Archive for the ‘Democrat’ Category

Obamacare hearing rolls past 24 hours. Meet the NJ leader of Democratic resistance – Philly.com

WASHINGTON The Republican trying to shepherd the GOPs Affordable Care Act repeal bill through a key committee got about eight words into his opening statement Wednesday when Democrat Frank Pallone interrupted.

Mr. Chairman! Mr. Chairman! the Jersey Shore-area congressman called out.

As the top Democrat on the committee, he wanted five minutes for leaders on the House Energy and Commerce Committee to speak and three minutes for rank-and-file members, not the three minutes and one minute allotted.

When the Republican majority shot down that request, Pallone jumped in again. Now he wanted more time for the second-ranking Democrat to speak. He was overridden again.

Then he raised a point of parliamentary inquiry, demanding that he be recognized even as Republicans tried to get the hearing moving.

So it went.

As Republicans began their work to advance a bill that would undo one of the Democrats most cherished accomplishments, Pallone played the petulant backseat passenger unwilling to quietly go along.

As of Thursday morning the committee hearing was still rolling on more than 24 hours after it began.Democrats continued to argue against the GOP proposal, stall and force votes on amendments.

A liberal with roughly three decades in Congress, Pallone was at the forefront of his party's efforts Wednesday and Thursday to fight Republicans rollback. As the top Democrat on one of the two key committees handling the GOP bill, he may be in the spotlight for days as the point man picking at the controversial proposal.

Wednesday signaled his intentions to be an all-around pest.

The lanky and normally languid Pallone, from Long Branch, questioned Republicans on every procedural step. Democrats forced committee staff to read aloud the entirety of the piece of the bill before them 66 pages of subtitles and legalese. That took an hour.

The committee debate could into the weekend. Democrats said Wednesday that they had close to 200 amendments to offer.

Well, let me ask just one more question, Pallone said at one point.

This was your last question, responded the panels chairman, Rep. Greg Walden (R., Ore.), noting that Pallone had said his previous question was his last one.

Pallones aggressive posture, as well as his losses in procedural votes, reflected both the intense fight Democrats plan to wage and its possible futility in the face of a Republican majority. The GOP plan seems to face more threats from Republicans breaking ranks than it does from Democrats.

In an interview during a break, Pallone said his goal was to at least show the flaws in a bill that he argues Republicans are jamming through without scrutiny.

The Republicans keep talking about what they dont like in the Affordable Care Act, but they never talk about how what theyre proposing today is going to improve it, Pallone said. In almost every case I can tell you that what theyre going to do would make it worse.

Republicans argue that their bill would erase a law that they blame for rising insurance premiums and decreased consumer choices.

This is a very contentious issue, and it does seem to engender partisan vigor, said Rep. Leonard Lance (R., N.J.), a member of the panel who has known Pallone for roughly 30 years. (Lance said he would likely support the bill.)

Walden, initially showing frustration, eventually took on the air of a parent gently trying to move things along while the kids kicked the back of his seat.

Well get through this, he said. Lets just all settle down here.

Hearings in the committee and another key panel, the Ways and Means Committee, Wednesday gave rank-and-file lawmakers their first chances to get their hands on the sweeping health bill.

I think its the appropriate framework through which to bring about the kind of reforms that we need, said Rep. Ryan Costello (R., Pa.), a member of the committee from Chester County, becoming one of the first local lawmakers to endorse the proposal. He said the measure would rein in health-care costs and get us on a path forward where we dont have government-centered, government-controlled health care.

Rep. Mike Doyle, a Democrat from the Pittsburgh area, read a letter from Gov. Wolf warning that the bill would disrupt health-care access and coverage for millions of Pennsylvanians.

Between sparring, Pallone leaned back in his chair to consult with aides and walked the dais to strategize with fellow Democrats. With their microphones off, Pallone and Walden spoke, frequently laughing together.

The irony is that Pallone, 65, has been dogged by a reputation of being too soft. The longtime representative passed up a chance to run for the Senate in 2002, leading some to question whether he had the guts for a fight.

Even as he jabbed at Republicans on Wednesday, he delivered his sharp words in a soft, easy tone, reading directly from notes. He launched his objections while propping his head on his hand.

I wish he had a little bit more prosecutorial energy, but hell do his job and he does it fine, said Rep. Bill Pascrell (D., N.J.), who hailed Pallones persistence and called him a brother.

Pallone ran for Senate in 2013, finishing a distant second to Cory Booker in a four-way Democratic primary. Returned to the House, he showed some appetite for battle, winning a nasty internal struggle for the top seat on the powerful committee, defeating a rival backed by top House Democrat Nancy Pelosi.

That perch gives Pallone a front-row seat in one of the biggest fights in Washington.

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After long urging repeal, Philly-area GOP cautious on Obamacare roll back plan Mar 7 - 6:45 PM

Infographic: Local Effects of the Two Health Plans

Published: March 9, 2017 10:56 AM EST | Updated: March 9, 2017 11:26 AM EST

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Obamacare hearing rolls past 24 hours. Meet the NJ leader of Democratic resistance - Philly.com

Democrat Congressman introduces No TRUMP Act to prevent taxpayer spending at Trump properties – Salon

Most recent presidents have placed their assets in a blind trust to avoid any potential conflicts of interest, but President Donald Trump, one of the wealthiest modern presidents, has refused to follow tradition even as questionspersist about potential conflicts of interests. But legislation introduced by one Democrat in the House on Thursday directly trolls the presidents decision while ensuringhis businesses dont benefit financially from the presidency.

The No Taxpayer Revenue Used to Monetize the Presidency Act, or, the No TRUMP Act, would prohibit the use of taxpayer dollars to pay for events, overnight stays, food or other expenses at hotels owned or operated by a president or his relatives, reported USA Today.

The measure, introduced by Oregon Democratic Rep. Earl Blumenauer, follows decisions by the administration and the first familystir national controversy.First LadyMelania Trump, for example, will live at Trump Tower in New York andrequire millions in taxpayer funding.

Trump and his family are riddled with conflicts of interests. Putting a strain on government resources for Trump to hold meetings with U.S. officials at Mar-a-Lago or for the Trump children to travel the world to promote the family business are just more examples, Blumenauer said in a news release. Blumenauer noted that hes particularly concerned about Trumps refusal to divest his ownership stake in the Trump Organization.Trump has left his two adult sons, Eric and Donald Jr,in charge of managing his companies without divesting his stake. A recent business trip to Uruguay by Eric cost U.S. taxpayers nearly $100,000, while

Presidents should not financially benefit from holding the office. No taxpayer money should be spent at Trump hotels. Period, Blumenauer argued. Though the name of the bill is clearly a reference to thecurrent president, it would apply to any future presidents:

Trump has sought to fend off concerns by vowing to donate profits from any foreign governments that use his hotels. Many ethics experts, however, have cast doubt on how such an arrangement would be executed, raising questions around how it would actually be implemented, enforced and disclosed to the public.

Just this week, debates about his potential conflicts of interest raged on when it was revealed that Trumps company had secured preliminary approval for 38 trademarks in China, after trying for over a decade.

We have never before seen a president aggressively pursuing valuable benefits from a foreign government of this kind, and it creates an obvious conflict of interest for him, Norman Eisen, who served in the Obama administration and is now a governance ethics fellow at the Brookings Institute, recently told the Washington Post.

Blumenauers bill would allow the Secret Service to continue protecting the president and his family at Trump Tower in New York and Mar-a-Lago in Florida. According to The Hill,Trump hasspent nearly a quarter of his presidencyso far at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, traveling there during four of the seven weekends since he took office in January.

Despite the masterful trolling in the bills title, the No Trump Act is unlikely to pass the Republican-controlled Congress. Still, Blumenauer told USA Today that he remains hopeful about his bills chances, given the mounting public pressure over an appearance of impropriety between the White House and the Trump Organization.

I think its entirely possible that under bizarre circumstances, the combination of public concern and political unease may grow, he said. I believe this would be broadly supported And if something happens that galvanizes public attention, we have something that is ready to go.

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Democrat Congressman introduces No TRUMP Act to prevent taxpayer spending at Trump properties - Salon

GOP Super PAC Airs New Ad Against Georgia Democrat – Roll Call

The GOP super PAC tied to House Republican leadership is releasing its second attack ad against Democrat Jon Ossoff, part of a previously announced $1.1. million investment in the district.

Congressional Leadership Fundsspot hits the 30-year-old Democrat for lying on his resume, questioning his honesty and preparedness for office. Like the first adagainst him, this one features footage from his college days of Ossoffdressed up as the Star Wars character Han Solo.

The truth is Jon Ossoff has a better chance of being cast as Han Solo in the next Star Wars movie than representing the 6th district in Congress, CLF executive director Corry Bliss said in a statement.

Ossoff is one of five Democrats running in a field of 18 candidates who will all run together, regardless of party, in an April 18 jungle primary. The top-two finishers will advance to a runoff in June.

Ossoff, a documentary filmmaker and former Hill staffer, has attracted national attention and fundraising assistance from liberal groups who see him as their best opportunity to flip this red seat blue.

Although President Donald Trump won this affluent, suburban district by less than 2 points, its a reliably Republican seat at the congressional level. Health and Human Service Secretary Tom Price won re-election here by 23 points last fall.

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GOP Super PAC Airs New Ad Against Georgia Democrat - Roll Call

Where are the real Democrats? – Weatherford Democrat

Where are the real Democrats?

Dear Editor:

Im disappointed the Democrats continued their playground antics during the Presidents speech to Congress, but it was good for America to see what has happened to that party.

Its so obvious the Democrat Party has been corrupted by lunatic fringe thinking. The Democrats once stood by salt of the earth working men and women, the heartbeat of Middle America. My family was dedicated Democrat voters from Pennsylvania steel country; they are so confused now they dont bother to vote.

The Democrats should address each other as Comrade since the party comes before all else, just like the communist party under old Joe Stalin. Stepping out of line wont get you shot but your career is over. If you are a Democrat you will not have representation for the next four years because obstructing the Presidents agenda takes priority.

When you have a leadership cabal of 70 plus year old senior citizens with a shallow vocabulary consisting of the words no, resist, racist, bigot, homophobic and Hitler, theres no room for younger forward thinking Democrats. I have nothing against senior citizens ... I am one, but I pride myself in having common sense, integrity, love of country, and doing the right thing. Fortunately most of America is growing weary of the antics. We are a country of laws and to have a President who wants to enforce them is refreshing. Certainly trying to stem illegal immigration tops the list. Changing Obamas bass fishing policy of catching and releasing was a great move.

For the good of the country get over yourselves and the election. If you keep up the policy of obstruction and destruction the Democrat Party may never get back to prominence.

Lonnie Williams

Weatherford

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Where are the real Democrats? - Weatherford Democrat

While Trump Was Dominating In Deep-Red Oklahoma, This Democrat Won A Landslide – Huffington Post

As precinct data rolled into his war room at the Aloft Hotel in downtown Oklahoma City last November, Joe Maxwell realized his team had a landslide on its hands.

He saw no need to delay the victory speeches, having been up since before daybreak orchestrating a statewide get-out-the-vote operation for what was expected to be a close contest. His team took the elevator to the rooftop bar, where about 50 small farmers gathered anxiously to watch the returns and, they hoped, celebrate.

For the previous 14 months, they had battled a so-called right to farm ballot initiative, with Maxwell serving as the general (to quote his friends) of that campaign. Corporate agricultural interests in Oklahoma hoped the measure would protect factory farming from environmental, food safety and humanitarian regulations. The deep-red states Republican governor and every member of its all-GOP congressional delegation backed it.

In response, Maxwell, who works for the Humane Society,had helped assemble an opposition force of animal welfare activists, environmental groups, Native American tribes and family farmers. Few political strategists would have picked that coalition to overcome the influence of the states dominant industry. But there Maxwell was, quietly enjoying a beer as he listened to former state Attorney General Drew Edmondson (D)deliver the news of their crushing victory to a cheering audience. The no vote had carried every congressional district in the state and defeated Big Ag by more than 20 points.

Maxwell slapped a few backs, shook a few hands and made small talk about the view of Oklahoma Citys modest skyscrapers. The party broke up early, as people relocated to await the presidential returns. Maxwell and a few of his top deputies retreated to a bar down the street.

Not many Democrats enjoyed the evening of Nov. 8, 2016. A bit after 10 p.m., Maxwell called Barry Lynn, director of the Open Markets Program at the New America Foundation in Washington, D.C., to complain that he had no one to celebrate with.

Donald Trumps triumph last November was a victory for rural and small-town voters over metropolitan enclaves, the culmination of agrim trend for Democrats that has been intensifying since the 1990s. In 1996, Bill Clinton won nearly half of Americas 3,142 counties. Sixteen years later, Barack Obama carried fewer than 700 countiesand still won the election. Hillary Clinton carried just 487 and lost.

Running up the score in population centers isnt helping much with down-ballot contests either. As culturally liberal people move away from suburban and rural communities and concentrate themselves in cities, theyve increased the Democratic Partys margins in already blue areas but decreased them in swing suburban, exurban and rural districts. At the same time, Republicans haveaggressively gerrymandered many previously competitive districts, redrawing them to neutralize Democratic votes. Those two factors make it extremely difficult going forward for Democrats to win the U.S. House of Representatives, where theyve shed 69 seats since 2008, or state legislatures, where theyve ceded more than 900 seats over the same stretch, without revitalizing their position in exurban and rural America.

After the 2016 disaster, Democrats tasked Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.) with performing an independent autopsy of the partys disappointing performance in House races across the country. His team conjured a 350-variable mathematical model, studying hundreds of districts. The massive resulting equation predicts doom for Democrats in districts with few college-educated voters, but sees promise in wealthier, diversifying suburbs. It suggests a strategy that effectively writes off all of rural America.

Theyre just wrong, Maxwell said. They cant do that, and they dont have to.

Maxwells brand of politics looks beyond the poll-tested analytics that dominate Washington. Even the best mathematical models tools like Maloneys current project are only useful at a particular snapshot in time. They treat voters as static data points, rather than human beings capable of changing their minds. A model might focus on the number of Democrats registered in a district to predict the partys performance in an upcoming race. But models cant explain how to create more Democrats in that district.

Maxwell won where Democrats werent even playing, in a state where Trump carried every single county. When he convinced the Humane Society to get involved against the right-to-farm measure in 2015, independent polling showed his side trailing 64 percent to 15 percent.

His decision to fight and battle plan reveal a possible path for the Democratic Party out of the political wilderness and back to electoral relevance. But taking it would require rejecting the political strategy that Democratic leaders are now honing in Washington.

Democrats dont have to throw out their values, Maxwell insists. Democrats dont even have to abandon their issues. Its about how you frame it. Its about connecting with people and showing them how your ideas fit with their values.

Alissa Scheller/The Huffington Post

Maxwell, 59, and his brother Steve run a farm in northeastern Missouri, just outside the town of Mexico, with a population of roughly 11,000. Theyre fourth-generation hog farmers, and politics wasnt a focus growing up. After stints in the Army and the U.S. Postal Service, Maxwell returned to the family business in the late 1970s, just in time for Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volckers crusade against inflation.

The Feds ruthless interest rate hikes didnt just bring down prices; they devastated small farmers, sparking a great wave of farm foreclosures across the country. When the farms failed, so did the local community banks that had loaned them money. And when the banks collapsed, so did other local businesses that relied on them for credit. Rural America was ravaged. Farmers rode tractors into Washington to snarl traffic in protest, and Maxwell decided to go into politics.

Thats when I realized that government actions pick winners and losers, he said. And theyd decided that my industry was a loser.

Maxwell began volunteering for Rep. Harold Volkmer (D-Mo.), and by 1986 he was working on the presidential campaign of Rep.Dick Gephardt (D-Mo.). He helped Gephardt organize his ultimately unsuccessful opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement before striking out on his own. Maxwell won election first to the Missouri legislature and then as the states lieutenant governor in 2000 another year when his win bucked a bad national trend for Democrats.

Im pretty good at getting up and giving a line to people on the stump, said Wes Shoemyer, a former Missouri state senator. Me personally, Im just a good ol boy, not too sophisticated. Joe, hes a sophisticated good ol boy. And thats something the Democrats lost.

Statewide Democratic campaigns in Missouri typically set up shop in Democratic-friendly cities like St. Louis or Kansas City.Maxwell ran his campaign for lieutenant governor from his hometown, which meant he didnt have to sit through city traffic every time he set out to stump in rural Missouri. Working adjacent to a farm did have its drawbacks, however.

We were in an at-times flea-infested office, recalled Tricia Workman, a Missouri-based lobbyist who managed the campaign. I probably paid to exterminate them myself. But he campaigned on agriculture, which is the states biggest industry.

And he campaigned on health care, the working class, the middle class everybody gets a quality education, she said. And we won on that. ... Democrats used to be a lot more popular in the state.

Michael Cali for The Huffington Post

Maxwell still speaks lovingly of Jeffersonian democracy and hails Franklin Roosevelts New Deal. Theres a harmony between his attacks on corporate farm interests and the rhetorical assaults from Sen. Bernie Sanders(I-Vt.) against the 1 percent. But Maxwell and his allies arent selling democratic socialism.

We dont want government subsidies, said Fred Stokes, a Maxwell collaborator who founded the Organization for Competitive Markets, which advocates for small farms against big producers like Tyson, Perdue and Smithfield. We just want the game to be fair. Apply the damn antitrust laws and itll work. Teddy Roosevelt had this figured out 100 years ago. I dont know why its so damn hard for people to understand.

The work that Maxwell and the Humane Society of the United States are doing in rural America could serve as a foundation for further outreach. The Humane Societys battles against factory farms, puppy mills, research labs and other places that abuse animals are nonpartisan. Its advocates are Democratic and Republican alike, and its explicit political organ, the Humane Society Legislative Fund, supports candidates from both parties. But many of the alliances it has built look like the nascent stage of a new rural liberalism.

In 2010, the groups president, Wayne Pacelle, was in Jefferson City, Missouri, to lobby in favor of a state ballot proposal to crack down on puppy mills. He ran into Maxwell at the statehouse. It was a pure case of serendipity, Pacelle said.

Maxwell had backed a bill to ban cockfighting during his time in the state legislature, and hed gone after Big Ag for animal cruelty before. Pacelle hired him to direct the Humane Societys rural outreach program. Connecting with farmers as an animal welfare advocate requires overcoming some significant cultural barriers. A lot of farmers see the Humane Societys efforts against animal cruelty as a Trojan horse the first step in a project that ends with forced vegetarianism and the elimination of all animal agriculture.

What people may not realize about places like Oklahoma is, yes, there is a huge agricultural industry, mostly wheat and cattle, said F. Bailey Norwood, an agricultural economist at Oklahoma State University. But ag is also a very popular hobby. For a lot of kids growing up, their hobby was showing cattle or showing hogs. They show farm animals the way other people show dogs. So even when people dont farm for a living, theres a real connection with farm culture.

With my students, theres a lot of us-versus-them mentality, he said. Us, the good Oklahomans who raise our animals right, and them, these crazy animal rights activists and environmentalists from California who wanna tell us what to do.

Stokes, the small-farmers advocate, acknowledged thatMaxwells association with the Humane Society is a significant cultural barrier.

All of us catch a lot of hell for that, Stokes said. Theyve been conditioned by Farm Bureau and everyone else over the years to think badly about the Humane Society, when theyve been very good to us and asked for absolutely nothing in return. (The American Farm Bureau Federation is a century-old organization that advocates for the agricultural industry, but tends to represent the goals of Big Ag.)

But there is a common interest between family farmers who are routinely undercut by the market power of big meat-packing companies and animal welfare advocates who want to end brutal factory farming techniques that small farms, by definition, dont deploy. And Maxwell is getting results. Back in 2002, when he was still lieutenant governor, the Humane Society helped pass an anti-cockfighting ballot initiative in Oklahoma. But it did so by getting strong turnout in Tulsa and Oklahoma City. Initiative supporters carried only 11 of the states 77 counties. On the 2016 right-to-farm question, Maxwells side won 37.

You have to go meet them, said Maxwell, referring to voters. You have to go be where they are. Its about who they are and showing them that you are like them, that you share their values. If youre in their coffee shop or barber shop or their synagogue or their church if youre there, then they feel comfortable to express themselves. You cant do that in a poll.

The Humane Societys success at state-level politics has earned it a lot of enemies. Major food and agriculture companies hired PR guru and super-lobbyist Rick Berman to target the Humane Society with a complex propaganda operation. Berman is behind both the think-tank-sounding Center for Consumer Freedom and the blog HumaneWatch.org, which has visually caricatured Maxwell as a puppet and falsely smeared him as an animal torturer.

HSUS is a vegan organization they dont want people to ultimately eat meat,Will Coggin, research director for the Center for Consumer Freedom, claimed. If they want to be like PETA, they should be as honest as PETA is about their agenda.

This charge is, of course, impossible to square with Maxwells career as a hog farmer.

I represent Monsanto, which Joe hates, but I still have the absolute biggest respect for him that I possibly could, as a human being and as a politician, said Workman, his former campaign manager who has since returned to lobbying.

rayna via Getty Images

While Maxwell is notching victories now, any broader Democratic Party strategy for rural America would take time to pay off. But he didnt win the first one either.

In 2014, when Maxwell decided to fight a right-to-farm ballot initiative in Missouri, Big Ag had a 35-point lead. Maxwells side ended up losing the vote by a whisper-thin 0.2 percent. Former Oklahoma state Sen. Paul Muegge (D) took note. When a similar plan was introduced in Oklahoma, he called Maxwell and urged him to join the opposition campaign, which was headed by Cynthia Armstrong, the Humane Societys top operative in the state.

Right-to-farm measures come with a sympathetic label, but they benefit big agricultural conglomerates, giving them legal protections that help elbow smaller producers out of the market. The Oklahoma initiative would have amended the state constitution to make it all but impossible for the state government to regulate farming technology, either by statute or agency rules. Unless the government could demonstrate a compelling state interest an extremely high standard of legal scrutiny that also applies, for example, to restrictions on voting rights new farming rules would be forbidden. Even if the state could show a compelling interest, corporate agriculture could have used the right-to-farm law to tie up new standards in court for years.

Maxwell was tasked with everything from writing speeches to pitching farmers face-to-face on the no campaign.

The farm community is so much faith-based, I thought the idea of stewardship could really be a powerful message, Maxwell said. Stewardship of the animals, stewardship of the land.

He also saw an opening on environmental concerns, which are paramount in many portions of the state. The Illinois River, Lake Tenkiller and other waterways in eastern Oklahoma have been polluted for years, due primarily to chicken waste runoff from big poultry farms. Eastern counties broke hard for Maxwells side on election night.

I think Joes an amazing person, said Mike Callicrate, a Kansas cattle rancher who serves on the board of the Organization for Competitive Markets. And its going to be his work and his coalition-building that will save family farming and get people back to the land. That win in Oklahoma might be the turning point.

Victory builds confidence. Maxwell spent this past New Years Eve in his hometown with brother Steve and former lawmaker Shoemyer. In deep-red northeastern Missouri, one of the bars on the town square displayed a sign declaring that anyone who had voted for Hillary Clinton would not be served.

Maxwells crew took the hint and started their evening on the other side of the square. After a few rounds, his drinking buddies looked up to see him walking toward the anti-Clinton sign.

Maxwell walked in, slammed his hand down on the bar and said, I voted for Hillary Clinton and I want a beer!

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Correction: A previous version of this article stated that Trump won every voting precinct in Oklahoma. He won every county.

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While Trump Was Dominating In Deep-Red Oklahoma, This Democrat Won A Landslide - Huffington Post