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Breaking: Cuccinelli Resigns Office over Star Scientific and Transportation Conflicts of Interest

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Happy April Fool’s Day from the Democratic Party of Virginia! (note: there’s nothing funny about Cuccinelli’s unethical behavior)

Richmond, VA – Today in a surprising turn of events, Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli announced that he will resign as Virginia’s Attorney General. Cuccinelli said in a statement that issues like his conflict of interest with drug company Star Scientific and his ideological attacks on the bipartisan transportation compromise are making it impossible for him to do his job impartially.

“I have come to realize that my political ambitions are not always compatible with the what’s best for the people of this Commonwealth and that now is the time for me to resign,” said Cuccinelli in a statement. “Virginians need an Attorney General who is focused 100% on their business, not on running a campaign, defending conflict of interest allegations and trying to derail transportation deals.”

Cuccinelli had previously refused to follow the precedent of the past 6 Attorneys General and resign, even as news broke that he failed to disclose holding thousands in stock from a company that is suing Virginia to avoid paying $700,000 in taxes. Cuccinelli’s office insists its failure to move forward on its case against Star Scientific since August of 2011 has nothing to do with the stock he owns or the $13,000 in gifts its CEO gave Cuccinelli that year. Still, he acknowledged that Virginians deserve better than to wonder whether Cuccinelli’s financial stake and close relationship with the company led him to sandbag the lawsuit.

Cuccinelli also said his multiple efforts to torpedo this year’s bipartisan transportation funding deal would make it impossible for him to do his job and represent the law in court impartially. He has so far refused to say whether or not he would repeal the law if elected Governor, but his resignation does mean Virginians can now trust their lawyer to fight to protect the historic funding for roads and infrastructure.

In other news, the Democratic Party of Virginia today wished all Virginians a happy April Fool’s Day and expressed sympathy to voters who are realizing that this prank may be the only time they read about Ken Cuccinelli putting growing our economy and preserving government accountability and transparency ahead of his personal agenda.

Virginia News Headlines: Monday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Monday, April 1. Oh, and it’s opening day for the Washington Nationals, even if it still doesn’t quite feel like it. Go Nats!

*Immigration Reform Deal Close Senators Say, Could Be ‘Rolled Out Next Week’

*As Administration Decides On Keystone, U.S. Experiences Two Tar Sands Spills This Week (That makes the decision even easier: NO!)

*Why conservatives hate college (“The right’s decades-long war on academia and ‘liberal professors’ is about defining an elite ‘populists’ can oppose”)

*Poll shows shift in Va. on same-sex marriage

*McDonnell traded favors with dietary supplements maker now under investigation (So slimy.)

*What’s the Deal With Star Scientific, McDonnell and Cuccinelli? (This needs to be fully investigated.)

*Cuccinelli called ‘roadblock’ to funding bill

*Today’s top opinion: Hidden tax

*Governor’s changes to transportation deal not expected to derail it (“When lawmakers return to the Virginia Capitol on Wednesday to consider revisions to the landmark transportation deal and other amendments, Gov. Robert F. McDonnell’s suggested changes may not give them much new to fight over, some say.”)

*Pay cut could be coming for part-time professors (“With Gov. Bob McDonnell limiting part-time state workers to 29 hours a week, some are bracing for a cutback in hours that translates into as much as a one-third pay cut.”)

*Cuccinelli springs April Fool’s joke

*Survey shines spotlight on Warner, McDonnell

*Sen. Kaine to tour Langley and Oceana

*Building boom fuels region’s economic rebound

*Roanoke, get ready (“Two transportation projects – one by road, the other by rail – will have a large impact on Roanoke. The city must prepare.”)

*3 dead, dozens hospitalized Sunday in I-77 pileup near Fancy Gap

*Easter at Wal-Mart in NoVa

*For the skipper, full steam ahead (“The Nationals say this will be Davey Johnson’s final season as their manager. But that’s not on his mind now.”)

*Will Ware be stuck with the bill? (“Players are often unprotected by the huge NCAA system they play for — and injuries can mean crippling bills”)

To Increase Costs or Not to Increase Costs On Energy Use: Increase Costs!

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Although widely unpopular, the idea that Americans should pay MORE for energy to reduce overall usage is indeed an option that requires serious consideration by Federal, state, and local governments.

At present, the U.S. participates in one of the world’s most egregious market distortions by keeping the costs of energy down in the country. By looking at both government supports and what “policymakers are refusing to do,” a recent report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded that governments across the planet held energy costs down by $2 trillion in 2011. The U.S. was, of course, one of the worst offenders.

While increasing the costs of energy in the U.S. may be a bitter pill to swallow at first, it’s nothing that U.S. citizens cannot cope with and it may also have the indirect effect of making Americans more aware of climate change itself, not just how much energy their using or not using.

And herein lies the biggest challenge that any government, private or nonprofit group faces in raising climate change awareness: how do you make what appears to many Americans as an abstract “thing” that has no apparent, immediate, or direct impact on their lives into a tangible phenomenon that has real-world effects everyday in each of our lives? The pictures and stories of wild fires in the West, droughts in the Midwest, and chaotic weather in the Northeast haven’t had the desired effect on most Americans (however, there are a number of conflicting polls on this and related issues; no duh, right?!).  

In an important way, the immensity of the problem of climate change has been a real issue and those who have attempted to raise awareness haven’t done the best of jobs conveying the simple, everyday tasks that Americans can undertake to reduce their “carbon footprint”. Or if the ideas have been proposed, they haven’t been pushed very hard on Americans reluctant to, for instance, car pool with their neighbors to work.

The pessimists say that it will take a catastrophe for Americans to finally come around to the idea that we will all have to make some sacrifices in our daily lives. However, catastrophes have already happened and still little, if any, positive change has occurred.

We shouldn’t throw in the towel, of course. Cultural shifts like the one many individuals are advocating to reduce America’s carbon footprint take time. But increasing the price of energy for Americans would certainly go a long way in expediting that process!  

In Easter Message, Pope Francis Condemns Greed, “iniquitous exploitation of natural resources”

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From Pope Francis’ Urbi et Orbi Message, Easter 2013.

Peace in the whole world, still divided by greed looking for easy gain, wounded by the selfishness which threatens human life and the family, selfishness that continues in human trafficking, the most extensive form of slavery in this twenty-first century. Peace to the whole world, torn apart by violence linked to drug trafficking and by the iniquitous exploitation of natural resources! Peace to this our Earth! Made the risen Jesus bring comfort to the victims of natural disasters and make us responsible guardians of creation.

Great stuff. Of course, Paul Ryan, Ken Cuccinelli, and their fellow Ayn Rand fans in the Republican Party can’t be happy with Pope Francis’ condemnation of greed and selfishness, his call to end the “iniquitous exploitation of natural resources” (can we say tar sands? mountaintop removal coal mining? spewing of carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the atmosphere?), and his plea that we be “responsible guardians of creation.” Don’t worry, though, I’m sure Paul Ryan, Ken Cuccinelli et al. will just ignore this part of Pope Francis’ message. But the rest of us certainly shouldn’t!

Virginia News Headlines: Sunday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Sunday, March 31. Oh, and the photo is what tar sands look like when they spill all over your backyard and the rest of your neighborhood. Lovely, huh? Yeah, let’s do a lot more of this. NOT!

*Labor, business reach immigration deal

*Will GOP governors’ plan to fight Obamacare in the states backfire? (“The Republican slogan of ‘repeal and replace’ has given way to ‘resist and annoy.'”)

*Stop the fossil-fuel subsidies (“CONSUMERS AREN’T paying nearly enough for their energy, and that’s a massive problem for the planet.”)

*The Senate’s moment on guns

*Anyone else want to be governor?

*The governor we can no longer have

*The Marquee ’13 Race: Let’s Keep It Clean, Guys

*Va. Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli’s disclosure of stock holdings was delayed

*Va. Gov. McDonnell on two-way street with chief executive of struggling company (Lovely.)

*Schapiro: Using history, McAuliffe can connect with Va. (“For the showman who aspires to be a statesman, a grasp of history – particularly of the vaunted office he seeks – could be a potent weapon against Republican Ken Cuccinelli.”)

*Terry McAuliffe invests millions in Virginia’s local governments

*What you need to know about the new photo ID law

*The Beltway is turning into mush (“The vital, crumbling highway is just one of thousands in America that have reached the end of their baby-boomer life span.”)

*Sensible budget for uncertain times (“For the coming year of uncertainty about defense spending and health care costs, Virginia Beach officials have proposed a reasonable budget that maintains the 95-cent real estate tax rate and plans for the future”)

*Nationals are all in for years to come (“Shrewd leadership has turned Washington’s baseball team into a potential dynasty.”)

This TED Talk’s for “Job Creator” Pete Snyder

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Virginia Republican LG candidate Pete Snyder loves to fancy himself as a “jobs creator” who “built that” all by himself (e.g., he gives ZERO credit to the education system that provides skilled workers, the military that defends the country, the police and firefighters who keep businesses and the rest of us safe, etc, etc.). Well, here’s a video that Snyder should watch – a TED talk by a guy who’s created a LOT more businesses than Snyder ever will, yet who comes to a completely different conclusion than Snyder does about who the real “job creators” are. Check it out.

I have started or helped start, dozens of businesses and initially hired lots of people. But if no one could have afforded to buy what we had to sell, my businesses would all have failed and all those jobs would have evaporated.

That’s why I can say with confidence that rich people don’t create jobs, nor do businesses, large or small. What does lead to more employment is a “circle of life” like feedback loop between customers and businesses. And only consumers can set in motion this virtuous cycle of increasing demand and hiring. In this sense, an ordinary middle-class consumer is far more of a job creator than a capitalist like me.

[…]

[O]ur current policies are … upside down. When you have a tax system in which most of the exemptions and the lowest rates benefit the richest, all in the name of job creation, all that happens is that the rich get richer.

Since 1980, the share of income for the richest Americans has more than tripled while effective tax rates have declined by close to 50%.

If it were true that lower tax rates and more wealth for the wealthy would lead to more job creation, then today we would be drowning in jobs. And yet unemployment and under-employment is at record highs.

Tax Me: Is Virginia’s Anti-Tax Pledge Era Over?

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by Paul Goldman

Are we witnessing the end of an era? Is the anti-tax pledge, thought by many to be a prerequisite to becoming Virginia’s governor, relegated to folklore?

Mark Warner, Tim Kaine and Bob McDonnell all made explicit promises not to raise taxes if elected governor. They made sure the voters got it. Once in office, Warner and McDonnell did in fact raise significant new taxes. Kaine tried but failed to raise taxes when the VA Supreme Court overruled the 2007 transportation tax deal. Technically, this tax deal delegated the power to increasing taxes to an unelected regional body, so it wasn’t legally the Governor/General Assembly doing it. This is why the Supreme Court shot it down as unconstitutional. Moreover, these were regional, not state taxes. But it is also fair to say that Kaine would have signed a statewide sales tax increase if the General Assembly would have sent him such a bill. This is hardly a revelation. The public got it once he took the oath of office.

Thus, the 200-proof political question: Is the “Read My Lips, No New Taxes” era over in Virginia gubernatorial politics? Warner and Kaine are now U.S. Senators, while Bob McDonnell has a solid political image in the Commonwealth. Meaning: As best one can tell from the objective evidence, their decision to break explicit “No Tax” pledges have not hurt them with voters; Indeed, their decision to break the pledge in order to deal with an important issues – budget and transportation – may actually have helped each of them, some more than others of course.

Now comes 2013. Presumptive Democratic gubernatorial nominee Terry McAuliffe has taken the Warner/Kaine/McDonnell experience to its logical next step, becoming the first gubernatorial candidate in history to publicly endorse, indeed push, a tax increase during an election year. Further point: prior to 1985, explicit No Tax pledges at the gubernatorial level were considered fiscally irresponsible by every single winning gubernatorial candidate in Virginia history. Indeed conservative business and political leaders in both parties were against such pledges and openly so.

 

But in 1981, then Republican candidate Marshall Coleman, looking for a way to “get to the right” of Democratic candidate Chuck Robb, took the “No Tax” pledge. Robb called it fiscally irresponsible on the advice of those who knew a thing or two about how to get elected governor.  Did it play a big role in the campaign? My gut  answer is NO. No one in Virginia had reason to believe Robb would be a big tax-and-spend guy. Indeed, no such person has ever been elected with that image, then or now.

Coleman faced a very tough fight to beat Robb, so the Republican had to try to find daylight where he could. Moreover, President Reagan had been recently elected a few months before, on a No Tax pledge (which he quickly preceded to break about $1 billion times).

Then came 1985. Lt. Governor candidate Doug Wilder, the underdog Democrat, was seen as the most liberal guy ever to run for statewide office by even his own party’s liberals. He took a carefully crafted No Tax pledge aimed at the Sales Tax in particular, since there were rumors of this being raised. Wilder had a record of voting for gas tax increases, meaning he would be the only person ever running statewide as a Democratic nominee with a pro-tax record. Wilder pledged not to increase the sales tax, a levy that had been used in prior years to punish the poor, as the segregationists have acknowledged.

By the Fall of that year, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Gerry Baliles decided to embrace a broad “No Tax Promise” as a clever campaign pledge. He knew it would cut the legs out from under his opponent, the polling very clear on that point. Baliles made the pledge: and his victory was assured. Once elected, he then proceeded to push for, and win an increase in the state sales tax, dedicating it to transportation. Wilder, having won an historic upset win, opposed him, citing his pledge.

Four years later, Wilder had to make a gut call. He spent his years as Lt. Governor trying to redeem Democratic pledges to cut the food tax and the tax on non-prescription drugs. But due to his refusal to back the sales tax increase, his own party refused to give not merely a good policy win, but a good campaign plank as well. That’s the game: We accept it at 200-proof.

So while Baliles got upset, Wilder pledged not to raise taxes: and said you could trust him, he wasn’t going to fool you again. This wasn’t aimed at Baliles: it was aimed at getting elected. Baliles had refused to vote for a gas tax while in the General Assembly because he didn’t want to run on a pro-tax platform.

But all politics to guys wanting to be governor is personal: I get that too; you roll with it, keep your eye on the ball. Wilder’s second historic win was so close – the only governor’s race to require a recount – that his No Tax pledge seemed to be a reason for the victory. There is, of course, no way to ever know for sure.

Republican George Allen picked up on it, and used it in his 1993 campaign. By 1997, GOP guv guy Jim Gilmore went everyone one further, proposing not merely “No Taxes” but in fact a huge tax cut with his “No More Car Tax” pledge. However, by 2001, everyone in Virginia who looked at the objective facts realized Gilmore’s pledge had been brilliant politics, but a disaster as fiscal policy.

My gut: Gilmore’s disaster, which played a big role in Warner’s election (since it led to the anti-Gilmore Republicans creating a budget stalemate for the first time in VA history), has slowly turned the politics of the state on fiscal matters. Thus,while Warner ran on a No Tax pledge, he also left the door open a tad, and in addition made it clear he was willing to back regional tax increases if there was clear evidence the public didn’t oppose such levies.

By 2004, Warner proposed a big package of tax increases and deductions, hoping to get a net $1 billion a year or so. He settled for less, but the sales tax was raised statewide despite a campaign promise to the contrary. His popularity soared: and I believe Tim Kaine, and now Bob McDonnell, took notice.

In that regard, what has now happened in 2013 is surely, as indicated above, a logical extension of the 2004 experience. McDonnell spent the last three years trying every scheme in the book to raise large amounts of new revenue without violating his No Tax pledge. Finally, he gave in.

That Cuccinelli remains strongly anti-tax, and McAuliffe publicly supportive of the new state and regional transportation taxes, is likewise a logical extension of the politics from 1985. Cuccinelli represents the new conservative approach of the Virginia GOP. They consider anything less than a full No Tax position to be fiscally irresponsible. This was not the view of the old conservative approach. In that regard, we can expect to see the 2013 Republican ticket be three folks all against the McDonnell tax deal. McDonnell has always been more political, and less conservative, than Cuccinelli on these kinds of issues.

On the Democratic side, the party leaders were never comfortable with Wilder’s No Tax position. But they took it. By 2009, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Creigh Deeds became the first ever to indicate he would raise taxes – for transportation – if elected. He hedged it as best he could for the longest time but in the end, he was forced to make his pro-tax position clear. Candidate McDonnell blasted him on it. Thus the Cuccinelli v McAuliffe 2013 campaign – on the issue of taxes – could signal the formal end to the No Tax pledge era.

As of right now, there is no evidence – once again – that being pro-tax is a big liability to McAuliffe. Indeed, depending on the politics of transportation come November, it could be a big plus, we just don’t know.  My gut: It all depends on how Cuccinelli plays the tax issue, which has historically always been the best one for the GOP. Terry’s position is clear: and he has a new transportation plan to point to the result. By and large, people know there is no free lunch. Moreover, since the new taxes were passed on a bipartisan basis, this might – or might not I can’t quite decide – be a significant plus on the pro-tax side of the debate.

Terry’s bottom line: Here is my position, here is why I did it, you decide whether it was a good choice. This is basically what any candidate wants, a clear choice for voters when he or she believes in a policy.

What will Cuccinelli do? He seems conflicted, even though he doesn’t believe he is conflicted based on news reports. In that regard, he isn’t like Wilder in 1989: Wilder opposed the transportation tax of his own party’s governor and never apologized, never pretended otherwise, never did anything of the sort.

The 2013 point being: Cuccinelli, a foe of abortion, should of all people be aware that even a male politician can’t be half-pregnant. McDonnell backed the taxes, he needed those taxes – a lot of taxes – to get his “historic” transportation plan. There is no getting around this fact. Thus, Cuccinelli can’t be both anti-tax and pro-McDonnell transportation plan. He has to choose.

When the anti-tax guy isn’t sure of this own issue, then 200-proof politics has to take notice: and wonder why. 200-proof doesn’t judge, we just analyze. Cuccinelli’s actions catch us by surprise. In this regard, he has refused to make an explicit pledge to Mr. Norquist, the No Tax pledge GOP guru.  This might be just a smart way to avoid having to deal with all the crazy pledges candidates sometime are forced to make to various groups. So you just draw the line early and say: I ain’t playing that game. This was my initial reaction. It is a smart play.

But then again: Could it be further proof that the anti-tax pledge era is over in Virginia in terms of it being a pre-requisite to being elected governor?

There there is a corrolary here: What about having an anti-tax image, this also no longer a big thing in VA politics?

Perhaps it is just AG Cuccinelli blurring things for GUV candidate Cuccinelli?

200 proof would have expected Cuccinelli to handling the anti-tax issue differently based on how Republicans see Virginia politics.

So what gives we ask?

We should know shortly.  

Audio: Bolling Won’t Endorse Cuccinelli; Rips Him as “too extreme…confrontational and combative”

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After stating (at 3:45 into the audio) that he will NOT be endorsing Ken Cuccinelli in this year’s gubernatorial campaign, Virginia Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling (R) talks (starting at around 4:45) about his relationship with Virginia Republicans and conservatives since he started considering a run for governor. Pop up some popcorn, because this is good! 🙂

As far as [RPV] Chairman Pat Mullins is concerned, I haven’t heard from him, I haven’t heard from the Attorney General, frankly I haven’t heard from any of these folks, which doesn’t particularly surprise me. But look, the only heat that I took during this entire process, to be perfectly honest, came from the more, I’ll just call them passionate elements in our party, who do represent more of the more extreme views within our party. But as far as mainstream Republicans, people that I’ve known and worked with for years, I think almost every one of them that I talked to was totally understanding of the position we were in…many of them frankly were supportive.

I will tell you, I’m not alone in the concerns that I have about the current direction of the Republican Party. There are a lot of other Republican elected officials and party leaders out there who share these exact same concerns, they’re just not in a position to voice them…At this particular point in time…I think I’ve been put in a position…to speak out on the need for a more mainstream approach to governing in Virginia…and the other is to speak out candidly to my fellow Republicans and talk about the need to get our party back to a more mainstream approach.

Great stuff.

In other news, Bolling says that Terry McAuliffe has not offered him any position in his administration if he’s elected governor. Bolling also says that most moderate and independent Virginia voters see Ken Cuccinelli as “too extreme…too ideologically driven…too confrontational and combative…too focused on the incredibly controversial and divisive issues of the day.” The question is, Bollins says, can Cuccinelli redefine himself, and does he even “want to do that, or is [Cuccinelli] gonna double down on the conservative ideology of the farthest right wings of the Republican Party?”  

Finally, Bolling agrees with the RNC assessment that the GOP is now viewed as “scary, out of touch and simply too extreme,” and “I think that is an accurate assessment.” For instance, on the issue of abortion, the GOP is “by and large” a “pro-life party,” but that doesn’t mean the GOP should focus on “controversial and divisive issues like fetal ultrasound.” Instead, “why aren’t we the party that’s championing efforts to reduce teen pregnancy in Virginia…support for crisis pregnancy centers…adoption as an option to abortion?” In Bolling (100% correct) view, “these are positive pro-life alternatives that would be supported not just by pro-life Virginians but by most pro-choice Virginians, and at the end of the day they’d probably do more to reduce the number of abortions being performed in our state than the fetal ultrasound will ever do.” As Bolling puts it, that’s all part of the Republican Party not being the “stupid party,” as Bobby Jindal put it. I couldn’t agree more with every word Bill Bolling said here!

Evolution on the issue of same-sex marriage doesn’t make up for Stone Age views on the environment

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While some of Virginia’s elected officials have ‘evolved’ their thinking on same-sex marriage, the same cannot be said about the dangers posed by construction projects like the Keystone XL Pipeline, a project that has become the ultimate symbol of the Northern Hemisphere’s rush to exploit any and all forms of energy, regardless of the short or long-term consequences.

Environmentally conscientious Virginian’s recently confronted one those elected officials from Virginia who has failed to see the negative climate as well as human and environmental health effects of the Keystone XL Pipeline, Sen. Mark Warner. One of those conscientious Virginians summed up her frustration with Warner the best:

“It wasn’t his telling the TV reporters, “I’m very concerned about climate change” that disturbed me, but rather his citing the State Department’s recently issued Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) as evidence that Keystone would have no major environmental impact. Didn’t he know it has been revealed that the EIS had been prepared by individuals with close ties to TransCanada, the company pushing to build the pipeline?”

It’s not difficult to understand why Warner has spoken so equivocally about the Keystone Pipeline; Warner no doubt believes that personally rejecting the pipeline will leave him open to attack by more moderate and conservative Democratic Party contenders for the 2016 presidential nomination. Maybe Warner is even worried about losing his U.S. Senate Seat come the next round of elections.

But here’s a newsflash for political REPRESENTATIVES: you are not in office to aggrandize yourselves. You are in office to serve your constituency and hopefully, your country (and maybe even the planet!) as a whole. I know, what heresy!

Warner is being cynical when he states on the one hand that “I’m very concerned about climate change,” while on the other hand citing the U.S. State Department’s recent Environmental Impact Statement which essentially gave the green light to start final construction of the Keystone Pipeline.

The State Department review process was as fraught with political considerations as a fete thrown at the palace of King Louis XVI, and Warner knows it.

Sen. Warner may have “evolved” on the issue of same-sex marriage, but growing one arm while the other remains missing still leaves you limited in the actions you can accomplish for the people of Virginia.  

Virginia News Headlines: Saturday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, March 30. Also, see President Obama’s weekly address, in which he offers Passover and Easter greetings to America.

*Scalia’s gay adoption claim: Even wronger than I thought (The top rated comment says it all: “I’m confused as to why anyone is surprised by this; conservatives use this linguistic sleight of hand about evolution, climate change, birth control, etc… all the time. When a conservative says there’s ‘considerable disagreement,’ what they mean is ‘I really, really, really don’t agree with the overwhelming data that exists’.” Exactly.Also, Scalia is a @#$#@$! disgrace to humanity, America, the Supreme Court, etc.)

*GOP could be own worst enemy in Senate races (“Party’s seeming advantage in 2014 could be blunted if extremely conservative nominees emerge from primaries.” And hopefully in Virginia in 2013 as well!)

*Epithets against Latinos, gays hamper Republicans’ outreach efforts (Yep, that’s Republicans for ya. The only time they change? When it adversely affects their own families, their own economic or political interests. Why? Because they don’t have any empathy.)

*The Campaign to Outlaw Abortion (“Extreme new restrictions in North Dakota and elsewhere are clearly unconstitutional.”)

*Dr. Ben Carson Fauxpologizes For Totally Not Comparing Gays With Child/Animal Rapists (This raging bigot is the “conservative” hero du jour. That really says it all about “conservatives,” I’d say.)

*Fox Interviews Man Who Showed Up At Gun Safety Rally With Loaded Assault Rifle – Doesn’t Mention Or Show Gun

*Without Medicaid Expansion, Poor Americans In The South Are Less Likely To Get Medical Care

*Democrat Eyes Cuccinelli Conflict

*Cuccinelli attacks McAuliffe on out-of-state car business while both attend conference in Charlottesville (So…the leading Virginia Republican now thinks it’s bad to be an entrepreneur? Got it.)

*Virginia jobless rate steady at 5.6 percent in February

*Abortion-rights advocates deliver 3,600 comments on Va. rules

*Lacey Putney’s retirement draws 2 GOP contenders for delegate post

*VDOT hopes resurfacing provides solution for Interstates 64, 264

*2013 Washington Nationals preview: Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper are ready to go the distance for a World Series contender

*D.C. area forecast: Saturday nicer than Sunday, but mild air wins through Monday