Archive for June, 2017

Congressional candidate switches from independent to Democrat – Southernminn.com

A 1st Congressional District candidate who planned to run as an independent is now running as a Democrat.

Johnny Akzam, of Rochester, initially filed to run as an independent. But the website developer said he has decided to seek the DFL endorsement.

I had a lot of support from DFLers asking me to run as a DFLer, he said.

Akzam, who supported 2016 presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, initially decided against running as a Democrat because he was concerned about how Sanders was treated by the Democratic National Committee. But he said it appears to be a much fairer process at the congressional level.

Theres been no shortage of interest in the seat since 1st District DFL Rep. Tim Walz announced in March he wouldnt seek re-election. He is running for governor in 2018.

Akzam is one of three Democrats seeking the partys endorsement for the seat. Others who have announced are former Sen. Vicki Jensen of Owatonna and electronic pull-tabs salesman Colin Minehart of Albert Lea. Byron High School teacher John Austinson is expected to announce his bid for the seat on Wednesday. Two other Democrats, Dan Feehan and Joe Sullivan, both of Mankato, are also considering running for the seat.

So far only one Republican has officially entered the race Blue Earth Republican Jim Hagedorn. He narrowly lost to Walz in November. Plenty of other Republicans are mulling bids, including state Olmsted County Republican Party Chairman Aaron Miller, Rochester Sen. Carla Nelson, Rochester Rep. Nels Pierson and Luverne Rep. Joe Schomacker.

Asked if he plans to abide by the DFLs endorsement process, Akzam said, If I feel like the process is fair, then I will respect the endorsement.

Reach Regional Managing Editor Suzanne Rook at 507-333-3134. Follow her on Twitter @rooksuzy

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Congressional candidate switches from independent to Democrat - Southernminn.com

Paul Ryan says it’s "easier" having Trump in the White House than a Democrat – CBS News

Speaker Paul Ryan is claiming that it's "easier" having a Republican in the White House rather than a Democrat, despite some of the legislative challenges his party has faced so far this year.

In a new interview on Fox News' "Fox and Friends," the Wisconsin Republican was asked if it's not necessarily easier having President Trump in the White House.

"Oh, I think it's easier," Ryan said. "It's easier but also it's exciting and it gives you optimism because you have a chance of doing things."

Ryan said that Republicans, on the other hand, disagreed with President Obama "on so many things."

"With President Trump, the sky's the limit," he said. "I mean, the Senate is a razor thin majority. That is a very tight majority. But we have this opportunity and we just cannot blow it."

But it hasn't exactly been easy for the Republican majority. The GOP's two major accomplishments during the Trump administration so far are confirming Neil Gorsuch as a Supreme Court justice and reversing a series of Obama-era regulations through the Congressional Review Act.

Aside from those successes, Republicans have been struggling. The House narrowly passed a GOP health care bill to repeal and replace Obamacare in early May after failing to secure enough support for the original measure in March. The Senate, meanwhile, was expected to vote on a different version of the bill this week before the July 4 recess, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, suddenly decided Tuesday to delay the vote until they return. Leadership was struggling to secure enough support to advance the bill to a final vote.

Other items the GOP majority hasn't completed:

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Paul Ryan says it's "easier" having Trump in the White House than a Democrat - CBS News

Senate intelligence panel to get Comey memos, top Democrat says – Fox News

The Senate intelligence committee will receive former FBI Director James Comey's memos of his conversations with President Trump as part of its investigation into Russian actions during the 2016 election, the committee's top Democrat told reporters Wednesday.

"We have a commitment to get appropriate access to the Comey memos," said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va. "I'm pleased, I think it's critical information we have to have as part of our review process."

Warner said the committee would receive the memos "soon," but would not specify a date. He also did not say with whom the committee made the deal to receive the memos.

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., right, and committee Vice Chairman Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va. confer during a hearing on Capitol Hill Wednesday. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Comey, who was fired by Trump as FBI Director May 9, told lawmakers earlier this month that he prepared multiple memos documenting conversations with the president that Comey said made him uneasy. One of the memos detailed a Feb. 14 conversation in which Trump requested that the FBI end an investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

During his testimony before the Senate intelligence committee, Comey admitted to having a friend leak that memo to the media.

Warner said he's anxious to see Comey's contemporaneous reflections on his meetings with the president, particularly the Oval Office discussion on Flynn.

Warner wouldn't say if he knew if there were multiple copies of the memos.

Earlier Wednesday, a source close to Trump's legal team told Fox News that they had indefinitely postponed filing ethics complaints against Comey with the Department of Justice inspector general and the Senate Judiciary Committee in relation to the leaked Feb. 14 memo.

The source said the postponement was in deference to the ongoing FBI investigation led by special counsel Robert Mueller.

Fox News' John Roberts and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Senate intelligence panel to get Comey memos, top Democrat says - Fox News

Seven Republicans, one Democrat file for Senate District 37 special election – Tulsa World

The Sept. 12 Republican special election primary for state Senate District 37 suddenly became very crowded on Wednesday.

Five GOP candidates turned in their paperwork to the state Election Board on the last day of filing for the soon-to-be vacated seat, bringing to seven the total number entered in the no-runoff primary.

Only one Democrat, Allison Ickley-Freeman of Tulsa, filed.

Filing Wednesday were Brian Jackson, 34, Sand Springs; Rick Hardesty, 56, Tulsa; Nicole Nixon, 31, Tulsa; R. Jay McAtee, Sand Springs; and Phil Nollan, 56, Sand Springs.

They joined Brian OHara, 56, and Grady Grant, 62, both of Jenks, who filed on Monday.

OHara, a field representative for First District Congressman Jim Bridenstine, is a former Jenks city councilor.

Grant operates a locksmith company in Tulsa.

Jackson, a Sand Springs city councilor, lost in last years GOP SD 37 primary to incumbent Dan Newberry. Newberry is resigning the seat no later than Jan. 31.

Nollan is also a Sand Springs city councilor. His wife, Jadine Nollan, is a state representative.

Nixon works for a Tulsa metal supplier and fabricator, and last spring was an outspoken critic of Tulsa Public Schools decision to close Remington Elementary School.

McAtee is an insurance and workers compensation defense lawyer.

The winner of the GOP primary will face Ickley-Freeman, a 26-year-old social worker, in the Nov. 14 general election.

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Seven Republicans, one Democrat file for Senate District 37 special election - Tulsa World

Healthcare debate highlights the split that threatens to paralyze Republicans – Los Angeles Times

Six months after taking control of the White House and both houses of Congress, Republicans who campaigned for years on repealing Obamacare still cant agree on how to do it.

A chief reason that the struggle has been so hard is the growing importance in the party of populist blue-collar voters, whom Trump proved adept at courting, but Republicans risk alienating with their healthcare overhaul.

Its true, as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Tuesday after temporarily shelving a vote on the healthcare bill, that legislation of this complexity almost always takes longer than anybody else would hope.

Its also true, as Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said, that President Trump is new to government, and "it has been a challenge to him to learn how to interact with Congress." Trump, who touts himself as the closer in big deals, has proven ineffective in that role so far in the Senate, in part because of a failure to master not just the details of healthcare policy, but the broad outlines of how the bill would work.

But something more than the complexity of the subject and the dysfunction of the White House has stymied Republicans: The split over healthcare highlights a deep division that threatens to paralyze them as a governing party.

A side-by-side comparison of Obamacare and the GOPs replacement plans

Republicans were seemingly so disciplined in not lending any support to Democrats during the Obama years that we thought they were unified, said Sarah Binder, a political science professor at George Washington University and expert on Congress.

Weve overestimated cohesion in the Republican Party, she said, noting that Republicans have become more ideologically diverse over the last decade.

The splits within the party have McConnell and his allies scrambling to get the 50 votes they would need in the Senate to pass a bill, a goal he repeated on Wednesday. McConnell hopes to reach a deal by Friday, before senators leave for a weeklong July 4 recess, and then vote on it when they return. However, the longer the bill is exposed to public scrutiny and attack, not just from Democrats, but from doctors groups, hospital officials, insurers and some Republican governors, the harder the search for votes will become, he and his lieutenants fear.

Alex Brandon / Associated Press

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell listens to a question while speaking with the media after a meeting with President Trump at the White House.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell listens to a question while speaking with the media after a meeting with President Trump at the White House. (Alex Brandon / Associated Press)

If Republicans cant agree, McConnell said after senators met with Trump at the White House on Tuesday, well have to sit down with Sen. [Charles. E.] Schumer, the Democratic leader to negotiate a solution to at least tackle the most acute problems with the Obamacare markets.

But he made clear that bipartisan discussion was not his first choice. My suspicion is any negotiation with Democrats will include none of the reforms that we would like to make on the market side and the Medicaid side, he added.

Republicans determination to pass the healthcare bill might seem puzzling in light of its deep unpopularity with voters. A poll for National Public Radio and PBS, conducted by the polling institute at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and released Wednesday, found, for example, that only one in five people approved of how the Republicans are handling healthcare. Even among those who identified themselves as Trump supporters, opinion was evenly divided on how the party is dealing with the issue, while Trump opponents were almost unanimous in their distaste for it.

Asked specifically about the Senate bill, just 17% of Americans and only 35% of Republicans said they approved of it.

Two other nationwide surveys, done by polling institutes at Suffolk University in Massachusetts and Quinnipiac University in Connecticut, showed similar results.

One counterbalance to the bills unpopularity is pressure from the partys donors, who tend to be ideological conservatives.

At a recent donor conference organized by the network of groups affiliated with the billionaire Koch brothers, Doug Deason, a major Republican donor from Dallas, told reporters that he and other wealthy Texans had let Republicans know that they would stop sending money until Congress started fulfilling key campaign promises, including repealing the Affordable Care Act, as Obamacare is formally known.

You control the Senate, you control the House, we have the presidency, theres no reason we cant get this done, Deason said he told House Republicans, including Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield). Were closing the checkbook until you get some things done, he said.

But pressure from donors is not the only factor. The same survey that revealed widespread unpopularity for the Senate bill also showed that 53% of Republicans still said they wanted Congress to completely repeal Obamacare. Among the public as a whole, 25% took that view, while 46% said Congress should change the law so it does more, and another 17% said they should leave it as it is.

A close look at how people voted last fall helps explain the divided impulses among Republicans. The partys victory in 2016 depended on two very different groups traditional conservatives and conservative populists who have clashing interests in the healthcare debate.

Political analysts often look at how voters line up on two different sets of issues economic subjects, such as the proper size of the social safety net, the role of government in the economy and inequality between rich and poor; and social issues, including race, immigration and moral questions like abortion.

Analyzed that way, voters typically separate into four big clusters. A recent large-scale study of 2016 voters, conducted by a team of political scientists for the Democracy Fund, a nonpartisan foundation, found that the largest group, making up about 45% of voters, was consistently liberal on both economic and social questions. Thats the Democratic Partys core not a majority, but relatively cohesive on most policy issues.

The opposite end of the spectrum conservatives on both economic and social issues made up just under 25% of the vote. Thats the traditional activist core of the GOP.

What allowed Trump to win and also helped create the Republican majorities in the House and Senate, is the degree of support they got from the roughly 30% of voters who hold conservative views on social issues but relatively liberal ones on the role of government. Those voters, often labeled populists, are typically blue-collar, less affluent and often drawn to Republicans despite the partys views on economic issues, not because of them.

The fourth group liberal on social issues, but conservative on economics has appeal in some elite circles, but is extremely small among ordinary voters, less than 5% of the voters in 2016.

There are a lot of people who voted Republican because of cultural and identity issues, but who want government programs that help them, said Lee Drutman, a senior fellow at New America, a Washington-based think tank, who analyzed voting behavior for the study.

The conflicting pressures that those two groups of voters create for Republican elected officials has been a key factor in the legislative stalemate.

Republican senators such as ones from Ohio, West Virginia, Maine and Nevada who have balked at the Senate bill have constituents who like these programs, including Medicaid and parts of the Affordable Care Act, Drutman said. If theyre taken away, a lot of these voters will be upset.

Trump in his campaign seemed to understand that view, and unlike most of his Republicans rivals, he opposed cuts in entitlement programs.

I was the first & only potential GOP candidate to state there will be no cuts to Social Security, Medicare & Medicaid, Trump declared in a Twitter message early on in his quest. Since his election, he has seemed intermittently aware of the tension between the GOP effort to repeal Obamacare and the needs of many of his voters, backing the healthcare bill in public, but then calling it mean after it passed the House and saying that the Senate should add more money to produce a measure with heart.

Shrinking Medicaid, the governments 50-year-old program of medical assistance to the poor, however, forms the largest element of the bill, despite Trumps campaign stand. The Senate version would reduce spending on Medicaid by $772 billion over the next decade, a cut of about 25%, and would push some 15 million people off Medicaid coverage, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

The president has not put forward a policy proposal of his own to achieve the measure with heart that he says he would prefer. Thats part of a larger theme of the Trump presidency so far: The administration has produced almost no specific policy proposals to back up Trumps populist economic message. Trumps strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, and his domestic policy advisor, Stephen Miller, have tried to push forward more specifically populist policies, but have had little success outside of immigration policy.

By default, that has left the policy field largely to the traditional conservatives, who have used the quest to overturn the Affordable Care Act as a vehicle for their long-term goal of cutting taxes and reducing Medicaid.

For them, despite the efforts unpopularity, the opportunity to roll back Medicaid and pass a big tax cut was sort of a dream come true, said Binder. Now, it may have backfired.

A side-by-side comparison of Obamacare and the GOPs replacement plans

Staff writers Lisa Mascaro and Brian Bennett contributed to this report.

David.Lauter@latimes.com

For more on Politics and Policy, follow me @DavidLauter

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Healthcare debate highlights the split that threatens to paralyze Republicans - Los Angeles Times