Home Blog Page 2309

Close Cuccinelli Ally: “Screw the stock market” and Shut Down Government!

6

Mark Levin is the same rightwing hate radio host who headlined a rally with Ken Cuccinelli a couple weeks ago in Sterling, Virginia. It was at that same rally that another close ally of Cuccinelli’s made an anti-Semitic joke. And no, despite erroneous corporate media reporting, Cuccinelli has NEVER “denounced” or “condemned” those remarks, just said they were “inappropriate” to be uttered in public and “unfortunate” (yeah, for him politically!). Anyway, we’ll see if Cuccinelli is willing to break with Levin on his “screw the stock market” comment, but I strongly doubt it, as Cuccinelli thinks exactly the same way as his Teahadist buddies.

Virginia News Headlines: Republicans-Shut-Down-the-Government Edition

16

Here are a few Virginia and national news headlines, political and otherwise, for Tuesday, October 1. Also check out the video, in which Rep. Gerry Connolly correctly points his finger at what can only be described as the Republicans’ “mass psychosis” for what’s going on right now.

*Shutdown begins: Stalemate forces first U.S. government closure in 17 years (And the Post gets off to a bad start; this is not a “stalemate,” it is ONE SIDE – the Republicans – forcing the government to shut down by putting forth completely absurd, extreme, un-democratic goals that they 100% know are a non-starter. I almost hate the pathetic, cowardly corporate media worse than I hate Republicans like Ted Cruz, Rand Paul, and Eric Cantor, if that’s humanly possible.)

*What the shutdown means for federal employees

*No more excuses on climate change (“Skeptics and deniers can make all the noise they want, but a landmark new report is unequivocal: There is a 95 percent chance that human-generated emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are changing the climate in ways that court disaster.” And we need to take strong action about it, now, on an emergency basis. So where the hell’s the sense of urgency?!?)

*The tea party’s revolt against reality (Column by conservative Republican Michael Gerson nails it: the Tea Party can’t handle reality, including an America that’s changing rapidly before their eyes, and they’re throwing a massive temper tantrum about it.)

*It’s Day One for Obamacare (Great news; millions of Americans can now buy quality health care coverage at affordable prices. Only a Teahadist could possibly see this as a bad thing.)

*Shutdown stalemate shows larger GOP dilemma: How to be a governing party (They have to marginalize the Tea Party and work across the aisle to get stuff done. To date, they have been unwilling and/or unable to do either of those things.)

*Cuccinelli, McAuliffe stake out clashing views on Obamacare as shutdown looms (Cuccinelli, needless to say, is part of what Gerry Connolly calls the “mass psychosis” wing of the Republican Party.)

*3rd bid in governor’s race could cost Cuccinelli (More importantly is that Cuccinelli is so far-right, including on “social issues,” that there’s an opening for someone like Sarvis.)

*Pursuing truth under negativism (“At the very least, such issues speak to the attorney general’s ability to manage his office for the benefit of Virginians.”)

*McAuliffe stumps with support of Crutchfield (“Less than a year after hosting a rally for Republican vice presidential hopeful Paul Ryan, Charlottesville-area businessman Bill Crutchfield on Monday endorsed Democrat Terry McAuliffe for governor.”)

*McDonnell: “A pox on both houses” for federal shutdown (I can understand why a Republican would say that, but can someone please tell me ONE THING Democrats have done to deserve any blame in this, let alone a “pox” on them? Uhhhhhhh…)

*Virginia prepares for shutdown’s effects, McDonnell says (Not sure how we really “prepare” for this.)

*Barreling toward oblivion (“Virginia’s economy is particularly vulnerable to harm in  a government shutdown.” Yet Virginia’s Republican House members voted to shut the government down rather than see the health care law continue to be implemented. They all need to be voted out of office for that. Every. Single. One. Of. Them.)

*Bolling lobbies for two-term governor, redistricting changes (I strongly agree: we definitely need bipartisan, or better yet NONpartisan, redistricting. We also should ditch the ridiculous one-term limit on our governors.)

*Donors fill boards of Va. universities (Yet another case of money, not necessarily MERIT, buying access. That’s not the way America is supposed to work.)

*Virginia Beach plans to branch out with more trees

*New season, same goal: Stanley Cup

*A warm and sunny start for October (Well, at least the weather will be nice as you’re out of work. I suggest you use it to get out and put up signs, knock on doors, etc., urging Virginians to vote Democratic on November 5!)

Time to Shut Down the GOP

4

A few tweets and quotes sum up how i feel about now.

*‏@NancyPelosi tweets, “That’s the 45th vote to derail #ACA & proof that Rs are bent on shutting down the govt. Time to #ShutdownTheGOP, keep govt open for America.”

*Conservative Michael Gerson writes an article headlined, “The tea party’s revolt against reality”: “We are no longer seeing a revolt against the Republican leadership, or even against the Republican “establishment”; this revolt is against anyone who accepts the constraints of political reality. Conservatives are excommunicated not for holding the wrong convictions but for rational calculations in service of those convictions.”

*Right winger Jennifer Rubin writes an article headlined, “All working according to plan, just not the GOP’s”: “At some point, the Republicans in the House, with or without the Vitter Amendment and with or without the Dems, will pass a clean CR. Anyone who imagined they’d obtain something monumental by threatening to blow themselves up must have been, well, working for Heritage Action or one of its comrades.”

*Ezra Klein boils it all down to one sentence: “The GOP has become an insurgent outlier in American politics – it is ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.” Klein also urges, Don’t forget what the shutdown is really about.

My thoughts: let’s start shutting down the Teahadists, once and for all, at the ballot booths. It starts right here in Virginia on November 5, then continues in November 2014 when we have a chance to toss out all the Tea Party nuts who rode into town on the 2010 teabagger tsunami.

Any other thoughts, other than outrage and revulsion at these extremist wackos – the Ted Cruzes, Rand Pauls, and all the Republican nuts in the House of Representatives?

P.S. I just checked Ken Kookinelli’s Facebook page, and all I saw about the government shutdown was Cuccinelli’s ludicrous Big Lie, somehow attempting to tie Terry McAuliffe to it. I know, what universe does this guy live in? Definitely not the universe known by most of us as “reality.”

Gov. Bob McDonnell says it’s “absolutely wrong” to threaten government shutdown over “Obamacare”

7

Gov. McDonnell is absolutely correct. The problem is, the Teahadists running his party – people like Eric Can’tor and of course Ken Cuccinelli – aren’t listening.

UPDATE: The McAuliffe campaign says “Ken Cuccinelli needs to follow Governor McDonnell’s lead and tell his Tea Party friends that using the threat of government shutdown as a bargaining chip is dangerous and wrong…Instead of rolling out the red carpet for Senator Ted Cruz, Ken Cuccinelli needs to put aside his ideological agenda and finally do what’s right for the Commonwealth.”

Thoughts on the Eve of the Latest GOP-Manufactured, Unnecessary Crisis

0



President Obama says: I won’t negotiate over the debt ceiling.

John Boehner says: Won’t negotiate? That’s not how things work.

I say: No negotiation with terrorist blackmailers is long-established American policy.

****************

These Republicans are the same guys who have been banging the drum about how bad for the U.S. Economy “Uncertainty” is.

Do they give out awards for most blatant hypocrisy?

****************

People now see the crazy destructiveness, but something is strikingly still missing.

Why don’t our national commentators spend more time on questions like:

“How did it come to pass that one of our two major political parties has become this monstrosity?”

Or: “How did the Republican Party break so bad?”

Mark Herring Calls on Mark Obenshain to Condemn Tea Party Effort to Shut Down Government

1

From the Mark Herring for Attorney General campaign: 

 

Shutdown demonstrates ‘politics at its worst’ and reflects the Tea Party’s view of governance

 

Democratic candidate for Attorney General Mark Herring is calling on his Tea Party opponent Mark Obenshain to condemn the Congressional Republican obstructionism aimed at shutting down the Federal Government.

 

“The federal government shutdown being pushed by the Tea Party is politics at its worst. The shutdown would have devastating consequences for Virginia’s families and Virginia’s businesses, and Tea Party politicians are continuing to put their political agendas ahead of the country,” said Herring. “I’m calling on my opponent in this race for Attorney General, Senator Obenshain, to join me in condemning the extreme Tea Party faction in the United States Congress that is actively rooting for a shutdown of the Federal government."

 

Earlier this year, Senator Mark Obenshain was endorsed by the Virginia Tea Party federation. Additionally, one of the Tea Party leaders working to shut down the government – Senator Ted Cruz – was in Virginia recently to campaign for the extreme Republican ticket.

 

However, Obenshain has yet to condemn their actions that will result in a government shutdown, which would have devastating consequences for Virginia.

 

“The Tea Party’s actions at the federal level are an example of the type of leadership we can expect from politicians who support their efforts at the state level. Both Ken Cuccinelli and Mark Obenshain have deep ties to the Tea Party and will continue to push extreme agendas here in Virginia. Most notably by trying to ban common forms of birth control,” Herring added.

 

The House’s most recent bill included a ‘conscience clause’ that would allow employers to opt out of covering basic preventive and contraceptive services for women’s health. Cuccinelli and Obenshain sponsored together the personhood amendment which would have banned certain types of birth control for women in Virginia.

 

“Obenshain and Cuccinelli have shown they have a similar approach as the Tea Party in Congress. Now they have a chance to show Virginians that that is not how they would lead,” Herring said. “It’s time for them to renounce their Tea Party ties and call on Republicans to put politics aside and avoid a government shutdown.” 

Shut It Down

0

Our eagles wings are provided by promises kept to each other — birds cheerfully singing and honey bees pollenating our survival, we’re awaken by promises to ourselves of Exceptionalism, beckoning:  l’avant toujours de l’avant.  Or we could just shut it all down.

Our eagles wings are provided by promises kept to each other — birds cheerfully singing and honey bees pollenating our survival, we’re awaken by promises to ourselves of Exceptionalism, beckoning:  l’avant toujours de l’avant.  Or we could just shut it all down.

Even the most subtle gesture or tiniest injection of courageous wonder for what’s new beyond conservative nose tips, ventures us forward embraced by the possibilities of living from a life changing point of view, and voila:  The New World.

Chasing her, a new puppy saves the life of a lazy old cat; a reluctant warrior, with proven stealth in Seal incursion and Drone explosion, speaks softly with a big stick of pinprick removal of chemical weapons and suddenly:  World Peace, at least in the Middle East, is whispered promise of a light upon our pathway, instead of a Miss America punch line.

Heeding the hopeful progress of charming candlelight, we can seize the adventure in a tunnel whose darkness echoes the question of the gods:  where’s the outrage at shutting down those to whom much is given, much is expected?

America can’t sustain as The Home of the Brave when burdened by a House of Representatives, divided in gridlocked focus on shut down.  We are either, Out of Many, One, keeping our promises to each other or, we immolate the leaves of Fall in colorful splendor, descending to the ground shaken by the frost of Congressional cold shoulders.

We either unite to right our ship of state on this Supreme first Monday in October, or we lay on our side like an ill-fated Cruz leaking oil and gas on those left afloat by tea that has lost its moral taste for The Golden Rule, drowning America’s soul in shut down.

We shut down ourselves when proclaiming, support our troops, except on pay day.

We’re shut down singing America the Beautiful to the world, while locking America’s school kids out of our national parks.

When we allow a Senator, and those who voted for and against him, the freedom to speak their mindset through him, even if twenty-one hours of nonsensical rambling, we are America.

However, when we allow our media to bestow Milton Berle’s Mr. Television crown on the head of an onerous excuse for Filibuster, as prelude to shortsighted political aggrandizement at the expense of God’s reputation and country’s budget, in a stand-up tragi-comedy performed for those few who choose the blight of ignorance over the light of knowledge, we are in, reality check shut down.

Every time we buy that extra-large portion, convinced by Madison Ave TV value meal ad, we are led by the nose, and stomach, down the road of keep them fat, lazy and stupid, to obesity shut down.

Fat covered, we move on to be pharmaceutical puppets  for  those who push the pills juggling vital numbers to shut down our ability to remember normal as a healthy diet and exercise that keeps us alive and kicking without supporting corporate drug habit.

Stage two, give ’em caricature distractions using pretend patriotism and fear inducing fake causes to protect the protected nameless/faceless from losing their payoff from keeping the masses confused, misdirected and mesmerized by corporate owned medium is the message:  look into my digital devices, and shut down.

Third base is I Don’t Know, affordable health care for all, being infected by broken promises from institutions surgically removing their promised employee benefits?

Home safe, we have within us the cure for rising insurance costs:  Movement is proof of life; sideline silence, like K & Wall Streets’ intersection plunder: Shut Down.

‘The very nature of promises is that they remain immune to changing circumstances’ – House of Cards

Sen. Adam Ebbin Applauds Ted Olson, David Boies for Joining VA Marriage Equality Lawsuit

0

From Virginia State Senator Adam Ebbin (D-Alexandria/Arlington): 

Openly gay lawmaker also commends the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the ACLU of Virginia and Lambda Legal for their Western District suit

"Today I thank and commend attorneys Ted Olson and David Boies for joining the lawsuit in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia seeking marriage equality. Mr. Olson and Mr. Boies are among America’s finest legal minds and I am delighted that they are putting their talents to use in seeking to strike down of the Commonwealth’s draconian Marshall-Newman amendment. Their skills were recently proven when they successfully argued for the US Supreme Court to strike down California’s Proposition 8.

I also applaud the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia, the American Civil Liberties Union and Lambda Legal for their filing of a motion for summary judgment today asking the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia for a swift resolution to their previously filed suit.

 I have great hope that these suits will ultimately lead to national marriage equality, as Loving v. Virginia led to the end of multiple states’ miscegenation laws in 1967.

This legal effort keeps with the tradition of advocacy for civil liberties by fair-minded Virginians initiated hundreds of years ago with James Madison's and George Mason’s fight for the Bill of Rights.

 It is not a question of whether marriage equality will come to Virginia; it is a question of when. This is the time for Virginia to wake up from history–as Jefferson said, 'laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind.'"

#  #  #

Virginia State Senator Adam P. Ebbin (D-30) represents part of the City of Alexandria as well as portions of Arlington and Fairfax Counties. Elected to the Virginia Senate in 2011, he previously served four terms in the House of Delegates. Ebbin is the first openly gay member of the Virginia General Assembly. 

Looming Shutdown Underscores Cuccinelli’s Strategy Guy’s Mistake

7

by Paul Goldman

Here at 200-proof, we have had enough success to feel comfortable admitting what we don’t know. So we stand in awe of those who seem to know everything. Especially the latest: who is going to get blamed for any federal government shutdown. We aren’t that smart. No way. But we aren’t without common sense at least. Meaning that we learn from mistakes and that means both your own along with those of others.

Case in point: Chris LaCivita, the strategy dude for Ken Cuccinelli. The looming federal government shutdown shows why his strategy has taken Cuccinelli from a landslide win in the first Post Poll to a landslide loss in the latest. We aren’t saying either poll is right in terms of the outcome predicted. But that’s not the lesson. Tather, the lesson is to learn why there has been such a huge reversal, why a campaign has turned Cuccinelli from a guy with decent job and personal approval to the most disliked major party candidate for Governor EVER in the modern era.

How did the AG go from a guy with a good image to a guy with an image so bad, it takes the likes of E.W. Jackson to make him look good in comparison. What went wrong?

That’s easy: LaCivita’s strategy has kept Cuccinelli on the defensive from Day #1. From the moment he beat Bill Bolling so badly in the early maneuvering that the LG dropped out of the GOP GUV nomination race, Cuccinelli has found himself on the defensive day after day, on every possible issue of the day or week or month. The big win over Bolling became a big time problem overnight.

There are only two lessons certain for the last year in VA politics. One, there would be some story on the Governor’s race. And two, in that story, Cuccinelli would find himself on the defensive. This isn’t to say Terry McAuliffe had it easy, as he got bashed most of the times too.

But LaCivita managed to adopt THE WORST possible strategy. The result: it kept his man both as the center of attention and also on the defensive day after day. “Do you wanna piece of me?” should be the Cuccinelli theme song, aka Brittany Spears.

To me, the looming shutdown of the federal government symbolizes the Cuccinelli/LaCivita blunder, entirely avoidable I should add. They adopted this strategy after careful review. Amazing. Why?  

It is clear the LaCivita strategy for winning has been based in good measure on using Cuccinelli’s headline-making fight against Obamacare as the key closing positive issue. Back in April, this made perfect sense to Chris. The Obamacare exchanges were do to open tomorrow, October 1. The law is unpopular among the key groups any Republican needs to win, especially Cuccinelli. The LaCivita strategy assumed there would be massive “free” attention given to the law, and that this would allow them to use their resources in the last month to help Cuccinelli ride this wave – also tied to the Medicaid expansion/budget resources – issues all way through the last weeks of the campaign.

With TMac squarely on the other side of Cuccinelli on these issues, the dramatic contrast fit the only strategy LaCivita does in politics. But Chris, a war veteran, forgpt the first rule of warfare: the battle plan lasts until the battle begins. This is the oldest rule in warfare, it explains why troops, not generals, win battles; why captains in a forward position, not guys with ribbons and stars safely back at HQ, are the keys to victory.

That is to say; Just as LaCivita’s strategy, the one that has held the Cuccinelli campaign hostage for months, is about to start, “stuff happens” as they say. “Buddy, gonna shut you down” from the line from the old Beach Boys song. Or put another way: LaCivita now has a strategy he doesn’t control, as the whole Obamacare/Medicaid expansion debate has been hijacked by Washington. Like I say, we at 200-proof applaud those who are so smart they can tell us how it will all play out.

All we have done over the course of these months is say that our analysis pointed to a Democratic sweep this year when the other gurus were claiming a “sure” Cuccinelli victory, NOT because we are smart, but rather because we simply try to be honest observers. And what we observed was a Cuccinelli/LaCivita strategy that NEVER TOOK THE OFFENSE. You don’t win that way.

Political math is simple: You don’t win votes on the defensive, you don’t win votes when you have to explain your position over and over. That’s lose-lose. If you have an 11-point lead in the polls, you might be able to run a defensive strategy and fall across the finish line in first place by 2 points. It happens. But only if you have a solid lead at first.

Thus the symbolism of the looming shutdown as regards Cuccinelli and LaCivita. First, it has stolen the “play” from Cuccinelli, and thus he has lost control of the Obamacare issue after months of betting the “ranch” on having October 1 be the start of his Obamacare end game. Cuccinelli has lost the offensive, and is now at the mercy of the political gods. It might still work out for him; the public is so unhappy with all sides, anything could happen if the shutdown gets out of hand, especially with the debt ceiling debt due to be teed up shortly.

Or put another way: As the campaign enters its crucial closing weeks, the Cuccinelli/LaCivita strategy plotted for months is in real danger of being overshadowed big time by a shutdown that redefines the Obamacare debate for most people, and then a debt ceiling debate.

It could be that the President’s image suffers some more damage, driving his favorables to the 40% level. That should be good for Cuccinelli under normal circumstances. BUT the problem for Cuccinelli is that McDonnell’s image has taken the biggest hit in NOVA, which in turn is the area of the state most attuned to the shutdown debate in DC. Thus, to the extent that the GOP in Congress and the GOP Governor help offset the President’s upside numbers in NOVA, it may not help Cuccinelli at all. Given that NOVA is a key to any Democratic win, the shutdown threatens to hurt, not help, Cuccinelli in the very geographic area he can’t afford any more slippage. Anything driving his image to the “my way or the highway” view hurts him.

Secondly, to the extent the narrative talks about the Republicans seeming inability to “govern”, this is very difficult for Cuccinelli running for an executive post. To me, the LaCivita strategy has failed the biggest by costing Cuccinelli the positive job ratings he had in the Spring.

This is a malpractice-level blunder. True, the polls say the AG is seen has having the better experience. But this matrix hasn’t won an governor’s election EVER in Virginia. This is especially true for a guy like Cuccinelli, whose claim to the GUV job requires him to be seen as an anti-establishment “man of the people” type of fiscal conservative. You can’t both run as the rebel, and then as the guy with the most experience in the establishment government!

That this problem has bedeviled Cuccinelli is evidence by his constantly failed attempts to be the anti-establishment candidate, yet the AG who defends the tolls, the transportation taxes and the like of the establishment political class in Richmond. ACDC worked for ACDC, but that was a rock band.

THUS, the LaCivita strategy blunder is seen clearly again through the shutdown storm clouds. Cuccinelli is again caught in the middle, forced to be against Obamacare as everyone else on Cruz control, but at the same time against a shutdown. Terry gets to take a clean line.

As we have written, Cuccinelli would have been better off being fish or fowl, take a clean position on a clean CR or not, one way or the other, let people know where you stand in a way that they can get a clear image of you. But again, his strategy risks getting Cuccinelli the worst of both worlds: he is seen as an ideologue by his opponents, and as a blurred line by too many of those who should be strongly out there working for him.

Like the GOP in Congress, the problem with the strategy is this: You are constantly on the defensive no matter what you do. Conservatives blame the press for this. If only it were that simple. Right now, Americans want less drama. That’s why they elected Obama. The Bush Presidency was one fight after another. This is Obama’s risk right now; the independents are tired of the drama, they want the government to function, they don’t want to keep reading and seeing the dysfunction. The public may decide not to blame one side or the other. Thus, they could easily blame both sides sufficiently enough to give neither side a clear edge when the shutdown smoke and possibly fire end.

For an underdog to be elected Governor, he is going to need a clean closing message, not one with all this other stuff attached. That’s the Cuccinelli/LaCivita blunder in my view at this moment. They have kept digging, month after month, convinced that in the end, come October 1, their message would be ready to deliver.

So they stayed on the defensive, always finding a move that kept them on the defensive, always forcing them to explain this or that, yada, yada, yada. It has been one double-down after another. But this morning, this is where things stand. The LaCivita strategy has put Cuccinelli at the mercy of events. That is not where you want to be heading into the last month of a campaign down in the polls. And yet that’s exactly where Ken Cuccinelli finds himself as September turns to October…