Archive for June, 2017

Republicans Needed Backup in the Georgia 6th. They Found It in Nancy Pelosi. – The Weekly Standard

Donald Trump's campaign changed the political playbook in elections across the country. But if Republicans in greater Atlanta retain an imperiled House seat next Tuesday, it will be thanks in so small part to their having called a familiar play.

GOP candidate Karen Handel and a conservative super-PAC advertising against her Democratic opponent, Jon Ossoff, have invoked House minority leader Nancy Pelosi to define Ossoff as out-of-touch with the district's voters. Handel said during a recent debate that Ossoff's values were "some 3,000 miles away in San Francisco." She called him a "liberal, Pelosi-like" Democrat in a recent interview. And the Congressional Leadership Fund, the super-PAC, has released multiple commercials linking the two. One that it pushed before the first round of voting on April 18 advised voters to "say no to Pelosi's yes man."

The demographics of the district, the Georgia 6th, indicate that such an approach should have legs. It has been reliably Republican for decades, and it remains favorable to the GOP despite recent redistricting that removed some of its reddest real estate. But it's also the sort of suburbia that wasn't gaga about the president in November; Trump won the district by fewer than two percentage points, the worst showing there by a GOP nominee in memory. So as Democrats try to use Trump's name to sink Handel"make Trump furious" was Ossoff's theme when he launched his bidRepublicans have come up with their reply.

According to the CLF, they're backed by sound data. As the Washington Examiner reported in April, "Tying Ossoff to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., proved especially effective. In an April poll the group conducted, respondents by a 62 percent to 26 percent margin said they preferred a candidate who would work with Ryan if elected to Congress, over one who would work with Pelosi." The CLF's aggressive last-minute intervention into the April runoff is credited with helping keep Ossoff below a 50-percent threshold that would have secured him the seat outright.

There's potentially a bigger-picture idea for Republicans in bringing up the former speaker: It's unifying. Handel has had the challenge of establishing her independence while not crossing Trump voters. "My job," she told me, "is to be an extension of the 6th district. It's not to be an extension of the White House, with due respect to the president." She otherwise has spoken favorably of Trump, though her casual support isn't a hallmark of her candidacy. While the GOP nationwide still mostly supports the president, the party cannot use him as a rallying cry and expect it to win purple districts, where soft Republicans and undecideds could turn elections.

But Pelosi? There's someone on whom the GOP will always be able to agree. Now let's see how effective she is as a motivating factor, more than six years since she last held the speaker's gavel.

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Republicans Needed Backup in the Georgia 6th. They Found It in Nancy Pelosi. - The Weekly Standard

AARP targets more Republicans in new healthcare ad buy – Washington Examiner

AARP is targeting 11 GOP senators, including key centrists, to oppose the House-passed healthcare bill that would raise premiums for seniors.

The ad campaign expands a May effort that ran ads targeting five senators, calling for the House-passed American Health Care Act to be scrapped. The expansion comes at a pivotal time as Senate leadership hopes to vote on a healthcare bill by the end of July.

AARP is targeting Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan of Alaska, Jeff Flake of Arizona, Cory Gardner of Colorado, Joni Ernest and Chuck Grassley of Iowa, Dean Heller of Nevada, Rob Portman of Ohio, Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker of Tennessee, and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia.

The list includes some key centrists who will be critical to the GOP leadership's hopes of passing its own version of the American Health Care Act before Congress' August recess.

Heller and Flake are up for re-election in 2018. Heller, Portman and Capito are pushing leadership for a seven-year phaseout of Obamacare's Medicaid expansion.

AARP, the nation's biggest seniors lobby, has been opposed to the American Health Care Act for some time, angry over a proposed change to premiums for senior citizens in insurance plans on the individual market.

Obamacare allowed insurers to charge seniors three times the amount they charge a younger person. The American Health Care Act would increase that to five times.

"Our members and other Americans over age 50 are very worried about legislation that would raise their premiums through what is, in effect, an age tax," said AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond.

It is not clear what pieces of the legislation the Senate will keep, including the age-rating ratio.

AARP also derided problems with Medicaid and hurting "protections for people with pre-existing conditions."

A controversial last-minute amendment to the legislation, which passed the House last month by a 217-213 vote, let states opt out of community rating mandate. States could get a waiver that would let insurers charge sicker people more money.

House Republicans say that $23 billion included in the legislation for high-risk pools could help offset any increases. A recent estimate from the Congressional Budget Office said that money wasn't enough to offset major increases for people with pre-existing conditions such as cancer or diabetes.

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AARP targets more Republicans in new healthcare ad buy - Washington Examiner

Republicans Tell Trump to Come Clean on Possible Comey Tapes – TIME

(WASHINGTON) Fellow Republicans pressed President Donald Trump on Sunday to come clean about whether he has tapes of private conversations with former FBI Director James Comey and provide them to Congress if he does or possibly face a subpoena, as a Senate investigation into collusion with Russia or obstruction of justice extended to a Trump Cabinet member.

It was a sign of escalating fallout from riveting testimony from Comey last week of undue pressure from Trump, which drew an angry response from the president on Friday that Comey was lying.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions was in for sharp questioning by senators on the Senate Intelligence committee Tuesday. Whether that hearing will be public or closed is not yet known.

"I don't understand why the president just doesn't clear this matter up once and for all," said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, a member of that committee, referring to the existence of any recordings.

She described Comey's testimony as "candid" and "thorough" and said she would support a subpoena if needed. Trump "should voluntarily turn them over," Collins said.

Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., also a member of that committee, agreed the panel needed to hear any tapes that exist. "We've obviously pressed the White House," he said.

Trump's aides have dodged questions about whether conversations relevant to the Russia investigation have been recorded, and so has the president. Pressed on the issue Friday, Trump said "I'll tell you about that maybe sometime in the very near future."

Lankford said Sessions' testimony Tuesday will help flesh out the truth of Comey's allegations, including Sessions' presence at the White House in February when Trump asked to speak to Comey alone. Comey alleges that Trump then privately asked him to drop a probe into former national security adviser Michael Flynn's contacts with Russia.

Comey also has said Sessions did not respond when he complained he didn't "want to get time alone with the president again." The Justice Department has denied that, saying Sessions stressed to Comey the need to be careful about following appropriate policies.

"We want to be able to get his side of it," Lankford said.

Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said "there's a real question of the propriety" of Sessions' involvement in Comey's dismissal, because Sessions had stepped aside from the federal investigation into contacts between Russia and the Trump campaign. Comey was leading that probe.

Reed said he also wants to know if Sessions had more meetings with Russian officials as a Trump campaign adviser than have been disclosed.

Trump on Sunday accused Comey of "cowardly" leaks and predicted many more from him. "Totally illegal?" he asked in a tweet. "Very 'cowardly!'"

Several Republican lawmakers also criticized Comey for disclosing memos he had written in the aftermath of his private conversations with Trump, calling that action "inappropriate." But, added Lankford "releasing his memos is not damaging to national security."

The New York City federal prosecutor who expected to remain on the job when Trump took office but ended up being fired said he was made uncomfortable by one-on-one interactions with the president just like Comey was. Preet Bharara told ABC's "This Week" that Trump was trying to "cultivate some kind of relationship" with him when he called him twice before the inauguration to "shoot the breeze."

He said Trump reached out to him again after the inauguration but he refused to call back, shortly before he was fired.

On Comey's accusations that Trump pressed him to drop the FBI investigation of Flynn, Bharara said "no one knows right now whether there is a provable case of obstruction" of justice. But: "I think there's absolutely evidence to begin a case."

Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, a member of the Intelligence committee, sent a letter to Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, urging him to investigate possible obstruction of justice by Trump in Grassley's position as chairman of the Judiciary Committee. Feinstein is the top Democrat on that panel and a member of both.

She said Sessions should also testify before the Judiciary Committee, because it was better suited to explore legal questions of possible obstruction. Feinstein said she was especially concerned after National Intelligence Director Dan Coats and National Security Agency Director Michael Rogers refused to answer questions from the intelligence committee about possible undue influence by Trump.

Feinstein said she did not necessarily believe Trump was unfit for office, as House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi has asserted, but said he has a "destabilizing effect" on government.

"There's an unpredictability. He projects an instability," Feinstein said. "Doing policy by tweets is really a shakeup for us, because there's no justification presented."

In other appearances Sunday:

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said he would take Trump up on his offer to testify under oath about his conversations with Comey, inviting the president to testify before the Senate.

Feinstein acknowledged she "would have a queasy feeling, too" if Comey's testimony was true that Loretta Lynch, as President Barack Obama's attorney general, had directed him to describe the FBI probe into Hillary Clinton's email practices as merely a "matter" and to avoid calling it an investigation. Feinstein said the Judiciary Committee should investigate.

Sessions stepped aside in March from the federal investigation into contacts between Russia and the campaign after acknowledging that had met twice last year with the Russian ambassador to the U.S. He had told lawmakers at his January confirmation hearing that he had not met with Russians during the campaign.

Sessions has been dogged by questions about possible additional encounters with the ambassador, Sergey Kislyak.

As for the timing of Sessions' recusal, Comey said the FBI expected the attorney general to take himself out of the matters under investigation weeks before he actually did.

Collins and Feinstein spoke on CNN's "State of the Union and Lankford and Schumer appeared on CBS' "Face the Nation." Reed was on "Fox News Sunday."

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Republicans Tell Trump to Come Clean on Possible Comey Tapes - TIME

New York Times Calls Sanders Progressives ‘Militant’ and ‘Often Raucous’ – Observer


Observer
New York Times Calls Sanders Progressives 'Militant' and 'Often Raucous'
Observer
The People's Summit took place in Chicago last weekend. Predictably, the establishment media is trying to attack the conference, which brought together hundreds of progressive and activist organizations. On June 11, The New York Times published an ...
Progressives consider, or don't, life after Bernie SandersCNN
Bernie Sanders urges progressives to seek more electoral winsReuters
Bernie Sanders & The People's Summit Highlight Progressives' Future AgendaChicagoist
Bustle -New York Times -The Resurgent -CNN
all 125 news articles »

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New York Times Calls Sanders Progressives 'Militant' and 'Often Raucous' - Observer

Take Heart, Progressives: Theresa May Is Putting a Nail in the Coffin of the UK Right Wing – Truthdig

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May. (Tiocfaidh r l 1916 / CC BY-ND 2.0)

What a relief it was to wake up Friday to news signaling that the hard-right march the West has been on for decades is being met with undeniable resistance.

Im talking about the United Kingdoms general election, of course, in which the Labour Party, under Jeremy Corbyns progressive leadership, made important gains.

Those who point out that the Tories are still the largest party in a hung Parliament are completely missing the point, as is conservative leader Theresa May, as she clings to power whichever way she can, seemingly deaf to the message her own people sent her during the snap election Thursday.

Seven or so weeks ago, after months of insisting she wouldnt call a snap election before the five-year term she won from her predecessor was up, May did just that. The unelected prime minister had surely been looking at polls that suggested she was a comfortable 20 points ahead of Corbyn, whod been maligned by media and even members of his own party since he was chosen as Labours leader in 2015. And so May decided to strengthen her mandate (read: do whatever she and her right-wing buddies damn well please) for the upcoming Brexit negotiations by asking the people of Britain to hand her more than the razor-thin majority she was working with in Parliament.

Brexit, my English partner Richard tells me, was never really about the E.U., regardless of what the pundits and politicians wanted everyone to believe. It was, as journalist Vincent Bevins wrote last year, the only tool handed to a rightfully disgruntled people to express their anger over a political system run by elites that has actively left them behind over the past several decades. Labour itself turned its back on the working classes under Tony Blairs leadership, becoming Conservative lite, as Richard likes to call it, until Corbyn stepped up and sent shock waves through the establishment.

Corbyn has been in Parliament since 1983, but hes been on the streets of the U.K. since before then, protesting injustices ranging from South African apartheid to the Iraq War and the National Health Services junior doctors salary cuts. Unlike many of his colleagues in power, hes been listening to the people he represents, a tendency that has kept him on the right side of history for decades. I have been at several events and rallies where Corbyn has spoken, and I can tell you that this is exactly the man that no one should have underestimated.

The establishments insistence on not taking the Labour leader seriously is his not-so-secret secret weapon. After winning two leadership contests while many in his own party repudiated him and the right-wing media continued to denounce him as a terrorist sympathizer, Corbyn understood what it took to win over voters as an underdog, and this snap election gave him another chance to prove it.

American anthropologist David Graeber has written convincingly about those who have feared Corbyns rise all along:

If the opposition to Jeremy Corbyn has been so fierce, and so bitter, it is because his existence as head of a major political party is an assault on the very notion that politics should be primarily about the personal qualities of politicians. Its an attempt to change the rules of the game, and those who object most violently to the Labour leadership are precisely those who would lose the most personal power were it to be successful: sitting politicians and political commentators.

The real concern among the Labour establishment [is the] fear [of] being made truly accountable to those they represent. [and] insofar as politics is a game of personalities, of scandals, foibles and acts of leadership, political journalists are not just the referees in a real sense they are the field on which the game is played. Democratisation would turn them into reporters once again, in much the same way as it would turn politicians into representatives.

As other politicians went through the motions of meaningless sound-bites, fearmongering and fundraising theyve become accustomed to in place of actually campaigning, Corbyn went back to doing what he arguably does best: He listened to the pain of the people. The Labour Party put out its most left-wing manifesto in more than 30 years, proposing a taxation plan that would quite literally take from the rich to give to the poortaxing corporations and the U.K.s highest earners to pay for social programs that include abolishing university tuition fees and boosting investment in the ailing NHS.

Mays party manifesto, on the other hand, proposed what became known as a dementia tax, a plan that would have the elderly who require home care pay for it posthumously with their property assets. But dont think about that, the prime minister seemed to say; we need to focus on Brexit, Brexit, Brexit. Thats what this election was called for, after all.

When tragedy hit in the form of attacks on Manchester and London in the weeks before Thursdays election, May promised to literally slash human rights in order to fight terrorism by increasing controls on the internet. Corbyn, on the other hand, focused on failed policies passed while May was home secretary: crippling cuts to the police budget that left 20,000 cops without a job and the connections between wars our government has supported or fought in other countries, such as Libya, and terrorism here at home. He refused to move right on foreign policy and immigration issues as his Labour predecessors had, finally putting to bed the tired argument that the left can only win elections by appealing to xenophobic sentiments in the center.

Regarding Mays awful comments on human rights, a Romanian friend told me, Why does this surprise you? Shes been infringing on our human rights for years now. Like myself, in order to stay in the U.K., this friend has been grappling with the increasingly draconian immigration laws May passed while home secretary. Hoops such as strict and arbitrary income requirements placed on British family membersbarriers Tories promised in their recent manifesto to raise higherhave literally torn families apart. This piece in the New Statesman lists just six examples of how xenophobic British immigration laws have kept partners apart and even parents from their children. With laws that emphasize income as a requirement for allowing people to bring their loved ones to the U.K., it seems only the wealthiest of Brits are allowed to fall in love and live with non-E.U. citizens in their own home country.

In the aftermath of the election, some conservatives tried to make sense of the vote, especially the high turnout among the young voters, by implying that the young were swayed by the idea of tuition fees being eliminated, again missing the larger issues at stake. Turns out my generation will not be blinded by numbers and bottom lines thrown at us like warning labels on a medicine called socialism. Many of my peers in the U.S. and U.K. pursued educations, only to subsequently drown in student debt and be thrown into job markets in crisis, where were consistently mistreated and underpaid. Socialist ideals promise health care, education, workers rights and yes, general protections of those pesky human rights to all members of society, regardless of class, race or gender. If anything is a recipe for mass appeal to young people struggling in a society that increasingly undermines these goals, it is this.

On Friday, I couldnt help but smile as I parsed the numbers showing that Corbyns appeal had increased the Labour vote by the largest percentage since 1945 and saw that even constituencies such as the wealthy Kensington district of London, and Canterbury, which has never in the history of British politics voted Labour, had turned Labours party color red on the voting map. The results were called a shock, but as someone whos been following the trajectory of Corbyns leadership, I was more smug than surprised. At those rallies where hed spoken, I had looked around the room and seen what the media and parliamentarians had willfully ignored: diversity. In attendance with Corbyn were people of all races, classes, ages and gender identifications. Like Bernie Sanders in the U.S., who supported Corbyn during his recent campaign, the Labour leader cut across these demographics to offer a message of hope for a better future.

Since the election Ive asked Richard the same question every morning as soon as I wake up: Has Theresa May resigned yet? The answer has been a disappointing no, but Im not worried, and other progressives shouldnt be, either. As journalist Richard Seymour points out, the election numbers were a result of a slow and steady movement that has been growing over the years, and that movement is far from finished. May seems willing to make a deal with the far-right devil that is Northern Irelands anti-gay, anti-womens rights, Democratic Unionist Party in order to hang on to whatever vestiges of power are left. Its rumored that Tories are pissed off at her, but are reluctant to depose her or trigger another general election out of fears that the so-called unelectable Jeremy Corbyn would be elected prime minister. Those fears are not unfounded: Polls are already giving the Labour Party a six-point lead, much, Im sure, to Mays dismay.

So take heart, progressives in the U.K. and abroad. This war against austerity and inequality, as Sanders framed it in his congratulatory message to Corbyn, is only beginning. There are many reasons to believe that the U.K. is moving left, ranging from the results in Kensington and Canterbury to the fact that Tories only received 2 percent more of the vote than Labour (and if you count other progressive parties share, such as the Scottish National Party, the Green Party and Wales Plaid Cymru, that number grows) to the fact that there are more women, people of color and LGBTQ members in Britains Parliament than ever before. There are also signs that the Tory alliance with the Democratic Unionist Party is fated to quickly burn out. As British history lessons have shown, perhaps this will allow an opportunity for Labour to take power.

It turns out that Corbyns integrity and his message of hope are hard to erase from peoples minds and spirits now that theyve been exposed to them, against all establishment odds. And that is as much a reason to celebrate as any.

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Take Heart, Progressives: Theresa May Is Putting a Nail in the Coffin of the UK Right Wing - Truthdig