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Cooch Hearts Massey Energy and Its Deadly Coal Mines

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Early today, there was a terrible tragedy at a coal mine in West Virginia. Our hearts go out to all the victims, as well as to their families, friends and coworkers, in what’s being called “the worst U.S. mine disaster since 1984.”

In addition to sadness, this explosion should also make you angry. The fact is, this mine had “a history of violations for not properly ventilating highly combustible methane gas, safety officials said.”  Why was that situation never dealt with adequately?

For a possible answer to that question [NOTE: see update #3 below], see NLS, which points out that: 1) Massey Energy is based in Richmond; 2) Massey’s Knox Creek site in Tazewell County “was one of ten sites in the country to be cited for major health and safety violations last October”; 3) our fine Attorney General is not only NOT cracking down on Massey, he “is actually working with Massey Energy on his lawsuit against the EPA;” and 4) Massey hearts Virginia Republicans, having donated $61,000 to Virginia Republicans in 2009 (“and $0 to the Dems”), not to mention $441,463 to Virginia Republicans since 1997 (just $8,250 to Democrats), including $40,000 to Bob McDonnell for Governor and $10,000 to Ken Cuccinelli for Attorney General.

So, as NLS concludes:

Now Ken Cuccinelli has a choice to make. Will he open up an investigation and ensure that the Massey mining site in Tazewell that has had so many violations of health and safety will comply with the law and ensure its workers safety?  Or is he going to ignore safety warnings even after yesterday’s tragedy and hope by 2013 that Massey continues to reward him with large political contributions for his efforts to help in their legal actions against the EPA?

We’re waiting for an answer Mr. Attorney General.

Yes, we are waiting for an answer, but don’t expect one anytime soon. The fact is, Ken Cuccinelli and others in Virginia government – overwhelmingly Republican – are deeply in the pocket of Massey Energy and Don Blankenship, far more concerned with doing their bidding than in protecting workers, the environment, etc.

More broadly, the question is why, in the year 2010, we are still stuck in a 19th century energy economy (coal and other fossil fuels) instead of a 21st century one (energy efficiency, wind, solar, geothermal, etc.)? Also, why do we let scumbags like Massey Chairman/CEO Don Blankenship get away with murder – repeated, serious safety violations leading to the deaths of miners?  On both of those questions, there’s a very simple answer: follow the money…

UPDATE: SatirclAlxndria tweets, “WVA mine accident, 25 dead & @KenCuccinelli waxing rhapsodic about Roanoke sunrise & press interviews!”

UPDATE #2: Daily Kos has more on Don Blankenship and the politicians he gives $$$ to.

UPDATE #3: Just to be clear, let me just state that there is absolutely no evidence Ken Cuccinelli caused or contributed to the terrible tragedy in West Virginia. What I’m saying is that Cuccinelli (and Virginia Republicans more broadly) receives large sums of money from Richmond-based Massey, that this is not a good thing, and that Cooch should be focused on cracking down against safety violations in Virginia before we have a mine disaster here as well. Cooch also needs to stop doing the anti-worker, anti-environment bidding of companies like Massey.

UPDATE #4: It’s also worth noting that Virginia’s two previous AG’s, Jerry Kilgore (2002-2005) and Bob McDonnell (2006-2009), apparently did nothing to rein in out-of-control Massey Energy on worker safety, the environment, or anything else. Neither did Mark Earley (1998-2001) or Jim Gilmore (1994-1997).  

Shayna Englin Says “Thanks Taxes!”

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There’s so much anti-tax rhetoric out there, and of course almost nobody enjoys paying taxes, but Shayna Englin has a great point here that is too often forgotten – without taxes, we wouldn’t have our quality of life, our military, our police and firefighters, Social Security, Medicare, safe food, safe water, Metro, roads, bridges, airports, parks, or just about any other “common good” you can think of. Oh wait, I forgot, Glenn Beck et al. say that taxes are “socialist,” right? No, Glenn, they’re called “American.”

Live Blog: 10th CD Democratic Candidates Debate

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7 pm: It begins, George Burke hosting. Introductions of the two candidates, Jeff Barnett and Rich Anthony. 3 minute opening statements.

Jeff Barnett Opening Statement: Stepping up to answer call to serve once again. “I am tired of Republican debt and denial.” Tired of them “passing off the buck to the next generation.” Four big areas: jobs, housing, transportation, ending our wars. I have specific proposals, people want action. Wolf has not delivered, I will. “Rock solid” Democrat, retired colonel. “This is a winnable election.” “If Massachusetts can elect a Republican Senator, we can elect a Democratic Congressman.”

Rich Anthony Opening Statement: Thanks everyone for debate. “I can and will beat Frank Wolf this fall…never would have gotten into this race if I didn’t believe that.” Positive economic message has resonated well. This issue is what I know, what I’ve been doing for the past 15 years – economic and workforce development. Help communities attract new employers, help people who’ve lost their jobs get training and assistance they need to get back on their feet. It’s important to know something about the issue you’re running on.  One hell of a retirement party for Frank Wolf.

More after the “flip”



Thanks to Bryan Scrafford for the photo

7:07 – Burke explains ground rules, describes district.

Question on US presence in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Jeff Barnett: I’ve seen the misery of war, have two kids active duty. I will never make decisions of a political nature on these wars. $200 billion a year for those 2 wars. We’ve lost 4,400 people in Iraq and 1,023 killed in Afghanistan. Iraq war was totally unnecessary, Afghan war bungled. Thankfully the surge and Anbar Awakening, that war’s coming to a close. Afghan war much more problematic. I support that war, but will ask very hard questions and stay on top of it. I have background, expertise…will be hard to persuade me to extend that war.

Rich Anthony: Echo many of Jeff’s sentiments. Clearly understand the mission, timetable for getting out.  I support the president’s plan and timetable. I want us to do everything humanly possible to get our young men and women home as soon as possible.

Question on policy towards Israel.

Rich Anthony: Israel is a strong friend of US. Often times we disagree. Recently, some of the actions that have taken place illustrate this perfectly.  Israel’s right to defend itself, we need to work towards peaceful resolution.  Diplomatic solutions, save as many live as possible, work with both Israelis and Palestinians.

Jeff Barnett: US committed to security of Israel. We can have frank discussions as friends. Disagreements over settlements; there is no peace in the area without 2-state solution. Necessary for Israel’s existence as a Jewish state and as a Democracy. I’m optimistic about peace in the area. Work with Israel and with the Palestinians. Light at the end of the tunnel.

Question on health care reform.

Jeff Barnett: Biggest regret I have is that I wasn’t in Congress to vote for that bill. That was historic. Cost, affordability, pre-existing conditions, bringing people into the system; this addresses all of those.  32 million more people get health care. Could have been better, but this is a great start. This is not the end game. Health care will be continuing issue going forward, this is just health insurance reform, will have to be watched and tweaked.

Rich Anthony: I would have absolutely voted yes. Is it a perfect bill, no. Will we have the opportunity to fix it, absolutely. That’s what I want to do in Congress, build on the positives and add to them. Possibly a public option. Bottom line is we’ve managed to turn a corner, we’ve made progress. If Frank Wolf and other Republicans want to run on repeal, that’s a debate I’m looking forward to. So far Frank hasn’t come out and said whether he’ll join the “repeal” wing of his caucus. Frank Wolf had opportunity to put his constituents needs ahead of greedy insurance companies and corporate lobbyists; he chose the greedy companies an corporate lobbyists.

Question on budget deficit.

Rich Anthony: I’ve said since the beginning, this comes down to three things – jobs, jobs, jobs. We’ve lost 8.2-8.4 million jobs, not paying Social Security or payroll taxes, who are spending less. This has affected every area of our economy, budgets at all levels. Best way to make progress on deficit is by combination of cutting programs where there is waste, plus getting people back to work.  Give people skills and training they need to succeed, will turn drain on system into a plus. Continue to do what we’ve been doing, do more to get people back to work.

Jeff Barnett: Difference between Richard and myself.  We have about $1.3 trillion deficit. Stimulus is about $900 billion, so we have $400 billion we need to close. Three phased approach. Grow jobs, I have a plan for that. Revisit our tax structure, we have an industrial age tax structure and the vestiges of trickle-down economics (e.g., AMT). AMT rate goes down for wealthy. We need to change our revenue stream, where we spend our money. We can cut discretionary spending – half if in the military, there is great savings to be had in that sector.

Rich Anthony rebuttal: Jeff’s correct that we do differ on this. One of the cornerstones of my answer is education and training.  People need long-term strategy to get good-paying job soon. They need training, education is the silver bullet.

Jeff Barnett rebuttal: Don’t understand what you meant by long-term plan for immediate effect. They still have to have a job to go to, we don’t have a job to go to, I’ve got a plan to focus federal investment on the next generation of jobs. We’re lacking vision – without a vision, the people perish. That’s what got us going on internet, jet engines…

[BREAK 7:29 pm]

Question on energy independence and global climate change.

Rich Anthony: Don’t know what Obama administration is thinking in changing their stance on offshore drilling. I’m against that, although I understand there’s a short-term need and we need a stopgap. But I’d want certain assurance – safe as humanly possible, we don’t need oil spills off coast of Virginia, oil stays right here in United States and shouldn’t be sold to other countries. I support aggressive policy of research and development on alternative fuels. Right now, we’re getting our butts kicked by Chinese in solar power.

Jeff Barnett: Rich and I have a lot of commonality. It’s all about energy independence. Drilling off Virginia’s coast has nothing to do with energy independence – 3 days supply of oil off Virginia’s coast. This isn’t even a drop in the bucket. We need to move towards renewables, move from fossil-fuel-centered industry into renewable industry. Right now, we’re addicted to fossil fuels. This is going to be a long process but it’s one we have to do. Fossil fuels are killing us environmentally, balance of payments, in terms of jobs. We need next generation of energy jobs in America.  It comes from brainpower, not from the ground.

Question on economic recovery/stimulus act.

Jeff Barnett: The bill was absolutely necessary. Were Republicans asleep in High School. History of Great Depression; there is a role for Government to apply bridge funding, basic Keynesian economics. The need for stabilization funding is clear. Government is not the same as a business; when times get tough, demand goes up, government must meet that demand.  4-year period is very reasonable. After that, we need to balance the budget. Every economist says we were on the verge of a collapse without deficit spending.

Rich Anthony: Very important, number of jobs saved or created is amazing, where we’d be without it is horrifying. We’re just now starting to turn the corner, we’ve grown 162,000 new jobs. Dramatic improvement. If we didn’t have stimulus, we couldn’t have caught ourselves as we fell off the cliff. I don’t know why Frank Wolf voted no on this or on many other things. He’s consistently voted “no, no, no, no” with his party since President Obama sworn in.  He is more interested in helping his party than helping his constituents.

Question on transportation.

Rich Anthony: If I had an answer to that, the election would be over. It’s one of the top issues on everyone’s mind, people tired of 2-hour commutes, time away from kids and home. It’s frustrating. We hear politicians coming up with formulas, magic solutions. I’m not going to promise definitive answer, but there are a number of things we can do. First, 80/20 funding formula needs to change to population-based formula – means more money for Fairfax, Loudoun, Prince William. Gerry Connolly has proposed possible extension of Metro along Orange line to Centreville, Blue Line to Woodbridge. We need to do more with bus rapid transit, an untapped resource. Lastly, more teleworking – huge opportunity to get cars off the road.

Jeff Barnett: The problem is we could spend an hour discussing this. We need to get out ahead of this problem, not just widen/tweak what we inherited from our parents. We need next generation of transportation for this area. Growth in this area is a constant, Loudoun has tripled since 1993. We have got to overbuild our transportation. More north-south links, more rail links (Reston-Rockville, Leesburg-Gaithersburg), what would happen if American Legion Bridge went down? We need an alternative to American Legion Bridge. 10th CD congressman in perfect position to form that consensus – Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia. Frank Wolf has not done that. Another problem is I-95, we need to get I-95 traffic off our Beltway. Where should it go? Only a few alternatives, but we have to step up to it. If we don’t, we’ll strangle our future here in Virginia.

Question about widening I-66.

Jeff Barnett: I hope Jim Moran’s not watching. It’s easy for me, “yes,” because it doesn’t directly affect me. We made a deal with Arlington County.  Yes, we need to revisit the # of lanes flowing through Arlington. Metro to Dulles may alleviate that traffic to some extent, but Silver Line will also cause economic boom in that area.

Rich Anthony: Possibly, and I don’t mean that as a hedge. That would be a last resort for me.  First look at telecommuting, telework, reduce time people are on the road, reduce the amount of emissions. Extending Metro and increasing capacity on Metro, parking facilities, incentivize ridership on Metro. People in NOVA like their cars, they’ll need compelling reason to move away from their cars. More incentive for public transportation, need the capacity or people won’t come back and try it again.

Rich asks Jeff a question on single issue, home mortages. Would you agree that in order to be credible by voters, candidate needs to possess some expertise on that issue? What’s your experience on this?

Jeff Barnett: I’ve talked about 4 issues – jobs, housing, transportation, ending our wars, all one issue. They’re all one issue. I reject your assertion that any of us should run on a single issue. There are multiple issues.

Jeff asks Rich a question about winning independent voters.

Rich Anthony: 49% DPI. It voted for Jim Webb, Tim Kaine, Mark Warner, Barack Obama. I think the 10th is winnable. People looking for someone they can relate to, shares their values, faces same challenges in daily life, reject inside-the-Beltway candidate, that’s not me. I come from solid, middle-class background. Wolf has consistently defeated inside-the-Beltway candidate. Need someone who can earn trust of voters in the 10th.

Closing statements.

Rich Anthony: Enjoyed the debate. We agree on many things, certain things we don’t agree on. FDR in inaugural address – greatest task is to put people to work.  We can’t take our eye off the ball.

Jeff Barnett: Incredibly optimistic about our area, most fiber-rich dirt on earth, expansion capacity at Dulles.  Optimistic about future of party, this area is trending blue and Wolf is trending towards far right. This is a very winnable election, I’m that guy. I am electable across our base and across independents, I can beat Frank Wolf.

Kentucky AG vs. Virginia AG: Now THAT Would Be A Fun Debate!

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I’d love to see Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli debate this guy.

The attorney general of Kentucky is dismissing calls from leading Republican officials to sue the federal government to block the recently passed health care legislation.

In an interview with the Huffington Post, Jack Conway, a Democratic candidate for Senate and current Kentucky AG, described talk of health care lawsuits as the baseless meandering of Tea Party conspiracy theorists; not to mention a potentially large waste of taxpayer money.

“Most constitutional scholars looking at this issue say it is absolutely clear that these lawsuits will not be successful,” Conway said. “While it may make for good Tea Party politics for [Republican Senatorial candidate] Rand Paul and Sarah Palin, it makes for really lousy lawsuits. And I’m not going to waste the taxpayer resources of the people of Kentucky on political stunts.

“The last thing I need is a lecture on the constitutional law from Rand Raul or Sarah Palin,” he added.

Wait a minute, “waste the taxpayer resources?”   Didn’t our fine Attorney General inform us that his lawsuit against the federal government will only cost Virginia taxpayers $350?  That is, unless you don’t believe Kookinelli that his staff time on this case, which undoubtedly will reach into the hundreds of hours, doesn’t need to be factored in to the cost. How much do those guys make, anyway, minimum wage? Maybe Jack Conway can ask Cooch about that when they debate. Heh.

Arlington Democrats’ Resolution on Cuccinelli’s Attack on Health Care Reform

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(Good job as always by ACDC. I hear that the Prince William County Democratic Committee is also busy, urging the Republican-controlled Board of Supervisors there “to focus on the issues that face Prince William County every day — such as home foreclosures, rising utility costs, cuts to our school system and predatory loans — rather than writing letters, resolutions or proposals that support frivolous lawsuits against the federal government.” Nice job by Pete Frisbie et al. – promoted by lowkell)

acdc logo The following proposed draft resolution, on Cuccinelli’s Attack on Health Care Reform, will be put forward to the full Arlington County Democratic Committee on Wednesday’s general membership meeting.  

Just last month, ACDC approved a resolution calling on Congress to support full legislative repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” in 2010.

For details about the event or to RSVP, please go to our Facebook event. Full text of the draft resolution below.

Whereas, President Obama signed into law the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act on March 23, 2010, and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 on March 30, 2010; and

Whereas, these bills provide a fundamental reform of the nation’s health insurance industry and expand coverage to 30 million uninsured Americans; and

Whereas, the new law provides a tax credit to 93,000 small businesses in Virginia to make purchase of health care more affordable, and the new law provides the 628,000 Virginians under the age of 26 with the option to obtain insurance under their parents’ plan;

Whereas, a key element of health care reform is ending discrimination by insurance companies based upon pre-existing conditions (“universal underwriting”) which will assist an estimated 112,000 Virginians in gaining coverage; and

Whereas, the new law requires individuals to maintain minimal essential health care coverage beginning in 2014 to make such universal underwriting possible by broadening the insured risk pool; and

Whereas, the new law affords states great flexibility in establishing alternative programs to meet the reform and coverage objectives of the new law; and

Whereas, Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, has filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Commonwealth challenging the authority of the Federal Government to enact the new health care reform law on the grounds that it exceeds the federal authority under the Commerce Clause; and

Whereas, the Attorney General’s duty is to serve the cause of justice in Virginia rather than to use his position and scarce taxpayer dollars to pursue his personal ideological agenda; and

Whereas, while the Attorney General is wasting scarce taxpayer dollars to pursue this lawsuit, Virginia’s current budget contains painful funding cuts to its Medicaid,  education, school meals and other priority safety net programs;

Therefore Be It Resolved that, the Arlington County Democratic Committee on April 7, 2010,  

1) commends the Congress and President Obama for enacting comprehensive health care reform,

2) condemns Attorney General Cuccinelli for wasting taxpayers’ funds to pursue a frivolous and politically-motivated litigation, and

3) calls upon the General Assembly to enact funding restrictions on the Attorney General to halt this frivolous litigation.

“Michael Steele’s problem isn’t the race card, it’s the credit card”

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I love White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs’ comeback to RNC Chair Michael Steele playing the race card. According to Gibbs, “Michael Steele’s problem isn’t the race card, it’s the credit card.” Especially in light of this latest RNC scandal, that is so true.

Barack Obama Throws Out The First Pitch

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It was high and wide, “ball one” – hopefully not a sign of things to come this season for the Washington Nationals! 🙂

Some news about me . . . (UPDATE at end)

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(Congratulations to teacherken on this honor! – promoted by lowkell)

It was March 4 in the early evening and my cell phone rang.  On the other end was the Communications office of my school system.  And today I can talk about what was said.

Or you could, if you have access to the dead tree edition of Washington Post turn to the back of the Metro Section, age B6, below the fold  (this you cannot see online).

From the Post website:  

The Agnes Meyer Outstanding Teacher Awards

Good teachers are critical to a strong school system, and The Post encourages excellence in teaching. Each year it honors exceptional men and women in the teaching profession by awarding $3,000 to an outstanding teacher selected in each of the 19 local public school systems, the District of Columbia Public Charter Schools and one award to a teacher from a private school in the metropolitan area.

The selections from the local school systems are made through a nominating process and the final decision is made by the local public school system.

The call was to tell me that out of almost 9,000 teachers, Prince George’s County Public Schools had selected me as their 2010 Agnes Meyer Award Winner.  

There are over 170 schools in our district.  Our school, Eleanor Roosevelt High School, is nationally known.   We have had the national winner of the Intel Science Fair, we have a Disney American Teacher Award winner in the building (she teaches Latin), we have award winners of all sorts.  But it is rare that we win awards that must go through the County offices –  they almost expect that we will win other awards, and choose to offer those under their control to honor those in other schools.

When the head of our PTSA asked me if he could nominate me for an award last won in our school in 1984, I agreed only after I checked with our head of teaching and our principal that they were willing to support me.  They were delighted, but the head of teaching told me I would have to commit to being at Roosevelt next year if they were going to nominate me, as it was a requirement for the award.  I reminded her that I had already made that commitment by agreeing to serve as chair of one of the key committees for our re-accreditation process for Middle States.

On March 3 my principal told me that the County had asked if they could send a photographer to take my picture.  He said they had said it was a final step in the selection process.  That seemed strange, so I checked with a source at the Post, former principal education writer Jay Mathews, who said the selection process was entirely up to the school system, but admitted it sounded strange.   When the photographer showed up, I asked how many other schools he was going to, and he seem surprised, then mumbled something about a couple of others.  He took a couple of head shots, and several shots of me with one of my AP Classes.

The following day, March 4, as I was about to leave school in the late afternoon I stopped by the office and the principal told me that the Communications office had called and asked for my phone number.  I asked what that meant and he shrugged his shoulders.   I was heading to a free class at George Washington Law School at 6, so starting around 5 PM I began checking my home voice mail.  I wondered why they had needed to get my home phone number from the school, since it was part of my personnel records.

They didn’t.  Around 5:30 my cell phone rang, and I was informed I had been selected, and that I needed to submit the names of my 12 guests with their emails by 11 the next morning for the ceremony at the Post on May 11.  I was told specifically that I could inform colleagues (which obviously I had to do to invite them, to know if they could come) but I was not to blog about it.

My students knew I had been nominated.  And unfortunately one of my guests dropped a hint to a student we share (he coaches her) and I had to dissemble, saying that officially I had not won anything –  which was true, because it is only with today’s publication that it is official.

No teacher succeeds by himself.  My guest list is intended to reflect that.  There were some people I wanted to invite that I could not reach in time, or who could not come.  Of course my wife will be there, as will my current principal and the head of teaching.  The head of the PTSA will be there, as will a parent of two boys I previously taught (one of whom I also coached) who is a past PTSA officer.  I have invited a guidance counselor with whom I have worked closely.  A fellow social studies teacher who started in the building the same year in the room next door to me, and who gets many of my AP kids in his 11th grade AP World History classes.  Our former principal, now a county-wide figure, is coming.  So is my first principal, now retired, who saw something in me when i started back in 1995 as a long term sub in her building:  inside of 3 days she was moving to hire me permanently, nominated me for a beginning teacher award, and made me head of the department after only a bit more than a year.  

Two former students who wrote me wonderful recommendations are arranging their schedules.  I went to the graduation presentation in the Honors program at Maryland – College Park for one, and have stayed in regular contact with the other, who is now interning as a social worker in a school about 2 miles away.  

And then there is Joe, perhaps my most important school invitee.  Joe is the other Marine in the building.  He started as a private, retired as a major.  This African-American gentleman works in security in our building.  And he has been invaluable in helping me reach some of my more problematic students.  Sometimes I will ask him to come to my room to talk to a student rather than have to make a formal discipline referral.  Almost all of the kids respect him, and the respect he offers me sometimes serves as a wakeup, and then I can concentrate on helping the student academically and not use what time I have for the student on disciplinary matters.

I have mixed feelings.  I know how many outstanding teachers there are in our building.  I understand teaching is a collaborative process.  

The award will give my words on policy a bit more leverage, both within the County in which I teach but also to some degree in my dealings with people on the Hill:  after all, the Post is a local newspaper here, and many are likely to see the half-pager in which the paper lists all the winners with their pictures  (that will run multiple times between now and the awards ceremony in May).

And Damn!   It does feel good to be recognized for the work one does.

I have wanted to share the news.  I finally shared with my wife’s family at Easter Dinner yesterday, knowing that it would be in the paper today.

Others will begin to learn through other means.  Jay Mathews was, coincidentally, doing a piece that will go up online later today, about Eleanor Roosevelt, largely in response to some correspondence he received from a parent one of whose children coincidentally I taught (and this parent came as a guest speaker last year).  In his response Jay decided to mention my winning the award, and the Post told him it would be public by the time he posted.  His column is widely read in educational circles, so some who know me will learn that way.

I am proud, I do feel honored, and I feel a responsibility to refocus myself to justify this honor I am receiving.

That’s my news.  Not a bad way with which to start the day, is it?

Peace.

UPDATEa friend of mine scanned in the image from the Post, so here it is, medium size:  Agnes Meyer 2010

If you want to see the large size, click here

and again, Peace.

Webb: Health Care Legislation Process a “nightmare”; Filibuster “holding up the U.S. government”

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C’mon, Senator Webb, tell us how you really feel. 🙂

Webb spoke briefly about the recently passed health care reform legislation – which engendered much conflict across the aisle – and expressed disappointment in its execution. “In my view, health care legislation is more good than bad, but in some cases, it is a close call,” he said. “This is a pretty good example of how not to pass a bill.”

Webb said that the problem came from the administration’s unwillingness to clearly state to Congress what needed to be included in the bill. In addition to criticizing the Democratic administration’s role, he also claimed that in an attempt to use the issue in 2010 and 2012 elections, the Republican members of the government refused to cooperate.

“Quite frankly, it was a nightmare,” he said. “It was the worst thing I’ve ever been involved in terms of politics.”

When asked by a student about the concern that Congress is not as close-knit as it used to be, Webb said that this was less of a concern than the abuse of the filibuster.

“We have a very difficult time moving legislation when we have people who want nothing done,” he said. “With so many bills waiting to get on the floor, this is the thing that is holding up the U.S. government.”

No disagreement here: the process of making the “sausage” of health care reform legislation was ugly, and the filibuster is being abused and overused. On the latter issue, perhaps Jim Webb can take the lead in fixing it, especially since “he views himself as more as a leader than a politician.” It seems to me that fixing the filibuster will take a leader like Webb far more than a politician like…well, many others in the U.S. Senate.

No Democratic Opponent For Eric Cantor?

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This would be a big mistake.

As the Republican whip in the House of Representatives, Rep. Eric Cantor, R-7th, has emerged as one of the leading critics of President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats.

But as he seeks re-election to a sixth term in Congress, Cantor may be unopposed by a Democrat.

I mean, obviously it would be extremely difficult for a Democrat to defeat the well-funded Cantor in the Republican-leaning 7th CD.  I also understand the argument that having a Democrat run against the House Minority Whip could actually help crank up Cantor’s fundraising.  

Still, I believe it’s important that Democrats have a serious candidate against Cantor. The first reason is that, as a general principle, I believe Democrats should have someone making the case for our values (and against theirs) in as many districts as possible. Second, I believe that having a serious candidate against Cantor will put pressure on him to answer questions about his unproductive, negative “leadership” style, as well as to explain his votes against economic recovery and his constant talking down of the U.S. economy. Finally, a serious, well-funded Democratic candidate could force Cantor to spend his money close to home, instead of using it to help fellow Republicans.  This could make a difference in potentially close races, like Virginia’s 5th CD.

Democrats have until May 14 to come up with a candidate, and 7th CD Democratic chairwoman Abbi Easter “said the party is talking to several potential candidates.” Let’s hope that one of them throws his or her hat in the ring.