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Is McDonnell the Cowardly Lion?

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So, I understand that little Bobby McDonnell can’t decide whether to extend Medicaid coverage to 430,000 Virginians who cannot afford to purchase health insurance, compliments of and paid for by the Federal government for the most part, Perhaps I can explain why the decision is a no-brainer in the only language that Republicans understand – in dollar terms.

According to the American Hospital Association, unpaid bills cost hospitals about $40 billion every year, and the Medicaid expansion will do much to offset the cost of uncompensated care. To help with the cost, many hospitals now receive funds through the Medicaid and Medicare Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) programs. Assuming the number of uninsured people will fall beginning in 2014, the Affordable Care Act decreases DSH payments under both programs.  So, if Bob McDonnell decides Virginia won’t take part in the program, he’s not just denying Medicaid to almost half a million people he evidently doesn’t care about. He’s also doing all he can to bankrupt Virginia’s hospitals that are the offering health care that’s a last resort for uninsured people.

If the cost of unpaid bills is lowered by Obamacare, that means less cost-shifting to the people who have health insurance, potentially lowering premiums for all Virginians. Having more insured people results in fewer people presenting in emergency rooms with complex, previously untreated dangerous illnesses. Healthier adults are more productive workers. Healthier children do better in school.

Health care is one of the fastest growing employment categories. Expanding Medicaid will create jobs, Mr. “Bob for Jobs.” Medicaid expansion doesn’t even require localities and the state giving piles of money to some corporation to create jobs. Instead, Medicaid expansion is a Federal jobs program with lots of benefits for Virginia’s working people with little or no cost to the state.

I suggest that Bob McDonnell set aside his snitty pique at not being in “President” Romney’s cabinet and do what’s right for Virginia’s insured citizens, Virginia’s hospitals, and Virginia’s unemployment rate. I realize he doesn’t give a hoot for working-class, uninsured people, but surely he cares about the state bottom line. Or, does he? Man up, Bobby. Decide.

Prince William County 2013 Preview

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( – promoted by lowkell)

Having grown up and worked in Prince William County in off year elections, it has certainly been exciting to see this swing county get national attention in the last two Presidential campaigns. It is clear that Prince William County has potential to turn blue very soon, but the key is to energize Presidential voters in off year elections.  

In 2011, I ran Dr. Babur Lateef’s campaign for Chair of the Board of County Supervisors against nativist Corey Stewart. With the support of Party Chair Bruce Roemmelt, we ran a campaign unlike any other in the county that year. At Dr. Lateef’s insistence, our campaign was the ONLY campaign in the county in 2011 that supported EVERY other Democrat on the ballot – at any level. While we were unsuccessful in picking up seats, Prince William County re-elected every Democratic incumbent.  

Sadly, Bruce Roemmelt tried to change too many things too fast and was forced out by the establishment crowd after only one year as Chair, after a lot of backstabbing and petty rumors. While I have not agreed with everything that has been done, current Chairman, Harry Wiggins, has been a pleasant surprise. Chairman Wiggins deserves a lot of credit for the performance in 2012, but the real test will be 2013. Just as we saw in 2008, many of the new volunteers and members will quietly disappear this year. Can Harry Wiggins and the Democratic committee keep more of these members engaged, raise more money, and pick up seats in 2013? I have heard exciting rumors about a new Democratic headquarters and changes to the stale, outdated Jefferson Jackson dinner that could signal a new era of the PWCDC. I wish Chairman Wiggins the best of luck in these reform efforts.

As we have seen in the last 4 years, there are plenty of Democratic voters in Prince William County. With redistricting, many Democrats are packed in one solid district and split up between several others. The 2011 redistricting map offers one safe Democratic seat, one great pick up opportunity, two lean Republican seats, and two safe Republican seats. Lowell has asked me to provide some local comments and insight on these races.

As Ben Tribbett is much better at crunching numbers, I have linked to his analysis of the districts as well in hopes to not duplicate his great work.

District 2 (Analysis by Ben Tribbett)

The newly created 2nd district in Prince William County has great potential to be a Democratic pick up in 2013. The district stretches along the east side of Prince William County along Route 1 and skips Dumfries and Triangle to spill in to North Stafford.  Republican Speaker Bill Howell helped craft this district for his friend and current incumbent Mark Dudenheffer.

 Throughout the 2011 campaign Dudenheffer proved to be a lackluster campaigner, a terrible debater and a barely noticeable fundraiser. Despite a spirited effort from Esteban Garces the demographics of this district in a non-gubernatorial election proved to be too much to overcome. Dudenheffer has not done anything wrong in Richmond but he also does not seem to be improving his campaign skills. Additionally rumors are beginning to circulate that he may look at returning to local government in Stafford, especially if Stafford moves to an at-large County Chair for the Board of Supervisors.

 The key to win in this district is to raise a significant amount of money to run two different programs in Stafford and Prince William. A Prince William County candidate must run a strong field and turnout program in the heavily Democratic Woodbridge areas and must also run an aggressive persuasion program in Stafford to minimize the vote deficit. With two very different groups of voters it will be ill advised for a candidate to try and talk to them in the same manner.  

Since 2011 Democrats have marked this district as a top priority and Delegate Scott Surovell has worked hard to recruit a strong candidate. I am hearing that a young candidate is ready to announce early in 2013. Their challenge will be if they are able to focus on doing the important things, raising money and talking to voters directly, or will they be distracted by “Prince William Style” campaigns that put a greater emphasis on the 4th of July Parade than turning out votes. If a candidate can emerge with the support of the old guard but a focus on doing the things needed to win younger and minority voters this could be a very fun race in 2013.  

This district will benefit from the continued strong leadership of Collin Davenport, the Chair of the Woodbridge Democratic Committee. For years the WDC had been a thorn in the side of the local committee with heavy infighting and petty long term grudges. Collin and the new WDC have turned the committee around in a short time frame to be the strongest committee in the County. Collin and his members are not only organized but show up to work to support their candidates.

District 13 

House District 13 and Republican incumbent Bob Marshall has been a money pit for Democrats for years. After the exciting and aggressive runs of Bruce Roemmelt in 2005 and 2007, Democrats decided to take a different path in 2009 and 2011 by running moderate candidates who did not say much.

Before redistricting, this was the largest district in the Commonwealth by population, due to explosive growth in western Prince William County.  This district became much more manageable after redistricting and picked up some decent Democratic areas such as Manassas Park. I am less optimistic than others about the chances that this district can flip, but to do it, Democrats will need to find a candidate who can energize Hispanic voters in this district.

While Bob Marshall continues to anger and outrage Democrats, he has stayed very in tune with the people who turnout in this district. The danger for Marshall, as Ben Tribbett points out, is that this district continues to rapidly change. New voters are continuing to move in to Manassas Park and the communities around Sudley Road. If Democrats can engage these voters who have never heard of Bob Marshall before and turn them out this district will become closer than expected.

Democrats in 2013 will be helped by a strong GOTV program for Governor attempting to turn those votes out.

  District 31

After redistricting House District 31 appears to have become worse for Democrats, but with Scott Lingamfelter running for Lt. Gov and possibly not running for re-election regardless of his quest for higher office, District 31 could be worth watching in 2013.

What had previously been a split between the very Democratic area of Dale City and the very Republican area of Fauquier got rearranged in redistricting to protect Luke Torian in District 52. Now District 31 goes further east in Prince William County, picking up areas in Montclair and shedding some of the Dale City area.  Democrats are going to have to find a different kind of candidate in this district, who can appeal to federal Democrats in Montclair communities.

More than any other district in the county, transportation is a key issue with many residents commuting to DC every day. With the right message, there will be plenty of swing voters in this district that swung 10 points higher for Mark Warner in 2008 than it did for Barack Obama in the same year.  Until a candidate with the ability to aggressively fundraise announces, Democrats are going to have a hard time viewing this district as competitive. That will be a real shame if we get caught sleeping and this is suddenly an open seat in 2013.  

District 50 and District 51 

There is not much to say about either of these districts with Republican incumbents who have avoided any major mistakes. Both have a history of pretty aggressive campaigns but good results in Richmond. Both were rewarded by getting very favorable districts under the new map, so favorable that neither incumbent drew a challenger in 2011.

 Rich Anderson in district 51 was first elected in the 2009 wave after hammering Paul Nichols for an incident with a police officer on a golfing trip years prior. Anderson even went so low as to mail Nichols’ social security number and personal information to voters in this district. Once he got to Richmond Anderson has done a solid job connecting with the business community.

 Jackson Miller in district 50 was first elected in the special election to replace the late Harry Parrish in 2006 and narrowly defeated Jeanette Rishell. Rishell and Miller went for a rematch in 2007 and Jeanette got smeared in the illegal immigration fervor that swept the community. Miller took a strong stance with Corey Stewart and Greg Letiecq as this race got nasty.

After 2008 Jeanette came back for a 3rd try after Obama won the district with a solid margin. Despite the hardest work ethic I have ever seen from a candidate to raise money and a commitment to a strong field program Jeanette was not able to prevail. Miller has gloated about getting rid of the Manassas Park area of his district and will now hold this seat until he runs for the State Senate.

It’s too bad a statesman like Harry Parrish has been replaced with a hot-head like Jackson Miller.

District 52

District 52, represented by Democrat Luke Torian had been the most competitive seat in Prince William County for most of the last decade. What had previously run from the Fairfax to Stafford border along I-95 and west to pick up Montclair had been represented by moderate Republican Jack Rollison. Rollison was defeated in a 2003 primary against Jeff Frederick who attacked Rollison for supporting an increase to the sales tax. Democrats were caught sleeping and failed to produce a strong candidate against Frederick in 2003.

That changed in 2005 and 2007 with Supervisor Hilda Barg and former Dumfries Mayor Chris Brown; however Hilda’s age in 2005 prevented her from effectively campaigning and Chris Brown was unable to overcome the anti-immigration wave that doomed all Democrats in 2007.

 Democrats finally picked up this seat in 2009 with Rev. Luke Torian. After Frederick had been elected as the Chairman of the Republican Party he fulfilled his first campaign pledge of his career and did not run for re-election as a Delegate. Chris Brown announced that he would run again but the establishment crowd chose to back Luke Torian and Brown chose not to file for a primary. Torian got an extra boost when Amy Frederick, long rumored to run in Jeff’s place, announced she would also not run for the seat. Dodging both Jeff and Amy Frederick, and Chris Brown, Rev. Luke Torian went on to face Rafel Lopez, an unimpressive Dumfries Town Council Member.

 Despite Luke Torian’s aversion to fundraising and campaigning he was able to put together a strong campaign staff and received excellent support from the local committee. Despite the bad environment in 2009, Torian prevailed.

 In his first session in the minority Torian did not cause any problems for Republicans in Richmond and was rewarded with a much safer district. Torian’s district now starts in Graham Park and Dumfries picks up his neighborhood on the north side of Montclair and runs into the Democratic stronghold of Dale City. In 2011 Torian again dodged any strong challenger and instead ran against a Hair Salon owner. Cleveland Anderson proved unable to raise any money and was unable to connect with any voters in this new minority-majority district.

Despite a less impressive campaign team and less support from the Democratic Committee Torian won re-election on the backs of strong efforts from over-lapping State Senate campaigns.  

Much like the 2nd district above, Torian benefits greatly from strong local committees. Overlapping with Collin Davenport’s efforts in Woodbridge the 52nd district also contains Deb Gaiser and the ever growing Potomac District and Ernestine Jenkins of the Neabsco District. Deb is a strong worker who is committed to continuing the growth of the Potomac committee and Ernestine Jenkins continues to have an impressive ability to raise money, find volunteers and turnout voters for candidates she chooses to support.  

Until someone grows tired enough of Rev. Torian’s more moderate to conservative tendencies to challenge him in a primary he will hold this seat for as long as he wishes. Democratic leaders should work with Torian to encourage him to take more progressive positions and support all Democratic candidates before he becomes a younger version of Chuck Colgan.  

About Mike

Mike McLaughlin, a native of Prince William County, Virginia, has been involved in Democratic politics since 2003. Having worked for Hilda Barg, Jeanette Rishell, the DPVA, Chris Brown and Babur Lateef, Mike has perfected the art of raising large sums of money and coming up short in Prince William County politics.  Outside of Virginia, Mike has found more success as an advisor to Harris County political donors in an effort to win 15 county wide races in one of America’s largest counties in 2012.

 Having gotten his start in politics by knocking doors on the mean streets of Northern Virginia suburbs Mike continues to relish in his role as a field hack who knows the importance of collecting accurate and robust data to inform campaign programs. The Columbus Dispatch ran a story in early 2012 where a 3 time failed Democratic opponent referred to him as a “DC Operative” and a “hired gun” who was “unlikely to change his stripes”; McLaughlin disputes all of these charges noting that he has never lived in DC nor does he own any stripes.

 When not working on campaigns, McLaughlin can be found trying to make the perfect chili recipe and watching college basketball. To get more insights on Mike and to see his thoughts on politics, college sports and other things few people care about feel free to follow him on Twitter at @miklaughlin.

While currently a resident of Texas, Mike remains focused on efforts to turn PWC Blue in 2015.  

Audio: Jeannemarie Davis’ Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Interview on the Kojo Nnamdi Show

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Wow, what a debacle for Republican LG candidate (and former State Senator) Jeannemarie Davis (formerly Devolites Davis — last we left her in 2007, we were busy helping Chap Petersen unseat her from the State Senate). Let’s start at the beginning of the interview, where she mangles WAMU radio host Kojo Nnamdi’s name, calling him “Kwame” for whatever reason. Hahahaha.

Next, head to the “flip” for more of Davis’ radio interview debacle today. It’s quite amusing to hear her claim that the mandatory ultrasound bill is actually voluntary, that Republicans are actually the better party for the middle class, that Virginia Republican candidates are all one big happy family, that differences in the General Assembly aren’t about party or ideology at all but are all regional in nature, etc, etc. Of course, Jeannemarie Davis has 0.000000000% chance of winning at a GOP convention dominated by the hard right wing, but if she wants to waste her time and money, for the next few months, I suppose it’s her time and money to waste. Meanwhile, enjoy the interview excerpts! 🙂

The first video is Jeannemarie Davis on abortion, transvaginal ultrasound, etc. At the beginning, Davis jokes uncomfortably that she’d rather talk about the Redskins moving to Washington (or probably ANY other subject) than social issues. No wonder why, as social moderates/liberals/”RINO”s like her clearly have no place in today’s hard-right-wing, extreme Republican Party. Anyway, Davis goes on to claim that “everybody realizes” abortion’s not going to become illegal in this country (barring Roe vs. Wade being repealed), completely downplaying/ignoring/poo-poo’ing the relentless war on women’s reproductive freedom being waged by her party. Davis then proceeds to claim that the transvaginal ultrasound bill “impeded” (she meant “intruded” but mangled it, just as she mangled Kojo’s name) into a woman’s life, but that the current external ultrasound law is voluntary, not intrusive, and is important to “help women to understand…what it is they are about to do”. Other than being incredibly patronizing, Davis appears to be wrong on the facts as well: according to this article, “The new bill makes the transvaginal ultrasound voluntary but requires an external, non-invasive, ultrasound.” Hmmmmm.

The next video has Jeannemarie Davis evading a question about Ken Cuccinelli and the fact that her party has gone off the right wing deep end (which, by the way, is why her husband, Tom Davis, decided to ditch his run for the U.S. Senate nomination in 2008). Also hilarious is Davis claiming that there are very few divisions in the Virginia General Assembly, and almost all of them are regional NOT partisan or ideological in nature. Yeah, right! So why do we all think there are ideological and partisan divisions in the Virginia General Assembly? In Jeannemarie Davis’ view, it’s all the media’s fault. Riiiiight! Then there’s the caller who (correctly) rips Republicans for being totally for the wealthy, and Jeannemarie Davis lashing out and claiming: 1) Republicans are only for the wealthy at the federal, not the state, level; 2) the middle class is being “struck upside the head” by Democrats; and 3) Republicans are actually the party of the middle class. Hahahahaha.

Finally, here Jeannemarie Davis is, laughably attempting to argue that Virginia Republican LG candidates – and really, all Virginia Republican candidates – are one big happy family. Deservedly, political reporter Tom Sherwood snorts and snickers at her for that one. Davis also appears to be arguing (I say “appears” because she’s not the most articulate person in the world) that rural candidates, like Creigh Deeds, don’t have the capacity to connect with people in urban/suburban areas like northern Virginia. Can we say “incredibly insulting?” She also seems to make the case that Republicans are better off that Bill Bolling dropped out and that Ken Cuccinelli won’t be contested for the gubernatorial nomination. Uh huh.

So that was Jeannemarie Davis’ terrible, horrible, no good, very bad interview on the Kojo Nnamdi Show this afternoon. Unfortunately for Davis, things aren’t likely to get much better in coming months for her (doomed) candidacy for LG.  

Video: AFSCME, SEIU, NEA Urge Sen. Warner to Stand Firm Against Cuts to Medicare, Medicaid

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Where I come from on this is simple: before we even begin to talk about cuts to Medicare and Medicaid, we have to do the following.

1. Let the Bush tax cuts expire for the wealthiest Americans. That certainly includes the estate tax, which is arguably the most progressive tax of all.

2. Ensure that the ratio of spending cuts to tax increases is 1:1 or, preferably, much lower than that.

3. I agree with Simpson-Bowles that capital gains and dividends should be taxed as normal income, not given preferential rates, allowing super-rich people like Mitt Romney to pay far lower rates than ordinary, working Americans (e.g., violating the “Buffett Rule,” and the Reagan rule for that matter).

4. Eliminate all subsidies to fossil fuels and other “bads,” like the corn ethanol boondoggle.

5. Institute a carbon tax – one large enough to make a big difference on CO2 emissions – immediately in order to avoid the “climate cliff” we’re about to plunge over, disastrously. I don’t care if this is revenue neutral or not, but if it’s not, some of that money can go for deficit reduction.

6. The only cuts to domestic discretionary program spending, which makes up a miniscule percentage of the budget and is NOT the cause of the federal deficit, should be to military spending. Why do we need to spend more than the next 10 countries combined? Can anyone justify that?

7. Cap deductions for home mortgage interest and other things that mostly wealthy people benefit from. Why should we be subsidizing them to buy multi-million-dollar mansions?

8. Raise the current $110,000 cap on payroll (“FICA”) withholding. Why should someone making $100 million only pay taxes on the first $100,000 and not on the remaining $99,900,000?

Once all that’s done, then IF we still have a budget deficit problem (which is highly unlikely), then we can talk about cutting Medicare and Medicaid benefits. And even in that case, we should only be talking about cuts that don’t hurt the poor, working class, or middle class Americans. We should also be continuing to figure out ways to “bend the health care cost curve” in this country, but most likely we first need to see how full implementation of “Obamacare” works out before we move in that direction. Still, is there any good reason why we don’t have a robust public option?

EMILY’S LIST and The Farm Team announce training

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The Farm Team is pleased to announce that we are partnering with EMILY’s List to offer three training opportunities in Virginia for pro-choice Democratic women and their key campaign staff in the next few months.

We hope you will share this invitation with any current women officeholders or future candidates that would benefit from this training.

As you may know, EMILY’s List is a political donor network and political resource for pro-choice Democratic women candidates. EMILY’s List has initiated a program designed to recruit and train women to run for and serve in elected office in the states.

Whether a pro-choice Democratic woman is currently serving on the school board, or in the General Assembly, or just beginning to think about running for elective office, we are certain this training will provide her with the skills and inspiration needed to successfully run for office.

We will hold our first training in Lynchburg on Monday, December 17th 2012.  The RSVP link for the first event is http://emilyslist.org/take-act…

The program, including materials and meals is free, however space is limited. Partial participation is not possible – you must make a commitment to attend the full program in order to be allocated a seat at the training.

Future trainings will be held Monday, January 14th in Northern Virginia and Friday, February 8th in Williamsburg. Stay tuned for details and RSVP links for those dates.

If you have any questions, or would like further details, please contact Jessica Byrd at 202-326-1400 or jbyrd@emilyslist.org or Julie Copeland of The Farm Team at 804-272-5955 or farmteam.va@gmail.com

BLS: Despite Superstorm Sandy, Unemployment Rate Drops to 7.7% (lowest in 4 years)

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Great news:

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the U.S. economy added 146,000 jobs in November, nearly double the projections. What’s more, the overall unemployment rate dropped to 7.7%, its lowest point in four years.

[…]

To be sure, 146,000 jobs isn’t evidence of a robust economic recovery, but given Sandy-generated expectations, the figures come as a pleasant surprise

Now, just imagine how good things would be if: a) we hadn’t gotten into the “Great Recession” in the first place under George W. Bush’s administration; b) Republicans hadn’t been obstructionists the entire first four years of President Obama’s first term; c) Republicans hadn’t caused the U.S. credit rating to be downgraded; d) Republicans hadn’t created the very “uncertainty” they decry; and e) we hadn’t had the public sector job losses we had, thanks to Republican refusal to provide more aid to the states? By the way, what ever happened to that supposed “socialist” (actually an Eisenhower/George HW Bush-style moderate through and through) Barack Obama destroying the economy? Yeah, that’s why the stock market doubled, the housing market’s rebounding, unemployment is way down from its Great Recession peak, consumer spending is up, etc., etc. Not that Republicans will easily abandon their narrative of that scary black/Muslim/Kenyan/radical/blahblahblah in the White House, but they really should check out this thing called “reality” once in a while, I strongly recommend it! 😉

Virginia News Headlines: Friday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, December 7 (a date that shall live in infamy, according to FDR).

*Debt Ceiling Bluff Called By Harry Reid, Leaving Mitch McConnell To Filibuster Himself (The absurdity of Republicans’ misuse of the filibuster takes on comic dimensions, courtesy of one of the slimiest members of that fine body, Mitch McConnell.)

*Good riddance, Mr. DeMint (One of the only things I can ever recall the egregiously bad Jennifer Rubin writing that actually made a relatively coherent, based-in-truth case for something.)

*Kaine says his campaign showed positive ads work (Perhaps they worked in Tim Kaine’s race, hard to know, but most campaign folks believe that NEGATIVE ads are what really work. Hard to say, as the record is mixed.)

*McDonnell still wary on state exchange, Medicaid expansion (You can be wary all you want, Bob, but as governor you still have to put your big-boy pants on and deal with it!)

*McDonnell said U.S. uncertainty requires conservative Va. budget

*Kaine Calls For Higher Taxes For Rich, Spending Cuts

*Virginia’s Kaine backs changes to filibustering (“Says he’d favor it regardless of party”)

*Sen. Warner: 80% Chance U.S. Will Avoid Fiscal Cliff (The only way we will avoid it is if Republicans start to seriously negotiate, something they’ve been unwilling to do up until now. The clock’s ticking…)

*Terry McAuliffe, Democratic hope (“Love him or hate him, Bill and Hill’s buddy is the only thing standing between the state and a Tea Party governor”)

*McDonnell expresses support for Cuccinelli’s 2013 bid

*Kaine: Porta-Potty dream summed up election

*Va. activists remain wary of Cuccinelli administration (Weird headline: people are a lot more than “wary” of this homophobic wacko)

*McAuliffe explains opening plant in Mississippi not Virginia (Not to Ryan Nobles: “Democrat” and “Democratic” should be capitalized; “its” is the possessive form not “it’s”)

*McAuliffe’s car company never finished Virginia incentive application (Interesting story, although also riddled with typos…)

*Wind offers a cleaner future

*White House crasher to campaign for governor in Hampton Roads

*Capitol Day recap: uranium and health care debates loom

*Editorial: Tighten the texting law

*Conflict of interest charges raised over Arlington transit vote (It’s amazing, when I raised this about Barbara Favola’s multiple conflicts of interest, the reaction I got from the County Board was hostility. Now, Board member Libby Garvey is raising a conflict of interest with fellow Board member Chris Zimmerman. We’ll see what the reaction is this time…)

*Va. Sen.-elect Tim Kaine reaches out, across aisle to fellow freshman Ted Cruz of Texas (Hahahaha, almost 24 hours later, they’ve STILL got this as “Timothy F. Kaine.” The Post sucks.)

Bruce Bartlett v the Fringe-anomic Republican Percenters

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Bruce Bartlett appeared on Elliot Spitzer tonight to discuss the budget negotiations.  He not only said President Obama was right regarding the path he has taken.  He said the President should have gone further in rebuilding our infrastructure. (We here at BV have been saying that too.)

Dan Burger of Patriotic Millionaires also spoke with Spitzer..

Diane Rehm Has Become the Most Useless Talk Show Host Ever

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A mere shadow of her former self, Diane Rehm once had a spine, heart and courage. She questioned and challenged guests, and even served as one of the key skeptics in the runup to the Iraq war (based upon lies). Now she is the worst radio show host in America. I remember painting the outside of my house during the runup to the Iraq war and during the early days of the war itself. And each day I painted, I listened to Diane each day.  

But in recent years, she has let vocal GOP ideologues bully and talk over other guests while making false statements, bashing ordinary Americans, conspiring to harm them, and otherwise doing the bidding of the 1%. So too, she sloughed off the role of a skeptical host yesterday in a show addressing hunger in America. Diane acted non-skeptically, asked almost nothing, and  challenged nothing. If she asked a question it was completely idiotic, such as, “Where does the food (for food banks) come from?” Americans were thus uninformed and even dis-informed because she lets guests get away with complete fabrications and alternate-universe notions of what is actually happening in our country. Why is she still taking up the airwaves? Why not just skip the intermediary and let the ever-polemic Steven Moore have his own show?

Yesterday, she pretended to offer a serious discussion on hunger in America. Instead, what she offered was some sort of cruel joke. I have never been on food stamps and I have never been obese, but I was offended by the outrageous crap coming from her show and under its banner. It was worse than offensive.  

She sat idly as Steven Moore, once a Club for Growth hack and now a member of the WSJ editorial board, belittled poor people. The bastard does this right before the holidays with true (Charles) Dickensian flourish. But the modern-day Scrooge had no Tiny Tim-inspired better day. Talk about the “worst of times.” He claimed those on food stamps did not need food, but rather they had too much of it. Make the man do a Food Stamp Challenge now!

The proof, he suggested, was in obesity in America. He implied the poor and working poor were all obese. He suggested America should scrap food stamps. And he proceeded to lie about the same old welfare-to-work and food stamps lies the GOP tried to get away with before the election.  

God, it gets old.  And there is Diane out-Charley-Rose-ing Charlie Rose. It’s pitiful. The airwaves are a public resource. It’s time NPR take back the two precious hours the Diane Rehm Show takes up. I am not alone in questioning Rehm’s handling of this show. She needs to retire-and soon. In the meantime, the Diane Rehm Show is a load of bull and it is the public getting reamed by its content.