Archive for August, 2017

What The Democrat Party Is Doing To Derrick Edwards Is Shameful – The Hayride

In case you havent heard, the leader in every poll for the Treasurers race this fall is a Democrat despite the fact the three major candidates in the race are Republicans. Derrick Edwards, a lawyer from New Orleans whose interesting physical condition hes a quadriplegic is a frequent candidate for office who ran last year for the Senate, polling three percent of the vote in the primary and finishing in eighth place. Now hes in first place and a fairly likely participant in the runoff; what we dont know at this point is whether it will be Rep. John Schroder, Sen. Neil Riser or former Jindal administration Commissioner of Administration Angele Davis wholl be in the final round with him.

Almost everybody who knows something about that race will tell you once Edwards gets into the runoff with whichever Republican joins him, hes got zero chance to win. But in that respect hes no different than Foster Campbell in the 2016 Senate race, or Kip Holden in the 2015 Lt. Governors race, or even Edwin Edwards in the 2014 6th District congressional race. They all got slaughtered in the runoff and the Democrats knew it, and backed them anyway.

But the Democrats arent backing Edwards in this race even though hes leading every poll with at least 25 percent of the vote.

Why?

(T)he Democratic Partys executive committee worries about how Edwards would get from 30 percent of the vote to the 50 percent plus one needed to win a runoff from an electorate who overwhelming backs Republicans in most statewide elections.

Though Edwards was the first announced candidate in the race, he hasnt been campaigning much. He reported $138.20 available in a campaign finance report filed Aug. 8. Plus, because he was late filing, Edwards could face $2,000 in fines from the Louisiana Board of Ethics.

We were uncomfortable with the fact that he was a little late, at that time, filing his financial disclosure and campaign finance forms, said Kyle Green Jr., a state party executive committee member from Marrero. We urged him to get his house in order and once he did that, we would be happy to revisit that decision.

The 25-member party executive committee decided to hold off until Edwards could name a campaign team, detail fundraising plans, and identify major supporters.

The executive committee felt rather strongly that Mr. Edwards needs to do some basic things before recommending him for a party endorsement, said Stephen Handwerk, executive director of the Louisiana Democratic Party.

One wonders if this is a racial thing, which youd think shouldnt be a problem for a party who would have virtually zero political presence in Louisiana but for black voters and black elected officials. Still, the Democrats have a history of failing to give much help to black candidates for statewide office they let Cleo Fields and Bill Jefferson die on the vine in the 1995 and 1999 runoffs, and they did exactly nothing to help Holden last year.

With a black state senator in Karen Carter Peterson, who as it happens is also from New Orleans, as the Democrat party chair, youd think this lack of support wouldnt continue.

But it does. Theyre going to let the only Democrat candidate they have in the only statewide race going on this year go without any money or an endorsement? And hes not only a candidate of color but a disabled candidate as well?

How can this be? How can a party which breaks its arm patting itself on the back for how much it supposedly cares about minorities and people with disabilities simply let Derrick Edwards die on the political vine?

Sure, Edwards has no shot to win. Foster Campbell had no shot to win. That didnt stop them from pitching in and raising every dime they could for him. And if he has no shot to win and cant do all the basic things a candidate needs to do to have a shot to win, then why in the hell couldnt the Louisiana Democrat Party recruit somebody more legitimate to run in an open seat?

None of their grandees, like for example Rep. Walt Leger or Sen. Eric Lafleur, bothered to qualify. This guy did, and he put a D next to his name. And theyre snubbing him anyway. No union money, no party money, not even a little check from one of their trial lawyer donors to get him started.

Its embarrassing. This is not a party that deserves to win a major election in this state, ever again.

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What The Democrat Party Is Doing To Derrick Edwards Is Shameful - The Hayride

House Democrat seeks to prohibit federal spending at Trump businesses – The Hill (blog)

A Democrats proposed amendments to an upcoming federal spending package on the House floor would prohibit taxpayer funds from being used at businesses owned by President Trump.

The House is expected to consider a spending package providing funds for multiple agencies during the first week of September, ahead of a deadline at the end of the month to avoid a government shutdown.

Rep. Steve Cohens (D-Tenn.) amendments to the legislation would ban the use of federal spending at Trump-owned hotels, resorts, golf clubs or any other businesses listed in the presidents financial disclosure form.

Congress should not allow the President to use his office to profit himself and his family, Cohen said in a statement. The Presidents refusal to divest from his privately owned businesses creates a conflict of interest when steering federal spending to his resorts and other businesses.

Trump has spent almost every weekend since taking office in January at his family-owned properties, including his Northern Virginia golf course located roughly an hour from the White House, his golf club in Bedminster, N.J., and Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla.

The Washington Post reportedin July that the State Department spent more than $15,000 to book rooms at the Trump hotel in Vancouver when members of the president'sfamily attended its grand opening in February.

The spending package slated for House consideration in September includes funding for the departments of Interior, Agriculture, Commerce, Justice, Treasury, Homeland Security, Labor, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Transportation, and State.

The House previouslypassed a national-security themed spending billin July that included $1.6 billion to start building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, a top priority for Trump.

Cohen, as well as Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.), submitted similar amendments to prevent taxpayer funds from going to Trump properties to the spending bill in July.

But House GOP leaders, who want to avoid forcing their members to take tough votes relating to Trump, did not allow floor votes on any of those amendments.

Cohen faces a long shot in securing votes on his amendments in September as well.

The Tennessee liberalannouncedlast week that he willfile articles of impeachmentagainst Trump over his response to the violence stemming from a white supremacist march in Charlottesville, Va. Trump has blamed both hate groups and counterprotesters for the violence.

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House Democrat seeks to prohibit federal spending at Trump businesses - The Hill (blog)

Jared Golden, a leading Democrat in Maine House, announces run … – Press Herald

LEWISTON Jared Golden, a Democratic state lawmaker and Marine combat veteran, announced Thursday that he is entering the 2018 race for the U.S. House, challenging incumbent 2nd District Rep. Bruce Poliquin, a Republican.

Golden, 35, served tours with the U.S. Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan before returning home to Maine, where he earned a bachelors degree at Bates College in Lewiston. He is the Democratic assistant majority leader in the Maine House of Representatives.

Golden is the fifth and, so far, most prominent Democrat to enter the race against Poliquin, who is serving his second term in Congress. Poliquin easily defeated his last challenger, Emily Cain, a former Democratic state lawmaker from Orono, in 2016.

Other Democrats who have announced a bid for the seat include Jonathan Fulford, owner of a construction business in Monroe; Tim Rich, a restaurant owner in Bar Harbor; Phil Cleaves, a Dexter mail carrier; and Craig Olson, an antique book dealer on Islesboro. Voters will select the partys candidate during a primary next June.

After studying at Bates, Golden said he returned to the war-torn countries where he fought, first volunteering as a teacher in Afghanistan and later working for a logistics company in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He then worked in Congress for U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, as part of the staff of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

Golden, now serving his second term as the state representative for Maine House District 60, grew up in Leeds and lives in Lewiston with his wife, Isobel, who serves on the Lewiston City Council.

On Thursday, Golden questioned Poliquins record of protecting Maine jobs and took aim at him for supporting a recently failed effort by Republicans in Congress to repeal the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

Everyone knows Congress must fix Obamacare to increase coverage and lower costs, but instead Bruce Poliquin voted to take coverage away from millions of Americans, Golden said.

Poliquins political adviser, the Maine Republican Party and the National Rifle Association all quickly issued statements criticizing Golden, a sure sign that he is seen as a credible challenger to the incumbents bid for a third term.

Young Jared Golden looks good on the surface, but diving deeper you find an extreme Augusta liberal politician, said Brent Littlefield, Poliquins political adviser.

Maine Republican Party Executive Director Jason Savage said Goldens assertions that Poliquin hasnt done much to secure jobs for Mainers are simply out of touch and not true, and that Poliquin had opposed Republican leaders in Congress to vote against trade policy changes that would hurt Maine.

The NRAs national spokesman, Lars Dalseid, said Golden opposed legislation that removed concealed-handgun permit requirements in Maine and supported legislation requiring a federal background check for private firearms sales in Maine.

His votes to deny Maine residents their constitutional right to self-protection and punish law-abiding gun owners for the criminal actions of others are just two of the many reasons why voters should reject his run for the U.S. Congress, Dalseid said.

Golden said none of the votes in question reduced the rights of law-abiding citizens to own guns. I dont want to take anyones guns away unless they are not legally allowed to possess them, he said. I would like to go shooting with Bruce Poliquin sometime and see who knows their way around an AR-15 assault rifle better.

Golden said the early attacks out of Washington are what he expected.

This is classic Bruce Poliquin, he said. All of his D.C. buddies in Washington, D.C., have been preparing for weeks now, figuring out how they were going to take a swing at a Marine because Bruce Poliquin is unwilling to do it himself.

As a state legislator, Golden has served on both the Veterans and Legal Affairs Committee and the Transportation Committee, developing a reputation as an advocate for veterans, immigrants and infrastructure improvement. He helped pass bills that expanded the capacity of the states Bureau of Veterans Services and provided free tuition for members of the National Guard at the University of Maine System campuses and the states community college system.

Golden joined the Marine Corps in 2002 while attending college at the University of Maine-Farmington, serving four years on active duty. He said his experiences while growing up and working on his familys Springbrook Golf Course, where he still works as greenskeeper in the summer, guided him during his military service.

Each Marine is expected to carry their own weight, to watch each others backs and to work as part of a team to get the job done, he said.

Scott Thistle can be contacted at 791-6330 or at:

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Twitter: thisdog

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Jared Golden, a leading Democrat in Maine House, announces run ... - Press Herald

Trump attacks Republican leaders over debt ceiling ‘mess’ – Sacramento Bee


Sacramento Bee
Trump attacks Republican leaders over debt ceiling 'mess'
Sacramento Bee
Fanning the flames of GOP discord, President Donald Trump accused Republican congressional leaders Thursday of botching efforts to avoid an unprecedented default on the national debt. "Could have been so easy-now a mess!" Trump tweeted.
Trump blames fellow Republican leaders for debt ceiling 'mess'Reuters
Trump again bashes the Republican leaders in Congress he needs to pass his agendaLos Angeles Times
Republican agenda threatened by feud between Trump, McConnellThe Denver Post
Axios -New York Times
all 663 news articles »

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Trump attacks Republican leaders over debt ceiling 'mess' - Sacramento Bee

The Republican Budget Fight, Explained in 5 Minutes – New York Magazine

Republicans are trying to pass a budget that would pare back the safety net, increase defense spending, and lay the groundwork for tax cuts. But there are such deep divisions within the House GOP, and between the congressional leadership and their reality-star president who just demanded a government shutdown unless his Mexican-border wall is funded the party may just tear itself to pieces and let America default on its debt by early October. While the budget process tends to be mundane in more normal political circumstances, this bill (for various procedural reasons) is shaping up to be a battle royal over the Republican agenda.

The strength of the safety net and the rights highest policy ambition For eight decades, conservative elites have been trying to topple pillars of the New Deal. Under Obama, House Speaker Paul Ryan drew up and passed budgets never enacted, of course slashing spending on virtually every program that benefits the poor. To make that blueprint a reality and fulfill a generations-old ideological ambition, all Ryan and the billionaires who back him thought they needed was a Republican president with enough working digits to handle a pen. But now that they have that and the moment of truth is here, the challenge of getting enough Republican congresspeople and senators to vote for such a radical, regressive agenda looks daunting.

Americas credit rating Congress needs to raise the debt ceiling the limit on how much the Treasury is allowed to borrow before the end of September, or else Uncle Sam will go into default. A debt default would damage our nations credit rating; swell the costs of future government borrowing (and, thus, increase the national debt); tank the stock market; and, quite possibly, plunge the economy back into recession.

House Republicans can raise the debt ceiling without passing a budget. But if House conservatives arent satisfied with the state of the budget negotiations, theyre likely to hold the nations credit rating hostage to their demands.

The survival of Donald Trumps legislative agenda Now that Obamacare has sneaked past its own death panel, the presidents hopes for notching a major legislative win before 2018 all ride on tax reform. But in order to even begin the process of passing the presidents proposed tax cuts, congressional Republicans will have to pass a budget. Although, expect there to be some overlap between those goals

Republicans want to pass large, deficit-expanding tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations. The vast majority of Democrats do not want to do that. And the Donkey Party has enough votes in the Senate to mount a filibuster against any bill that does.

Except, that is, for an annual budget bill. To prevent intransigent minorities from undermining the basic functioning of government, Senate majorities can pass budget bills with 51 votes, so long as said bills dont increase the deficit ten years after theyre passed. So, if Republicans can pass a budget, they can attach giant, temporary tax cuts to it and pass them into law without a single Democratic vote.

Trump promised to pass the biggest tax cut in history; dramatically increase military and border-control spending; preserve Medicare and Social Security at their current benefit levels; and balance the federal budget. It is not mathematically possible to do all of these things. Nor is it politically tenable to cut taxes on the rich, while simultaneously passing entitlement reforms and spending cuts Draconian enough to balance the budget within a decade.

The GOP leaderships nominal solution includes pretending that the American economy will grow by an average of 2.6 percent per year over the next decade (even though most economists think wed be lucky to get 2 percent). That, along with various other sleights of hand and half-measures,would be enough to balance Uncle Sams books, they unconvincingly claim.

The proposed cuts including $200 billion to mandatory programs and a whopping 24 percent to domestic discretionary spending would likely increase Americas (already exceptionally high) rates of child poverty and hunger, threaten Medicare benefits jealously guarded by the GOP base, and jeopardize the federal bureaucracys capacity to perform its most basic functions. Intuitively, the issue here would seem to be getting Republican moderates to sign on. (And that will be difficult.) But thats only half the issue: The leaderships proposed cuts are quite small, relative to the ones House conservatives are demanding. Which is to say: Ryans caucus is split by irreconcilable goals. The conflict cant be solved by compromise, only by one sides surrender.

For some in the GOP, increasing spending on conservative priorities is more important than reducing funding for liberal ones. President Trump is desperate to build his border wall (and his much-touted Mexican financing appears to have fallen through). The Houses defense hawks want to add a few new wings to the military-industrial complex. But Senate Democrats can and will filibuster wall funding. And if Republicans insist on domestic spending cuts, then Chuck Schumer & Co. will block the defense appropriations, too: The 2011 Budget Control Act puts a hard cap on annual military spending, one that the GOP cant lift without Democratic votes.

The president is now threatening to veto any spending bill that doesnt fund his wall, out of the (bizarre) belief that fear of government shutdown will convince Democrats to do his bidding. But political dysfunction hurts the party in power far more than the opposition. Trumps threats wont get his wall built but they could encourage the Houses far-right fanatics to continue holding the federal government hostage to their untenable demands.

Diane Black Chair of the House Budget Committee, shes taken a lead role in the deliberations thus far, and helped craft the preliminary compromise budget (decried by conservatives and moderates alike). Black recently announced that she will run for governor of Tennessee in 2018, an ambition that may make her even more reluctant to embrace the Freedom Caucuss unpopular plans for Medicaid and Medicare.

Mark Meadows Chair of the Freedom Caucus, Meadows has warned the GOP leadership that he and his fellow conservatives wont vote for any debt-ceiling bill that doesnt include large spending cuts or deregulatory measures provisions that are certain to doom the legislation in the Senate. He has also said that they will need to see larger spending cuts and more details on the partys tax-reform plan before agreeing to back any budget.

Charlie Dent Head of the moderate Tuesday Group, Dent led the moderates revolt against Blacks budget. Unlike the Houses other weak-willed GOP centrists, Dent voted against Trumpcare a decision that many of his moderate colleagues surely envy, now that the bill has been rhetorically rejected by the president, and legislatively rebuffed by the Senate.

Donald Trump President of the United States, Trump could, ostensibly, tip the balance in the House GOPs civil war, if he can find time between livetweeting Fox & Friends, undermining the GOP leadership, and trash-talking his way to the brink of nuclear war.

September 29 The debt-limit deadline.

September 30 The federal government runs out of funding. To avoid a shutdown, the House will need to pass, at the very least, a short-term spending bill. That legislation will also need to renew the Childrens Health Insurance Program. Theres a good chance Ryan will likely need Democratic votes to get this done.

December 15 Final day of Congresss 2017 session (for now). Trump has pledged to pass tax reform by years end.

Best-case scenario for the GOP Ryan raises the debt ceiling with the votes of Democrats and moderate Republicans. His far-right faction takes the hit, learns humility, and decides it can accept a mere $200 billion in budget cuts. GOP moderates cave after being assured that said cuts wont survive the Senate. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell gets around budget caps on military spending which under normal circumstances would require Democratic votes by duplicitously treating the spending increase as war funding. After months of haggling, McConnell finds a set of spending reductions and tax cuts that 50 GOP senators can live with. Those clowns in Congress finally get something done. Americas rich get richer; the poor, poorer.

More plausible, pretty-good-case scenario for the GOP Ryan raises the debt ceiling with the votes of Democrats and moderate Republicans. The far right is furious but not furious enough to sabotage tax cuts for the rich. With maximum whininess, they agree to pass a short-term spending bill in September, and then go along with the same cop-out their party used to get the ball rolling on health care: a shell budget that does nothing but lay the groundwork for passing temporary tax cuts in the Senate. The Draconian spending cuts will have to wait for next year (or never).

Best-case scenario for Democrats Ryan raises the debt ceiling with the votes of Democrats and moderate Republicans. His far-right faction declares a mutiny. Their demands for the budget grow more extreme. Ryan is forced to pass a budget with Democratic votes; Nancy Pelosi secures money to shore up Obamacare, in exchange for Trumps requested funding for defense and border control. There are no major spending cuts. The betrayal costs Ryan his speakership, the GOP descends into a civil war, and tax reform dies in utero.

Worst-case scenario for the country Ryan attaches entitlement cuts to the debt ceiling, passes it with Freedom Caucus and (spineless) moderate votes. Senate Democrats filibuster. America defaults on its debt. The economy goes into recession.

Convicted killer Mark James Asay lost his last appeal, and was executed on Thursday night.

Weeks ago, nearly 50 counties had no insurer selling Obamacare plans. Despite Trumps many acts of sabotage, that number is now zero.

So long as the president has an internet connection, hes bound to read and, occasionally retweet all manner of far-right wing nuts.

Weve had the time of our lives, and we owe it all to him.

If Trump were to be removed from office via impeachment, the GOP would continue to rule with much the same policies. So why all the talk of a coup?

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke says hes recommending changes to a handful of national monuments.

Its an acknowledgement that the sailors are not expected to be found alive.

History shows the party in the White House struggles to knock off incumbent senators in midterms. Its one of many cross-cutting factors for 2018.

Fix the Debt is now fixin to get paid.

Police are reporting that one person died, and the suspect was shot and taken to the hospital.

It could become a Category 3 storm and cause potentially devastating floods by dumping close to two feet of rain in some areas.

Now that the president has put a government shutdown squarely on the table, Democrats must decide if they want a deal, or just a Trump defeat.

A primer on how the Houses struggle to pass a 2018 budget could blow up tax reform and Americas credit rating.

The White House chief of staff is controlling the flow of information to the president and presenting him with decision memos.

The president plays backseat Majority Leader, as relations between the White House and Capitol Hill continue to sour.

Progressives have taken up a conservative principle as a shield against the federal government. But is it just a marriage of convenience?

Rick Dearborn, who is now deputy chief of staff, reportedly passed along information about someone trying to connect Trump officials with Putin.

The charges stem from his use of pepper spray at the rally in Charlottesville, which he says was justified.

They said his words have given succor to those who advocate anti-Semitism, racism, and xenophobia.

The reported plan gives Mattis six months to figure out what Trumps tweets mean for service members and by then the courts may have weighed in.

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The Republican Budget Fight, Explained in 5 Minutes - New York Magazine