Archive for February, 2017

Democrats are now the party of no. Is that enough to win …

After three months wandering in a post-election wilderness, Democrats in Washington are coalescing around a new mission, courtesy of President Trump: Resist. Thats the one-word slogan progressives began using after Trumps election, but even establishment Democrats have begun to take it up.

Where we can engage, we certainly will, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said last week. But if cooperation is fruitless, she added, We must stand our ground we must resist.

Democrats in Congress began the year less defiant, with a more tentative, case-by-case approach to an untested new president. They were ready to work with Trump, they said, if he met them halfway. Democratic senators confirmed a few of Trumps Cabinet nominees without much fuss.

Then their base erupted.

Thousands of pink-hatted demonstrators poured into the streets to renounce the president and all his works. Democratic senators switchboards lit up with demands that they stop voting for Trumps nominees. Outside the Capitol, demonstrators crashed a speech by the Senate Democratic leader, Charles E. Schumer of New York, chanting Do your job. In Brooklyn, demonstrators gathered outside Schumers home, chanting Resist or resign.

Last week, Democrats showed they had heard the message. They walked out of committee hearings to advance Cabinet nominees, and Schumer threatened a possible filibuster against the Supreme Court nomination of Neil Gorsuch. That takes care of the Democrats immediate problem: Theyre restyling themselves in Congress as the party of no.

It wont stop Cabinet nominations from moving forward; there are 52 Republicans in the Senate, and only 50 are needed for confirmation. But it will make it difficult for the GOP to advance much in the way of new legislation, such as a replacement for President Obamas healthcare plan; that would require 60 votes.

And Democratic strategists say theres no political downside to being obstructionist. It didnt stop Republicans from winning in 2016, former Bill Clinton advisor Stanley Greenberg noted.

Resist is simple, punchy and clear but its only the beginning of a strategy to revive the Democrats fortunes. Its not enough to win the real prize, which is to regain a majority in the House or the Senate two years from now.

Thats a daunting challenge. Democrats need to win another 24 seats to take back the House, no easy job when gerrymandering has turned many districts into single-party strongholds. The Senate looks even more difficult, because an unusually high number of Democrats are up for reelection, 10 of them in states Trump won.

Still, theres historical precedent on the Democrats side: The party that wins the White House usually suffers reverses in the congressional election that comes two years later. Thats what happened to the Democrats in 2010, after President Obama passed his healthcare plan.

If Democrats have a larger strategy, so far it boils down to this: Make the 2018 election a referendum on Trump, whose job approval is already slightly lower than it was on Inauguration Day.

You have to assume this is 2010 in reverse, said Greenberg, whos advising House Democrats. The Republicans succeeded in 2010 because they nationalized the election around Obama and Obamacare. The 2018 election will be about Donald Trump, and that changes everything.

One more factor thats buoying Democrats hopes: the enthusiasm of the anti-Trump demonstrators who have poured into the streets in recent weeks.

We have a well-known problem with turnout in congressional elections, said Guy Cecil, another Democratic strategist. But theres already a lot of energy out there. We need to find a way to harness it.

Already, the Democrats House campaign committee has released a list of 59 Republican-held districts it will target in the midterm, many in suburban areas that Trump lost to Hillary Clinton last year. In Southern California, one example is Rep. Ed Roycesdistrict east of Los Angeles, which Clinton won by almost nine percentage points.

But one challenge still bedevils the Democrats: coming up with a single, clear message about what their priorities are beyond rejecting Trump.

At the moment, the party doesnt even have a chairman, and the race for that job has reopened old divisions. Last week, former Vice President Joe Biden endorsed former Labor Secretary Tom Perez, who is widely seen as the candidate of Obama and Clinton loyalists. Bernie Sanders, who backs Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), responded with a tart statement: Do we stay with a failed status quo approach or do we go forward with a fundamental restructuring?

We need to talk about a vision for the country the whole country, not just a confederation of demographic groups, Cecil said. There are going to be a thousand fights available. The fight needs to be focused, it needs to be consistent, and it needs to be electoral.

And yet, he conceded, Our success will depend on whether Donald Trump is a popular president.

The most important figure in the Democratic Party right now may be Trump. Hes a unifying figure, and theyre hoping his flaws will lead them to victory in the next election. But then, thats what they thought in 2016.

doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com

Twitter:@doylemcmanus

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Short One Vote to Defeat Betsy DeVos, Democrats Refuse to Yield Floor – New York Times


New York Times
Short One Vote to Defeat Betsy DeVos, Democrats Refuse to Yield Floor
New York Times
After days of grasping at procedural hurdles, Democrats held vigil against Betsy DeVos, Mr. Trump's polarizing nominee for education secretary, and promised to spend the final 24 hours before her confirmation vote Tuesday reiterating their objections.
Senate Democrats Begin 24-Hour Protests Against Trump's Education Secretary Pick, Betsy DeVosABC News
Democrats are speaking for 24 hours in last push against Betsy DeVosWashington Post
Senate Democrats Plan All-Night Push To Rally Against Trump's Education PickNPR
NBCNews.com -Los Angeles Times
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Short One Vote to Defeat Betsy DeVos, Democrats Refuse to Yield Floor - New York Times

Breakaway Democrats in New York Feel Trump Backlash – New York Times


New York Times
Breakaway Democrats in New York Feel Trump Backlash
New York Times
There are Democrats. There are Republicans. There are the Independent Democrats, a breakaway group of eight legislators who control the State Senate in partnership with Republicans an arrangement the Independent Democrats say empowers them to ...
Breakaway NY Senate Democrats Face Greater Scrutiny by ConstituentsWall Street Journal

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Breakaway Democrats in New York Feel Trump Backlash - New York Times

Democrats push for medical marijuana after Vos says he’s open to idea – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

State Sen. Jon Erpenbach (D-Middleton) left, is introducing a bill to legalize medical marijuana in Wisconsin.(Photo: Scott Bauer/AP)

MADISON Democrats pushed for legalizing medical marijuana Monday, hoping to build on momentum after the Republican speaker of the Assembly said he was open to the idea.

Were not criminals. We no longer want to live in the shadows of society, said Steve Acheson, a Gulf War veteran who uses marijuana to treat post-traumatic stress disorder and back pain.

At a Capitol news conference, Acheson held up two large bags of drugs that had been prescribed to him over the years. He said marijuana did a better job of treating his symptoms than those drugs did.

Sen. Jon Erpenbach (D-Middleton) and Rep. Chris Taylor (D-Madison) offered two pieces of legislation Monday. One would legalize marijuana for medical purposes. The other a backup measure would set an advisory referendum on the issue so voters could have their say on whether to make it available to patients.

Twenty-eight states and Washington, D.C.,allow medical marijuana, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Among them arethree of Wisconsins neighbors Minnesota, Illinois and Michigan.

Taylor noted Republican states like Arizona are among those that allow medical marijuana.

People want medical marijuana legalized and we will not stop this fight until it is legal in the state of Wisconsin, she said.

Last month, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) said he was willing to consider allowing medical marijuana.

"I'm not an expert on medical marijuana, but I certainly have no problem with saying, if you have a sincere medical need and your doctor prescribes it, and it's done under the normal process of any other opiate, I would be open to that," Vos told reporters.

Democrats are hoping to seize on those comments.

Im hoping that he means what he says, Taylor said.

A spokeswoman for Vos did not say Monday whether Vos would want to hold a hearing or votes on the legislation.

Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau) said he opposed the legislation but had not talked to his fellow Republicans about the idea.

Under the bill, patients would be able to acquire and possess marijuana if they had certain medical conditions and registered with the state Department of Health Services. They could have a maximum of 12 plants and 3 ounces of leaves or flowers.

They could be prosecuted if they drove vehicles under the influence of marijuana orused marijuana on public transit or school grounds.

The state would license dispensaries, which would have to be 500 feet or more from schools and would have to follow limits on how much marijuana it could provide to individuals.

Taylor and Erpenbachare not advocating for thelegalization of recreational marijuana, as is allowed in states such as Washington and Colorado. They said they would fight opponents who contend legalizing medical marijuana would put Wisconsin on the road to full-blown legalization.

Its an excuse, Erpenbach said of such arguments. Its cold. Its callous. Its calculated. Its stupid. This will not lead to full legalization.

On Wednesday, senators areslated to take up Senate Bill 10, which would make it easier for parents to acquire an oil derived from marijuana that can be used to treat children with seizure disorders.

A similar measure got through the Assembly last yearbut stalled in the Senate. This year, its chances look much better.

Patrick Marley can be reached atpatrick.marley@jrn.comandtwitter.com/patrickdmarley.

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Democrats dig in to fight Trump’s takedown of Dodd-Frank financial regulations – Los Angeles Times

Democrats are preparing for a battle over President Trumps push to dismantle the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, which analysts said will be difficult to accomplish without bipartisan support.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi vowed Monday to take thecase to the public to try to build opposition to any effort to eliminate or water down protections designed to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis.

The president has moved to expose hardworking Americansto unfair, deceptive and predatory practices, perpetuating a massive con on those who thought he would stand up for them against the powerful interests, Pelosi told reporters.

Dodd-Frank, which was passed with almost no Republican support in the wake of the financial crisis, toughened capital requirements for financial firms,set up a powerful panel of regulators to watch for threatsand created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureauto oversee credit cards, mortgages and other financial products.

Trump signed an executive orderFriday ordering a review of Dodd-Frank, which he has vowed to dismantle.Republicans and businesses say the law has restricted bank lending and consumer choices.

After the signing, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) said the move represented the beginning of the end of the Dodd-Frank mistake.

Althoughsome of the laws rules can be weakened by regulators appointed by Trump, key provisions cannot be eliminated without legislation. That sets up a looming political battle between the administration and congressional Democrats.

To get legislation through the Senate, Republicans would need the support of at least eight Democrats to break an expected filibuster. The chances of that dont look good right now, said Jaret Seiberg,an analyst with brokerage and investment bank Cowen & Co.

Democrats have promised to defend the 2010 law, one of former President Obamas signature accomplishments.

The lesson of history is that when faced with a danger like Donald Trump, opposition needs to grow. Most of all, opposition needs to be willing to fight, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), an ardent supporterof Dodd-Frank, told theProgressive Congress Strategy Summit in Baltimore on Saturday.

Giveaways to giant banks so they can cheat people and blow up our economy again? said Warren, who came up with the idea for the consumer bureau. We will fight back.

Seiberg noted in a report Monday that even moderate Democrats boycotted last weeks Senate Finance Committee vote to advance the nomination of Steven Mnuchin to be Treasury secretary. Mnuchin, a wealthy Wall Street executive,would help lead the effort on an overhaul of financial rules.

If these trends continue, it will be hard to see the president driving legislation forward, particularly as it relates to reforming Dodd-Frank and providing banks with regulatory relief, Seiberg said.

Republicans could try to use the budget reconciliation process, which requires only a simply majority in the Senate,to make changes to Dodd-Frank regulations that affect federal spending and taxes.But that would limit how much of Dodd-Frank could be changed, Seiberg said.

For example, a reconciliation provision could eliminate the independent funding stream for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and subject it to the congressional appropriations process. But reconciliation couldnt be used to replace the bureaus single director with a bipartisan commission, which Republicans have advocated.

Likewise, Trump could not repeal the Volcker Rule, whichprohibits federally insured banks from trading for their own profit and limits their ownership of risky investments. Instead, Trump would have to try to change the rules provisions through the five regulatory agencies that are in charge of it.

Strong Democratic opposition to Trump so far means there are substantial obstacles to bipartisanlegislation overhauling financial, health and energy regulations, Goldman Sachs analysts wrote in a report Monday.

While we have not expected a sweeping overhaul of regulation in any of these areas to become law, recent developments lower the probability somewhat that even incremental changes could pass in the Senate, the report said.

On Friday, at a White House meeting with top corporate chief executives including Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase & Co., Trump signaled his intention to rely on Wall Street for advice on reducing financial regulations.

Theres nobody better to tell me about Dodd-Frank than Jamie, Trump said before the meeting began, adding that we expect to be cutting a lot out of Dodd-Frank.

One of the administration officials helping to direct the overhaul of Dodd-Frank is National Economic Council DirectorGary Cohn, who recently stepped down as chief operating officer at Goldman Sachs. Mnuchin also used to work at the Wall Street investment bank.

Rep. Maxine Waters of Los Angeles, the top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, said Monday that Trumps campaign rhetoric about being tough on Wall Street amounted to a pack of lies.

Waters said Democrats on the Financial Services Committee have been willing to make minor modifications to the law. But she said they would not allow its key provisions, such as creation of the consumer bureau, to be demolished.

We listen very carefully to any concerns that are identified by community banks, even by the big banks, she said.

But, she added, Were not going to destroy Dodd-Frank.

jim.puzzanghera@latimes.com

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Democrats dig in to fight Trump's takedown of Dodd-Frank financial regulations - Los Angeles Times