Constant Comments
Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts. — Anonymous
A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. — Edward R. Murrow
Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns
I have a Bluesky account now. The URL is https://bsky.app/profile/marie-burns.bsky.social . When Reality Chex goes down, check my Bluesky page for whatever info I am able to report on the status of Reality Chex. If you can't access the URL, I found that I could Google Bluesky and ask for Marie Burns. Google will include links to accounts for people whose names are, at least in part, Maria Burns, so you'll have to tell Google you looking only for Marie.
The Commentariat -- July 25, 2013
Michael Shear & Peter Baker of the New York Times: "President Obama tried to move past months of debate over guns, surveillance and scandal on Wednesday and reorient his administration behind a program to lift a middling economy and help middle-class Americans who are stuck with stagnant incomes and shrinking horizons. Returning to the site of his first major economic speech as a young senator eight years ago, Mr. Obama lamented that typical Americans had been left behind by globalization, Wall Street irresponsibility and Washington policies, while the richest Americans had accumulated more wealth. He declared it 'my highest priority' to reverse those trends, while accusing other politicians of not only ignoring the problem but also making it worse":
... Here's the text of the speech. ...
... Greg Sargent: "Given implacable GOP opposition to his agenda, Obama has little choice but to try to seize the rhetorical and ideological initiative in hopes that it will make a difference in the spending fights ahead, and beyond that in the midterm elections. In service of that goal, Obama sought to frame the problems facing the country in as grandiose terms as he could.... Obama talked about declining wages and rising inequality not just as urgent moral problems, but as threats to long term growth and shared prosperity, and decried trends creating these problems that have been decades in the making. He noted that the deficit is falling faster than it has in decades. Obama then made the case against continued GOP austerity as a threat to the recovery and the middle class...." ...
... Jonathan Cohn of The New Republic: "... the reason Obama keeps calling for these steps is that congressional Republicans keep blocking them. And while versions of these ideas, or some of them, were in the Recovery Act, the evidence suggests they worked pretty well.... He's having at least some success working with less extreme members, like Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham. Not coincidentally, Obama chose his words carefully, criticizing a 'a sizable group of Republican lawmakers' who have threatened not to raise the debt limit but also praising the 'growing number of Republican Senators [who] are trying to get things done.'" ...
... E. J. Dionne says this time is different. ...
... Court Harson of NBC News: "The Republican Party is no longer content being the party of 'no.' Now they've launched an offensive against nearly everything President Obama stands for -- vowing to slash funding for programs he supports. And that includes Obamacare -- they say they won't even agree to a budget beyond the end of the fiscal year if even a penny is used to fund the president's signature health reform law. The chairman of the House Appropriations Committee puts it simply: 'His priorities are going nowhere.'" ...
... Sahil Kapur of TPM outlines some of the desperate attempts by conservatives to derail ObamaCare. Interestingly, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell does not seem to be going along with the program. CW: It seems possible his Tea Party primary challenger could change that. ...
... Jonathan Easley of the Hill: "Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) said Wednesday he opposes a plan endorsed by at least a dozen Republican senators to shut down the government to block funds for ObamaCare." The only other GOP senator to say he opposed the tactic is John McCain. ...
... Paul Krugman: "... think about [this] for a moment: the cause for which the GOP is willing to go to the brink, breaking all political norms, threatening the US and world economies with incalculable damage, is the cause of preventing people with preexisting conditions and/or low incomes from getting health insurance. Apparently, the prospect that their fellow citizens might receive this help is so horrifying that nothing else matters." ...
... To wit, David Morgan of Reuters: "With the Obama administration poised for a huge public education campaign on healthcare reform, Republicans and their allies are mobilizing a counter-offensive including town hall meetings, protests and media promotions to dissuade uninsured Americans from obtaining health coverage." CW: I guess this is the "Show 'Em You've Got the Courage to Get Sick & Die" Campaign. ...
... Norm Ornstein in the National Journal: "... to do everything possible to undercut and destroy its implementation -- which in this case means finding ways to deny coverage to many who lack any health insurance; to keep millions who might be able to get better and cheaper coverage in the dark about their new options; to create disruption for the health providers who are trying to implement the law, including insurers, hospitals, and physicians; to threaten the even greater disruption via a government shutdown or breach of the debt limit in order to blackmail the president into abandoning the law; and to hope to benefit politically from all the resulting turmoil -- is ... contemptible. One might expect this kind of behavior from a few grenade-throwing firebrands. That the effort is spearheaded by the Republican leaders of the House and Senate ... takes one's breath away." ...
... Carrie Brown & John Bresnanhan of Politico: "Armed with a PowerPoint presentation and a direct line to President Barack Obama, [White House Chief of Staff Denis] McDonough has spent the past three months soothing Democratic anxieties over the most divisive health care expansion in decades. He meets every other week with [Max "Train Wreck"] Baucus, briefs vulnerable Democrats on the administration's progress and treks up to the Hill on a moment's notice to visit offices unannounced. McDonough's message: We've got this."
Jenna Johnson of the Washington Post: "The U.S. Senate approved a plan Wednesday to restructure the government's education loan program, tying interest rates to the market and imposing limits on how high those rates can go.... Some Democratic senators are already saying that they will have to take action on it again soon. The legislation, which still needs the approval of the House, would dramatically lower interest rates on nearly all new federal education loans taken out by undergraduates, graduate students and parents for the coming school year. But as the economy improves, those rates are expected to increase and could surpass the current rates within five years.... [Elizabeth] Warren [D-Mass.] introduced an amendment with Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) that would cap the new interest rates at the current rates. That amendment failed. So too did an amendment introduced by Sen. Bernard Sanders (I-Vt.) that would have authorized the new rates for just two years...."
Profiles in Cowardice. Bernie Becker of the Hill: "The Senate's top tax-writers have promised their colleagues 50 years worth of secrecy in exchange for suggestions on what deductions and credits to preserve in tax reform. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and the panel's top Republican, Sen. Orrin Hatch (Utah), assured lawmakers that any submission they receive will be kept under lock and key by the committee and the National Archives until the end of 2064." Thanks to James S. for the link.
Brett Logiurato of Business Insider: "The House of Representatives voted against an amendment that would have severely limited the National Security Agency's ability to collect data on telephone communications by a 205-217 vote.The amendment would have barred the NSA from blanket collection of records under Section 215 of the Patriot Act, including telephone records, 'that pertain to persons who are not subject to an investigation under Section 215.' It was co-sponsored by Reps. Justin Amash (R-Mich.), a libertarian Republican, and John Conyers (D-Mich.)." ...
... The New York Times story, by Jonathan Weisman, is here. ...
... Glenn Greenwald comments here.
John Hilsenrath & Damian Paletta of the Wall Street Journal: "The race to become the next leader of the Federal Reserve looks increasingly like a contest between two economists: Lawrence Summers and Janet Yellen."
Obama 2.0. Mark Landler of the New York Times: "President Obama on Wednesday nominated Caroline Kennedy to be ambassador to Japan, moving to give a scion of America's most enduring political dynasty a diplomatic post that has often gone to political heavyweights."
Tom Edsall of the New York Times on the "Political Endangered Species List.... The dangers facing middle-of-the-road Democrats in swing districts is reflected in the exceptionally high casualty rate suffered over the past four years by the Blue Dog coalition of conservative and moderate Democrats." Edsall highlights the predicament of Patrick Murphy, the Democrat who defeated Allen West, "the notorious Republican Congressman from Florida who once described President Obama as 'a low-level socialist agitator,' before suggesting on another occasion that his supporters were 'a threat to the gene pool.'"
I don't think there's anyone in Congress who has a stronger belief in minority rights than I do. -- Rand Paul
John Lewis. -- Constant Weader
Should it be prohibited for public, taxpayer-financed institutions such as schools to reject someone based on an individual's beliefs or attributes? Most certainly. Should it be prohibited for private entities such as a church, bed and breakfast or retirement neighborhood that doesn't want noisy children? Absolutely not. -- Rand Paul, 2002, writing in opposition to the Fair Housing Act
It's not all about race relations, it's about controlling property, ultimately. -- Rand Paul, in 2012, defending his father's opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Later in the interview, Paul called the matter "an obscure issue."
I think we have really gotten beyond that now. We have an African-American President, African-Americans are voting at a higher percentage than whites. -- Rand Paul, June 2013, explaining why the Voting Rights Act is unnecessary
Paul] insists he will continue outreach efforts to black and Hispanic voters despite reports about a former aide's past connections to neo-Confederate groups. -- Chris Moody of Yahoo! News ...
... CW: in fairness to Li'l Randy, Moody notes that "Paul has championed legislation that would reform how the justice system handles drug laws, which disproportionately affect black men. In March, he co-authored a bill with Vermont Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy that would provide judges more flexibility in handling drug cases. Paul said he is planning further work on prison reform that would eventually reinstate rights to convicted felons who serve their time." In addition Paul has made numerous efforts to reach out to minority groups, though of course these efforts are also self-serving.
Sergi Loiko of the Los Angeles Times: "The latest bid by fugitive National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden to leave a Moscow airport has run into bureaucratic hurdles, his Russian lawyer said Wednesday. Russian media reported that Snowden would be allowed to leave the transit zone where he has been holed up for more than a month following a government decision to consider his request for temporary asylum. But he was turned back at passport control because he did not have all the paperwork he needed, a Russian immigration official told The Times." ...
... Fox "News": "... now it appears that even with new legal papers, [Snowden] still must wait at the airport while Russian authorities consider his asylum request."
Max Siegel of the New York Times: "Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, formally inaugurated a new political party bearing the name of his antisecrecy organization on Thursday and declared his own unorthodox candidacy for a seat in the Australian Senate in national elections to be held here later this year." CW: just an excellent idea. I'm sure he's in it to represent the people -- at least all of those Aussies who can stop by the Ecuadorian embassy in London to air their grievances.
Local News
** Dahlia Lithwick of Slate on "What's the Matter with North Carolina."
CW: I'm tardy on this story, but here it is anyway: Martin Weil & Freedom du Lac of the Washington Post on Morgan Lake, whose car was hit -- twice -- by a tractor-trailer on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge & forced over the side & into the bay. "In 2010, Travel + Leisure magazine named it one of 'the world's scariest bridges.'" Lake tells her amazing story:
... The Post has a follow-up story, with video of Lake in the water, here.
AP: "A federal judge on Wednesday swept aside lawsuits challenging Detroit's bankruptcy, settling the first major dispute in the scramble to get a leg up just days after the largest filing by a local government in U.S. history. After two hours of arguments, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes made clear he's in charge. He granted Detroit's request to put a permanent freeze on three lawsuits filed in Ingham County, including another judge's extraordinary decision that Gov. Rick Snyder trampled the Michigan Constitution and acted illegally in approving the Chapter 9 filing."
WeinerGate, Ctd.*
Michael Barbaro & Nick Corasaniti of the New York Times: "The racy online conversations that have jeopardized Anthony D. Weiner's campaign for mayor of New York began with an angry Facebook message, according to the editor of a blog who has communicated with the young woman involved. Not long after Mr. Weiner resigned from Congress, the 22-year-old woman reached out to express her disappointment in him. Mr. Weiner eventually responded and, at his urging, their exchanges veered from politics to sex within a week, as he demanded dozens of explicit photographs, said Nik Richie, the editor of The Dirty, the blog that first documented the exchanges.... Mr. Richie's account ... cannot be independently verified."
Robin Abcarian of the Los Angeles Times: "Hate to say it, but you can't trust a woman whose husband has been screwing around."
Gail Collins: "... there is a point in political scandals when bad behavior stops being a joke and just becomes sad and depressing. We have reached that point with Anthony Weiner."
mistermix of Balloon Juice: "Weiner is an idiot but he didn't do anything illegal, his wife has forgiven him, and the question we ought to be asking is if he's capable of being a working mayor or whether he'll just be a show pony the way he was in the House."
Weiner's Big Boner. CW: It seems to me Weiner's mistake was not the sexting dickpics & making false promises to strange women less than half his age. That might be stupid, callous & a little risky, but he's a politician, & stupid, callous & risky is what politicians do. No, mistake was marrying & having a child. Surely he was self-aware enough to realize that wedding vows were not going to change behavior that he certainly engaged in regularly during the decades he remained single. Had the Dirty published these Tweets & e-mails involving an unmarried New York congressman, they probably would have stayed at the level of the Dirty, Gawker & similar gossip sites. The New York Times wouldn't have touched the story with a ... well, you know. If he had never married, Weiner would still be making raucous speeches in the House, & he would probably also be running for mayor of NYC, since he long ago said that was his dream job.
BuzzFeed IDs the woman Weiner was sexting.
* Bear in mind, it's never-ending.
News Ledes
AP: Virginia "Johnson, half of the renowned Masters and Johnson team, was remembered Thursday as one of the key figures in the sexual revolution. Johnson, whose legal name was Virginia Masters, died Wednesday of complications from several illnesses at an assisted living center in St. Louis. She was 88."
AP: "The owner of a natural gas drilling rig aflame off of Louisiana's coast said preparations were under way for the possible drilling of a relief well to divert gas from the site and bring the well under control. Adam Bourgoyne, a former dean of Louisiana State University's petroleum engineering department, said such an effort is a complicated task that could take weeks to complete."
AP: "Deposed politician Bo Xilai will go on trial on charges of corruption and abuse of power within weeks, wrapping up a festering scandal that China's new leaders want disposed of as they cement their authority. Bo, 64, was a rising political star who ran the metropolis of Chongqing until he fell from power last year in a scandal that saw his wife convicted of killing a British businessman. On Thursday, the official Xinhua News Agency announced that he was charged with bribery, embezzlement and abuse of power and will stand trial in the eastern city of Jinan."
Washington Post: "Closing arguments in the trial of [Bradley] Manning, a former intelligence analyst in Iraq, begin Thursday."
The Commentariat -- July 24, 2013
Reuters: "Former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden was on Wednesday granted documents that will allow him to leave a Moscow airport where he is holed up, an airport source said on Wednesday." ...
... UPDATE. Daniel Strauss of the Hill: "White House press secretary Jay Carney on Wednesday said the administration is pressing Russian officials to clarify the status of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, amid reports he has been granted permission to leave Moscow airport."
... Spencer Ackerman of the Guardian: "The Obama administration has forcefully urged the defeat of a legislative measure to curb its wide-ranging collection of Americans' phone records, setting up a showdown with the House of Representatives over domestic surveillance. A statement from the White House press secretary, Jay Carney, late on Tuesday evening capped an extraordinary day of near-revolt on Capitol Hill concerning the secret National Security Agency surveillance programes revealed by ex-NSA contractor Edward Snowden and published by the Guardian and Washington Post." ...
... James Risen & Charlie Savage of the New York Times: "Gen. Keith B. Alexander, the N.S.A. director, met with Democrats and Republicans to lobby against a House bill that would stop the financing for its phone data collection program. The Republican-sponsored legislation is one of the first Congressional efforts to curb the agency's domestic spying efforts since they were leaked by Edward J. Snowden, the former N.S.A. contractor." ...
... Hayes Brown of Think Progress: "Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) warned an audience at the Center for American Progress on Tuesday of the threat that the post-9/11 surveillance state could not only become permanent, but extend far beyond even its current reach.... While Wyden was unable to comment in detail on whether spying programs exist beyond those now revealed, he made clear that he believes that the current incarnation of the PATRIOT Act would authorize nearly limitless intrusion into citizens' lives."
... Justin Elliott of ProPublica: the NSA claims it doesn't have the technology to surveil its own employees' e-mails. CW: the NSA made this claim in response to an FOIA request by Elliott. Sounds like a convenient excuse to me.
My friend Barack asked me to pass this along to my friends. So here ya go:
... Jonathan Weisman of the New York Times: "As Mr. Obama prepares to deliver a major economic address on Wednesday in Illinois, Republicans in Washington are delivering blow after blow to programs he will promote as vital to a more robust economic recovery and a firmer economic future -- from spending on infrastructure and health care to beefing up regulatory agencies. While Mr. Obama would like to keep the economic conversation lofty, his adversaries in Congress are already fighting in the trenches." ...
... Dana Milbank: the White House is promoting today's speech as a Very Big Deal. "But even a reincarnated Steve Jobs would have trouble marketing this turkey: How can the president make news, and remake the agenda, by delivering the same message he gave in 2005?" ...
... Matt Canham of the Salt Lake City Tribune: "Sen. Mike Lee [R-Utah] has delivered an ultimatum: Stop funding Obamacare or he'll try to shut down the entire federal government. Utah's firebrand conservative is hitting friendly radio and TV shows to rally Republicans to his cause, appearing on Fox News' morning show Monday saying so far he has at least 13 senators on board. They'll make their stand in October, when Congress is expected to vote on a continuing resolution that will keep the federal government functioning. Lee sees it as the last attempt to wind down Obamacare before it takes full effect Jan. 1." ...
... Charles Pierce notes the Lee's "massive hissy fit" reveals him to be a "massive chickenshit," who proposes "to keep all the really popular stuff and do away with everything that makes the really popular stuff possible." ...
... Ed Kilgore: "I'm not sure congressional Republicans really want to enter a promising midterm election year just having engineered another phony crisis, but I also don't know if they can put this particular genie back in the bottle.... The GOP has managed to talk itself into a very firm belief that this national version of Mitt Romney's Massachusetts health plan is a satanic abomination that will either ... crash and burn taking the entire U.S. economy down with it, or succeed in seducing Americans to sell themselves into the voluntary slavery of 'socialized medicine.'" ...
... Alex Roarty of the National Journal: "A majority of adults don't want to repeal the Affordable Care Act, according to the latest United Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll, preferring instead to either spend more on its implementation or wait to see if changes are needed later. But based on recent news that the White House is delaying its employer health insurance mandate, the public appears convinced that the law's implementation is going poorly." ...
... Jennifer Epstein of Politico: "First lady Michelle Obama on Tuesday joined the White House's campaign to build support for Obamacare, as she urged a major Hispanic advocacy group to help spread the word as state exchanges prepare to open.... The first lady also spoke briefly on immigration reform, telling the crowd of Hispanic activists that while the fight for new legislation is 'hard,' they shouldn't give up 'because I promise you that my husband won't give up until a good bill gets on his desk.'" ...
... "Cruel & Indecent." The Spanish-language La Opinion: "Family values are a pillar of traditional Republican discourse. But as soon as it comes time to address immigration issues, all of their emphasis on family unity goes out the window, replaced by advocacy for division. This is the logical conclusion that follows from the KIDS Act, being developed by the House of Representatives.... It is the height of hypocrisy to posture oneself as representing family integrity, while heartlessly promoting actions that divide the family home, whose human worth knows no borders." ...
... Most Hispanic Kids Are Drug Smugglers. Some of them are valedictorians -- and their parents brought them in. It wasn't their fault. It's true in some cases, but they aren't all valedictorians. They weren't all brought in by their parents. For every one who's a valedictorian, there's another 100 out there who weigh 130 pounds -- and they've got calves the size of cantaloupes because they've been hauling 75 pounds of marijuana across the desert. -- Rep. Steve King (R-Disgusting) ...
... James Downie of the Washington Post: "... no GOP leader has yet disavowed [King's] intolerant views. For now, despite some prominent talking heads softening their attitudes on immigration, anti-immigrant bias remains strong in the Republican Party, blocking any chance of reform making it through Congress. But America is changing, and if Republicans want to stay relevant, they'll have to kick prejudices like King's out of the party." ...
... Shocking Update. Seung Min Kim of Politico: "Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) said in a statement late Tuesday that comments from King ... likening so-called DREAMers to drug mules was 'wrong.' King's remarks came from an interview conducted last week but circulated widely on Tuesday.... Eric Cantor (R-Va.) ... said of King's remarks: 'I strongly disagree with his characterization of the children of immigrants and find the comments inexcusable.'" ...
... Totally Expected Update. Steve Benen: "... soon after, King doubled down on his remarks, appearing on an Iowa radio show to say, 'It's not something that I'm making up. This is real.' ... In case facts still matter, King's assessment isn't even close to being accurate.... [King] may come across as a racist buffoon that the American mainstream finds repulsive, but at this point, he's winning -- King has been fighting to kill comprehensive immigration reform, and by all appearances, House Republican leaders intend to hand him and his allies the outcome they prefer ... largely because Boehner and his friends are too inept to lead."
Li'l Randy Is No Ike. For inspiration and guidance, I often look towards America's great military leaders. Some of the best observations on war and diplomacy come from the president who was also one of our most decorated generals, Dwight Eisenhower. -- Sen. Rand Paul (RTP-Ky.)
Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post: "Paul repeatedly referenced ... Eisenhower ... as a model for Paul's argument for a foreign policy that drastically cuts foreign aid and minimalizes overseas entanglements." But Eisenhower continued the internationalist policies of FDR & Truman, he promoted CIA covert actions, he bankrolled the French war in Vietnam, he used foreign aid as a central strategy. "Paul needs to find a new model for 'inspiration and guidance.' We suggest he consult a biography of [isolationist Sen. Robert] Taft [R-Ohio]."
Mark Murray of NBC News: "The American public's dissatisfaction with Washington has reached new heights, according to the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.... A whopping 83 percent of Americans disapprove of Congress' job, which is an all-time high in the survey. What's more, President Barack Obama has seen his job-approval rating dip to its lowest level since August 2011, when the debt-ceiling showdown wounded almost every Washington politician."
We all know John Boehner has no control over his House caucus, but is Mitch McConnell losing control of Senate Republicans, too? Alexander Bolton of the Hill: "Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) is trying to contain a GOP rebellion on spending levels, a struggle that has major implications for budget negotiations this fall. Nineteen Republicans voted Tuesday to advance a motion to begin debate on a bill funding the departments of Transportation and Housing and Urban Development, even though McConnell says the bill will bust the spending cap set by the 2011 Budget Control Act (BCA)."
New York Times Editors: "The government should not be making money off the backs of struggling student borrowers. In the long term, the loan program needs to be restructured so that the loans are closely linked to the government's actual cost of borrowing, which could reduce rates for students. A Senate compromise bill that is supposed to address the harmful rate increase falls well short." The editors recommend the Congress accept an amendment offered by Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass) & Jack Reed (D-R.I.) which would cap loan rates.
Ryan Grim of the Huffington Post: " President Barack Obama is leaning towards former White House Economic Adviser Larry Summers as his choice to replace Ben Bernanke as chairman of the Federal Reserve, according to people who have been briefed on the administration's thinking. Liberal critics of Summers' economic record, along with those who continue to question his ability to work with women, are waging a last-minute campaign to persuade the president to change his mind and instead choose the other frontrunner for the job, Fed Vice Chair Janet Yellen."
Jonathan Martin of the New York Times: Chris Christie is full of himself.
Maureen Dowd continues with her coverage of the gruesome Whitey Bolger trial.
Reid Cherlin, formerly a White House assistant press secretary to Robert Gibbs, argues in The New Republic that it's time to end the White House press conference, which is a waste of time for both the press & the White House.
Local News
David Chen & Michael Barbaro of the New York Times: "A new scandal involving raunchy online messages engulfed Anthony D. Weiner, imperiling an improbable political comeback that had catapulted him to the top of the New York City mayor's race. Mr. Weiner, who left Congress amid revelations that he had engaged in a pattern of reckless online conduct, acknowledged during a hastily arranged news conference that the behavior had continued even after his resignation." ...
... Weiner & his wife Huma Abedin speak at a news conference:
... Here is the BuzzFeed post, by Ben Smith, which is mentioned in the Times story. ...
... Politico's story, by Mike Zapler & Katie Glueck is here. ...
... Andrew Kaczynski of BuzzFeed: "A high-profile interview with People Magazine seen as a first step in rehabilitating his tattered image came a week after Anthony Weiner allegedly stared an online relationship with a woman that quickly descended into dirty messages and pictures." ...
... Here's the Dirty's first post. The Dirty's main page is here & currently ledes with a post of a pixelated image of Weiner's penis. The main page has links to other posts, but the links are broken. ...
New York Times Editors: "... the serially evasive Mr. Weiner should take his marital troubles and personal compulsions out of the public eye, away from cameras, off the Web and out of the race for mayor of New York City."
Katy Steinmetz of Time: "For nearly two weeks, San Diego Mayor Bob Filner has refused to resign in the face of sexual harassment allegations, apologizing for any misbehavior while maintaining his innocence. It has been an awkward dance of acknowledgement and resistance, and one made easier by the anonymity of his accusers. That changed Monday when Irene McCormack Jackson, the mayor's former communications director, accused Filner of sexual harassment in a lawsuit against him and the nation's eighth largest city." ...
... Craig Gustafson of the San Diego Union-Tribune: "The former top spokeswoman for Mayor Bob Filner sued him and the city for sexual harassment Monday, alleging he repeatedly made unwanted sexual advances toward her and put her in a headlock on several occasions so she couldn't get away." ...
... Mark Walker of the Union-Tribune: "Five hours after his former communications manager went public with allegations of sexual harassment against him, San Diego Mayor Bob Filner issued a written statement asking again that due process be allowed to run its course."
The Apology Tweet. Laura Vozzella & Rosalind Helderman of the Washington Post: "Gov. Robert F. McDonnell announced Tuesday that he repaid more than $120,000 in loans to a businessman whose nutritional supplement he and his wife promoted, and he apologized for the first time for a gifts scandal that has consumed his final year in office. 'I am deeply sorry for the embarrassment certain members of my family and I brought upon my beloved Virginia and her citizens,' McDonnell (R) announced via Twitter. 'I want you to know that I broke no laws and that I am committed to regaining your sacred trust and confidence. I hope today's action is another step toward that end.' The McDonnells paid back Star Scientific chief executive Jonnie R. Williams Sr. $52,278.17 for a $50,000 loan made to first lady Maureen McDonnell in 2011 and $71,837 for $70,000 provided last year to a real estate company the governor owns with his sister."
David Savage of the Los Angeles Times: "Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the Supreme Court in 2011 to uphold an order against California's overcrowded prisons. Now Gov. Jerry Brown wants him to block a release of more than 9,000 inmates."
Charles Pierce on North Carolina's legislative Jubilee, with a special shout-out to Chief Neutral Arbiter John Roberts, "who had been crusading against the [Voting Rights Act] for his entire career as a government lawyer...."
Senate Race
Molly Reddin of The New Republic: "... just because [Liz] Cheney is the worst species of partisan hack doesn't mean that her target is a bastion of comity and compromise.... What [Sen. Mike] Enzi [RTP-Wy.] is, on an average day, is a personally inoffensive, fairly ineffectual conservative nonentity.... For years, his vote has mainly been good for making sure that every meaningful piece of legislation to come before the Senate faces a filibuster.... He is susceptible to the worst pressures of tea partyism.... Enzi ... has not engaged in a meaningful attempt at compromise since 2009.... Even then, it was not clear that he was participating in good faith.... Because he attracts praise for the 'integrity' he projects while paralyzing the Senate at every opportunity, you could say that Enzi is the worse of the two [between Enzi & Cheney]."
Gubernatorial Race
Alexander Burns of Politico: "Virginia gubernatorial candidate Ken Cuccinelli once suggested that society would benefit from enforcing anti-adultery laws, according to a report dating to the Republican's days as a state senator. Speaking to Richmond's Style Weekly magazine back in 2008, Cuccinelli defended laws criminalizing extramarital sex, saying that such restrictions 'ought to stay on the books.... Frankly it wouldn't hurt to enforce them more,' Cuccinelli is quoted saying." CW: a truly excellent use of our criminal justice system, Kenny. Also an excellent way to solve our unemployment problems -- millions of people would be in jail instead of working or looking for work, & thousands of single people could be put to work building new jails. Plus, your brilliant suggestion would totally disband Congress. And, no, Kenny, you're not an extremist at all. You can start your prosecutin' with my ex-husbands.
News Ledes
New York Times: "The New York City Council notified [Madison Square Garden] that it has 10 years to vacate its 45-year-old premises and find a new home, the Garden's fifth since it opened in 1879. By a vote of 47 to 1, the Council voted to extend the Garden's special operating permit for merely a decade.... Ten years should be enough time, officials said, for the Garden to find a new location and for the city to devise plans for an expanded Pennsylvania Station, which currently sits below the Garden, and the redevelopment of the surrounding neighborhood."
New York Times: "President Obama, in his first punitive response to the ouster of Mohamed Morsi as president of Egypt, has halted the delivery of four F-16 fighter planes to the Egyptian Air Force."
Reuters: "At least 56 people were killed and 70 injured when a train derailed on the outskirts of the northern Spanish city of Santiago de Compostela on Wednesday in one of Europe's worst rail disasters."
New York Times: "Ronell Wilson, whose first death sentence for killing two undercover police detectives was overturned, was sentenced again on Wednesday to die by a federal jury that heard gripping testimony about his time in jail, where he roamed freely after the shootings, intimidated fellow inmates and fathered a child with a guard."
AP photo/Office of George Bush.The Classy President Bush. AP: "Former President George H.W. Bush has shaved his head to show solidarity for the sick child of a Secret Service agent. A statement issued by a Bush spokesman Wednesday says the 89-year-old former president acted earlier this week at his summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine. That was after he saw members of his Secret Service detail with newly shaved heads to show support for the 2-year-old son of an agent."
Guardian: "The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have announced their newborn son is to be called George Alexander Louis. He will be known as His Royal Highness Prince George of Cambridge. The announcement at 6.20pm showed the couple have chosen to stick with very traditional royal names. There have already been six British monarchs called George -- the last being the Queen's father, George VI. Louis is also a favourite and was the name of Lord Mountbatten, the uncle of the Duke of Edinburgh."
Guardian: "Lance Armstrong has claimed the United States government was happy to overlook drug-taking allegations because it was ready to take advantage of the publicity of being associated with him.... His legal team is now claiming the US government's federal lawsuit against him be dismissed because the case is too old."
San Francisco Chronicle: "The family of a man killed when a bicyclist slammed into him in San Francisco's Castro neighborhood last year didn't want the rider to spend time behind bars, prosecutors said Tuesday. Chris Bucchere, 37, avoided jail time when he agreed Thursday to plead guilty to felony vehicular manslaughter for having killed 71-year-old Sutchi Hui as he walked through a crosswalk at Market and Castro streets on March 29, 2012. Bucchere is scheduled to be sentenced to three years of probation on Aug. 16."
AP: "An out-of-control natural gas well off the Louisiana coast has caught fire, hours after a blowout that prompted the evacuation of 44 workers. Meanwhile, officials stressed that Tuesday's blowout wouldn't be close to as damaging as the 2010 BP oil spill...."
Reuters: " A federal judge on Tuesday delayed until next year the enforcement of Alabama's new abortion law, which tightens restrictions on providers and, according to opponents, could force the closing of more than half of the state's abortion clinics."
The Commentariat -- July 23, 2013
** CW: This essay, by Kurt Eichenwald of Vanity Fair, is perhaps the best piece I've ever read on conservatives' war on poor women & their families. It is eloquent not in its style -- Eichenwald wrote it while his wife was having surgery for breast cancer -- but for its visceral outrage. Via Charles Pierce.
Mark Landler & Thom Shanker of the New York Times: "The Pentagon has provided Congress with its first detailed list of military options to stem the bloody civil war in Syria, suggesting that a campaign to tilt the balance from President Bashar al-Assad to the opposition would be a vast undertaking, costing billions of dollars, and could backfire on the United States. The list of options -- laid out in a letter from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, to the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Carl Levin of Michigan -- was the first time the military has explicitly described what it sees as the formidable challenge of intervening in the war." ...
... Spencer Ackerman of the Guardian: "The top US military officer warned senators on Monday that taking military action to stop the bloodshed in Syria was likely to escalate quickly and result in 'unintended consequences', representing the most explicit uniformed opposition to deeper involvement in another war in the Middle East. Alluding to the costly, bloody occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, said that once the US got involved militarily in the Syrian civil war, which the UN estimates to have killed about 93,000 people, 'deeper involvement is hard to avoid'." ...
... Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post: "The House and Senate intelligence committees have approved CIA weapons shipments to opposition fighters in Syria, allowing the Obama administration to move ahead on the stalled program, senior congressional and administration officials said Monday.... Both the House and Senate panels voted on the administration's plan last week, officials said. The agreement allows money already in the CIA's budget to be reprogrammed for the Syria operation, a covert action that President Obama approved early last month."
OMG. George Zimmerman, Action Hero. Matt Guttman & Alexis Shaw of ABC News: "George Zimmerman, who has been in hiding since he was acquitted of murder in the death of Trayvon Martin, emerged to help rescue a family who was trapped in an overturned vehicle, police said today. Zimmerman was one of two men who came to the aid of Dana and Mark Gerstle and their two children, who were trapped inside a blue Ford Explorer SUV that had rolled over after traveling off the highway in Sanford, Fla. at approximately 5:45 p.m. Thursday, the Seminole County Sheriff's Office said in a statement. The crash occurred at the intersection of I-4 and route Route 46, police said." CW: By coincidence, I was driving on I-4 at Route 46 at about 5:45-6:00 pm Thursday. I didn't see no stinking crash. ...
... Kerry Pickett of Breitbart News embellishes the story, which is sensational enough: "The SUV later caught fire.... According to Sanford Police Zimmerman had a fire extinguisher with him."
... According to John Hawkins of Right Wing Daily, "This is God reaching down in his own way to shame the people attacking George Zimmerman & let him prove he's a good guy." CW: thank God for reminding George to bring his fire extinguisher to the scene. ...
... Erin Ryan of Jezebel: "According to Sanford police (who apparently don't care that everyone now knows where George Zimmerman is), Zimmerman was just, I don't know, moseying along the highway like normal people tend to do ... when he just happened to stumble across an overturned truck, and he pulled the person in the truck to safety like the hero he always imagined he was.... It's a good thing that the person in the cabin wasn't armed and didn't feel threatened by Zimmerman's entry into their vehicle, or, you know, Zimmerman could have gotten himself shot." ...
... Kathy, a commenter on No More Mister Nice Blog, provides a plausible explanation of how Zimmerman happened upon the accident: "I have to wonder if he was listening to the police scanner, waiting for his moment." ...
... CW: I'm pretty sure the Sanford sheriff's department is fixing to make Zimmerman their Good Citizen of the Month. ...
... Carrie Healey of the Grio: "The Buckeye Firearms Foundation started a fund to buy George Zimmermann 'a new gun and fight attacks on the Second Amendment.' ... U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said that the Department of Justice has an open investigation into the case. Sanford Police Capt. James McAuliffe confirmed Thursday that all evidence related to the February 2012 shooting is on hold, which includes Zimmerman's gun." CW: Gosh, I hope they get him a new fire extinguisher, too. ...
... Stanley Fish: "... 'stand your ground' is more than a declaration of a right; it is an injunction -- stand your ground, be a man. Retreating in order to avoid violence is not the commendable act of a prudent man, but the act of a coward, of someone who runs away. It is this aspect of the Stand Your Ground laws -- their implicit affirmation of a code of manliness -- that links them to the novelistic and filmic representations of the old west.... As civilization advances, and the law book replaces the gun, these rationales for violence sound increasingly hollow, and more and more westerns are self-consciously elegiac...." ...
... This piece on ALEC/NRA-promoted laws by Brendan Fischer of PR Watch, republished in Truth-Out, is a week old but still a valuable read: "Justice under Stand Your Ground laws have been anything but equal. The Tampa Bay Times found that people who killed a black person walked free 73 percent of the time, while those who killed a white person went free 59 percent of the time. Other studies have shown that Stand Your Ground is more likely to be applied in cases of white-on-black crime, and in May, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights launched an investigation into racial bias and Stand Your Ground laws."
We have more people in acting positions in Washington than there are in Hollywood. -- Prof. G. Calvin Mackenzie ...
... George Condon of the National Journal on "why the confirmation process is completely broken.... It is unprecedented in history for any Cabinet department to be headless for [so] long -- things are even worse below the surface.... Vacancies are scattered broadly across the Washington landscape.... The basic problem remains -- neither branch has sufficient capacity to handle the vetting process." ...
... Sarah Binder in the Monkey Cage: Harry "Reid's strategy tells us a bit about the conditionality of the nuclear option: First, the more narrowly targeted the nuclear gambit, the more credible it seems to be.... Second, the political feasibility of the nuclear option seems conditioned on the behavior of the minority. Strident overreaching by the Republicans ... helped Democrats to paint the GOP as going a step too far in a Senate parliamentary arms race.... Third, keep in mind that the CFPB, NLRB, EPA and Labor department are critical institutions for pursuing core Democratic policy interests...." Binder wonders what will happen now with judicial nominees, particularly the three Obama nominated to the D.C. court, which the GOP claims has too many judges.
** Fernando Espuelas of Univision in the Huffington Post: "We're now almost a decade into the immigration 'debate' and the rising antagonism toward non-white Americans is hitting a fever pitch.... Perhaps emboldened by the acrid assertions of certain Tea Party members of Congress who revel in fostering racial divisions as a way to cement their shrinking power base, the temperature is rising and the rhetoric is crude.... It's time for John Boehner to decide if he is a national leader or merely a party hack raised by fate to the level beyond his true capacity, thereby staying in 'power' by appealing to the lowest-common denominator and ignoring an urgent need for America." Via Jonathan Bernstein.
Steve Benen on seven ways Republicans are trying to sabotage ObamaCare even though "for millions of Americans, very little matters more" than access to affordable health insurance. Perhaps the most shocking: "refusing to help their own constituents navigate the system." Then there's lying about the costs, repeated attempts to repeal the ACA or essential parts of it, denying funds to implement the system, & threatening groups who would help do PR for the ACA. At the state level, there's refusing to allow Medicare expansion & refusing to create health insurance exchanges. CW: I would add refusing to fix aspects of the law -- like the employer mandate, which would improve the ACA in ways that would appeal to GOP constituencies. ...
... Some stars won't be intimidated. Sarah Kliff of the Washington Post: "What do Oprah, Funny or Die and the Grammys have in common? All three, it turns out, have volunteered to promote Obamacare." Others stars who will participate in promoting ObamaCare: Jennifer Hudson, Alicia Keyes, Jon Bon Jovi & Amy Poehler. ...
... Alexander Bolton of the Hill: "ObamaCare is at the center of a rapidly escalating fight that threatens to shut the government down this fall. Senate Republicans, including two members of the leadership, are coalescing around a proposal to block any government funding resolution that includes money for the implementation of the 2010 Affordable Care Act." ...
... David Rogers of Politico: "... the Republican budget strategy in Congress shows almost daily signs of coming apart. The central premise, as sold by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, was that Washington could wipe out deficits in 10 years and protect defense spending, all while embracing the lower appropriations caps dictated by sequestration. Four months later, it's proving to be a bridge too far. Only three of the 12 annual spending bills have even been debated -- by far the worst record since the GOP took over the House. Against their better judgment, Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee have been required to cut important investments in science, community development and foreign aid. Senate Republicans are peeling off in protest -- setting up a crucial procedural vote at noon Tuesday on the transportation and housing budget." ...
... Matt Fuller of Roll Call on House Republicans' summer constituent outreach plan: basically, it's bash Washington & President Obama because they've got nothin'. ...
... Dana Milbank interviews John McCain, who has returned to maverick status. CW: a definite plus in ensuring Sunday show bookings. ...
... Ferinstance. Greg Sargent: "McCain has now said the American people will not put up with another round of GOP debt limit and government shutdown 'shenanigans.' McCain also bluntly warned House Republicans against using the debt limit fight to gain the repeal of Obamacare, which he said 'is not going to happen.'"
Bryon Tau of Politico: "With his ambitious second term agenda stalled, President Barack Obama sought to rally his most faithful activists Monday, calling on them to push back in the face of congressional paralysis. 'I'm going to need your help,' Obama told a crowd of Organizing for Action volunteers at a Washington, D.C. hotel":
Joe Nocera on three court rulings re: treatment of Guantanamo prisoners that won't change much.
Revolving Door. Ben Protess & Peter Lattman of the New York Times: "Robert Khuzami, a former a terrorism prosecutor and recent enforcement chief at the Securities and Exchange Commission, has taken a $5MM/year job at white shoe law firm Kirkland & Ellis. "In doing so, he is following the quintessential Washington script: an influential government insider becoming a paid advocate for industries he once policed."
Your Tax Dollars, Misplaced. Sarah Lynch of Reuters: "The U.S. Marshals Service has lost track of about 2,000 encrypted two-way radios worth millions of dollars, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday, citing internal records it had obtained through a public records request. The paper reported that the problems date back to at least 2011, when the Marshals were deploying new versions of the radios to communicate in the field."
I could never lend myself to any transaction, however respectable, that would commercialize on the prestige and dignity of the office of the Presidency. -- Former President Harry Truman, who lived on an Army pension of $112.56 per month after leaving office
Last year, Bill Clinton earned seventeen million dollars giving speeches, including one before a company in Lagos that paid him seven hundred thousand dollars. -- George Packer of the New Yorker
Frank Bruni: "... some of the same dynamics that fed the crisis in Catholicism -- an aloof patriarchy, an insularity verging on superiority, a disinclination to get secular officials involved -- exist elsewhere. And the way they've played out in Orthodox Judaism illustrates anew that religion ... can ... be a self-preserving haven for wrongdoing."
New York Times public editor Margaret Sullivan offers some insights into why Nate Silver left the Times for ESPN, despite the Times' reported efforts to retain him. ...
... Mike Allen of Politico has more.
Presidential Race
CW: I missed this last week, but I thought you'd want to know how the 2016 GOP race for the presidency is getting started. Tom Hamburger of the Washington Post: "Sens. Ted Cruz (Tex.) and Rand Paul (Ky.) ... were the key speakers at a meeting of 400 Iowa ministers and their spouses. The senators also attended an Iowa Republican Party fundraiser." ...
... AND this from Leonardo Blair in yesterday's Christian Post: "Hundreds of pastors in Iowa anointed U.S. Senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul with a shower of prayers after they collectively promoted an agenda to abolish the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), get rid of Obamacare, champion religious freedom, defend marriage and fight abortion on Friday." ...
... MEANWHILE. Matea Gold of the Washington Post: "Long before any candidates announce their presidential bids, the next race for the White House is unofficially underway. Political operatives for two independent groups -- American Bridge 21st Century on the left and America Rising on the right -- are already tracking potential contenders, aiming to build robust research files that can be used against the opposition. The organizations are part of a wave of super PACs, advocacy groups and even for-profit corporations that are poised to play their biggest role yet in national politics."
Right Wing World *
Hucksters. Alex Seitz-Wald of Salon: conservative bloggers & media stars aren't selling only their phony political philosophy; they're also selling lots of worthless -- but expensive -- products to their ignorant fans. Seitz-Wald cites some egregious examples.
* Where the answer to "Have you no shame?" is always "No."
Local News
Bernie Woodall of Reuters: "Labor unions trying to stop Detroit from cutting pensions filed a new challenge to the city in bankruptcy court as the federal judge overseeing the case said he would hear arguments on Wednesday. U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Steven Rhodes agreed on Monday to a request by Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr to fast track a hearing on whether other courts can hear lawsuits against Detroit, while it seeks federal bankruptcy court protection."
News Ledes
William & Kate leave the hospital & show off the new baby:
Reuters: " Al Qaeda claimed responsibility for simultaneous raids on two Iraqi prisons and said more than 500 inmates had been set free, in a statement posted on militant forums on Tuesday. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which was formed earlier this year through a merger between al Qaeda's affiliates in Syria and Iraq, said it had carried out the attacks on Abu Ghraib and Taji jails after months of preparation."
Washington Post: "Dennis Farina, a Chicago policeman who initially moonlighted as a movie actor for the comparatively easy money but quickly became an acclaimed staple of crime dramas and comedies, playing characters on both sides of the law, died July 22 in Scottsdale, Ariz. He was 69. The cause was a blood clot in a lung, said a spokeswoman...."