Archive for June, 2017

Trump administration has failed to answer 275 inquiries: Democrats – ABC News

House Democrats sent a letter to the inspector general at the Office of Personnel and Management today asking for clarification and answers about a new White House policy to not respond to their oversight requests unless the queries come through House committee or subcommittee chairs.

According to Democratic Reps. Kathleen Rice of New York and Derek Kilmer of Washington, who penned today's letter, a senior official from the Office of Personnel and Management (OPM) called Rice's office in May to inform her and Kilmer that a letter they wrote asking about the federal government's guidelines for hiring new cybersecurity experts would not be answered unless a chair or subcommittee chair joined the inquiry.

All committees and subcommittees in the House as well as the Senate are run by Republicans, as they hold the majority in both chambers.

Two sources have confirmed to ABC News that the White House counsels office instructed legislative affairs departments to follow a new protocol to ignore requests for information from Democrats unless a Republican had signed on as well.

However, the OPM wrote in a statement to ABC News saying that the office planned to respond to letters from individual members on a "case-by-case" basis.

"It represents a practice followed for many years, regardless of which party is in the majority," a spokesperson from the office said in an email. The spokesperson said the office plans to respond to Democrat's letter about the policy, but did not make clear if the office would provide the information sought in the initial request.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and several other top Democrats on the Hill say by and large oversight letters from members of their party have been ignored. Pelosi has argued that to her, it seems like a policy shift. In total, House Democrats say about 275 of their inquiries since the Jan. 20 inauguration have gone unanswered.

The White Houses attempted gag order is the latest and most egregious attempt by the president to hide the truth from the American people," Pelosi said in a statement. "From firing FBI Director James Comey in an effort to quash the Bureaus investigation into Trump-Russia ties to refusing to release his tax returns, President Trump continues to wage an unprecedented campaign of dishonesty and secrecy."

The House minority leader continued, With this order, President Trump is making his disregard for transparency and his lack of respect for Congresss oversight role crystal clear. Since day one, the administration has refused to respond to hundreds of requests from Democrats on a range of issues critical to the health and security of the American people.

Kilmer told ABC News in an interview that such a directive to not engage with members of a political party really "flies in the face of government by the people and for the people."

"What is shocking here is that the Trump administration is making even a nonpartisan request for information and oversight partisan. I think that is really a new low for American democracy," he said.

Rice was insistent that her and Kilmer's original letter was apolitical and aimed only to get information about whether the House could help facilitate any federal efforts to recruit and retain top cybersecurity talent.

The New York congresswoman said she hopes the White House will reconsider its policy on House inquiries.

"It is completely undemocratic," she said in an interview with ABC News. "This is a political move to stymie the proper role of Congress, which is oversight over agencies."

She said she is talking about the issue with her Republican colleagues and she disputes any notion that the Democrats' inquiries are all fishing expeditions designed to sink Trump.

"The Constitution created the House of Representatives as part of a co-equal branch of government, made up of directly elected representatives of the people," says the letter that she and Kilmer today sent to the inspector general. "Every representative, regardless of political party, has a responsibility to serve his or her constituents, just as the administration has the responsibility to serve every American, regardless of who they voted for."

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Trump administration has failed to answer 275 inquiries: Democrats - ABC News

National Democrats making modest investment in South Carolina race to succeed Mick Mulvaney – Charleston Post Courier

WASHINGTON The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is investing in South Carolina's special election to succeed congressman-turned-White House budget director Mick Mulvaney but just a fraction of what the national party has spent on the special election in neighboring Georgia.

The DCCC is putting $275,000 towards boosting South Carolina Democratic candidate Archie Parnell.

That's far less than the nearly $5 million being spent in support of Democrat Jon Ossoff in the highly competitive 6th District race in Georgia.

The difference shows that while the DCCC may be serious about party-building in traditionally red states ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, it doesn't necessarily see a clear pathway for victory in Parnell's bid against Republican Ralph Norman later this month.

"This investment will help turn out and provide key lessons on crucial voters for South Carolinas 5th Congressional District and the 2018 midterms more broadly," DCCC regional press secretary Cole Leiter said in a statement announcing the investment, provided to The Post and Courier.

"Were proud to make this investment in organizing staff, African-American radio, mail, digital and other targeted voter outreach in the final weeks of this campaign," Leiter continued, "and support a candidate like Archie Parnell who will stand up and fight for the smart, responsible kind of leadership this community needs."

The DCCC's investment will place a special focus on faith communities during the next two Sundays leading up to the June 20 special election finale.

The national party is also paying the salaries of three full-time field organizers for the Parnell campaign between now and Election Day.

The announcement of increased national party spending in the 5th District comes on the heels of this past weekend's visit from Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten and former S.C. Democratic Party Chairman Jaime Harrison, who is now a DNC associate chairman and focusing largely on state party building.

The attention on a special election in a conservative state and district is notable and could represent a new sensitivity towards investing in areas of the country that have been overlooked by Democrats in the past. But others warn that capitalizing on anti-Donald Trump sentiment may not be as viable in South Carolina as in Georgia.

S.C.'s 5th District stretches from Sumter to the Rock Hill region of the state.

Maddie Anderson, a National Republican Congressional Committee's regional press secretary, said in a statement to The Post and Courier that the DCCC's investment made it "clear they see no path to victory in South Carolina's fifth District.

"Just like in Kansas and in Montana, the DCCC is leaving their candidate high and dry and is underinvesting in a special election," she added, referencing to two other special elections this year that have been won by Republicans.

Anderson could not, however, offer a figure for how much the NRCC had spent in support of Norman so far. She said it is not the organization's policy to publicize its incremental investments in Congressional races, and that a sum total would be revealed closer to the time of the election.

Emma Dumain is The Post and Courier's Washington correspondent. Reach her at 843-834-0419 and follow her @emma_dumain.

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National Democrats making modest investment in South Carolina race to succeed Mick Mulvaney - Charleston Post Courier

House Democrats seek leverage on spending, make-up of money committees – The Advocate

Update, 1:30 p.m.:

House Democratic Caucus Chairman Gene Reynolds, of Minden, announced to his colleagues Monday that he plans to step down from his position as leader of the chamber's minority party.

"I have another life. I have so many things at home that that's where I need to be," Reynolds told The Advocate. The head of the caucus is required to travel the state, help out fellow Democratic officials, and find candidates for races.

Reynolds said his announcement was more of an early warning as he plans to serve as chairman for the 41-member caucus in the 105-member House through the end of this session and a special session, if called.

Reynolds was criticized for not voting on the controversial bill that would have blocked the removal of Confederate monuments. But he said those wounds have healed and Democrats have rallied around the need to get a reasonable state spending plan passed and to get better representation for moderates on the two House money committees.

He doesn't know if any other representative is interested in taking over the caucus duties.

Original story:

Democrats in the state House are continuing to try to block a must-pass construction spending bill to gain leverage with the Republican majority over other issues.

Democrats have stopped passage of House Bill 3, which authorizes the state Bond Commission to sell the bonds needed to finance the construction projects. The Legislature normally passes HB3 without fuss because it includes projects in so many members districts.

HB3 requires at least 70 votes, which gives the 41-member Democratic caucus leverage in the 105-member House. Democrats are asking for better representation on the Appropriations Committee which writes the first version of the budget and Ways and Means which handles tax measures. Democrats want 40 percent of the seats on the two committees, in line with their 40 percent representation in the House.

House Speaker Taylor Barras, R-New Iberia, indicated Monday that the House Republican leadership plans to try to sidestep the Democrats by amending HB3 onto House Bill 2, which lists the projects to be funded. Democrats question whether the Constitution allows such a maneuver.

Four senior Democrats met with Barras on Friday morning to present their requests. Later that day, Barras told reporters that he was noncommittal about what the Democrats are seeking.

Reynolds said that view was inaccurate. He is seeking a commitment from the GOP House leadership to allow more Democrats and more moderate Republicans a place on House Appropriations and House Ways & Means committees. Both panels are stacked with very conservative Republicans who routinely oppose any legislation that would raise revenues.

"How are we ever going to do tax reform if we never get any of those bills out of committee," Reynolds said. "We've got to stop this madness. We've got to get something done."

The Democrats also want more spending on government services.

Democrats in the state House blocked a must-pass spending bill Wednesday in an attempt to fo

The House is expected today to take up the Senates version of House Bill 1, the general spending bill for the fiscal year that begins on July 1. The House already passed its version of HB1 that the Senate has amended. The House will be deciding whether to approve or reject the Senates version, which takes the $206 million that the House Republican majority kept in reserve and spends it on education, public health care, prisons and pay raises for state employees.

Reynolds said House Democrats want the House to approve the Senates version, which would require at least 53 votes in the 105-member House.

If the House rejects HB1, House and Senate leaders will have to meet to try to settle on a final version that both sides can accept. Failure to reach a deal on HB1 and HB3 by 6 p.m. Thursday, when the regular legislative session ends, would force a special session that would begin 30 minutes later.

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Scholarships from the Taylor Opportunity Program for Students appears to be safe from cuts i

Follow Tyler Bridges on Twitter, @tegbridges.

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House Democrats seek leverage on spending, make-up of money committees - The Advocate

Texas businesses need immigration reform now – Houston Chronicle

Begin Slideshow 6

Photo: Chip Somodevilla, Staff

Immigration reform activists hold a rally in Washington earlier this year. A poll indicates most Texas voters of every political stripe think the nation's immigration laws are not working.

Immigration reform activists hold a rally in Washington earlier this year. A poll indicates most Texas voters of every political stripe think the nation's immigration laws are not working.

Houston Chronicle columnist Chris Tomlinson.

Houston Chronicle columnist Chris Tomlinson.

Texas businesses need immigration reform now

The legal entanglements of 50,000 children entering the United States illegally this summer may have highlighted our broken immigration system, but Texas businesses are warning that Congress' failure to pass comprehensive immigration reforms could create a bigger long-term economic crisis.

Leaders in Houston's manufacturing, construction and agriculture industries joined colleagues in 40 other cities across the country last week to complain that federal immigration law has left them without enough workers and that the market favors the unscrupulous. They want comprehensive immigration reform now.

"This is about the economy, jobs and a strong workforce for Texas," said Nelson Salinas, lobbyist with the Texas Association of Business, which promotes pro-business policies.

Richie Jackson, CEO of the Texas Restaurant Association, said the current immigration system doesn't work for anybody. In the oil and gas boom areas of South and West Texas, restaurants can't open to full capacity because they don't have enough workers.

To read this article in one of Houston's most-spoken languages, click on the button below.

"We need to be able to access both high-skill and low-skill workers in this booming economy," he said. "When we can't get our lower-skilled, but essential workers, we can't open the restaurants, we can't expand, we can't meet customer needs."

The Republican Party of Texas hurt efforts to ease the economic stress by removing the so-called "Texas Solution" from its platform last month. Instead of supporting a guest worker program to bring in legal workers, party delegates instead demanded that local police round up those in the country illegally and called for the denial of in-state tuition for kids who grew up here without papers.

The most common demand in return for reforms is a sealed border, but that's a paper tiger.

The only border that comes close to being sealed is the 160-mile demilitarized zone on the Korean Peninsula, and that is hardly a model for the 1,933-mile U.S.-Mexico border. I've driven along most of the Texas border with Mexico, and building a Berlin Wall along it is impossible, and frankly silly.

There will always be some leaks. The question is, how much of a reduction in illegal crossings will it take for Republicans in Congress to deal with the much larger humanitarian and economic crises caused by our bad laws? Illegal border crossings are at the lowest level in the last decade.

Few applicants

While we wait on Congress, the booming Texas economy could stumble for lack of labor.

Kelli Vazquez, vice president at a concrete cutting and demolition company called Holes Inc., said her Houston company runs background checks on every employee and gets only a handful of applicants for every opening.

"When we put up an ad, we want to see more people come and apply," Vazquez said. "We're a small company. We would never look abroad to bring workers over, but if there was an easier process for people to come over legally and work, it would help the construction industry."

Companies that follow the rules want a chance to compete for the skilled labor of the millions of people who are working in the country illegally, said Bob Bacon, CFO of Houston-based TAS Commercial Concrete Construction.

'Level playing field'

"If we are able to hire them, as we do all of our employees, through the legal process, we're going to withhold taxes and Social Security, we're going to pay workers' compensation," he said. "It will be a level playing field."

Labor agrees with management in this case. Texas AFL-CIO President Becky Moeller praised Texas businesses for supporting a comprehensive immigration bill.

"To address the crisis at hand, the legislative process needs to continue and the political process needs to take a back seat," she said.

A new poll indicates that business leaders aren't the only ones frustrated by inaction in Washington.

More than 80 percent of Texas voters of every political stripe think the nation's immigration laws are not working and that Congress needs to take action, according to a survey of 1,000 people last month on behalf of the Partnership for a New Economy, a bipartisan, pro-business lobbying group.

When it comes to exactly what policy Texans support, opinions vary. But 61 percent said they would support comprehensive reforms that include additional border protections, visas for workers with needed skills, an employer verification program, work permits for those already in the country and citizenship for those brought here as children.

Blockade in House

The U.S. Senate has passed a plan that includes all of those elements. The only majority in the nation that seems opposed to comprehensive immigration reform is the one in the House of Representatives.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, in April openly mocked the Republican caucus' reluctance to take a vote.

"Here's the attitude: 'Ohhhh. Don't make me do this. Ohhhh. This is too hard,'" he said. Incumbents were worried about taking votes that could hurt them with tea party primary voters.

Perhaps once the Republican primaries are over, and most incumbents are assured their re-election, the business community can get the relief it needs to keep the economy humming.

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Texas businesses need immigration reform now - Houston Chronicle

Red Alert: The First Amendment Is in Danger – Truth-Out

President Trump at a news conference, at the White House in Washington, April 20, 2017. Memos kept by James Comey indicated that Trump asked the former FBI director to consider jailing journalists who published classified information. (Photo: Al Drago / The New York Times)

Of all the incredible statements issuing from the fantasy factory that is the imagination of Donald Trump, the one he recently made in a speech to graduates of the Coast Guard academy, that "no politician in history -- and I say this with great surety -- has been treated worse or so unfairly" sets an unenviable record for brazen ignorance plus a toxic mix of self-aggrandizement and self-pity. In his eyes, the most villainous persecutors are the mainstream "fake news" organizations that dare to oppose his actions and expose his lies.

So, having already banned nosy reporters from news corporations that he doesn't like, branded their employers as enemies of the nation and expressed a wish to departed FBI Director James Comey that those in the White House who leak his secrets should be jailed, why should there be any doubt that he would, if he could, clap behind bars reporters whom, in his own cockeyed vision, he saw as hostile? His fingers itch to sign an order or even better a law that would give him that power. Could he possibly extract such legislation from Congress?

Such a bill might accuse the press of "seditious libel," meaning the circulation of an opinion tending to induce a belief that an action of the government was hostile to the liberties and happiness of the people. It also could be prohibited to "defame the president by declarations directly or indirectly to 'criminate' his motives in conducting official business."

To see more stories like this, visit Moyers & Company at Truthout.

With a net that wide, practically anything that carried even the slightest whiff of criticism could incur a penalty of as much as five years in jail and a fine of $5,000. Just for good measure, couple it with an Act Concerning Aliens, giving the president the right to expel any foreign-born resident not yet naturalized whom he considers "dangerous to the peace and safety of the United States" without a charge or a hearing.

How Trump would relish that kind of imaginary power over his enemies!

I didn't make up those words. They are part of actual laws -- the Alien and Sedition Acts, passed in the summer of 1798 and signed by John Adams, our second president and titular leader of the conservative Federalist Party. Men were actually tried, imprisoned and fined for such "sedition." If anyone believes that under the First Amendment gagging the media can't happen here, the answer is that it already has.

How did it happen? Just as it could happen again today -- in the midst of a "national emergency." In Adams' day, it was a war scare with France that produced a flurry of "stand behind the president" resolutions, a hugely expanded military budget (including the beginnings of the US Navy), demonstrations of approval in front of Adams' residence and a conviction among the Federalists that members of Congress who talked of peace -- namely the "Republicans," the pro-French opposition party who at that time were the more liberal of the two parties, "[held] their country's honor and safety too cheap."

In other words, just the kind of "emergency" that could be produced at any time in our present climate by a terrorist attack here at home -- genuine, exaggerated or contrived -- and pounced upon by the man in the White House.

Do I exaggerate? Read the chilling report of the April 30 interview between Jon Karl of ABC News and Trump chief of staff Reince Priebus, who said the president might "change libel laws" so he could sue publishers. When Karl suggested that this might require amending the Constitution, Priebus replied, "I think it's something that we've looked at, and how that gets executed or whether that goes anywhere is a different story."

This is reality. A lying president aspiring to become a tinpot dictator is making his move. It's time to be afraid, but not too afraid to be prepared.

Let's briefly flash back to 1798. In the bitter contest between Federalists and Republicans, their weapons were the rambunctious, robust and nose-thumbing newspapers of the time, run by owner-editors and publishers who simply called themselves "printers." They weren't above dirtying their own hands with smears of ink, nor was there any tradition of "objectivity." A British traveler of a slightly later time wrote that "defamation exists all over the world, but it is incredible to what extent this vice is carried in America."

Nobody escaped calumny, not even the esteemed father of his country. Benjamin Franklin Bache, Republican editor of the Philadelphia Aurora, commented as George Washington departed office that his administration had been tainted with "dishonor, injustice, treachery, meanness and perfidy if ever a nation was debauched by a man, the American nation has been debauched by WASHINGTON."

Bache also had had harsh words for "old, bald, blind, querulous, toothless, crippled John Adams," sounding very much like a pre-dawn Trump tweet aimed at some critic of His Mightiness. You might not find that kind of personal invective now in The New York Times or The Washington Post, but it's familiar on right-wing talk radio and would sound at home coming from the mouths of Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity or Ann Coulter. The mode of dissemination changes; the ugliness at the core is unchanged.

Stung and furious, Adams and his Federalist supporters in Congress pushed the Sedition Act through Congress, though by a narrow majority. But could it survive a legal challenge from the Republican minority under the First Amendment's guarantee of press freedom? The Federalists answered with a legal interpretation that the guarantee only covered "prior restraint," which meant that a license from a government censor was required before publication of any opinion. Once it actually emerged in print, however, it had to take its chances with libel and defamation suits, even by public officials. Today,"prior restraint" is judicially dead, but the question of who is a public official and can be criticized without fear of retaliation in the courts continues to produce litigation.

But in 1787 argument made little difference. With the trumpets and drums of war blaring and thundering, the Constitution, as usually happens in such times, was little more than a paper barrier. Some provisions were added that would help the defense in a prosecution under its provisions. Moreover, the act was ticketed to expire automatically on March 3, 1801, the day before a new president and Congress would take office and either renew the law or leave it in its grave -- which is precisely what happened when Thomas Jefferson and the Republicans eventually won the 1800 election.

Nevertheless, during its slightly more than two years in force that produced only a handful of indictments, the Sedition Act did some meaningful damage. It produced what Jefferson called a reign of witches -- harmful enough to prove it was a travesty of justice, but not enough to become a full-blown reign of terror like the "disappearances" and executions of modern tyrannies.

The act never succeeded in its purpose of muzzling all criticism of the government, and in fact worked to the contrary. The toughest sentence -- 18 months in jail and a fine of $450 -- a huge sum in those days when whole families never saw as much as $100 in cash -- was imposed on a Massachusetts eccentric who put up a "Liberty Pole" in Dedham denouncing the acts and cheering for Jefferson and the Republicans. Other convictions for equally innocuous "crimes" defined by zealous prosecutors as sedition inflicted undeserved punishment by any standard of fairness. But two were especially consequential thanks to the backlash they produced.

One involved Matthew Lyon, a hot-tempered Vermont congressman, who ran a newspaper in which he accused Adams of a continual grasp for power and a thirst for ridiculous pomp that should have put him in a madhouse. For that he got a $1,000 fine and four months of jail time in an unheated felon's cell in midwinter. But numerous Republican admirers raised the money to pay his fine. Asenator from Virginia rode north to personally deliver saddlebags full of collected cash. Lyon even ran for re-election from jail in December and swamped his opponent by 2,000 votes. His return to his seat in the House was celebrated joyfully by Republican crowds.

Jedidiah Peck from upstate New York was also indicted for his heinous offense of circulating a petition for the repeal of both the Alien and Sedition Acts. At each stop in his five-day trip to New York City for trial, the sight of him in manacles, watched over by a federal marshal, provoked anti-Federalist demonstrations. His case was dropped in 1800, and he was also easily re-elected to his seat in the New York assembly.

In fact, the entire Republican triumph in that year's election was in good part a backlash to the censorship power grab of the Federalists. Literate voters of 1800, kept informed by a vigorous press, were not going to put padlocks on their tongues or take Federalist overreach lying down. Maybe it was from ingrained love of liberty or plain orneriness, or maybe because they were tougher to distract than we their heirs, beset by a constant barrage of entertainment, advertisements and other forms of trivial amusements.

Because that stream of noise is constant and virtually unavoidable by anyone not living in a cave, we are vulnerable to the tactic of the unapologetic Big Lie. If Trump keeps repeating "fake news" over and over at every exposure of some misdemeanor, eventually the number of believers in that falsehood will swell.

Genuine trouble is at our doorstep. If that statement from Reince Priebus is taken at face value, our bully-in-chief is looking for nothing less than control of the court of public opinion through management of the media by criminalizing criticism -- all behind a manufactured faade of governing in the name of the people.

With the example of 1798 before us, we need to resolve that any such effort can and must be met with the same kind of opposition mounted by that first generation of Americans living under the Constitution. If we want to be worthy of them, we need to use all our strength and resolution in deploying tactics of resistance. We need to fill the streets, overwhelm our lawmakers with calls and letters, reward them with our votes when they check the arrogance of power and strengthen their backbones when they waver. Any of us who gets a chance to speak at public gatherings and ceremonies should grab it to remind the audience that without freedom of speech, assembly and protest there is no real freedom. If the First Amendment vanishes, the rest of the Bill of Rights goes with it. And we're dangerously close.

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Red Alert: The First Amendment Is in Danger - Truth-Out