Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

Opioid policy unites Democrats, Republicans on Capitol Hill – Washington Times

Extreme partisanship is rampant on Capitol Hill, but a glimmer of hope for cooperation is emerging from a dark place the prescription painkiller and heroin crisis thats ravaging the country.

Its an issue where all sides have said they want to act, though getting agreement hasnt always been smooth.

Sen. Rob Portman, an Ohio Republican who has taken the lead on the issue, was only able to get five fellow Republicans last year to sign onto his bill to root out synthetic opioids pouring into the U.S. through postal packages from China. This year, hes already gotten several Democrats to join him.

The most recent co-sponsors from either party Sen. David Perdue, a Georgia Republican who is staunchly pro-life and anti-gun control, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Massachusetts Democrat and hero to the progressive left highlight the political breadth of the problem and eagerness to deal with it.

Another bill, the Stop OD Act of 2017, would authorize grants to highlight the dangers of opioids and expand the use of overdose-reversing drugs. It has more than 20 House co-sponsors, scattered from Hawaii to New Hampshire, and roughly split between Republicans and Democrats.

Drug abuse is a problem that afflicts many parts of the country and therefore is something that unites red and blue state legislators. If members can address that issue, it offers some hope of progress in other areas as well, said Darrell West, director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution.

The prescription drug and heroin epidemic stands out because it is affecting Americans of all ages with little regard for race, income or other social factors. The crisis resulted in more than 30,000 overdose deaths in 2015 alone.

The epidemics wide reach prompted Congress to pass bipartisan legislation last year the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act that bolstered treatment and the availability of overdose-reversing drugs.

But Congress struggled to pony up funds. After months of feuding, lawmakers agreed to dedicate $500 million per year for fiscal years 2017 and 2018. It passed just weeks after the contentious November election, giving lawmakers hope that bipartisanship is still possible.

With President Trump calling for belt-tightening in domestic spending, members of Congress are warning the administration not to fiddle with the funding.

Democrats said efforts to repeal Obamacare and proposed spending cuts in Mr. Trumps budget for the National Institutes of Health or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were particularly troubling.

During the campaign I was pleased to hear President Trump talk about the need to address [the epidemic]. Its been disappointing to see him try and take away health care, said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, New Hampshire Democrat, noting Obamacares expansion of Medicaid had been a vital conduit to treatment for addicts in her state.

For now, lawmakers are reaching for common ground wherever they can find it.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, Missouri Democrat, reached out to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, after Mr. Trump tapped him to lead the national fight against opioid addiction, saying we need all hands on deck, including administration officials to thwart the epidemic.

I hope we can take some lessons from this. It is a public health crisis in all of our states in every community, rural and urban, Ms. McCaskill said Friday.

Ms. McCaskill made her comments to a reporter just moments after shed cast a vote against Mr. Trumps Supreme Court nominee, Judge Neil Gorsuch.

That court fight which saw Democrats mount the first ever partisan filibuster of a high court nominee and the GOP trigger the nuclear option to change the rules and curtail the use of the filibuster threatened to send the Senate to new lows of bipartisanship.

But Mr. Portman said even in the midst of that, bipartisanship is alive and well.

Literally during the vote, two Democrats came over, and we talked about other legislation, he said Friday. Were going to continue to work together across party lines. We have to. Thats our job, and we have lots to do.

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Opioid policy unites Democrats, Republicans on Capitol Hill - Washington Times

Report: Top Democrats tried to convince Emmy-winning actress to run for office – TheBlaze.com

In lengthy article published by the Washington Post on Sunday, reporter Ben Terris revealed Emmy-winning Hollywood actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus has said shes been approached by top Democrats who wanted her to run for office.

According to Terris, Louis-Dreyfus said she has been approached by top Democrats and asked to run for office. (Not in a million years, she said she told them.)

Louis-Dreyfus didnt tell Terris what the Democrats had in mind or who the top Democrats are.

Louis-Dreyfus stars in HBOs hit comedy Veep, where she has for several seasons played a disgruntled, often ignored vice president thats always stumbling her way through a sea of scandals and political escapades.

Louis-Dreyfus likely isnt the first celebrity Democrats have approached about running for office. Many high-profile people with connections to the Democratic Party have been rumored to be interested in a 2020 White House run or for some other high-level political office.

According to the Financial Times, Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook; Mark Cuban, the owner of the Dallas Mavericks NBA team and reality-television star; and Bob Iger, the chief executive of Walt Disney, have all expressed interest in running for office since the start of 2017.

In an interview on The David Rubenstein Show, which aired in March 2017, Oprah Winfrey told host Rubenstein she has thought about since Donald Trump surprised the world in November 2016.

I thought, Oh, gee, I dont have the experience, Winfrey said. I dont know enough. And now Im thinking, Oh. Oh.

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Report: Top Democrats tried to convince Emmy-winning actress to run for office - TheBlaze.com

Democrats Lose Argument, Try to Burn Books – Power Line (blog)

Well, to be fair, the Democrats dont want to burn books that point out how unscientific the global warming scare is. They want to recycle them. The Daily Caller reports:

Three senior House Democrats asked U.S. teachers Monday to destroy a book written by climate scientists challenging the environmentalist view of global warming.

The Democrats were responding to a campaign by the conservative Heartland Institute copies of the 2015 book, Why Climate Scientists Disagree About Global Warming to about 200,000 science teachers. Democratic Reps. Bobby Scott of the Committee on Education, Ral M. Grijalva of the Committee on Natural Resources, and Eddie Bernice Johnson of the Committee on Science, Space and Technology all issued a statement telling teachers to trash the book.

But if the arguments in favor of global warming hysteria are so strong, why do they need to trash the book? Why not respond to its arguments?

Just kidding.

Public school classrooms are no place for anti-science propaganda, and I encourage every teacher to toss these materials in the recycling bin, Scott said. If the Heartland Institute and other climate deniers want to push a false agenda on global warming, our nations schools are an inappropriate place to drive that agenda.

Got that? If you make scientific arguments against a fraudulent claim that benefits government, you are anti-science. And if you tell the truth about the Earths climate, you are a climate denier. What a stupid phrase! Do the Democrats mean to imply that some people deny the Earth has a climate? Apparently so.

So who are the anti-science authors of a book that dares to tell the truth about government-funded global warming alarmism?

The books three authors all hold doctorates and taught climate or related science at the university level. The book was written by former Arizona State University climatologist Dr. Craig D. Idso, James Cook University marine geology and paleontology professor Robert M. Carter, and University of Virginia environmental scientist Dr. Fred Singer.

When it comes to the Earths climate, Democratic Congressmen Scott, Grijalva and Johnson are entirely ignorant. But what they do know is that the whole point of global warming hysteria is to give the government more power over the economy. That, they are in favor of! The excuse is mostly irrelevant.

Why do you think our federal government has funded global warming alarmism to the tune of $40 billion? It is all about power and money. And if you blow the whistle on the liberals scam, your book should be thrown in the trash! We wouldnt want Americas students to get a balanced view of the facts relating to climate, not when so much money is at stake.

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Democrats Lose Argument, Try to Burn Books - Power Line (blog)

Trump aide meets with moderate Democrats ahead of tax, infrastructure fights – CNN

The Trump administration's director of legislative affairs, Marc Short, met with the moderate Blue Dog Democrats on Monday evening on Capitol Hill, according to two people familiar with the meeting.

There were about 15 Democratic members present and a number of Congressional staffers, one source said. The Blue Dog Democrats Coalition for the 115th Congress has 18 members, so a majority of that group attended the meeting -- though the sources declined to give specific names of Congress members who attended.

It is a strategic move for the Trump administration as they struggle to find votes to support their legislative agenda. These would be the clearest allies on the Democratic caucus the Trump team can find: Centrist, bordering on almost right-leaning Democrats, hailing mostly from Trump districts.

One source said both sides discussed infrastructure in an effort to try and lock in some early goodwill from a group that will be central to any big push on that front. That person also added the meeting included some discussion on tax reform, in an effort to feel out where the Democrats stand on the issue.

Short pledged would meet with the group at a regular clip in the weeks ahead, according to one of the sources.

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Trump aide meets with moderate Democrats ahead of tax, infrastructure fights - CNN

Democrats Are Walking A Careful Line In Criticism Of Trump’s Syria Strike – Huffington Post

WASHINGTON After President Donald Trump launched a Tomahawk missile strike on a Syrian airfield, the debate among congressional Democrats was not over the actual merits of bombing Syrian airfields but instead about Trumps decision process.

The reaction of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), the most progressive member of the Senate Democratic caucus, was a case in point.

It is very questionable whether it is legal to bomb the Syrian air force without congressional involvement, Sanders told The Huffington Post.

Some of Sanders colleagues were less equivocal, including Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), who said this certainly is not a lawful act. On the other end of the spectrum, Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) said it seems like a reasonable exercise of presidential power.

But only a handful of Democrats questioned the evidence that Syrian President Bashar Assad used chemical weapons on civilians, the efficacy of using force to address that crime or the overall pattern of U.S.involvement in the Middle East.

The relatively measured criticism from top Democrats reflects a complex array of factors that have again put the party out of step with some grassroots members. In many cases, Democratic lawmakers simply agree with the need to punish Assad for using chemical weapons on the town of Khan Sheikhoun, even as they are uneasy about Trumps leadership, the legality of his actions or the consequences of a strike.

Carlos Barria / Reuters

That leaves Democrats in an interesting political position. For months they have taken every opportunity to lambaste Trump as a threat to the very fabric of the American republic. And from Trumps travel ban to the Obamacare replacement debacle, the strategy has largely paid off. Now, with Trump launching the first direct attacks on the Syrian government, Democrats are more ambivalent.

Larry Korb, a senior fellow at the Democratic-aligned Center for American Progress, said he was not surprised that Democrats were sympathetic to the idea of a retaliatory airstrike. Many Democrats subscribe to a responsibility to protect doctrine that swift force is justified to prevent major humanitarian catastrophes, according to Korb.

Democrats should be more concerned, Korb said, with the prospect of this leading to more significant U.S. intervention in Syria.

The real question is: What comes next? said Korb, who supported the Obama administrations decision not to heed calls to arm Syrian rebel groups more aggressively or remove Assad by force.

The fact that Democrats may have substantial reasons to embrace the idea of retaliating against Assad does not diminish the divide between many elected leaders and the ardent anti-interventionism of the partys base.

My expectations [of Democrats] were very low, and my expectations were met, said Phyllis Bennis, a foreign policy expert at the left-wing Institute for Policy Studies. Am I disappointed that we dont have an antiwar party? Yes, I am.

Bennis represents a wing of the peace camp that believes military force, whether legal or not, is justified only in very limited circumstances of self-defense. The last U.S. intervention she considers legitimate was World War II.

Bennis and other progressive critics argue that there should be a full international investigation of the use of chemical weapons to determine definitively whether Assad is responsible, which they admit is extremely likely.

Having a full investigation is not some sort of delaying tactic. It is essential to getting real accountability, said Stephen Miles, director of the progressive Win Without War coalition.

That view got a high-profile boost from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who urged caution in an interview with The Globe and Mail on Thursday. Trudeau called for a United Nations Security Council resolution that will enable the worldto determine first of all who was responsible for these attacks and how we will move forward.

Even if Assads guilt is established, punishing him militarily would not be an effective response, according to Miles of Win Without War. He supports removing the weapons from Syria, negotiating a diplomatic end to the war and trying alleged war criminals.

The ultimate accountability comes from international tribunals, Miles said. It is really gratifying to blow things up, but that doesnt make it accountability.

But Win Without War, Credo, MoveOn.org and Peace Action, which jointly condemned Trumps strike as a reckless act of war, have largely mirrored Democrats talking points about the strikes legality in their mobilization strategy.

A petition Credo is circulating that quickly picked up over 57,000 signatures calls on Democrats to rein in Donald Trumps unauthorized military strikes and hold immediate emergency deliberations on Trumps illegal escalation of military engagement in Syria.

Miles praised House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for demanding that Congress reconvene to debate a new authorization for use of military force and saved his criticism for Democratic lawmakers, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who voiced unreserved agreement with Trumps decision.

Its not the first time we have seen Democrats in Congress who are way out of touch with where their base is, he said.

Bloomberg/Getty Images

Democrats have often chafed under Republican claims that they are weak on national security. After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, critics saw signs of this insecurity in the ease with which Democratic lawmakers lined up behind then-President George W. Bushs invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.

But veteran Democratic foreign policy thinkers argue that Democrats ambivalence about President Trumps missile strikes against Assad have more to do with former President Barack Obama and his foreign policy legacy than the ghosts of the Bush presidency.

Obama famously warned the Syrian government that use of chemical weapons would cross a red line, forcing the United States to consider military action against Assads regime.

When the U.S. concluded in August 2013 that Assad had used chemical weapons against civilians in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta, Obama announced plans to launch missile strikes against Syrian military targets.

After the British Parliament rejected a bid for the United Kingdom to participate in the strike, Obama decided to seek congressional approval for the move. It soon became clear that the strike faced bipartisan opposition, and the White House pulled the request.

Despite public opposition to the retaliatory strike, Obama endured a lot of criticism, including from members of his own party, for not honoring his red line ultimatum, undermining U.S. credibility.

The residue of the decision not to bomb in 2013 created an environment where the next time it happened a strike was going to be a foregone conclusion. Thered be no alternative, said Steven Simon, who was senior director of Middle Eastern and North African affairs on Obamas National Security Council in 2011 and 2012.

That leaves Democrats who want to avoid a replay of 2013 with limited grounds on which to criticize Trump, admitted Simon, now a history professor at Amherst College.

They have sort of squared the circle by applauding the use of force but registering concerns about lack of congressional consultation, Simon said.

Then there is the matter of deeper disagreement within the Democratic Party about Obamas broader policy toward Syria. Obama rejected the suggestions of many advisers, including then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, to intervene more forcefully to protect Syrian civilians and speed up Assads ouster. Those disagreements were evident in Clintons campaign promise to create a no-fly zone in Syria, as well as her callsThursday for the U.S. to take out all of Assads airfields a more ambitious step than Trump ended up taking.

Clinton and other proponents of greater intervention in Syria argue that by declining to diminish Assad, the U.S. will never have the leverage needed to stop his atrocities and forge a diplomatic solution.

As a candidate, Trump ran against Clintons strategy, repeatedly insisting that Assad was preferable to the Syrian groups trying to overthrow him.

For Democrats hoping Trump would adopt a more Clintonian approach, it is tempting to view his strike on the Syrian airfield as the beginning of a recognition that Assad must face greater pressure, including the threat of force, to end the conflict.

But one such proponent of more robust action, Michael Breen, president of the center-left Truman Center and Truman National Security Project, warned against getting too optimistic.Breen is concerned about Trumps haste and apparent lack of strategy.

A lot of people wanted to see the U.S. get more involved in Syria and wanted to see a response to the regimes atrocities, but it is way too early to suddenly say Donald Trump is a different president than he was two days ago.

Ryan Grim and Mike McAuliff contributed reporting.

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Democrats Are Walking A Careful Line In Criticism Of Trump's Syria Strike - Huffington Post