Archive for March, 2017

American democracy: Not so decadent after all – Times-Mail (subscription)

WASHINGTON Under the dark gray cloud, amid the general gloom, allow me to offer a ray of sunshine. The last two months have brought a pleasant surprise: Turns out the much feared, much predicted withering of our democratic institutions has been grossly exaggerated. The system lives.

Let me explain. Donald Trumps triumph last year was based on a frontal attack on the Washington establishment, that all-powerful, all-seeing, supremely cynical, bipartisan cartel (as Ted Cruz would have it) that allegedly runs everything. Yet the establishment proved to be Potemkin empty. In 2016, it folded pitifully, surrendering with barely a fight to a lightweight outsider.

At which point, fear of the vaunted behemoth turned to contempt for its now-exposed lassitude and decadence. Compounding the confusion were Trumps intimations of authoritarianism. He declared I alone can fix it and I am your voice, the classic tropes of the demagogue. He unabashedly expressed admiration for strongmen (most notably, Vladimir Putin).

Trump had just cut through the grandees like a hot knife through butter. Who would now prevent him from trampling, caudillo-like, over a Washington grown weak and decadent? A Washington, moreover, that had declined markedly in public esteem, as confidence in our traditional institutions from the political parties to Congress fell to new lows.

The strongman cometh, it was feared. Who and what would stop him?

Two months into the Trumpian era, we have our answer. Our checks and balances have turned out to be quite vibrant. Consider:

Trump rolls out not one but two immigration bans, and is stopped dead in his tracks by the courts. However you feel about the merits of the policy itself (in my view, execrable and useless but legal) or the merits of the constitutional reasoning of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals (embarrassingly weak, transparently political), the fact remains: The president proposed and the courts disposed.

Trumps pushback? A plaintive tweet or two complaining about the judges that his own Supreme Court nominee denounced (if obliquely) as disheartening and demoralizing.

Federalism lives. The first immigration challenge to Trump was brought by the attorneys general of two states (Washington and Minnesota) picking up on a trend begun during the Barack Obama years when state attorneys general banded together to kill his immigration overreach and the more egregious trespasses of his Environmental Protection Agency.

And beyond working through the courts, state governors Republicans, no less have been exerting pressure on members of Congress to oppose a Republican presidents signature health care reform. Institutional exigency still trumps party loyalty.

The Republican-controlled Congress (House and Senate) is putting up epic resistance to a Republican administrations health care reform. True, thats because of ideological and tactical disagreements rather than any particular desire to hem in Trump. But it does demonstrate that Congress is no rubber stamp.

And its independence extends beyond the perennially divisive health care conundrums. Trumps budget, for example, was instantly declared dead on arrival in Congress, as it almost invariably is regardless of which party is in power.

Trump is right. It is the opposition party. Indeed, furiously so, often indulging in appalling overkill. Its sometimes embarrassing to read the front pages of the major newspapers, festooned as they are with anti-Trump editorializing masquerading as news.

Nonetheless, if you take the view from 30,000 feet, better this than a press acquiescing on bended knee, where it spent most of the Obama years in a slavish Pravda-like thrall. Every democracy needs an opposition press. We damn well have one now.

Taken together and suspending judgment on which side is right on any particular issue it is deeply encouraging that the sinews of institutional resistance to a potentially threatening executive remain quite resilient.

Madisons genius was to understand that the best bulwark against tyranny was not virtue virtue helps, but should never be relied upon but ambition counteracting ambition, faction counteracting faction.

You see it even in the confirmation process for Neil Gorsuch, Trumps supremely qualified and measured Supreme Court nominee. Hes a slam dunk, yet some factions have scraped together a campaign to block him. Their ads are plaintive and pathetic. Yet I find them warmly reassuring. What a country where even the vacuous have a voice.

The anti-Trump opposition flatters itself as the resistance. As if this is Vichy France. Its not. Its 21st-century America. And the good news is that the checks and balances are working just fine.

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American democracy: Not so decadent after all - Times-Mail (subscription)

Trumbull High junior receives Sutherland Inspiration in Democracy Award – CT Post

Photo: Matthew Montgomery / Matthew Montgomery Photography

Sutherland

Sutherland

Matthew Kuroghlian, 16, a junior at Trumbull High School, is hugged by Doug and Terry Sutherland after receiving the Kevin J. Sutherland Inspiration in Democracy Award on Sunday.

Matthew Kuroghlian, 16, a junior at Trumbull High School, is hugged by Doug and Terry Sutherland after receiving the Kevin J. Sutherland Inspiration in Democracy Award on Sunday.

Senator Chris Murphy speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Senator Chris Murphy speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Senator Chris Murphy speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Senator Chris Murphy speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Rep. Jim Himes speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Rep. Jim Himes speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Senator Richard Blumenthal speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Senator Richard Blumenthal speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Senator Richard Blumenthal speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Senator Richard Blumenthal speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Trumbull Town Treasurer Anthony Musto at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Trumbull Town Treasurer Anthony Musto at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Trumbull Board of Finance member Vicki Tesoro speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Trumbull Board of Finance member Vicki Tesoro speaks at the 2017 Keys to Democracy Trumbull Democratic Town Committee Awards Dinner at Tashua Knolls Country Club in Trumbull, Conn. on Sunday, March 26, 2017.

Trumbull High junior receives Sutherland Inspiration in Democracy Award

TRUMBULL Matthew Kuroghlian, a Trumbull High School junior, was presented Sunday with the Kevin J. Sutherland Inspiration in Democracy Award, named after the intern of Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., who died in a knife attack on a subway in Washington nearly two years ago.

The 16-year-old Trumbull High student was singled out for dedicating himself to public service and engaging young people in local and state elections while still in high school, according to the Trumbull Democratic Town Committee which bestowed the honor. He is vice president of his class and a leader in the Model United Nations THS club.

When I was in high school, I began a Young Democrats organization, too, and its still active, said Sen. Chris Murphy. I know many of you have a sense of anxiety over whats happening in Washington, but its not something that cant be cured by political action.

Rep. Jim Himes recalled Sutherland as a young man who could bring about change though thoughtful expression, rather than bombast and insults.

To me he was a little brother, Himes said. We should all be in awe of the strength of his character. I didnt always agree with him, but I always wanted to hear his thoughts.

He said turning back efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act was a major victory for Americans.

This was a week in which we pushed back to protect a whole bunch of people, he said of Congress decision not to repeal the law commonly known as Obamacare.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal told the gathering Democracy was in peril and the nation is careening toward a Constitutional crisis because of Russian meddling in the fall elections.

I will block any nominee for deputy attorney general until and unless he commits to a special prosecutor , he said, someone who can perform an aggressive, impartial inquiry, and bring charges and prosecute whoever is responsible up to and including the president.

Matthew was a volunteer for Himes in his 2016 campaign and held a leadership role in the unsuccessful 2016 campaign of Lino Costantini for Trumbulls 126th District seat in the Legislature. Matthew also created a group, the Eastern Fairfield County Young Democrats.

Doug Sutherland, Kevins father, was choked with tears when he approached the lectern. He thanked Kuroghlian for starting a Young Democrats group in Trumbull.

This was something that Kevin tried to to when he was at Trumbull High but of course there was no Donald Trump back then, he said. So I guess there is a silver lining in this after all.

Also honored by the TDTC Sunday night were Timothy A. Cantafio, vice president of engineering for Northeast Electronics, Corp., Milford, for his four decades of involvement in local political and social issues, and Beryl Kaufman for furthering the participation of citizens in our government and protecting the rights and education of people with special needs.

Cantafio ran unsuccessfully for a Town Council seat when he was 18. He is a lifelong Trumbull resident and with his wife, Dawn, reared two children here.

Kaufman, as a young mother, became executive director of the Connecticut Association for Children and Adults with Learning Disabilities and Attention Deficits, or CACLD, which was active from the early 1970s until recently. She also organized the first conference in Connecticut on issues faced by high school graduates with special needs.

More than 250 turned out for the dinner event at the Tashua Knolls clubhouse, and those in attendance included former first selectmen Paul Timpanelli and Ray Baldwin, former Bridgeport Mayor Tom Bucci and Tom McCarthy of the Bridgeport City Council.

The attack on Kevin Sutherland occurred on July 4, 2015, in a Washington Metro train. Police said Sutherland, 24, died of numerous stab wounds.

Jasper Spires, then 18, has been charged with the crime, and the case is continuing. Police said the attack began when Spires tried to steal Sutherlands cel phone and that the suspect may have been high on synthetic drugs at the time.

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Trumbull High junior receives Sutherland Inspiration in Democracy Award - CT Post

California: Trump Supporters Attack Anti-Trump Protesters – Democracy Now!

The U.S.-backed Iraqi militarys ground campaign to retake west Mosul from ISIS has been halted as details emerged over the weekend about U.S.-led coalition airstrikes that killed over 200 people in a single day. The U.S.-led coalition has admitted launching the March 17 airstrikes that targeted a crowded section of the Mosul al-Jadida neighborhood.

Some reports say one of the strikes hit an explosive-filled truck, triggering a blast that destroyed nearby houses where hundreds of people were taking refuge amid the citys heavy fighting. Up to 80 civilians, including women and children, may have died in one houses basement alone. The March 17 strikes appear to be among the deadliest U.S. airstrikes in the region since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Over the weekend, witnesses told The Guardian that some of their family members remain trapped under the rubble after days of U.S.-coalition airstrikes battered neighborhoods in and around west Mosul. This is a family member of some of the civilians killed in the March 17 strike.

Witness: "I came to the house to stay with my family, but the owner of the house told me there was no place for me. More than 100 people were inside. Half an hour later, the house was hit in an airstrike. There were neither snipers nor ISIL militants on the street. At least 15 people from this street, that links into the alleyways, have been killed."

The journalistic project Airwars reports as many as 1,000 civilians have died in U.S.-led coalition airstrikes in Iraq and Syria in March alone. The high civilian death toll is leading many to question whether the U.S. military has loosened the rules of engagement that seek to limit civilian casualties. The Pentagon maintains the rules have not changed. Well have more on U.S.-led airstrikes, including the devastating strikes in Mosul al-Jadida, later in the broadcast.

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California: Trump Supporters Attack Anti-Trump Protesters - Democracy Now!

If Socialism and Feminism Had a Baby, This Is What It Would Look Like – AlterNet


AlterNet
If Socialism and Feminism Had a Baby, This Is What It Would Look Like
AlterNet
Like the economics of caring, socialism has some decidedly girly aspects, which helps explain why many men are fearful of it. Sounds so soft. In contrast, feminism has some boyish qualities, which helps explain why some women veer away from it. Sounds ...

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If Socialism and Feminism Had a Baby, This Is What It Would Look Like - AlterNet

How To Marginalize The Tea Party – Huffington Post

How is it that the 37 most rightwing members of the House, the so-called Freedom Caucus, have disabled the Republican majority?

The explanation is the relatively recent tradition that Republicans never make bipartisan agreements with Democrats, except in the rare cases when they can peel off a few conservative Democrats to totally capitulate to Republican terms. If Republicans could bring themselves to work with Democrats the norm for most of American history the outsized influence of the most extreme Republicans would collapse.

The Republican posture of ultra-partisanship, which has now backfired, is something recent in American legislative politics. It dates only to the presidency of George W. Bush, and more recently to the Republican wall-to-wall blockage of Democratic initiatives under President Obama.

Before that, President Bill Clinton, who had a Republican majority in Congress for six of his eight years, frequently reached across the aisle to win majorities for policies, some of them liberal and some conservative.

This posture, commended by the strategist Dick Morris, was called Triangulation. It drove liberals crazy, but enabled Clinton to govern. (Clinton was also willing to play partisan hardball when then Speaker Newt Gingrich shut down the governmentand had to back down.)

Under Clinton, liberal legislation like the Family and Medical Leave Act and the hike in the minimum wage were passed with mostly Democratic votes, but also with support of some Republicans. Conversely, more conservative bills, like the NAFTA deal in 1993 and the enactment of a draconian welfare reform (TANF) in 1996, passed with mostly Republican votes and a minority of Democrats.

Before Clinton, Republican President George H.W. Bush governed the same fashion. He reached across the aisle to get Republican and Democratic support for the Americans with Disabilities Act and the 1990 Clean Air Amendments. He enlisted Democrats when his fellow Republicans balked at a tax increase.

Several bills in the eras of the first president Bush and Bill Clinton bore the names of Ted Kennedy and Republican co-sponsors Nancy Kassebaum or Orrin Hatch.

Early in the Bush II Administration, W worked with Democrats over the objection of some Republicans to win support for an expansion in federal aid to education in exchange for federal standards, and to add a Medicare drug benefit.

And then partisanship gradually hardened. Under the so-called Hastert Rule, Republicans avoided bipartisan coalitions. It was first propounded in November 2004 by the then House Speaker, Dennis Hastert, as a way to maintain tighter party discipline. The Hastert rule bound Republicans to vote with a majority of the Republican caucus position.

Hastert left Congress in 2007, after Republicans lost control of the House. Hastert was subsequently found guilty of ethics violations and went to prison in a sex scandal, after it was revealed that he had been paying hush money to former students who he had abused as a wresting coach.

But when Republicans took back the Congress after 2010, they imposed a more extreme version of the same idea. They simply stopped working across the aisle.

This strategy worked well enough in their cynical opposition to anything Barack Obama imposed, but it has now given a de facto veto power to their own most extremist members the Freedom Caucus. Basically, the caucus has inverted the Hastert Rule, and feels free to oppose the GOPs rightwing policies if the are not rightwing enough. This has made it all but impossible for the Republican majority to govern.

There is a very simple cure, one that would consign the Freedom Caucus the political oblivion that it so richly deserves Trump and the Republicans should rediscover the benefits of bipartisanship.

After all, Trump did not campaign as a conservative but as a populist. He is not much of a partisan Republican and is cordially detested by most Republicans, who tolerate him only to the extent that they can use him.

If any president should be practicing triangulation, it is Donald Trump. Where is the ur-opportunist Dick Morris now that we need him? (Morris fell from grace in 1996 when he was caught with a hooker.) He and Trump were surely destined for each other.

If Trump and relatively sane Republicans could get together with Democrats to improve the aspects of the Affordable Care Act that do in fact need fixing, like rising premiums, they could tell the Tea Party Republicans in the Freedom Caucus to take a hike. Likewise on infrastructure and trade measures.

That maneuver and repositioning would show true artistry of the deal. With upwards of a hundred Democrats supporting bipartisan measures, the 37 whack jobs in the Freedom Caucus, who surely have no loyalty to Trump, would cease to have influence.

Are some House Republicans and Trump himself ready to acknowledge that reality and this option? It would allow for a restart of his presidency, more consistent with the promises he made in the campaign.

Or do they just share a hatred of Democrats so profound that they will continue to allow the Freedom Caucus to wreck the Republican Party and the Trump presidency alike?

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and professor at Brandeis Universitys Heller School. His latest book is Debtors Prison: The Politics of Austerity Versus Possibility. http://www.amazon.com/Debtors-Prison-Politics-Austerity-Possibility/dp/0307959805

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How To Marginalize The Tea Party - Huffington Post