Tag Archives: senate

AP Praises Democrat Push To Abolish Filibuster

If you’re a Democratic Senator floundering in the polls and about to lose a reliably blue seat, what’s the best way to boost your image? Call up the Associated Press and spout clichés about reforming politics. It worked pretty well for one Michael Bennet, freshman Senator from Colorado. On Thursday, AP writer Jim Abrams interviewed him about a host of suggestions to change the rules in the Senate, allowing him to call the system “out of whack” and “broken.” Abrams then spoke with Senators Claire McCaskill and Tom Udall, from Missouri and New Mexico respectively – both states conveniently being places where the Democratic party is losing its edge. Abrams mentioned their reform proposals with very little background and failed to challenge their selective outrage. Get ready for 16 paragraphs of Democrat campaign talk dressed up as a news report : Those who hold the Senate in low esteem can get a sympathetic ear from some of the chamber’s newer members. These lawmakers also are fed up with the Senate’s ways and would like to change them. “A graveyard of good ideas” is how freshman Democrat Tom Udall of New Mexico sees the Senate. “Out of whack with the way the rest of the world is,” says another freshman, Michael Bennet, D-Colo. “Just defies common sense” is the impression of Claire McCaskill, a first-term Democrat from Missouri, in describing the filibuster-plagued institution. You see, everyday Americans are not fed up with Christmas Eve voting antics, efforts to stall the swearing-in of newcomers, or voting on bills that no one reads. Those ways won’t change. Just the part about Republicans blocking liberal agendas. What actual changes are being proposed? Abrams helpfully lists them: Bennet, the Denver school superintendent appointed to his post after former Sen. Ken Salazar became interior secretary, has put forth an elaborate plan to make the Senate more workable. It includes eliminating the practice known as a “hold” in which a single senator can secretly prevent action on legislation or nominees; ending the ability to filibuster motions to bring a bill up for debate; banning earmarks for private, for-profit companies; imposing a lifetime ban on members becoming lobbyists; and restricting congressional pay raises. “It was immediately apparent to me that the system was broken,” said Bennet, who won a hotly contested primary and faces a tough election this fall. Ah, no one knows more about the broken system than a public school administrator given a Senate seat. Party bosses were not thrilled with Bennet in 2009, claiming that his lack of experience and unpopularity with voters would inevitably give the seat to Republicans in 2010. The party went all-out to protect him from a primary challenger, securing Obama’s endorsement and spending millions on his campaign. It was mere days ago, on August 10, that Bennet won the primary, but since then he’s been trailing Republican Ken Buck. So he trots out familiar reform ideas on earmarks and lobbyists. Every time a political party is facing massive defeat, these things come up but are never imposed. The move to change filibuster requirements is a well-known mission among the far left – a cynical scheme to make slim majorities more powerful. As for anonymous holds, anyone who witnessed the public crucifixion of Rep. Bart Stupak (D – Mich.) immediately understands why Senators would want objections to remain private. Bennet’s reform plan would not allow holdout Senators to stall a vote discreetly. If anyone delayed a vote long enough to read the entire bill or consult with constitutional lawyers, the Senate would publicize their objection and wait for the media to Stupak them. The end result would be more hurried votes from Senators going along to get along. While some of Bennet’s suggestions are good, others will simply discourage dissent and weaken the minority. Yet the AP didn’t bother to examine any unintended consequences. Nothing negative was said about Bennet’s proposal. And in the case of Senator McCaskill’s ideas, Abrams used the vaguest wording possible: McCaskill also has worked with a Republican, Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, to bring more transparency to bills passed by “unanimous consent,” meaning they are approved without debate or roll call votes. Bringing more transparency! Who wouldn’t want that? But what exactly does McCaskill have in mind? This NBer had to search for an explanation elsewhere. Turns out that McCaskill doesn’t want to actually end the practice of passing bills without a vote – she even uses unanimous consent to forward things herself – but she joined Coburn on one superficial request . Coburn’s idea is that if his colleagues allow passage of a bill with no vote, they should at least sign a statement confirming they physically looked at it. That’s what McCaskill is trumpeting as brave new reforms. But without any actual details of the proposal, readers would have no idea how tedious it really was. If Abrams wanted to highlight reform efforts, it might have made sense to speak with Coburn and include his take on the “broken” system, perhaps even allowing him to explain the transparency thing. But Abrams didn’t quote anything positive from a single Republican. Up next was the reform plan from Senator Udall. Turns out Abrams saved the best for last: Udall has what might be the simplest but most radical proposal. He says that when the new session opens next January, he will offer a motion that the Senate adopt rules by a simple majority. That would make it vastly easier for the majority to modify filibuster rules with proposals. Doesn’t this sound great? Not only could the Senate pass controversial bills with 50 plus 1, they could change long-established rules, remove procedural hurdles, or rig the process to favor the majority’s whims. Each new session of the Senate could theoretically operate on a different playing field regarding everything from cabinet nominations to spending bills. The process to censure a senator or impeach a president could also be watered down. Toward the end, Abrams did at least acknowledge a certain amount of hypocrisy from Democrats who suddenly have no interest in protecting the minority: Udall calls his approach the constitutional option. Five years ago, Democrats called it by the more ominous name of the “nuclear option” when then-Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., threatened to push through a simple majority rule for overcoming minority Democrats’ opposition to President George W. Bush’s judicial nominees. In the end, nothing happened. Udall’s idea has been put forward several times in the past, Senate historian Don Ritchie said. But “the Senate has always gotten up to the cliff and decided to step back.” “Some of the people advocating these changes might be very glad they didn’t succeed if they end up in the minority,” he said. That’s as close as Abrams got to discussing the negative possibilities. Four paragraphs from the end, he finally got around to quoting one Republican: “I submit that the effort to change the rules is not about democracy,” Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said at a recent hearing on the history of the filibuster. “It is not about doing what a majority of the American people want. It is about power.” Supporters of the 60-vote supermajority say it helped prevent Democrats from attaching a government-run public option – an idea unpopular with many Americans – to the health care law. And growing national sentiment that Congress should quit adding to federal deficits was reflected when Democrats needing Republican votes to reach the 60-vote threshold were forced to cut future food stamp benefits and an energy program to pay for a $26 billion jobs bill this month. Just when it looks like Abrams was being fair, wait for the handy little nugget in the very last sentence: Both times, the changes grew out of considerable agitation for reform, in 1917 during World War I and in 1975 after years of civil rights advocates being stymied by filibusters, said Sarah Binder, a political science professor at George Washington University. That’s right, folks. The Senate successfully broke a filibuster to pass the Civil Rights Act in 1964, and that’s why they changed the rules 11 years later. But the internet is such a great thing. Turns out Time magazine has online archives from 1975, allowing NBers to see what contemporary accounts actually said. Turns out that liberal Democrats like Walter Mondale were trying to lower hurdles to pass – wait for it – national health insurance. In a news report that sounds eerily like 2010, Democrats back then were complaining that in “a period of economic crisis” the do-nothing Republicans were blocking them from creating more government programs. There was a side note that dealt with “civil rights,” but only because Democrats wanted voting ballots printed in multiple languages. So the last time these ideas were enthusiastically pushed in the Senate, liberal Democrats were angry because their pet agendas couldn’t pass through. Yet Abrams found a professor who white-washed it as heroic efforts to provide civil rights, and that’s the final sentence left ringing for readers in 2010. It’s nice to know that a prestigious news wire like the Associated Press is doing such hard-hitting investigations.

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AP Praises Democrat Push To Abolish Filibuster

Oil Change International: It’s Time To "Clean Up The Senate"

Majority Leader Harry Reid, the Senate’s ringmaster (photo via flickr) As George Parker so thoughtfully detailed last week in is New Yorker story , the U.S. Senate has become a place that produces imperfect policy, when it does produce policy, and the rest of the time the members of the “World’s Greatest Deliberative Body” are off raising money. One thing they are not doing is taking action on our dependance on dirty fossil fuels, which is why Oil Change International has launched CleanUptheSenate.com . … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Oil Change International: It’s Time To "Clean Up The Senate"

Chris Matthews Winces In Pain When Guest Says Dems Could Lose Senate

Chris Matthews this weekend winced in pain when a guest on his syndicated program said it’s actually more likely the Democrats will lose the Senate than the House in the upcoming midterm elections. As the “Chris Matthews Show” entered its final segment when guests offer their predictions, New York magazine’s John Heilemann said, “There are a lot of really smart Democratic politicos that I talk to who are actually a little bit more worried right now that it’s possible Democrats could lose the Senate more easily than they could lose the House.” Matthews interrupted with a pained expression on his face, “That’s like losing a dozen seats.” As Heilemann continued, the host once again interrupted, “Could [Sen. Barbara] Boxer lose in California?”  When Heilemann said yes, Matthews grimaced, “You’re talking tsunami” (video follows with transcript and commentary):  CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: John, tell me something I don’t know. JOHN HEILEMANN, NEW YORK MAGAZINE: You know, there are a lot of really smart Democratic politicos that I talk to who are actually a little bit more worried right now that it’s possible Democrats could lose the Senate more easily than they could lose the House. And part of it I think is because there are… MATTHEWS: That’s like losing a dozen seats. HEILEMANN: Well, it is, and I think there’s a concern about some of the quality of some of those Democratic candidates, there’s a concern about the national mood, and then there’s also some concern about the National Democratic Senatorial Committee which is not actually investing money necessarily in the wisest way according to some of the Democrats who… MATTHEWS: Could Boxer lose in California? HEILEMANN: Boxer could lose in California. And I think it’s also possible that you could see Democrats lose seats they should not lose like in New Hampshire, like in Illinois, seats they should absolutely hold that right now they’re not spending much money there. MATTHEWS: You’re talking tsunami. HEILEMANN: They could lose, yeah. Sheesh, could Matthews at least try to behave like a journalist and not show the audience how pained he is at the thought of a Democrat loss this November? 

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Chris Matthews Winces In Pain When Guest Says Dems Could Lose Senate

WaPo: Reid Paints Angle as ‘Dangerously Reactionary,’ and That’s ‘Not Especially Difficult Work’

Saturday’s Washington Post put the Harry Reid-Sharron Angle race on the front page with the headline “In a tight spot, Sen. Reid colors his foe ‘wacky,’ reactionary” . Post reporter Amy Gardner makes it all about the attack on Angle, not on Reid’s record: Few places are as aptly named as a divey little bar in southwest Las Vegas called The Hammer.That’s where the campaign brain trust of Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D) unwinds over beer and nachos after long days spent trying to discredit his Republican opponent, former state assemblywoman Sharron Angle. All summer long, Reid’s small army of young, eager staffers has bombarded Nevada voters with unflattering, sometimes distorted allegations about Angle. They have scoured old newspapers, government transcripts and video archives for anything she has said or done that might be turned against her. In television and radio ads, Reid’s aides have tried to create and then exploit perceptions that Angle is a dangerous reactionary. It has not been especially difficult work . Angle, a “tea party” favorite, has said many controversial things in her years as a politician. A conservative who is deeply skeptical of government, she called for a phaseout of Social Security and proposed eliminating the departments of Education and Energy. Most recently, Reid claims to have uncovered information that links Angle to an obscure political movement called Christian Reconstructionism, which holds that government should rule according to biblical law. Why is the Post covering a campaign by the Majority Leader of the Senate entirely focused on laying all his opposition research out on the table? Gardner would only address Reid’s record by underlining he doesn’t want to talk about it: He is gaffe-prone, as when he said recently that he didn’t know “how anyone of Hispanic origin could be a Republican.” And in an anti-incumbent year, Reid has chosen not to run on his credentials as one of Washington’s most powerful politicians. Instead, his campaign strategy has been to use his formidable resources to diminish his opponent rather than to promote himself. This is the Post’s first (and so far only) mention of Reid’s gaffe, plopped in paragraph 8, safely inside the paper on page A-5. There’s no mention of Reid’s gaffes about how Obama won election because he was a “light-skinned black” with “no Negro dialect.” There’s no mention of Reid claiming the war in Iraq was “lost” and the surge accomplished nothing. But the Post is more interested in Reid’s Sharron Angle packets: This month, The Washington Post received a 27-page packet linking Angle to Christian Reconstructionism. Similar material appeared in reports by other news outlets. Within days, newspapers, television stations and political bloggers in Nevada began buzzing about Angle’s ties to this largely unknown conservative movement, which says politicians should follow biblical law and should not separate their Christian beliefs from their secular duties. The Reid packet strongly implies that Christian Reconstructionism is a dangerous secret society intent on turning the United States into a theocracy. This is something of a stretch. At its peak in the 1990s, the Christian Reconstructionist movement was small and mostly ignored. The group’s founder, R.J. Rushdoony, tried to start a political party, but it went nowhere. When Rushdoony died nine years ago, the movement dried up. It is true that some of Angle’s views mirror those of Christian Reconstructionists. She has called government entitlement programs a violation of the First Commandment and has objected to church-state separation. The Reid material also points out that Angle was an early member of the Independent American Party of Nevada, the state’s affiliate of the Constitution Party, which seeks “to restore our government to its Constitutional limits and our law to its Biblical foundations.” Of course, to any group of secular leftists, it’s frightening for any conservative politician to talk about God, regardless of whether the Rushdoony arguments have a scintilla of merit. The Post’s video detailing Reid’s opposition research shows footage of Angle talking to CBN about how God called her to the Senate race, and then includes Reid “tracker” footage of Angle telling some elderly women that the left dominates academe, and the media also bends to the left. Apparently, the Washington Post considers this contention “wacky” and “reactionary” — even as its Harry Reid coverage proves it.

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WaPo: Reid Paints Angle as ‘Dangerously Reactionary,’ and That’s ‘Not Especially Difficult Work’

Another Crack: Petermann Glacier, Giant Ice Island, Breaks Off Into The Sea

A NASA image shows the large chunk of ice breaking away from Greenland’s Petermann Glacier. Credit: NASA While the Senate, the White House, and delegates in Bonn at the international climate negotiations dither, Mother Nature keeps the hits coming. Russia is of course baking in record heat and now the Petermann Glacier in northern Greenland has lost an iceberg of 87 square kilometers in size. For scale, the ice sheet is said to be 4 times the size of Manhattan. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Another Crack: Petermann Glacier, Giant Ice Island, Breaks Off Into The Sea

Kagan’s Confirmation Makes ABC and NBC as Giddy as Liberal Democrats

“The number that really excited Democrats is three: Think Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan,” NBC’s Kelly O’Donnell excitedly announced Thursday night while leading into a clip of Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy, who exclaimed as he bounced on his heels on the Senate floor: “Three women will serve together on the United States Supreme Court for the first time in our nation’s history!” The news equally excited the TV network journalists. “History was made in this country today when the Senate confirmed Elena Kagan to the U.S. Supreme Court,” declared fill-in NBC Nightly News anchor Lester Holt as viewers were treated to a “Making History” on-screen graphic. “Tonight on World News, a day of high court history. Elena Kagan confirmed. For the first time ever, three women will be part of deciding the law of the land,” spouted a giddy Diane Sawyer in matching NBC by making Kagan her lead story. Sawyer could hardly contain her excitement: We are here in Washington on the day a new voice joins the Supreme Court. Elena Kagan, the third woman currently on the court, a woman with a reputation for holding her own in any room. And our Jonathan Karl is right here to tell us about the big vote right over there on Capitol Hill. And I want to know what happens when a new justice dons the robe for the first time, Jon? Karl confirmed: “Well, it’s a big day here. I mean, in all of American history, the Senate has confirmed only 112 justices, and, even if you include retired Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, only four of them have been women.” One sour note for Karl, a certain Republican who voted no: “There was one surprise. Scott Brown, I mean, this is the liberal, or moderate Republican from Massachusetts, introduced her at the confirmation hearings, defended her leadership of Harvard Law School. But in the end, he voted no.” (Back on January 31, 2006, when the Senate confirmed President George W. Bush’s second Supreme Court nominee, Samuel Alito, ABC’s World News held itself to a short item read by anchor Elizabeth Vargas.) On NBC Thursday night, Holt fretted that “today’s confirmation vote fell largely along party lines, seen by many as another symbol of Washington’s ever-deepening partisan divide.” But that “ever-deepening” is actually slightly less so than with Alito. Five Republicans voted to confirm Kagan, one more than the four Democrats who backed Alito. On the January 31, 2006 NBC Nightly News, Pete Williams noted: “The vote, 58-to-42, was one of the most deeply partisan ever for a Supreme Court nominee, with just four Democrats voting to confirm.” The MRC’s Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video to provide these transcripts of the Thursday, August 6 stories: ABC’s World News: DIANE SAWYER, IN OPENING TEASER: Tonight on World News, a day of high court history. Elena Kagan confirmed. For the first time ever, three women will be part of deciding the law of the land. … SAWYER: We are here in Washington on the day a new voice joins the Supreme Court. Elena Kagan, the third woman currently on the court, a woman with a reputation for holding her own in any room. And our Jonathan Karl is right here to tell us about the big vote right over there on Capitol Hill. And I want to know what happens when a new justice dons the robe for the first time, Jon? JONATHAN KARL: Well, it’s a big day here. I mean, in all of American history, the Senate has confirmed only 112 justices, and, even if you include retired Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, only four of them have been women. SENATOR AL FRANKEN (D-MN): The tally is 63-37. KARL: Elena Kagan was easily confirmed in a vote the President hailed as historic. PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: For nearly two centuries, there wasn’t a single woman on our nation’s highest court. KARL: Kagan faced last-minute attacks from Republicans who branded her a liberal activist with absolutely no judicial experience. SENATOR PAT ROBERTS (R-KS): Her lack of judicial experience, striking. MITCH MCCONNELL, SENATE MAJORITY LEADER: -is not suited- SENATOR JEFF SESSIONS (R-AL): -does not have the gifts- SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN (R-AZ): She is unlikely to exercise judicial restraint. KARL: It was highly partisan. All but five Republicans voted no. All but one Democrat voted yes. With Kagan, the court will now have, for the first time, three women serving at once, one third of the justices. It’s a huge sea change for an institution that has been dominated by men. As recently as last year, there was just one woman on the court. JUSTICE RUTH BADER GINSBURG, U.S. SUPREME COURT: Now there I am all alone, and it doesn’t look right. It’s lonely for me. There’s life experience that a woman has simply because she’s grown up inside a woman’s body. KARL: Ronald Reagan nominated Sandra Day O’Connor as the first woman in 1981, but it wasn’t until 12 years later that the court installed a woman’s restroom near the room where they deliberate. JOAN BISKUPIC, SUPREME COURT HISTORIAN: For years, they would just have a men’s bathroom back there. It just goes to show what a male-dominated place the Supreme Court had been for many years. KARL: Kagan will, of course, be the most junior justice, and the others will make sure she knows it. By tradition, the junior justice must take notes when the nine of them deliberate. And, Diane, if somebody knocks on the door, it is her, the most junior justice, that has to go up to answer the door to bring in papers, a message, or even coffee. SAWYER: Pretty mild form of hazing, though. Tell me about the vote itself. Any surprises who voted for and against? KARL: There was one surprise. Scott Brown, I mean, this is the liberal, or moderate Republican from Massachusetts, introduced her at the confirmation hearings, defended her leadership of Harvard Law School. But in the end, he voted no. SAWYER: So he voted with the Republicans? KARL: He voted with the rest of the Republicans, all but five of them, against her nomination. SAWYER: Okay, thanks, Jon. Good to be here with you tonight. NBC Nightly News: LESTER HOLT: Good evening. Brian is on assignment tonight. I’m Lester Holt. History was made in this country today when the Senate confirmed Elena Kagan to the U.S. Supreme Court. Once she’s sworn in this weekend, she’ll become the current court’s third woman member and the fourth ever named. Tonight President Obama calls Kagan’s confirmation “an affirmation of her character and her temperament.” Still, today’s confirmation vote fell largely along party lines, seen by many as another symbol of Washington’s ever-deepening partisan divide. NBC’s Kelly O’Donnell is on Capitol Hill with more. Kelly, good evening. KELLY O’DONNELL: Good evening, Lester. When you look at today’s vote, you can see history. Justice Kagan will give women a greater voice – making up one-third of the court – and you can see politics. Five Republicans crossed over to support Kagan while one Democrat was among the no votes. SENATOR AL FRANKEN (D-MN): The tally is 63-37. The nomination is confirmed. O’DONNELL: Elena Kagan did get five fewer votes than Sonia Sotomayor last summer, but the number that really excited Democrats is three: Think Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan. SENATOR PATRICK LEAHY (D-VT): Three women will serve together on the United States Supreme Court for the first time in our nation’s history! O’DONNELL: At 50, Kagan becomes the youngest justice, succeeding the oldest, 90-year-old John Paul Stevens. Congratulations from President Obama late today. PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: She knows that the Supreme Court’s decisions shape not just the character of our democracy, but the circumstances of our daily lives. O’DONNELL: Kagan’s unexpected sense of humor charmed Senators of both parties at her confirmation hearings. JUSTICE ELENA KAGAN, U.S. SUPREME COURT: It means I’d have to get my hair done more often, Senator Specter. O’DONNELL: New York born, first woman dean of Harvard Law. Her policy to limit military recruiters access there gave Republicans their strongest criticism. SENATOR JOHN CORNYN (R-TX): Dean Kagan, I believe, showed a willingness to bend the law and facts to advance her own political goals of protesting the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy. O’DONNELL: Kagan worked for Presidents Obama and Clinton. She will be the only justice on the current court who has never been a judge. LEAHY: She earned her place at the top of the legal profession. No one gave it to her. She earned it. O’DONNELL: And it’s been 40 years since the newest member of the Supreme Court has had no previous experience as a judge. And the plan for Elena Kagan is that she will be sworn in this Saturday afternoon by her new colleague, Chief Justice John Roberts.

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Kagan’s Confirmation Makes ABC and NBC as Giddy as Liberal Democrats

Elena Kagan Is Your New Supreme Court Justice [Supreme]

After some snoozy confirmation hearings in which she didn’t say anything, Elena Kagan has earned herself a seat on the nation’s highest court, the Supreme Court! The final Senate vote was 63-37. Congratulations to Elena Kagan! More

Can the Senate Even Pass the BP Spill Bill?

Photo via Dynamic Patents The Senate notoriously gutted and left for dead its comprehensive climate and clean energy reform bill, even after watering down numerous times. Now, even the tiny remnants of that bill , those measures deemed least offensive — primarily getting tougher with offshore drilling regulations and some energy efficiency incentives — may not pass. I have to say, if the S… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Can the Senate Even Pass the BP Spill Bill?

Schultz Says Breitbart ‘Nutjob, Makes Me Sick’ But Whines Won’t Come On Show

Hey, it’s been a long day with all this Sherrod stuff.  So let’s kick back and enjoy some—unintentional—humor, courtesy Ed Schultz.  On his MSNBC show this evening, Ed advised Dems not to go on Fox News because they’ll “beat you up.”  Schultz then unleashed a torrent of venom on Andrew Breitbart, saying among—many—other things that Breitbart is a “nutjob” who “makes me sick.” But Schultz began the show by whining because—ready?—Breitbart wouldn’t come on Ed’s show. Sit back and enjoy the video as Ed twists himself into a logical pretzel. ED SCHULTZ: I want to know why any Democrat in the Congress, any Democrat in the Senate, any Democrat anywhere: why do you even go on those shows over there [at Fox News].  They won’t tell the truth. They beat you up. What do you gain? . . . Andrew Breitbart, right-wing nut job. Well this guy makes me sick.  He’s an absolute pro at hatchet jobs. But here’s Ed during the show-opener . . . SCHULTZ: This Breitbart is a master at trying to destroy people professionally.  He’s a right=winger, he has an agenda, no doubt about it.  I saw him today in the hallway today at MSNBC, asked him to be on this program tonight.  He’s too tired. And he doesn’t know about tomorrow. This is how hate merchants operate. 

Unemployment extensions: Obama comes down hard on the GOP

Just a quick update regarding President Obama's stance on unemployment. In his Saturday morning radio address July 17th, President Obama said, about the Republicans in the Senate “They've got no problem spending money on tax breaks for folks at the top who don't need them and didn't even ask for them, but they object to helping folks laid off in this recession who really do need help,” Obama said. “And every day this goes on, another 50,000 Americans lose that badly needed lifeline.” added by: Cecilia_Deuhs