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GOP Pledges to Cut Spending! (by 0.01%)

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Rep. Kevin McCarthy, one of the main authors of the GOP “Pledge to America,” can only come up with $100 million – that’s MILLION – in cuts, out of a $3 trillion – that’s 1,000 THOUSAND times greater than a million – federal budget.  For the math challenged, McCarthy’s proposed cuts amount to 0.01% of the federal budget, leaving 99.99% of the federal budget – including entitlements (Medicare, Social Security), defense and interest on the debt; about 80% of the budget – intact.  And he won’t name any non-defense discretionary programs he’d cut. Wow, is that bold or what? Of course, what else would you expect from a bunch of fresh-faced, fresh-ideas “Young Guns” like John BONEr and Eric Can’tor?  On second thought…

UPDATE: Actually, as Paul Krugman points out in his superb article, “Downhill With the G.O.P.,” “there’s only one specific cut proposed – canceling the rest of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which Republicans claim (implausibly) would save $16 billion. That’s less than half of 1 percent of the budget cost of those tax cuts.”

Bob McDonnell Gets It Right on Civil War History, After Exhausting All Other Options

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(UPDATE: Sen. McEachin has issued a statement in which he “commend[s] the governor for his promise about next year’s Civil War month.” – promoted by lowkell)

I’m very glad to see Bob McDonnell finally get it right on the Civil War, even if he exhausted all other options before he managed to do so. The full speech – delivered earlier today at Norfolk State University, for a conference entitled,  “Race, Slavery, and the Civil War: The Tough Stuff of American History and Memory” – is after the “fold,” but the highlights are:

*Today’s Virginia is a “diverse” place, in which we are committed to “the founding ideal of equal liberty and justice and opportunity for all.”

*McDonnell’s Confederate History Month proclamation was flawed, due to its “major and unacceptable omission of slavery”  an omission which “disappointed and hurt a lot of people, myself included.”

*”Slavery was an evil and inhumane practice which degraded people to property, defied the eternal truth that all people are created in the image and likeness of God, and left a stain on the soul of this state and nation.”

*In April 2011, McDonnell will issue a “Civil War in Virginia” proclamation that will remember all Virginians-free and enslaved; Union and Confederate. It will be written for all Virginians.”

Again, I’m glad to see that Bob McDonnell finally got this right. I just wish we could get to a place in Virginia where no governor would ever conceive of getting it wrong, whether an “error of haste” or “of heart.”

Welcoming Remarks of Governor Robert F. McDonnell

“Race, Slavery, and the Civil War:

The Tough Stuff of American History and Memory”

Virginia Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission – 2010 Signature Conference

Norfolk State University

Norfolk

September 24, 2010

FOR PUBLIC RELEASE

Thank you Virginia (Board), for that kind introduction, and Dominion for sponsoring this great event.

Thank you President Kim Luckes, Rector Ed Hamm, and the Norfolk State University community for hosting all of us today.

I want to congratulate the Green and Gold, the Spartans, on a great start to the season. 51 points last week……you are doing a lot better than my alma mater, Notre Dame. We’ve suffered through some tough ones recently!

And I want to thank the General Assembly, Cheryl Jackson and the staff of the Sesquicentennial for planning for years to take on these pivotal issues.

On behalf of the Commonwealth of Virginia, I welcome scholars and leaders from around the nation to this very important conference to discuss the truly tough stuff of the American Civil War.

Virginia now begins the four year period marking the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War.

A prosperous, dynamic, and diverse Commonwealth is attempting to remember, understand, and put into proper perspective one of the most painful and bloody periods in the history of western civilization. This is not going to be easy.

I know that from firsthand experience.

In the century and a half since the armistice was executed at Appomattox, few states have undergone as many changes, or witnessed such stunning growth and progress, as our Commonwealth. Our borders have been fixed for 147 years; but our culture, community, and breadth of opportunity have been incredibly dynamic.  These changes have made Virginia a stronger and better place.

But they have also made our collective “memory” — how our diverse society remembers and processes the events in its collective history — much more complicated.

In earlier times, Virginia’s dominant culture was defined by relatively few, and basic civil rights were excluded for many.  Whatever the strengths and weaknesses of that culture, and both were present in abundance, as in any human enterprise – there was a common lens through which to view history.  Those in power wrote a single, narrow narrative.  It left out many people, along with their powerful stories.  

And so, while talking about our history has become more complicated today, we can all agree it has also become a much richer conversation.

Today we are a Commonwealth of nearly 8 million people, and one in ten citizens are foreign born. We come from many different countries, backgrounds and traditions. Modern Virginia is a place of great natural beauty, hope, and opportunity, a place refined in the crucible of conflict, and renewed in its commitment to the founding ideal of equal liberty and justice and opportunity for all.

We have made progress together in Virginia. The nation’s first African-American governor. An African-American is Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. The nation’s first official expression of “profound regret” for slavery from a legislature. A marvelous civil rights memorial in front of the Governor’s Mansion, and a wonderful new portrait of Barbara Johns that I helped unveil last Friday in the State Capitol.

In my Inaugural Address, I tried to tell this story of progress, and reflect on Virginia’s common history.

I stood on the steps of the State Capitol, looking down towards the James River, the waterway of the settlers. The building behind me was designed by Virginia’s second Governor, Thomas Jefferson. Inside it, Robert E. Lee, the son of a Virginia governor, took command of Virginia’s military forces in 1861. Four years later, President Abraham Lincoln visited the Capitol as the fallen city around it burned. In 1990 that same building welcomed the inauguration of my friend, Governor Doug Wilder, the grandson of slaves. And now I stood there, a descendant of ancestors who were poor farmers in Ireland in the 1860’s. An average middle class kid from Fairfax County became part of that gubernatorial tradition tracing back to Patrick Henry.  

I was far less successful in capturing the full meaning of our history when, four months later, I issued a proclamation concerning Confederate History Month.  My major and unacceptable omission of slavery disappointed and hurt a lot of people, myself included. Young people make mistakes, and I suppose sometimes young administrations do as well.  Ours was an error of haste and not of heart.  And it is an error that will be fixed.

Next April our office will issue a “Civil War in Virginia” proclamation commemorating the beginning of the Civil War in our state.

This proclamation will encapsulate all of our history. It will remember all Virginians-free and enslaved; Union and Confederate. It will be written for all Virginians.

While we cannot fully put to paper the definitive collective memory of this period, we are going to at least ensure that all voices are heard in the attempt.

The legacies of the Civil War still have the potential to divide us. But there is a central lesson of that conflict that must bond us together today.  Until the Civil War, the founding principle that all people are created equal and endowed by their Creator with unalienable rights was dishonored by slavery. Slavery was an evil and inhumane practice which degraded people to property, defied the eternal truth that all people are created in the image and likeness of God, and left a stain on the soul of this state and nation. For this to be truly one nation under God required the abolition of slavery from our soil. Until the Emancipation Proclamation was issued and the Civil War ended, our needed national reconciliation could not begin. It is still a work in progress.

150 years is long enough for Virginia to fight the Civil War.  

Now, on the eve of this anniversary, is a time for us to approach this period with a renewed spirit of goodwill, reverently recalling its losses, eagerly embracing its lessons, and celebrating the measure of unity we have achieved as a diverse nation united by the powerful idea of human freedom.

A modern Virginia has emerged from her past strong, vibrant and diverse. Now, a modern Virginia will remember that past with candor, courage and conciliation.

It is my hope that the work of the Sesquicentennial Commission will bear much fruit, starting with this conference. Beginning in 2011, people will come from across the world to see the solemn battlefields of Virginia, home to more than any other state, and we encourage and welcome that tourism. Experts will come to conferences and appear on TV and debate the causes, tactics and legacy of the war that divided America, and we encourage that dialogue. Perhaps most importantly, we must do what we are doing today. We must talk openly and honestly about how we as Americans, black, white and brown can promote greater reconciliation and trust and greater access to the American Dream for all, so that there is more peace in our hearts and homes, schools and neighborhoods.

Again, I thank all of you for joining us here today to discuss the “tough stuff” of the Civil War. May a spirit of mutual respect and love govern your discussions.

Have a great conference and God Speed!

Thank you.

UPDATE: Donald McEachin has issued a statement.

I would like to take this opportunity to commend the governor for his promise about next year’s Civil War month. As someone who has not hesitated to comment when I believed the governor is in error, I want to also praise him when I believe he is right.

Here in Virginia, we can only truly commemorate and remember the Civil War by honoring the memory of all those who suffered during those horrific times. The Commonwealth that we all love ran red with blood and suffering in those times. Young men on both sides of that confrontation were killed, wounded and maimed here. Civilians, both black and white, free and slave, also suffered and died. The losses here were staggering, not only of family members never to be seen again, but of homes that families had spent years building and creating and, with the loss of those homes and their loved ones, dreams were lost. Those losses were suffered by people of all colors, slave and free.

Let me thank the governor again for acknowledging this universal suffering and for putting in place the process for us as Virginians to remember this time and to learn from it. As we study this conflagration, let us remember that freedom and liberty are a universal human rights and that we Virginians must rededicate ourselves to ensuring that all people are able to live free.

McDonnell as Houdini: His Excellency’s excellent escape plan?

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( – promoted by lowkell)

By Paul Goldman

By refusing to pro-actively push for a referendum, Democrats think they are being smart, confident they can kill the Governor’s ABC plan in the State Senate, and embarrass him. They see McDonnell in a straitjacket, hanging high above the General Assembly building, seemingly with no way out, and all of it rebounding to the Democrats sure benefit and his sure loss.

Harry Houdini promised to come back from the dead but never has. Until now perhaps?

As Houdini, aka Erik Ivan Weisz, showed escaping from a straitjacket is actually rather easy. Legend says the idea for his legendary upside-down escape before a huge crowd of people as caught by the newsreels came from the “Great Randini” the stage name of a young guy who was a fan of Houdini and who showed him the possibilities in the attic of his mother’s home in Sheffield, England. As to the strait jacket itself, it first came to Houdini’s attention while visiting a Canadian Institution where he first watched it being used on a patient.

Turns out it isn’t all that hard for a sane person, even a Republican, to get out a strait jacket, especially one put together by Democrats.

IS HOUDINI GOING TO FINALLY COME BACK AS BOB MCDONNELL, ABC escape artist 2010?

Senate Democrats and Democratic Party leaders laugh at the possibility. They think they have McDonnell in dire straits. Really?

Consider this however:

1)  McDonnell’s Reform Commission comes up with a number of modest reforms, and of course the marque issue, the McDonnell privatization plan. The Governor says thanks Mr. Malek and Company.

2) The Governor calls a Special Session, sending down bills to enact all of the reforms, big, medium and small.

3) Let’s assume worst case, his own GOP kills the ABC plan in the House, but passes along the others, small potatoes yes, but President Clinton showed how little things can mean a lot to your approval rating.

4) Senate Democrats will crow, yes it will be an embarrassment inside Capitol Square lobbying community to McDonnell, heck let’s even say they don’t give it to a study commission, just killed it outright.

5) Senate Democrats however have to pass these small things, what is the excuse not to?

Net, net: McDonnell gets headlines saying the GA passed X number of his reforms, saving Y dollars, but he got defeated on his big ABC thing.

Result: He is winner, not the Democrats. AND THIS IS ASSUMING THE WORST CASE SCENARIO. If the House puts it in a study committee instead of killing it, then McDonnell wins on his small things and can say that he agrees we can study it a little longer, we know have a new $1 billion in tranny money so no need to hurry right now if waiting a little bit will help get the GA on board.

The headlines will say: General Assembly passes most of Governor’s reforms but kills his big one.

In today’s political climate, getting bipartisan support for anything is a win, getting it for reforms that can be billed as saving millions and shrinking government is a home run.

BOTTOM LINE: If Democrats don’t watch it, they are the ones going to be in the straitjacket, politically speaking.

McDonnell has blundered hugely in his nearly year long pursuit of the white whale.

A referendum campaign would do not just the right thing by the people, but force him and the GOP to defend any number of things, giving Democrats a chance they have not had in recent memory to engage Virginians in a real debate on the broader issues which go into ABC privatization.

Come 2013, Democrats may regret letting McDonnell, Bolling and Cuccinelli snatch victory from the jaws of defeat without even putting up a fight.

You know what they say: It isn’t the size of the dog in the fight that matters, it is the size of the fight in the dog.  

Will New Evidence Convince Cuccinelli to Drop War on Climate Science?

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One of the things you always hear from science deniers like Ken Cuccinelli is that if only there were more research on global warming, it would align with their political opinion that climate change is (depending on the day):

  • Not happening
  • Happening but not our fault
  • Happening & our fault, but oh, it’s not so bad
  • Sunspots! Martian warming! Fartgate, follow the smell!

But the problem with that is, the more scientists look into climate change, the more they find the planet is warming, manmade carbon emissions are to blame, and we need to switch to clean energy sources as soon as possible to avert catastrophic impacts.

So now that two new independent studies have both come to the conclusion that current global warming is unprecedented in magnitude, speed & cause, do you think Ken Cuccinelli will consider his demand for more research fulfilled, drop his attacks on the Clean Air Act & support more wind farms & energy efficiency in Virginia?

Yeah, me neither.

GOP Vision for America: WHITE-ONLY

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As was pointed out in another Blue Virginia diary entry, the GOP released on Thursday their “Pledge to Screw Over America.”  The release was made behind a chain-link fence topped with barbed wire, in an empty parking lot in Sterling, VA.

The best part, however, is the “Pledge” itself.

Printed on slick paper with full-color photos illustrating real Americans — and you don’t have to read it to figure out what the GOP is all about.  Just look at the photos that fill the “Pledge” booklet.

http://www.jackandjillpolitics…

Jon Stewart: “This thing’s not even a sequel, it’s like a shot-by-shot remake!”

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So two years ago, just to get this straight, two years ago America broke up with you, because you had badly mistreated her. And so you disappear, do some soul-searching, get your head together, and you come back rapping on our door, hat in hand, and you say, “Baby, I know you love me. But if we get back together, I pledge to you, I promise you, I will still try to fuck your sister every chance I get. It’s who I am, baby!  It’s who I am! Now, make up your mind, because I’m not going to ask you twice!

Statements by Kaine, Saslaw on VDOT Audit Results

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As Ryan Nobles reports, Tim Kaine is getting “blow-back…in his direction” following “the release of a scathing audit on the Virginia Department of Transportation,” which found that “[m]ore than $1 billion in state transportation funds were left on the table, while traffic remained bottled up, rest stops were closed and pot holes not filled.” According to Bob McDonnell, not specifically mentioning his predecessor in the governor’s mansion, Tim Kaine, “There was a bad set of management decisions made to be able to keep money in the bank that should’ve been spent.”

Tim Kaine’s response is as follows (bolding added by me for emphasis):

“Typically when an audit is released with such anticipation, it’s because of a discovery that taxpayer dollars are missing. In the case of today’s audit – thanks to tight-fisted project management and sharp reduction in overhead during the toughest economic downturn in a generation – what’s clear is VDOT has cash in the bank to pay for the projects in the Six Year Plan as they are built. That’s good news.

“VDOT reforms enacted by the General Assembly were meant to yield exactly these results – and as intended the available cash has been budgeted to a maintenance or construction project. In 2002, there were $687 million in project deficits and about 10,500 VDOT employees. Today, there is a substantial cash balance and fewer than 7,000 VDOT employees.

When the McDonnell Administration went to market this past May to sell transportation bonds, they bragged about the smart fiscal management at VDOT. The nation’s top bonding agencies studied the agency’s performance and agreed, rating the VDOT bonds a strong AA credit. The McDonnell Administration’s own Six Year Plan includes sizable cash reserves as a smart strategy for reserving funds for future projects.

“Ultimately the fact that there is money to spend on transportation needs is welcome news for Virginians and for the Commonwealth.”

Senate Majority Leader Dick Saslaw (D) also weighed in, defending Kaine and also explaining the situation. I think Saslaw’s statement makes a lot of sense.

As chair of the Senate Finance Subcommittee on Transportation, I am pleased to see that Governor McDonnell has focused his attention on Virginia’s seriously inadequate transportation funding model and resurfaced many of the audit recommendations made by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission and Auditor of Public Accounts since 2002.  While we are happy to see that the audit yielded no evidence of fraud and abuse in VDOT, it is clear that this audit identifies no new funds for transportation.  What we do see, however, is an agency with a critical mission, dealing with the loss of over 1,000 employees in an unprecedented era of shrinking state revenues and considerable uncertainty in the availability of future federal funds.  Coupled with the immediate challenges of allocating federal stimulus dollars, it appears that some projects may have been slowed down in the process.  While no one wants to see funds lying unused, I appreciate that the VDOT management employed a cautious approach during a period of great financial uncertainty and did not over-obligate funds, as we saw under the Gilmore Administration.  In fact, legislative requirements that adequate fund balances be accrued to projects prior to the authorization of contracts were put in place to prevent the abuses seen under the Allen and Gilmore administrations.  This change, implemented in 2005, received unanimous bipartisan endorsement with even Delegate McDonnell voting for this requirement.

Until my colleagues and I learn more about the details in the audit, I am hesitant to affirm that there are in fact substantial new dollars for transportation.  Furthermore, many of the funding recommendations apparently fail to acknowledge the statutory formula through which maintenance dollars are currently allocated, a process which ensures that all areas of the state receive necessary funding for the upkeep of transportation assets.  When available balances are “redeployed”, as the Governor suggests, that may mean that some districts are winners and some are losers.  Again, we need to see the details.  And while I would be pleased to see additional projects go forward, we must understand that these are largely one-time resources.  This audit demonstrates that the Commonwealth has yet to face the fact that it lacks a comprehensive long-term plan for solving its transportation problem.

Your Health Just Isn’t Worth It…To Us

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“Most people think we should be holding polluters accountable, but the American Petroleum Institute is fighting back. This video takes satirical approach to lampooning what big oil is really trying to say.”

More on this ad here. Great stuff!

Virginia About to Hold an Execution. Where’s Bob McDonnell?

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Tonight at 9 pm, Virginia is scheduled to execute Teresa Lewis, a woman with the mental capacity of a 12-14 year old. Whether you agree with this or not – and I certainly do not! – you’d think that Bob McDonnell would be at his desk tonight, just in case a last-minute, emergency petition or something came in, or just because this is a solemn moment for the Commonwealth that Bob McDonnell leads as governor. Also, I’d point out that Bob McDonnell is largely responsible for this execution going forward, and could stop it even now.  So what’s he up to tonight?  According to his public schedule, he’s addressing the Richmond Academy of Medicine this evening, from 7 pm until ???.  After that, it’s hard to tell what he’s up to, since he has a tendency to hide his private schedule, fundraisers and stuff like that.  Anyway, the bottom line is that Bob McDonnell should be at his desk right now, and shouldn’t move from there until this execution is completed. What do you think?

UPDATE: Here’s a description of the event Bob McDonnell’s attending tonight.

…The meeting opens with cocktails in Evans Court followed by dinner in the Marble Hall…At the seated dinner, immediately following the cocktail hour, Governor McDonnell will address the health care challenges the Commonwealth faces as it adapts to federal health care changes… The September 23 meeting is open to RAM members. Member reservations are required. Please email your RSVP to Vicki Foster . Guest fee is $40. Cancellation fee is $75.