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Shutdown: Obama Seals the Deal for McAuliffe

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by Paul Goldman

When the President signed legislation late last night saving GOP Speaker John Boehner from his own caucus (the Republican House majority voted against the bill reopening the government and preventing default), Obama sealed the deal for Terry McAuliffe. Chris LaCivita, the Rasputin behind Ken Cuccinelli’s campaign strategy, had been saying for months that he had an “October surprise” guaranteed to win the election for his client.

Back in April, we dismissed the October surprise silliness from LaCivita, rejecting the other gurus claiming – you can look it up – that Cuccinelli was a “sure” winner if he could raise enough money to “go negative” against Terry. At the time, the Washington Post poll had Cuccinelli up double digits. We didn’t believe the polls. Moreover, as we have written, all this stuff about an October surprise, some Cuban Missile Crisis-type event, is the stuff of urban legend. It will no doubt be true someday, but by luck, not by design.

Still, we concede that yesterday Chris got his surprise. And it was in October. Except it wasn’t the kind of surprise he had in mind. Instead, the President signed a bill ending the latest Republican-inspired foolishness in Washington, while also sealing the deal for Terry McAuliffe, the next Governor of Virginia.

This isn’t to say that McAuliffe’s margin of victory will be the same as in the polls; it could be closer. Ralph Northam, of course, will win big. But there is still a chance, if Democrats don’t rally together, for our prediction of a sweep to fall short, if Mark Obenshain manages to squeak past Mark Herring. But THAT SHOULD NOT HAPPEN.

 

The president did his part by winning the chess match against Ted Cruz and his posse. Now, expect to hear leaks from the Cuccinelli camp that they were “catching up”, that their strategy was “really beginning to work,” but that the whole shutdown/default controversy stopped the AG’s “mo.” It will be a good spin, intended to take Chris and others “off the hook” for the loss.

But it will not be true. At best, what can be said is that these last few weeks froze the race, taking away whatever real power the Obamacare issue might have had for Cuccinelli by diverting attention to DC. The only good news for Cuccinelli: by Monday, the noise will clear from DC, and he will have two weeks to make his Obamacare/Medicaid expansion/negative attacks and whatever else been LaCivita’s closing strategy.

As a general rule, the GOP tends to gain at the end in Virginia — at least this is the data from the elections of Chuck Robb, Doug Wilder, George Allen, Jim Gilmore, Mark Warner and Bob McDonnell. Except for the Wilder campaign, the other winners basically had over 50% in the polls two weeks out, it was just a margin of victory difference. Wilder had a shaky lead at best, never over 50%, a classic equation to lose at the end to a GOP surge. It almost happened, so this is always a sobering stat.

The 2013 race is of course complicated by a third-party candidacy that for some reason is being promoted as a responsible third alternative by the media. My own gut is that it helps Terry, but at 200-proof, we write about politics, not our own choices. We don’t judge, we just analyze.

This, then, is the first year since 1965 when a Virginia GUV candidate can win with less than 50% of the vote. But this is more a complication for the AG’s race, not the GUV race, in terms of predicting the winner. As for the LG race, that was over the moment Jackson was nominated at the Virginia Republican convention last May.

Bottom line: The President just sealed the deal for Terry McAuliffe. Can Terry get most of the folks who backed Warner and Kaine? If he can, then a sweep seems a sure thing in this three-way race, along with a likely record percentage victory margin for a Democrat in the two-party era.

But whether it is over 50% or under 50%, the President, by outplaying the Cruz/Cuccinelli side of the GOP, did two things besides avoiding a debt default: 1) he put an end to the government shutdown; and 2) he shut down the Cuccinelli for Governor campaign.  

Ken Cuccinelli’s A-Paul-ing Pal Rand

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There’s a lot more Rand Paul insanity where this video came from. For instance, see Rand Paul’s Muslim-Bashing Speech and Rand Paul’s Crazy BP Oil Spill Comments. As if that’s not bad enough, see Rand Paul Mocks Drowning Polar Bears, Rising Sea Levels And White House ‘Extremists’. Paul also opposes abortion even in cases of rape and incest and a “personhood” amendment which would ban many forms of contraception, in vitro fertilization, and embryonic stem cell research. has stated that Medicare is “failing” for the same reason the Soviet Union failed – “socialism doesn’t work.” And he mused that the government had no right to prohibit racial discrimination by “private entities.” In other words, if Hobby Lobby or Chik-fil-A or whoever doesn’t want to let African Americans or Muslims or Latinos or LGBT people in its restaurants, that’s fine in Rand Paul’s view.  Just keep all that in mind when you see Cuccinelli campaigning with this “wacko bird” (to quote Sen. John McCain).

P.S. Oh, and yesterday evening, Paul voted to keep the government shut down indefinitely and to have the United States default on its debt, thereby ruining its credit rating and the economy. Reporters should definitely ask Ken Cuccinelli if he agrees with all that.

Virginia News Headlines: Thursday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia and national news headlines, political and otherwise, for Thursday, October 17. Also see the video, “Day 19 of 21 Days of Cuccinelli’s Extremism: The Homosexual Agenda.” As Cooch loves to say, “you can’t make this stuff up!”

*SHUTDOWN ENDS: Obama signs bill to raise debt limit, reopen government (Federal employees should expect to work Thursday)

*Republicans Shut Down the Government for Nothing (“After two weeks of closed government and a debt-limit freakout, a deal is on the horizon-and the GOP has little to show for the crisis caused by its demands.”)

*Boehner and his majority are in disarray(“House Speaker John A. Boehner lost the shutdown showdown in ignominious fashion, winning not a single concession of any value from Democrats and exposing his majority as powerless to advance conservative causes.” Good!)

*New Jersey voters elect Democrat Cory Booker to U.S. Senate (I’m not particularly a fan, but Booker’s much better than the extremist Tepublican he was running against. We’ll see how it goes…)

*Ted Cruz, one sore loser (Remember, Ken Cuccinelli said we need MORE Ted Cruzes in Congress! Amazing.)

*Conservatism’s dark side (“As we witnessed during the debt crisis, the negative impulses of the right now haunt us all.”)

*Sen. Rand Paul to campaign with Cuccinelli in Va. Beach (On a related note, see Rand Paul’s Muslim-Bashing Speech – utterly a-PAUL-ing!).

*Va. Gov. Robert McDonnell set back by federal appeals court ruling on e-mails (Ruh roh!)

*Goodlatte, Griffith, Hurt vote against bill to end shutdown (If voting to destroy our country’s credit rating, economy, etc., isn’t cause for defeat at the polls next November, what is?!?)

*In bitter AG race, Va. GOP lodges complaint against Dem group

*Anti-Mosque group linked to Virginia Beach councilman (“Councilman Bill DeSteph received a presentation from the local chapter of ACT for America, a group that alleged that the proposed mosque had ties to Muslim extremists”)

*Repeal of Va. hybrid vehicle tax in the works (Good riddance; what a stupid STUPID policy!

*Warner: “This self-inflicted crisis has done harm”

*Virginia purges 40,000 from voter rolls

*McAuliffe made $9.4 million last year, tax papers show

*As Virginia governor, Terry McAuliffe would have to woo GOP, learn the ropes (My guess is that he’d hire a super-experienced chief of staff to help him do just that.)

*Star Scientific, tobacco and the Virginia way

*Following Va. IG report, now what?

*Libertarian Candidate’s Impact on Virginia Governor’s Race (Not much, as far as I can tell.)

*S.C. Gov. Haley campaigns with Cuccinelli (A corrupt right wingnut, just like…uh, Ken Kookinelli perhaps?)

*Perception is no friend to governor

*Amtrak ridership booms in Virginia, McDonnell says

*Passing showers late today, tomorrow is back to perfect

Obenshain’s Extreme Friends Assisting in Race for Attorney General

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From the Mark Herring for Attorney General campaign:

Pat Robertson, Jim Bob Duggar support Tea Party AG candidate

In the latest financial reports, it was revealed that Tea Party Attorney General nominee Mark Obenshain’s campaign accepted a $10,000 contribution from Pat Robertson, whose extreme opinions on issues of gay marriage and reproductive rights have made headlines. While the financial reports were coming out, Obenshain surrogate Jim Bob Duggar was in Virginia Beach doubling down on his comments comparing the United States to Nazi Germany, referring to abortion as a “baby holocaust.”

Jim Bob's son, Josh Duggar, Executive Director of FRC Action, the lobbying arm of the Family Research Council, said yesterday at a rally in support of Cuccinelli, Jackson and Obenshain, that all three are “really exemplary of our values.” A copy of FRC Action's “values” can be found here 

Today, The Washington Post endorsed Mark Herring for Attorney General and described Mark Obenshain as a “doctrinaire conservative who has tried to explain away” his extreme record.

Based upon these surrogates, doctrinaire conservative is an understatement. But let’s take a look at the statements these surrogates have made and the votes Obenshain has cast that line up.

The way Pat Robertson speaks on LGBT issues…

  • Pat Robertson says homosexual couples make him want to “vomit,” accusedhomosexuals of intentionally spreading AIDS, “which would be the equivalent of murder,” and believes many homosexuals are really heterosexuals who were abused as children; he says others suffer from “chromosomal damage.”

Is the way Mark Obenshain votes on LGBT issues…

  • Mark Obenshain was among 12 Republicans in 2013 who walked out of the chamber rather than oppose a gay judicial nominee, he has refused to sign the Equality Virginia non-discrimination pledge and he voted against adding sexual orientation to Virginia’s nondiscrimination policy in 2010 as well as opposed a similar measure in 2013 to prohibit discrimination in public employment.

The way Pat Robertson speaks on reproductive rights…

  • Pat Robertson has called abortion a “holocaust” that will bring on “the wrath of the lord,” he said that the founder of Planned Parenthood “was the one who set the stage for Adolf Hitler,” and Robinson has said that Planned Parenthood sought to commit “genocide” against black people.

Is the way Mark Obenshain votes on reproductive rights…

  • Mark Obenshain voted in favor on the onerous regulations that will shutterwomen’s health clinics and deny thousands of Virginia women access to prenatal care as well as screenings for cancer and sexually-transmitted diseases. And Mark Obenshain voted in 2009, 2010 and 2011 to strip funding from Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

The way Jim Bob Duggar speaks on reproductive rights… 

  • Jim Bob Duggar, at a Value Voters Summit last week, made shameful remarks comparing the United States to Nazi Germany and was in Virginia Beach yesterday doubling down on his comments, referring to abortion as a “babyholocaust.”

Is the way Mark Obenshain has voted on reproductive rights

  • Mark Obenshain co-patroned a “Personhood” Bill with Ken Cuccinelli that would outlaw all abortion and many common forms of birth control and supported legislation that would require all women receiving an abortion procedure to undergo a mandatory transvaginal ultrasound. In 2007, Obenshain accepted a “Legislator of the Year” award from the Family Foundation And Valley Family Forum, saying, “it's easy to stand up and fight for the sanctity of life.” (Daily News-Record, 03/30/07)

 

Video: Sen. Mark Warner on Agreement to Reopen Government, Prevent Default

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For a transcript of Sen. Warner’s remarks, see the “flip.” For more reaction from Virginia leaders, see the comments section of this post. Thanks.

P.S. In no way, shape or form should we ever forget what Republicans just did to our country. In 20 days, it’s our first chance to let them know how we all feel about their irresponsible, destructive, disgraceful behavior, as we turn out in DROVES to vote against the extreme team of Ken Cuccinelli, EW Jackson, and Mark Obenshain.

WASHINGTON – U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA) delivered these remarks on the Senate floor today following announcement of a bipartisan agreement to reopen the federal government and prevent a credit default:

“To paraphrase Charles Dickens, in a way ‘It may the best of times and the worst of times.’ It may be the best of times because over the last couple of days we’ve seen leaders of the Senate, Leader Reid and Leader McConnell, basically say, ‘Let’s put away some of the disputes and end this crisis.’ I want to compliment their work and the work of all the bipartisan efforts that have been going on to put this to an end. So in a certain sense perhaps it is the best of times. Yes, we’re about to finally do our job. We’re about to actually reopen the government. Put our workforce back to work. And by a whisker, we’re avoiding default and financial calamity that would ensue if we continued down that path. But it’s also the worst of times in that once again we took this conversation to the 11th hour. We have inflicted damage on our economy and our reputation. We have – and not by a Republican or Democrat skirmish, but by a small group of a ‘our-way-or-the-highway’ crowd — we have violated the first principle of governing, which says: ‘First, do no harm.’

Unfortunately, Mr. President, this self-inflicted crisis has done harm, even if we reopen the government and avoid default. The economist Mark Zandi has estimated that the cost to our economy is at least $20 billion. Reopening the government, avoiding default, isn’t going to erase that $20 billion hit to an economy that’s been struggling. I wish those who advocated for this shutdown, who advocated for this brinkmanship would be willing to come down and explain folks in my state or, for that matter, in their states, if you happen to be a government contractor, some of your workforce may have been deemed essential, you may get paid. But that portion of your workforce that was deemed nonessential chances are won’t be paid.

A company in Virginia, 5,500 people strong, 34% of their workforce has been deemed nonessential. The company has tried to pay those people through this period. Some will be paid, some will not. They will not recover. Those individuals, those families will not recover. I’d like to have somebody come down and explain what all this was for in terms of the hurt that it took in their personal finances. I’d like some of the folks who advocated these tactics to come down and explain to a restaurant owner down in Hampton, Virginia, the workforce at NASA Langley, 3,500 strong was reduced through this furlough to seven people. The lost

receipts from that restaurant over the last two weeks, how their tactics somehow improved the fortunes of that private-sector business. I’d like those who advocated that this was smart politics to shut down the government and take us to the verge of default, explain to the motel owner on Skyline Drive in Virginia who lost a couple of weekends of the peak fall foliage season and won’t see any of those dollars come back, how this was in their best interest to shut down. It’s not just in Virginia. Yosemite in California. It’s national parks in Texas.

I’d be anxious for some of those who advocated for these tactics to explain to those private-sector business owners who won’t see those dollars come back. They’re not going to get recouped. I’d like those who say and come to this floor and talk about trying to get rid of our debt and deficit and the burdens on the taxpayer, how these tactics of shutting down the government and bringing our nation to the verge of default help the American taxpayer. The American taxpayer comes out  giant loser from these tactics. The federal government, the workforce rightfully is going to be repaid, so there is no savings there. As a matter of fact, the cost of starting and stopping any enterprise is enormous. Anyone that has run any kind of business understands that. So I hope those who have advocated these tactics will come down and explain to the American taxpayer how this created a bigger deficit and explain why this made sense…

We’ve gone through two of these self-inflicted crises. The last crisis, two or three of these, close to the fiscal cliff or close to default, the last time cost us a downgrade from one of the rating agencies. We saw yesterday, Fitch, the second rating agency, put us on negative outlook. As a former governor of the state of Virginia where we kept our triple a bond rating, you don’t get back your bond rating overnight by simply saying, ‘Oops! Never mind.’ We will be paying the price for these kind of tactics for months or maybe years to come. I’d like those who advocated these tactics to come down and answer the kind of headlines we saw in “The Financial Times” and the “Wall Street Journal,” countries that may not be that friendly to us, China and Russia and others around the world, saying we need to move away from an American-centered economy around the world, a dollar-centered economy around the world, how this hit to our reputation was somehow in the best interest of our country.

So, Mr. President, I am glad that Leader Reid and Leader McConnell have worked out what appears to be a short-term solution. I’m glad for many of my colleagues on both sides of the aisle that has tried to find a common ground. It appears that we will reopen the federal government. It appears that we will avoid default and go into uncharted territory where we candidly don’t really know how bad it could have been. But, before we celebrate too much, let’s check, if reports are true, of what this avoidance of this catastrophe will mean. It means that we’ve got 90 days before the government runs out of money again. We’ve got 113 days until the debt ceiling might have to be raised again.

So my first hope would be, as we move forward, that those who practiced the tactics of shutdown and threatening default will say never again will we put the full faith and credit of the United States of America at risk. Never again will we shut down our government, hurt our federal workforce, hurt taxpayers, hurt private businesses simply because we didn’t get what we want in a political dispute. I hope as well in these coming weeks that we’ll recognize that the people who work for the United States of America and our federal workers deserve better…

The second thing, I hope we will go forward on is recognize that sequestration was set up to be so stupid that no rational group of people would ever let it happen. Well, we’ve let it happen about eight months so far and as challenging as it’s been over the last eight months, in this next fiscal year, which started actually on October 1, it is going to get exponentially worse. I understand the concerns of my colleagues on the other side, and my concern as well, that we’ve got to find a way to cut back some of our spending. But there are smarter ways to do it than sequestration. In this ensuing period, I hope we’re able to work through that. And I do believe we need to take these next 90 days or even a shorter period if we need to report back from a budget committee by mid-December, and recognize that this constant every three-month, six-month manufactured budget crisis does our country no good, and that both sides will enter into this next phase of negotiations with a little more sobriety, a little less willingness to call out each other by name, and actually recognize that we do have to get our balance sheet in order.

If we want to avoid a repeat in January and February of this last couple of weeks that we’ve seen and the damage we’ve done to our country, we are going to have to roll up our sleeves and recognize to get this problem behind us, we’re going to have to deal with our entitlements. It’s going to mean folks on my side of the aisle are going to have to think about how we preserve Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid in a way that’s affordable over the long haul. My friends on the other side of the aisle are going to have to realize what kind of government we want and what kind of government we’re going to be willing to pay for. As somebody who spent the last four years combing through these numbers repeatedly, I don’t think we can pay for the level of government that the American people have expected with our existing tax code. So we’re going to have to find ways to close some of these loopholes, make our tax code more pro-growth but at the same time generate more revenues than we currently have…

So, Mr. President, it is the best of times and the worst of times. I hope we will celebrate the fact that we have done our job and avoided this calamity, but let’s make sure that we never do this again. Let’s make sure that we take this next 90 days before the next C-R expires and the 113 days before the debt ceiling comes and really get our fiscal house in order and make sure we give the American back the confidence they need to move forward. With that, Mr. President, I yield the floor and note the absence of a quorum.”

Ken Cuccinelli’s Extremist, Crazy Contributors (Part 1): Philip Zodhiates of “Response Unlimited”

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This is the first in a series on Ken Cuccinelli’s extremist and/or crazy contributors. Today, we begin with Philip Zodhiates, who donated $1,000 to Cuccinelli on 9/11/13. Per the New York Times, Zodhiates – who “runs Response Unlimited, a Christian direct-mail company in Waynesboro, Va.” – was intimately involved in a highly-publicized “international parental kidnapping” involving a mother secretly transporting her daughter to Zodhiates’ Nicaraguan beach house. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, Zodhiate’s organization, “Response Unlimited”:

…charges $100 for the rental of every 1,000 names of subscribers to the now-defunct Spotlight newspaper. Founded by veteran anti-Semite Willis Carto, The Spotlight carried anti-Zionist, anti-Semitic and wildly conspiracist articles interspersed with ads for Klan, neo-Nazi and related hate groups.

Wow. But wait, there’s more:

In March 2005, The New York Times reported that Response Unlimited had cut a deal with Bob Schindler, the father of Terri Schiavo, a woman in a persistent vegetative state who was dying after a court authorized removal of her feeding tube. In return for the list of people who had donated money to Schindler, Zodhiates’ firm agreed to send out an E-mail soliciting further donations for the Schindlers, who had battled Schiavo’s husband over whether or not to retain the feeding tube.

Many found the list deal, made even before Schiavo finally died two days after the Times article appeared on March 29, ghoulish

And last but not least:

Other lists offered by Response Unlimited include donors to the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, a group described by President Bush as “vigilantes” that has sent armed civilians to the border to guard against illegal immigration; Gun Owners of America, whose founder Larry Pratt has written for anti-Semitic publications and who was ejected from Pat Buchanan’s presidential campaign for alleged ties to white supremacists; and American Border Patrol, led by Glenn Spencer, whose vitriolic Web site has long specialized in pillorying Latinos and especially Mexicans.

Lovely, eh? Yet why is it not surprising that Zodhiates is a big supporter of his fellow extremist nutjob Ken Cuccinelli?

Revisiting What Progressives Believe

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A while back, I posted this concerning what progressives believe:


What do progressives believe in?

• Moving forward, not backward.

• The right to pursue life, liberty and

       the pursuit of happiness

• Equality before the law.

• Everyone (including the rich

       and corporations) paying their fair share.

• The right to a job (and protection

       from off-shoring) in exchange for

       a willingness to work.  

• Government has a role to play

       in solving intractable problems.

• Free public education is every

       American’s birthright.

• Affordable health care is a

       necessity, not a luxury.

• Protection of Social Security

       from privatization.

• Protection of water, air and

       other essential resources.

• Sound and honest stewardship of

       our economic resources and budgets.

• Protecting citizens/consumers  

       against corporate abuse and lack

       of good faith.

• Government should get out of

       the bedrooms and personal

       relationships of Americans.

• War is the last resort, not the first.

• The golden rule.

• We are our brother’s keeper.

 

To that I’d add:

* Putting Americans before partisan advantage.

* Protection of the right to vote.

*Protection of the integrity of our financial systems.

* Fundamental homeland security depends upon protecting citizens against the ravages of global warming

* Workers have every right to organize.

* Balancing the needs of persons and corporations.  

* In matters of health and safety, putting people first.

Virginia Women Leaders Rip Mark Obenshain’s Deceitful New TV Ad

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I just got off a conference call – with State Senator Barbara Favola, former Delegate Katherine Waddell, NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia’s Executive Director Tarina Keene, and Planned Parenthood’s Cianti Stewart-Reid – responding to Mark Obenshain’s latest deceitful television ad (in Orwellian fashion, Obenshain’s Big Lie is entitled “Truth”; also note who Marsha Garst is – ee gads). In this case, Obenshain is deliberately attempting to mislead Virginians when it comes to his deplorable record on women’s health issues. He’s pretending that stating the FACTS of the bills HE has sponsored and the votes HE has taken to make miscarriage a crime, to shut down women’s health clinics across Virginia, to ban abortion and many forms of contraception, etc, etc., are somehow an “attack” on him. But here’s the total flaw in his “logic”: it can’t be an “attack” to point out things that he himself did, and was very proud to do, unless he’s changed his mind and now opposes those things (which he hasn’t). I know, details details. 🙂 With that, here are highlights from the call.

*Sen. Favola emphasized the importance of setting the record straight when it comes to Mark Obenshain’s anti-women’s-health legislation (e.g., the “personhood” bill, which would ban abortion even in cases of rape and incest; legislation to criminalize miscarriages; and many others).

*Favola noted that “Mark Obenshain votes the way E.W. Jackson speaks and Ken Cuccinelli has acted as Attorney General.” They are all Tea Party folks, and have all been “flat-out terrible” when it comes to women’s health and reproductive freedom.

*The bottom line, in Favola’s view, is that Mark Obenshain as AG would be “devastating.”

*Former Delegate Katherine Waddell said if we’ve learned anything the past 4 years, it’s “the importance of the Attorney General of Virginia and the impact the Attorney General has on public policy in Virginia.”

*Waddell added, “We’ve seen what Ken Cuccinelli has done at Attorney General related to women’s reproductive health care,” and Obenshain has said he’d be just like Cuccinelli.

*Waddell reviewed Obenshain’s record, including “transvaginal ultrasound” legislation, a bill to criminalize miscarriages, fetal pain legislation, regulating women’s health clinics as hospitals, opposing the HPV vaccine, leading the charge to ban emergency contraception in JMU campus dispensaries, etc., etc.

*Waddell concluded: “As a Republican woman who believes in limited government, individual freedom, and the right to privacy, I could never ever support Mark Obenshain.” In contrast, Mark Herring “is the only candidate for Attorney General who will support and protect women and children.”

*Tarina Keene said that “Mark Obenshain has been going around the Commonwealth intentionally misleading women about his record. He seems to be offended by his own offensive legislation, his own voting record, and just the plain truth.”

*Keene added that Obenshain is simply not telling the truth on the miscarriage bill, on closing down women’s health clinics across the state, etc. Obenshain has “an abysmal and proven record when it comes to attacking women’s health and rights during his time in the State Senate…He can’t run from the truth and Virginians just can’t trust him.”

*Cianti Stewart-Reid said that “this extreme ticket really represents three peas in a pod.”

*Stewart-Reid concluded that Obenshain is clearly “not for women’s health…has not been working to protect women, and we’ve really had enough; Virginia women deserve better than that in our Attorney General.

The Absurd and Unfair Attack by Right-Wing Bloggers on James Harder

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Recently, James Harder, who is running to unseat Joseph Yost for Delegate in the New River Valley, sent a mailer challenging Yost on his support of the concept of a personhood bill. Harder contended that a personhood bill would mean involving police in miscarriages. See also here. In doing so, Harder stood up for women who do not deserve the criminalization, ultimately, of both birth control and miscarriage. That’s part of what personhood-from-the-moment-of-conception-legislation does. If Joseph Yost supports  personhood legislation (reifying a zygote from the moment of conception) then de facto he does support criminalizing miscarriage. Period. Indeed he voted for such a bill in 2012. Yost’s denials of the consequences for women who miscarry are just plain wrong. That didn’t stop Bearing Drift bloggers from hyperventilating and trashing Harder for a fundamentally pro-woman position.

Of all people, Joseph Yost should oppose personhood amendments. Unknown to Harder at the time was that Joseph Yost’s wife Lisa has gone through two painful miscarriages in the past year. Harder could not possibly have known that. I am very sorry for both the Yosts’ suffering. For women, though, the experience is much worse. She is grieving, and experiencing a breathtaking hormonal “drop off a cliff” at the same time. I know first hand that it is a profoundly difficult and traumatic experience.

But no matter how sorry I am that she and her husband went through this ordeal, that doesn’t mean Joseph Yost should get a free pass for supporting legislation which will have disastrous consequences for women, whether he admits it or not. Of all people, he should know better. Nor does it mean that women (or their allies) shouldn’t speak up strongly about this.  

It is suspect and contemptible that the MEN of Bearing Drift think they can stifle women and their allies on this subject. (Yes, obviously, it was unfortunate that he mailer landed in their mailbox. I sincerely believe that was an accident. Harder has said as much. But Harder stands by the facts underlying the mailer, as he should.)  

It is impossible to believe that Yost doesn’t get the implications of the personhood bill he has supported. It’s been years now since Del Cosgrove half-assedly stumbled into this argument. He became a national embarrassment, fodder for late-night ridicule. Even conservative women said the legislation went too far. And Cosgrove withdrew the bill. Though he still conceptually supports the notion of personhood legislation, AG candidate Mark Obenshain also had to withdraw his legislation. It is unthinkable that either Yost or Obenshain doesn’t understand the consequences of his position. That can only mean they are lying. There is absolutely no excuse to support a law, so hyper-conservative and draconian that even Mississippi voters voted against it.

Yost could use this as a teachable moment. He could enlighten fellow cons about what that type of legislation would mean in terms of outright savageness to women in some of their their most vulnerable and painful (both literally and figuratively) moments. 20 percent of women experience natural miscarriage sometime in their lives. They all deserve our compassionate support, not criminalization. Instead, Yost pretends personhood legislation wouldn’t affect women who miscarry along with those using birth control.  He likewise pretends he is not pandering to the most extreme fringes of his party. Note: Yost could educate himself about birth control. He could also educate himself on the human side of women who, for whatever reason, find themselves in dire circumstances and decide they must have an abortion. But he won’t. That might make him challenge his too-convenient support of a horrendously misogynist bill.

So, spare me the phony umbrage (from the MEN at Bearing Drift; The fact is, a personhood amendment is right out of “The Handmaid’s Tale,” no matter how mocking, cynical, overbearing and drippingly contemptuous these Bearing Drift MEN are. The clumsiness of the mailing list notwithstanding, James Harder provided a service to call out Yost’s support of such legislation. Joseph Yost: More extreme than Mississippi voters. He needs to go.

Video: Vote “Ben Buccinelli” for Virginia Governor!

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Hahahahaha, love it!