Archive for March, 2017

VP Mike Pence calls on conservatives to support GOP health care bill – ABC News

Ahead of a key vote on Capitol Hill, Vice President Mike Pence called on skeptical Republicans to get behind the GOP health care bill in remarks to conservative donors and members of Congress Saturday night.

Speaking at the Club for Growth's dinner at the Breakers Resort in Palm Beach, Florida, Pence said the new Republican plan represented "the kinds of solutions conservatives have been talking about for years," and promised to work with lawmakers to improve the legislation.

"Let me be blunt, we need your help," he said to conservatives of the American Health Care Act, which the House is expected to take up on Thursday.

He addressed a crowd of roughly 140 people, including Reps. Mark Meadows, R-North Carolina, and Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, leaders of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus that have called for substantial changes to the American Health Care Act before they can support it on Capitol Hill.

"I know there have been concerns," Pence said. "Just know the president and I and the entire administration are listening."

Earlier in the day, Pence, joined by Republican Florida Governor Rick Scott, met with small business owners about Obamacare and the Republican plan to repeal and replace the law at Mac Papers Envelope Converters in Jacksonville.

On Friday, President Trump met with members of the Republican Study Committee, a large and influential group of House Republicans, and agreed to adjust the health care proposal to allow states to impose work requirements for Medicaid recipients and change the way the federal government transmits Medicaid payments to the states.

Still, members of the Freedom Caucus are pushing for additional changes to address premiums and adjust the proposal's refundable tax credits that would help people pay for insurance.

They also want to phase out the Affordable Care Acts Medicaid expansion before 2020, which moderate Republicans consider a non-starter.

Pence also said the White House would follow through on tax reform and work to roll back Dodd-Frank financial regulations.

While Pence has longstanding ties to the Club for Growth, the free-market advocacy group initially opposed the proposed health care legislation, and was also critical of Trump during the presidential campaign.

On Saturday, Pence argued that the organization and the White House share the same goals.

"We have a pro-growth House, a pro-growth Senate and a pro-growth president of the United States of America," he said.

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VP Mike Pence calls on conservatives to support GOP health care bill - ABC News

A Top Adviser To Mike Pence Is An Investor In Favored Media Outlet – BuzzFeed News

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One of Vice President Mike Pences top political advisers is a major investor in the Independent Journal Review, a social media-minded news outlet geared toward young conservatives.

Nick Ayers, Pences top strategist outside of the White House, confirmed to BuzzFeed News that he owns part of IJR. He is also playing a major role in America First Priorities, a political group launched by Trump campaign advisers to trumpet the presidents message. He joined Trumps campaign when Pence was tapped as the vice presidential nominee and later acted as a senior advisor for the vice president-elect during the transition. Ayers previously worked as a political consultant and as campaign manager for former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlentys presidential bid in 2012.

Theres no indication that Ayers was involved in this weeks controversial State Department decision to grant the sole press spot on Secretary of State Rex Tillersons trip to Asia to IJRs White House correspondent. The move, a break from tradition, has enraged the State Department press corps as Tillerson makes big diplomatic news without a traditional pooler tagging along.

Ayers investment in IJR is another example of close ties between Trumps orbit and a favored media outlet. Steve Bannon, the presidents top strategist, ran Breitbart News for years and has brought with him to the administration a handful of ex-Breitbart staffers. The company has said that it no longer has financial and editorial ties to Bannon. Trumps son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner transferred his ownership of The New York Observer to a family trust.

Theres no sign that Ayers has had any editorial involvement with his investment, and a person involved in the company noted that IJR notably didnt benefit from insider leaks during the campaign.

The revelation of Ayerss investment comes as a series of recent IJR stories attracted wider attention. An IJR reporter had dinner near the president at DCs Trump Hotel based on a tip from a source. The site scooped the national media when it first reported that Neil Gorsuch would be Trumps Supreme Court nominee.

IJR also faced criticism for a story posted Thursday spreading a conspiracy theory that Barack Obama made a surprise visit to Hawaii to sway a judge there to block Trumps revised travel ban executive order. IJR later retracted the article and posted an editors note apologizing. The publications congressional reporter resigned Thursday over disagreements with IJRs direction.

IJR was founded in 2012 by Alex Skatell, who previously met Ayers when he worked in Republican politics, and Phil Musser, a former executive director of the Republican Governors Association.

The site has found success in fashioning viral right-leaning web content geared for heartland news consumers, like funny GOP candidate videos (Sen. Ted Cruz fired a gun wrapped in bacon, for instance). IJR has also sought to ramp up its reporting chops, hiring journalists from mainstream outlets and co-sponsoring a GOP debate with ABC.

This week, IJRs reporting push came at the expense other political news outlets. BuzzFeed News first reported that Erin McPike, IJRs White House correspondent, was the sole journalist selected for a spot on Tillersons trip. We dont take this opportunity lightly and recognize the controversy surrounding press access for the trip, Skatell said in a statement at the time.

McPikes selection became the subject of a heated State Department press briefing on Wednesday. Can you explain why, once a seat was identified on that plane that was available, the decision was made rather than to allow the press to send a pooler who would share information and actually allow us to work around not being there personally, the decision instead was made to handpick a conservative outlet to accompany the secretary and not to share that information? one reporter asked State Department spokesperson Mark Toner, according to a transcript.

In this specific trip and instance, it was decided to take to make an outside-the-box, if I could put it that way, decision to bring somebody in who doesnt necessarily cover the State Department, a media outlet that isnt steeped in foreign policy and give it a new, fresh perspective, Toner said.

On Friday, reporters complained on Twitter that McPike had not filed a piece yet, even though Tillerson made newsmaking comments about North Korea and decided cut his trip to South Korea short. While external advice is noted, Im working on a longer piece per explicit instructions from my supervisor, and I always have been, McPike tweeted. Skatell tweeted that he is to be blamed for McPikes silence: View is a series of tweets not best medium to convey a long form piece.

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A Top Adviser To Mike Pence Is An Investor In Favored Media Outlet - BuzzFeed News

Mike Pence tried with extraordinary speech about Irish heritage – but Hillary Clinton wins the biggest cheer of the … – Irish Independent

US Vice President Mike Pence had an extraordinary speech about how he stood on the inauguration stand in January thinking about his Irish heritage - but it was a picture of Hillary Clinton that earned the biggest cheer on the night.

In an extraordinary and almost emotional speech, Mr Pence said: "All the I am, all that I will ever be and all the service that I will ever give is owed to my Irish heritage.

"As I serve the people of this country I will do so with the faith, the determination, the cheerfulness, the humility and the humour that is characteristic of the great people of the Emerald Isle."

Donald Trump's number two is the grandson of Richard Michael Cawley who emigrated from Tubbercurry, Co Sligo in 1923 to become a bus driver in Chicago.

He told The Ireland Fund dinner in Washington last night that people regularly ask him what went through his head as he was sworn in as the Vice President.

"I just keep thinking of that day in April 1923 when Richard Michael Cawley stepped off the boat in Ellis Island.

"I can't imagine what the sight of the statue of liberty meant to him that day. The torch of freedom," he said.

But it was a photograph of US Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton that earned the biggest cheer of the night.

Ireland Funds ran a montage of all the dinner's previous honourees and the photograph of Mrs Clinton sparked a massive applause, as Mike Pence watched on.

In front of 700 guests including Taoiseach Enda Kenny, the controversial politician had described his family as "a small part" of the story connecting Ireland and the United States.

"As I stood on that inaugural stage I just kept thinking of that Irishman. I kept thinking of what he would be thinking about looking down.

"One, knowing me as well as he did, he'd be extremely surprised," Mr Pence said to laughter.

"And two, I have to think he just thought he was right. He was right about America. He was right to summon the courage as generations did before and since to come here and follow their dreams."

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He was presented with a special award by The Ireland Fund and a copy of the Tubbercurry National School enrolment book that contained his grandfather's name.

"The truth is that whatever I honour I receive over the course of my time as Vice Present, to receive an honour in the name of the Irish people and my Irish heritage will count as chief among them," Mr Pence said.

His sisters, Annie and Mary, attended the lavish event in Washington's Museum Building, while his mother who had been due to travel was unable to due to the storm sweeping the east coast of America.

During a 15 minute speech, Mr Pence also spoke about his visits to Doonbeg, Co Clare where he has relatives.

He also told the gathering that he was able to bring "greetings from my friend, the leader of the free world".

Mr Pence said Donald Trump knew of the contribution the Irish have made to America.

"Irish immigrants and their descendants have been proud patriots," he said, adding that the Irish were among "the strongest and most vibrant threads of our national fabric".

Mr Pence praised the Irish economic recovery and said the success was "a testament" to the "strong" leadership of Enda Kenny over the past six years.

"Many leaders around the world would do well to emulate your leadership," he told the Taoiseach.

In his speech Mr Kenny said: "The Vice President has joined the distinguished list of Irish Americans who have occupied the highest political offices in the United States.

"We take special pride in the fact that, for the first time in the history of this great republic, one Irish American has succeeded another in the office of Vice President."

Online Editors

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Mike Pence tried with extraordinary speech about Irish heritage - but Hillary Clinton wins the biggest cheer of the ... - Irish Independent

Chuck Berry, Donald Trump, Interest Rates: Your Weekend Briefing – New York Times


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Chuck Berry, Donald Trump, Interest Rates: Your Weekend Briefing - New York Times

The Dutch Donald Trump Loses – The New Yorker

CreditIllustration by Tom Bachtell

Is there anything typically German about you? Donald Trump was asked in January, during an interview with European journalists about his immigrant forebears. He answered, I like things done in an orderly manner. And, certainly, the Germans, thats something that theyre rather well known for. As often with Trumps comments, it was hard to distinguish historical insensitivity from personal obliviousnessgiven the complete disorder of his Administrationand heedless stereotyping. (He added, in reference to his mother, who was born in Scotland, The Scottish are known for watching their pennies.... I deal in big pennies.) When Trump talks about Europe, it tends to be as a land of his own imagining: a once terrific place brought low by NATO deadbeats and so wrecked by immigration-related disasters that no one wants to visit anymore; its discontent a harbinger of his success and proof of his perspicacity. Last week, however, the real Europe fell out of step with Trump.

On Wednesday, the Dutch held an election in which the center-right Prime Minister, Mark Rutte, was pitted against Geert Wilders, a right-wing extremistwhose oddly constructed blond pompadour is the least baneful of his resemblances to Trump.Wilders had called for shutting mosques, banning the Koran, closing the Netherlands borders to Muslims, and levying a tax on women who wear head scarves in public.Owing to the fragmented state of Dutch politicstwenty-eight parties were on the ballothe had a shot at gaining a plurality, an outcome that would have given momentum to others on Europes far right, including Marine Le Pen, who will face French voters in the Presidential election next month, as well as the German extremists who will challenge Chancellor Angela Merkel in the fall.

The fear was that, after a near-miss in Austria, three months ago, the Continent was emulating Trump and reverting to its basest image of itself and of others. In fact, Europes current populist-nationalist movements predate Trumps ascendance, and, at times, it isnt clear who is nurturing whom. Wilders, for example, was a featured speaker at a 2010 rally in New York, protesting the construction of a mosque near the World Trade Center site, and he has since written for Breitbart News. Representative Steve King, the Iowa Republican, was praising Wilders when he remarked, earlier this month, that Western civilization could not be saved by somebody elses babies.

Two days before the Dutch election, in a televised debate, Wilders railed against the liars and the givers-away who dont allow the Netherlands to be the Netherlands anymore. Rutte agreed that immigration was an issue, but charged that Wilderss proposals were fake, and added, Thats the difference between tweeting from your couch and governing the country. That line, which dominated the next days headlines, was one that Hillary Clinton might have used; in Ruttes case, it seems to have worked. With a record eighty-two-per-cent voter turnout, his party won thirty-three seats out of a hundred and fifty, leaving Wilders in second place, with twenty. Many young, first-time voters supported the GreenLeft Party, which won fourteen seatsup from just four in the previous electionunder the leadership of Jesse Klaver, who is thirty years old and exhorted crowds to stand by their principles.

The celebrations were tempered, though, by the way that Rutte had pandered to the right. One of his campaign ads told immigrants, Be normal or get out, and he warned that, with Wilders, the wrong kind of populism would take hold, begging the question of what the right kind might be.This is a temptation that many European politicians share with the leaders of the G.O.P.: how Trump-like are they willing to appear in the interest of winning over voters? In the event, Ruttes party did worse in this election than it did in the last one, and it will probably rely on insurgent pro-Europe leftist parties to form a coalition. Franois Fillon, Frances center-right Presidential candidate, tried a tactic similar to Ruttes, only to be derailed by a classically French corruption scandal involving, among other things, expensive suits. If the polls hold, Emmanuel Macron, who is essentially running as an independent, will be the mainstream alternative to Le Pen in a runoff, in May. At a moment of partisan upheaval and realignment, the future is not likely to belong to those who do little more than triangulate.

Europe may also be taking note of the backlash in this country to Trumps xenophobic policies. On the same day that Wilders was defeated, a judge in Hawaii issued a temporary restraining order halting Trumps latest travel ban, on the ground that its legal language was simply a cover for discriminating against Muslims. Still, European anti-Trump sentiment possesses, as yet, a certain ideological incoherence. Last week, after Nicola Sturgeon, the First Minister of Scotland, called for a new referendum on Scottish independence she took to Twitter to boast about the numerical superiority of her electoral mandate to that of Theresa May, the British Prime Minister. In response, Ruth Davidson, the Scottish Tory leader, tweeted, Someones gone the full Donald Trump. It is May, though, who is leading Britain out of Europea process advanced by Parliament last week. More than a million Britons signed a petition berating her for inviting Trump for a state visit, which would entail the national mortification of seeing him presented to the Queen. (Sean Spicers accusation, during a White House press briefing, that British spies had helped President Obama wiretap Trump didnt help matters.) But such gestures mean little in the absence of a clear European voice speaking out against what Trump stands for.

The closest the Continent has to that is Angela Merkel, who arrived in Washington last Friday. During the campaign, Trump said that Merkel, with her humane approach to refugees, was ruining her country, and that the German people are going to end up overthrowing this woman. At a joint press conference, when a reporter asked Merkel what she thought of Trumps style she politely made a broader point: People are different, people have different abilities, have different characteristics, traits of character, have different origins, have found their way to politics along different pathwayswell, that is diversity, which is good. As she finished speaking, she turned and nodded at Trump, with a smile, trying, perhaps, to discern just what about him might be typically American.

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The Dutch Donald Trump Loses - The New Yorker