The Commentariat -- Feb. 26, 2014
Internal links removed.
Ashley Parker of the New York Times: "The Republican plan to overhaul and simplify the nation's tax code is expected to call for a cut in the top corporate income rate to 25 percent from 35 percent, and a reduction of the seven individual tax brackets to two -- at 10 percent and 25 percent -- according to aides familiar with the proposal. The proposal, which is set to be released Wednesday after nearly three years of behind-the-scenes work, is the brainchild of Representative Dave Camp of Michigan, the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee...." ...
... Uh-Oh. New Lede: "The proposal by the top Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee to overhaul and simplify the nation's tax code is already coming under scrutiny from fellow Republicans, with at least one party leader, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, saying the plan has no chance." ...
... CW: Democrats' criticism of the ways & means of Dave Camp -- which are near the bottom of the story -- are worth reading. It is pretty clear that Camp doesn't want the legislation to pass. It's just a campaign ploy.
Billy House of the National Journal: "Several governors are trying to thwart attempts to reduce food-stamp payments to their states, in a move that could affect portions of the recently passed farm bill aimed at saving $8.6 billion over the next 10 years.... What the governors have in mind amounts to an end run around a new set of requirements that governs how recipients receive food-stamp assistance in the states." CW: The only governors House mentions are Democrats: Dannel Malloy of Connecticut & Deval Patrick of Massachusetts.
President Obama spoke about manufacturing innovation yesterday:
Reid Abelson of Politico: "Touting the latest White House Obamacare benchmark, President Barack Obama told his political base not to be discouraged by partisan attacks.... 'We're going to make a big push these last few weeks,' Obama told OFA volunteers and officials. 'I can talk, my team can talk here in Washington, but it's not going to make as much of a difference as if you are out there making the case. The work you're doing is God's work. It is hard work.' ... He devoted the bulk of his time to health care but also called on supporters to back his effort to raise the minimum wage and touched on his push to expand broadband Internet access to schools."
Jonathan Easley of the Hill: "Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on Tuesday accused GOP governors of 'playing with people's lives' by refusing to expand Medicaid in their states under ObamaCare. The criticism from Sebelius is the latest example of an effort by Democrats and the White House to take the offense on the issue of healthcare." CW: Um, also, Sebelius is right. Dead right. But never mind about that: when Democrats tell the truth, it's a campaign tactic. ...
... One Republican "Good Idea" to "Fix" ObamaCare. Sahil Kapur of TPM: "A Republican-led bill designed to 'save American workers' would cause 1 million workers to lose their health care coverage and increase the deficit by $74 billion, according to [the Congressional Budget Office]. The legislation, offered by Rep. Todd Young (R-IN) and 208 co-sponsors as a tweak to Obamacare, would change the definition of a full-time work week under the health care law from 30 hours per week to 40 hours.... The bill was touted by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) as part of the GOP's winter 2014 agenda."
Tom Edsall of the New York Times: The real reason Darrell Issa & other Congressional Republicans won't stop their phony investigations of the phony IRS "scandal": the investigations have paralyzed the Exempt Organization Division of the IRS which now devotes most of its time to preparing for & responding to these witch hunts, thus leaving the division no time to investigate the labyrinth of fake "social welfare organizations" backed by Karl Rove, the Koch brothers, et al. ...
... CW: In other words, the real scandal is the partisan investigation of the IRS, from Bush hack IG Russell George's initial flawed report (in which he accidentally forgot to note that the IRS was "targeting" possible fake social welfare groups with liberal-sounding names, too) through all the subsequent Congressional hoohah. Couple that with Citizens United, decided by Dubya appointees to the Court, the post-regnum staying power of Rove -- "Bush's Brain" -- & other Bush operatives, and you realize that our disgraced former president, while hiding out at the ranch, still manages to cast a long shadow. ...
... AND, Right on Cue. Bernie Becker of the Hill: "House Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) is hauling Lois Lerner back to Congress. Issa told Lerner's attorney in a Tuesday letter that he expected the retired IRS official to appear before his committee on March 5."
Hayes Brown of Think Progress: "Former Vice President Dick Cheney took to Fox News on Monday night to lambaste the Obama administration's proposed cuts to the military budget.... 'And I think the whole thing is not driven by any change in world circumstances, it's driven by budget considerations. He'd much rather spend the money on food stamps than he would on a strong military or support for our troops.' [Emphasis original] ... A Defense Department review released last year showed that military families were more reliant on food stamps in 2013 than in any previous year, with over $100 million in food stamp spending at military grocery stores.... 'Nationwide, in any given month, a total of 900,000 veterans nationwide lived in households that relied on SNAP to provide food for their families in 2011,' the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities wrote in a recent analysis.
Zeke Miller of Time: "Efforts in several states to toughen voter identification requirements are driven by 'hatred,' Vice President Joe Biden said Tuesday ... at an evening reception for African-American History Month at the Naval Observatory.... In 1982, when President Ronald Reagan and Strom Thurmond backed reauthorization, Biden told the crown he 'thought it was done -- finally, finally done,' pounding the podium with his fist. But Biden angrily spoke out against the Supreme Court's decision last year to overturn parts of the law, and legislation in North Carolina, Alabama and Texas that toughens voting requirements. 'These guys never go away. Hatred never, never goes away,' Biden [said]. He added: 'The zealotry of those who wish to limit the franchise cannot be smothered by reason.'"
Jad Mouaward of the New York Times: "Federal regulators on Tuesday ordered shippers to properly test and classify crude oil from the productive Bakken region before loading it onto freight trains, a move meant to tighten regulatory standards after a spate of derailments and explosions that highlighted the hazards of carrying crude oil on rails. The announcement from the office of secretary of transportation, Anthony Foxx, was the fourth emergency order or safety advisory issued in the last seven months related to the booming oil-by-rail trade.... The order effectively limits the shipping of oil to the most commonly used type of tank cars.... Even those cars, however, are known to break up too easily in a crash. Regulators are also working on new, tougher tank car standards."
Mike Lillis & Rebecca Shabad of the Hill: "A K Street lobbying giant joined a brewing battle over gay and lesbian rights Tuesday when it disowned a former employee who is hawking legislation to bar gays from the National Football League (NFL). In an unusual public rebuke, Holland & Knight denounced the efforts of Washington lobbyist Jack Burkman, a former associate who says he's lining up congressional support for his NFL player ban."
Henry Farrell in the Washington Post: "Bitcoin is like Tinkerbell: If people stop clapping, it's going to die." See yesterday's Ledes.
Congressional Races
Paul Kane & Sean Sullivan of the Washington Post: "Democrat Debbie Dingell plans to run for the seat being vacated by her husband, Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.), two senior Democratic strategists on Capitol Hill familiar with her plans told Post Politics. She will begin her campaign as the clear front-runner to succeed her husband. Debbie Dingell is an experienced Democratic strategist who currently serves as chair of the Wayne State University Board of Governors. John Dingell has praised her as his closest confidant."
Joseph Gerth of the Louisville Courier-Journal: "Former President Bill Clinton packed a crowd of more than 1,200 people into a Galt House ballroom on Tuesday to raise money and boost Alison Lundergan Grimes' Senate campaign. During a 25-minute speech, he alternately praised Grimes, the daughter of his longtime friend Jerry Lundergan, and took shots at U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who she hopes to beat in the November election." ...
... Jonathan Martin of the New York Times: "The former president's presence on the stage also underscored a larger truth of the 2014 midterm campaign: Mr. Clinton is embraced in states, mainly in the South and the West, where Mr. Obama is all but unwelcome." CW: Just can't figure out why that is. Martin doesn't tell us.
New Jersey News
Ginger Otis of the New York Daily News: "Embattled Port Authority Chairman David Samson lacks the moral authority to be in charge, Gov. Cuomo's top appointee to the bistate agency told the Daily News on Monday. Executive director Patrick Foye made the blunt assessment during a wide-ranging discussion with the Editorial Board that touched on everything from Bridgegate to pay for airport workers." ...
... New York Daily News Editors: "The shockwaves touched off by Bridgegate have made clear that Samson perverted the PA into a toll-financed dispensary of favors and punishments for Christie allies and enemies -- as well as a benefactor of clients of Samson's law firm.... Samson must go in order for the Port Authority to get back on track."
An anonymous blogger at Daily Kos has produced a preliminary lists of lies in which the media or others have caught Chris Christie. They go waaay back. Most of these are baldfaced, CYA lies, not liberal "interpretations" of facts. Thanks to Barbarossa for the link.
Elsewhere in the Nation
Jeremy Duda of Arizona Capitol Times: "Corporate tech giant Apple has asked Gov. Jan Brewer to veto the controversial religious freedom bill SB1062, the company and the Governor's Office confirmed.... The chorus of anti-SB1062 businesses kept getting louder on Monday as 83 companies, trade organizations and other business groups signed onto a letter, originally sent on Friday by the Arizona Technology Council, urging the governor to veto the bill. The additional signees included several major hotel chains, tourism groups, corporate giants like AT&T and other technology companies." ...
James Hohmann & Burgess Everett of Politico on prominent Republicans -- including both of Arizona's U.S. senators -- who see the Arizona bill as an election-year loser. CW: My favote is Sen. John Thune (S.D.), who urges Republicans to "stay focussed on ObamaCare." So the GOP's "principled stand" is -- better to make sure fewer people have health insurance than to make sure gay people can't eat at Bud's BBQ. Pretty impressive.
... Jim Small of the Capitol Times: "In the automated poll of 802 Republicans by Coleman Dahm, a Republican political consulting firm in Phoenix, 57.1 percent of respondents who were asked about the bill said they would like Brewer to veto it. Only 27.6 percent said they want her to sign SB1062. The remaining 15.3 percent had no opinion. The poll has a margin of error of +/- 4 percentage points." ...
... Mary Jo Pitzl of the Arizona Republic: "Brewer has said that before taking action she wants time to meet with interested parties and review the bill, which would offer a legal shield for businesses that cite religious convictions as a reason to not serve or cooperate with certain customers." ...
... MacKenzie Weinger of Politico: "Right talk radio is turning its focus this week to Arizona's controversial bill that would allow business owners to deny service to gay and lesbian customers, and Rush Limbaugh is leading with the charge that Gov. Jan Brewer is being 'bullied' into vetoing the measure 'in order to advance the gay agenda.' Media Matters has audio of the Limbaugh segment here. ...
... Dana Liebelson of Mother Jones: "A bill moving swiftly through the Georgia House of Representatives would allow business owners who believe homosexuality is a sin to openly discriminate against gay Americans by denying them employment or banning them from restaurants and hotels.... The Georgia House bill's text is largely identical to controversial legislation that passed in Arizona last week.... Legal experts ... warn that Georgia and Arizona's religious-freedom bills are so sweeping that they open the door for discrimination against not only gay people, but other groups as well." The Georgia bill has Democratic as well as Republican sponsors.
Presidential Election 2016
Josh Kraushaar of the National Journal: "Rand Paul Is the GOP's Early Presidential Front-Runner. While the establishment hopes for a governor to emerge, he is quietly putting together a formidable operation."
Right Wing World
Religious Freedom? Not in Right Wing World. Dan Merica of CNN: "Organizers for the 2014 Conservative Political Action Conference [CPAC] will not allow American Atheists to have an exhibition booth at the conservative conference, the group's spokeswoman said Tuesday. The decision comes just hours after American Atheists, the outspoken organization that advocates for atheists nationwide, announced that it would have a booth at the event. David Silverman, president of American Atheists, tells CNN that a groundswell of opposition from high-ranking members of CPAC compelled the group to pull the invite."
News Lede
Canadian Press: "Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday ordered massive exercises involving most of its military units in western Russia amid tensions in Ukraine.... A senior Russian lawmaker on Tuesday told pro-Russia activists in Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula where Russia has a major naval base that Moscow will protect them if their lives are in danger."