Archive for July, 2017

The Liberals are considering loosening the reins on charities’ political spending. That is a terrible idea – CBC.ca

There is nothing "charitable" about charities spending less on philanthropic work and more on political endeavours. But Justin Trudeau's Liberals are nevertheless considering loosening charities' spending limits and restrictions on political activity.

By the end of this month, the Liberals say they will officially respond to a report commissioned from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), which recommends the government "broaden the ability of registered charities to engage in political activities," while at the same time maintain "an absolute prohibition on partisan political activities."

The Liberals have already gone ahead and suspended the political audits and revocations of charities, a process that was launched under the Harper government in 2012. At the time, the government was accused of political opportunism for its "witch hunt" of charities that were, for example, critical of its policies on the environment. The CRA, nevertheless, found violations committed by seven out of the 54 charities audited violations that were grievous enough to warrant revocations. Indeed, with hindsight, it appears the Conservatives might have been onto something.

Currently, a large (annual income over $200,000) charity can spend only 10 per cent of its budget on "non-partisan" political activity, but if the report's recommendations are adopted by the government, charities will be allowed unlimited "non-partisan" political engagement, just as long as it is "subordinate to and furthers their charitable purposes."

What that means, and how the line will be drawn, is unclear.

What would be clear, however, is that charities such as the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, of which Trudeau was vice president of the board in 2012, would have no limit as to how much it could spend on social science research, conferences and speaking events promoting progressive policies policiesthat are awfully well aligned with the Liberal agenda.

The right-wingFraser Institute, which is also a registered charity, would likewise have no cap as to how much it could spend on reports meant to influence government policy. Yet none of these activities are even deemed political by the current rules, as these charities didn't file any of their expenses under the political activity section with the CRA. As it stands, the rules might be too lax already.

It already appears the Liberals have benefitted from third party political involvement:arecent report in the Calgary Herald alleged registered third parties with the aid of funnelled foreign money helped the Liberals win ridings in the last federal election.

Granted, only a few of those 114 third parties were registered charities. Butwould it not be politically advantageous for the Liberals to allow and encourage more charities to get politically involved if could potentially lead to electoral success?

Sure, every party theoretically stands to gain from unconstrained "charitable"spending, but as National Post columnist Andrew Coyne has pointed out, other than the odd conservative-minded charity like the Fraser Institute, "the vast majority are more likely to sympathize with Liberal and NDP policy than Conservative." Trudeau'stop adviser Gerald Butts ran a charity while it engaged inpolitical activities and campaigns against pipelines, so he surely knows firsthand how charities can be politically influential in reaching a desired end.

According to charity expert and lawyer Mark Blumberg, Canadian charities report spending a total of about $25 million annually on political activities, but they already have the combined potential to spend a whopping total of $25 billion. That's without counting added funds fromforeign entities, which have already gotten involved withstopping pipeline development.

If the Liberal government relaxes the laws in a misguided effort toencourage charities to "make an important contribution to public debate and public policy," more out of these billions could be syphoned for political operationsinstead of charitable purposes, potentially dwarfing the tens of millions political parties themselves spend.

The philanthropic sector in the U.S. has already been largely co-opted by trillions of dollars from its richest citizens looking to covertly influence the political process. That's not the case in Canada; by and large, charities remain highly respected by industry experts for their vital work in helping the needy.

But if the Liberals let go of the reins and allow charities unlimited political spending, an opportunistic few could sully the reputation of an entire industry. There are limits on political spending by third parties for a reason. The Liberals should not be making it easier to bypass the rules.

This column is part ofCBC'sOpinion section.For more information about this section, please read thiseditor'sblogandourFAQ.

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The Liberals are considering loosening the reins on charities' political spending. That is a terrible idea - CBC.ca

Young Trump supporter cleans Trump’s defaced Hollywood star and liberals blow a gasket over it – TheBlaze.com

A young supporter of President Donald Trump is taking heat after she was pictured cleaning Trumps defaced Hollywood Walk of Fame star.

Since he announced his intentions to run for president in June 2015 and after he won the Republican nomination and later the White House, Trumps Hollywood Walk of Fame star on Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles has been defaced numerous times.

So when University of Wyoming student Makenna Greenwald visited Hollywood last week, it was no surprise that she found Trumps star to vandalized. And instead of further defacing the star or spitting on it or taking another action to symbolically bash Trump, she instead chose to clean the star.

Stopped to clean @realDonaldTrump Hollywood Star. Nothing but respect for MY President, Greenwald wrote on Twitter last week, adding the hashtag #RaisedRight.

She also posted three pictures of herself posing with the star. One of the pictures shows Greenwald cleaning the defaced star and scrubbing what appears to be marker lines and doodles off the star. The other two pictures show Greenwald posing with the then-cleaned star.

As of early Sunday morning the tweet had received nearly 50,000 retweets and more than 200,000 likes.

And while Greenwald took pride in cleaning off her presidents star, liberals decided to tear Greenwald apart for her seemingly kind and compassionate decision.

But despite the liberal hate, many big names, including Eric Trump and Fox News host Sean Hannity recognized Greenwald for her efforts:

Trump was awarded his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2007 during the height of the hit TV show The Apprentice, which he hosted up until he began his run for the White House.

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Young Trump supporter cleans Trump's defaced Hollywood star and liberals blow a gasket over it - TheBlaze.com

As GOP struggles with health care, Democrats forge ties with ‘resistance’ – Washington Post

As Republicans return to their home districts to sell a flailing health-care bill, liberal groups are using the congressional recess to build opposition. They believe tens of thousands of phone calls, emails and in-person pushes will force on-the-fence senators to reject the legislation for good.

The fresh activism is coming with encouragement from Democratic lawmakers who are mired in the minority and have been mostly left to watch as Republicans struggle to reshape the nations laws to their liking. After starting the year on the defensive with their own base, party leaders and House and Senate Democrats are finally taking cues from these groups, believing that tactics honed far outside Washington could help scare Republicans into abandoning long-standing promises to upend the Affordable Care Act.

Ahead of the recess, while Republican senators toiled over details of their health-care overhaul behind closed doors, Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) did whats become natural for Democrats lately: He lashed out on Twitter.

CBO confirms this thing is a %#$@ sandwich, he tweeted shortly after the release of the Congressional Budget Offices report that estimated 22 million more Americans would be uninsured under the Senate GOPs plan. He tweeted later that the lefts fight against the legislation is a test of the morality of our country. We have to win this one.

Democrats can see with their eyes where the energy is in American politics right now, said Ben Wikler, the Washington director of MoveOn.org, a liberal group initially launched to oppose the impeachment of President Bill Clinton.

Its to abandon politics as usual and put up a bare-fisted fight. Thats really sinking in.

Schatz won reelection last year with more than 70 percent of the vote and acknowledges he did so by airing really pretty ads and taking advice from expensive consultants. It might have worked for him in Hawaii, but President Trump won the White House and Democrats failed to win back control of the House or Senate.

So now he admits to being a recent convert to the tactics used by Wiklers group and other organizations such as CREDO Mobile; the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees; and the fast-growing Indivisible movement. The groups have organized protests or sit-ins at congressional district offices and urged followers to flood Capitol Hill phone lines in opposition to Education Secretary Betsy DeVoss appointment or Trumps entry ban. Neither pressure campaign stopped DeVos or the Trump ban, but Schatz said they signaled to Democratic lawmakers that the groups could quickly mobilize Americans against Trump.

Our playbook needs a refresh. Its predictable and its stale, Schatz said. That refresh is not just new language or a new standard-bearer, but a recognition that for Democrats to win, we need to fight for Democrats and then theyll fight for us.

For Schatz, that has meant firing off quick stream-of-consciousness tweets that have earned him headlines and 30,000 more followers so far this year. Its also meant marching in the streets for the first time in his life as he did last week with activists who opposed the GOP health-care plan. And it means providing counsel to constituents or activists who still want a little guidance from an elected official.

The senator who once chastised Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Twitter for calling Hawaii an island in the Pacific said his change in tone is a recognition that people dont want to be sold soap.

They dont want a prepackaged product; they want to know that were people and that we respond to outrages in the same way that they do.

Democrats willingness to fight, particularly on health care, has not gone unnoticed by progressive activists who say they deserve credit for drawing in even wary moderates.

Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin III (W.Va.), Heidi Heitkamp (N.D.) and Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) who are all up for reelection in states Trump won handily have all been eager to speak out. They joined a protest-turned-photo-op on the Senate steps with Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and other Democrats, with each senator holding a portrait of a constituent who had benefited from Medicaid.

The way theyve coalesced around the health-care issue has been better than expected; theyve done so because of how many people were demanding it, said Winnie Wong, the co-founder of People for Bernie Sanders and an Occupy Wall Street veteran.

Schatz was one of only a handful of Democratic lawmakers to actually march in last weeks health-care rally other party leaders just showed up to give speeches. He waited restlessly as Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Schumer addressed the crowd.

They have lots of powerful wealthy people on their side, Schumer said of Republicans. Who do we have? You!

Schumer especially has seen his fortunes change with the far left. In February, thousands of protesters marched to Schumers Brooklyn home to demand resistance to Trumps Cabinet nominees; some chanted What the f---, Chuck.

The infighting has largely stopped since then. Schumer has been a regular presence at protests, thanking activists for having Senate Democrats back. Theyve returned the praise. Schumer is both speaking out at every opportunity and keeping the caucus aggressive, said Wikler, whose group helped organize the Capitol protest.

After Schumer spoke, Schatz stepped on stage and called the GOP health-care bill literally an $800 billion cut in Medicaid and literally an $800 billion wealth transfer to people who dont need it.

He offered some advice for the congressional recess: Dont wait for instructions from any organization. Whatever you think you can do in that moment, just do it.

Six months ago, everyone in that building thought that repeal of the Affordable Care Act was a done deal, Wilker said, pointing to the Capitol. Since then, he said, Democrats had learned to take some cues from the resistance.

Weve mobilized hundreds of thousands of people to participate in our democracy, and thats taught us something crucial about the resistance to Trump: its working, said Faiz Shakir, national political director for the American Civil Liberties Union.

In many ways, Schatz is an ideological counterweight to conservative foot soldiers such as Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah), James Lankford (R-Okla.) or Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), other senators in their 40s with no obvious White House dreams who could find themselves in the Senate for decades to come. While many of his Democratic colleagues ponder a run for president, Schatz said he intends to stay in the Senate.

Somebody has to not run for president, Schatz quipped.

Schatz came to the U.S. Senate in late 2012 as the appointed successor of the late Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), who died after 49 years in the Senate just as Congress was in the throes of the fiscal cliff fight. The day after Christmas, Schatz flew to Washington aboard Air Force One with Obama, who cut his annual Hawaiian vacation short to avert a financial disaster.

As Schatz prepared to travel from Washington to Honolulu on Thursday, a trip he makes nearly every weekend to see his wife and two young children, he admitted that despite doling out advice on how progressives should pressure Republicans during the upcoming recess, he hadnt determined what he will do. Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) have urged Democrats to hold news conference, host rallies with progressive groups and submit op-eds to newspapers.

Schatz said thats not good enough.

You cant fill a calendar and think thats a plan, he explained, meaning that he will avoid a strategy that dictates, Im going to use Facebook on Tuesday and use Twitter on Wednesday, and then Im going to send an op-ed in and hold a news conference on Friday.

Its a pretty chaotic environment out there, he said. We need to be a little more flexible.

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As GOP struggles with health care, Democrats forge ties with 'resistance' - Washington Post

Manchin to Trump: Work with Democrats ‘who are willing to meet you in the middle’ – The Hill

Sen. Joe ManchinJoe ManchinGOP senators warming to repeal then replace on ObamaCare Manchin to Trump: Work with Democrats 'who are willing to meet you in the middle' Sunday shows preview: Trump clashes with media as health push delayed MORE (D-W.Va.) on Sunday said he wants President Trump to succeed and called for him to work with Democrats on healthcare legislation.

During an interview on "Fox News Sunday," Manchin said he has always wanted to repair ObamaCare, as opposed to repealing and replacing the former president's signature healthcare legislation.

"The only thing I'm saying toto PresidentTrump ... He's the president of all of America, Democrats and Republicans, independents, those who voted for him, those who voted against him, he is our president and I want him to succeed," Manchin said.

Manchin said the Senate can't get 50 votes to repeal ObamaCare right now.

"Look at some of us, work with us Democrats who are willing to meet you in the middle," he said. "Who have always been willing to meet you in the middle."

Manchin's comments come after Senate Republicans decided to delay a vote on theirhealthcare bill after it became clear it lacked the votes for passage.

During the interview Sunday, Manchin was asked about Trump's commentsthat the Democrats are obstructionists.

"I truly respectfully disagree with that statement," he said.

"I think that was a little over the top," he added, noting he is willing to sit down with Trump and his Republican colleagues to make things better in the country.

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Manchin to Trump: Work with Democrats 'who are willing to meet you in the middle' - The Hill

Tufts nurses strike puts Democrats in political pickle – Boston Herald

Bay State Democrats will be faced with a political conundrum when they weigh in on an impending nurses strike at Tufts Medical Center that is bringing together two issues close to their hearts: supporting working families impacted by soaring health care costs and fighting for union labor, analysts say.

When costs for hospitals go up, the cost for health care goes up. While the politicians supporting the unions because the unions turn around and support them is good politically, its clearly a contradiction, Boston-based Republican strategist Brad Marston said. Theyre doing it while they dont have a full year budget because MassHealth is taking up 50 percent of our budget it sounds to me like they are trying to have it both ways.

In a statement yesterday, Tufts nurses announced theyve told the hospital they will go on strike July 12 after a monthslong negotiation over a new contract stalled last month. In a statement, Mary Havlicek Cornacchia, an OR nurse and bargaining unit co-chairwoman for the Massachusetts Nurses Association, said, weve been trying to get them to listen to us and theyre just not listening.

Cornacchia said the union expects to return to the bargaining table Friday.

The association, which represents about 1,200 registered nurses at the Hub hospital, has been pushing for increased staffing and pay raises and voted last month to reject a $30 million package that wouldve given 60percent of nurses a 10.5percent raise through 2020. The hospital has said it cant afford to increase pay beyond what it called its best and final offer.

In a letter to Tufts President and CEO Michael Wagner signed by more than a dozen Democratic Bay State representatives and state senators, the legislators stressed that the hospital must not allow the significant hardships to patients, families and residents in Boston that a strike by its 1,200 nurses would cause.

We have met with Tufts nurses about what they are seeking and we believe their concerns are valid and their proposals are reasonable, they wrote.

In another letter sent to Wagner in May that was signed by U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren and U.S. Reps. Michael E. Capuano and Stephen F. Lynch, the trio of Democrats urged both sides to remain at the table, bargaining in good faith, to find ways to resolve the issues that continue to divide you.

Former Bay State Democratic Party Chairman Phil Johnston said he expects the majority of local Democrats would join them in standing with the nurses, despite the partys push to reign in out-of-control health care costs.

Thats just who we are ... the Democratic Party has been pro-labor since the days of Franklin Roosevelt, he said. Theres constant tension within the industry as a result of whats perceived to be inequities in pay and this has a big impact on working families. The Democrats generally support working families.

Though the union is only planning to strike for 24 hours, Wagner said the hospital has recruited more than 300 replacement nurses to work for five days.

Leaving patients to join a picket line is not what is best for patients or for reaching common ground, he wrote in a letter to employees. The contract the hospital has offered the nurses is a strong a competitive proposal, and the best the medical Center can offer given our limited resources.

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Tufts nurses strike puts Democrats in political pickle - Boston Herald