobel Peace Prize, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said Friday in Oslo."
New York Times: "JPMorgan Chase, the nation's largest bank, reported a third-quarter net loss of $380 million on Friday as it continued to grapple with a raft of regulatory and legal woes. The added costs dragged down JPMorgan's results as the bank posted a net loss of 17 cents a share. JPMorgan's earnings were eroded, in large part, by a legal expense of $9.2 billion."
AP: " The administration of Iran's new President Hassan Rouhani has cancelled an anti-Israeli conference as part of his outreach to the West and efforts to map out a new diplomatic path for Iran. The annual event was set up by Rouhani's predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and showcased the former president's vitriolic anti-Israeli rhetoric and promoted his anti-Israeli sentiments."