Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

Senate Democrats put pressure on Carson over potential HUD budget cuts – Washington Post

Several Democratic senators denounced potential cuts to the Department of Housing and Urban Development in a sharply worded letter Friday to Secretary Ben Carson, calling the budget reductions being considered by the Trump administration unconscionable and warning that they could pose health risks.

The White House isconsidering cutting more than $6 billion from HUDs 2018 budget, according to preliminary budget documents obtained by The Washington Post this week. The proposal would eliminate billions of dollars from public-housing maintenance funds used to fix vital equipment such as toilets, water pumps and heating equipment and eliminate community development grants entirely. Such grants are used to fund a range of services, such as building affordable housing, meal assistance and first-time homeownership programs.

Friday's pointedletter to Carson pins responsibility squarely on the secretary, who indicated during his confirmation hearing two months ago that he would not seek drastic cuts to existing HUD programs. Though Carson was probably not involved in the initial budget deliberations, because of a delay in his confirmation as secretary, he will have to oversee any budget cuts the administration makes at HUD.

If this reported budget stands, you will most certainly be presiding over an unprecedented attack on the health of some our most vulnerable Americans, reads the letter. It cannot stand and, if you are to remain true to the testimony you gave under oath, it must not.

The letter, delivered to the department Friday evening, marks the first flash of resistance among congressional Democrats to significant cuts at HUD. Itwas signed by several senators on the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, including Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Mark R. Warner (D-Va.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), Jack Reed (D-R.I.) and Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.).

Brown, the ranking Democrat on the committee, voted in favor of Carsons confirmation during the full Senate vote this month, to the disappointmentof activists who said Carson was unqualified for the job. Brown defended his decision, citingassurances byCarson that he would uphold the core mission of the department.

Those assurances were repeatedly turned against Carson in the statement Friday.

You testified to your understanding of the real impacts that substandard housing have on the health and opportunities of children and their families, in particular how it is far more costly to ignore lead hazards than to spend the money to abate them, the senators wrote. A cut of $1.3 billion nearly 70 percent in the public housing repair budget will mean more children, families, elderly, and individuals with disabilities will be exposed to mold, lead, and other health hazards.

The budget documents obtained by The Post a marked-up budget being passed between HUD andthe Office of Management and Budget show repeated requests by HUD that some maintenance funds and development grants be included in a separate infrastructure package. The administration has discussed putting a massive infrastructure bill before Congress, but the White House has not publicly discussed including housing projects in such a bill.

In the letter, committee members expressed skepticism over that solution.

The suggestion that some HUD funds will be addressed as part of an infrastructure package provides no assurance whatsoever, the letter said. The Administration has made clear that infrastructure is not an immediate priority, and that it hopes to finance its plans through tolls and other offsets.

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Senate Democrats put pressure on Carson over potential HUD budget cuts - Washington Post

Q&A: Democrats Must Deliver an Economic Message – The American Prospect

DNC Chair Tom Perez speaks during the general session of the DNC winter meeting in Atlanta.

For years, Democratic pollsters Allan and Sheri Rivlin have been arguing that the reason their party has been losing power is that Democrats lack a clear, compelling economic message.

After last years populist revolt installed Donald Trump in the White House, the Rivlins found a fresh audience for their research. Theyve been meeting with Democrats around town to share a PowerPoint presentation that diagnoses the problem, and outlines a solution.

Democrats agree on a long list of policies, the two pollsters argue, but must boil these down to something catchy and concise that voters can understand. They want Democrats to set up a process to distill the various policies emerging from the partys power centers, and formulate a single, simple economic message. As a starting point, theyve spelled out several potential messages involving innovation, job creation, economic equity, community investment, and sustainable growth. The Rivlins met with the Prospect to discuss Democrats and economics. What follows is an edited transcript of Allans remarks.

The Prospect: What is the problem as you see it with the Democratic Partys economic message?

Allan Rivlin: They have not been able to articulate a clear and compelling economic message for nearly a decade now. Most of the time they have been trailing Republicans on the generic measure: Which party do you trust most to get the economy moving and create jobs?

In the three elections weve lost out of the last four2010, 2014, and 2016we trailed the Republicans on that generic question.

After each of those elections, our self-criticism wasnt that they didnt get our message. It was that we didnt have a message.

What have been the consequences of this messaging problem?

Democrats are very focused on the White House, and when we were in the White House we felt like there was nothing wrongeven though we were losing lots of seats in legislatures.

In 2016, we didnt just lose the White House, we came up short in all of the battleground states for the White House. But we also didnt achieve our goals in the Senate and House. Meanwhile, theres been this hollowing out of the party at the state legislative level that has to be reversed.

Without going into a long deconstruction of the 2016 presidential race, what would you say was Hillary Clintons biggest problem when it comes to an economic message?

That she had a list of policies, but she didnt have an overall explanation of what her diagnosis of the problem was, or what her solution was. This is what we call the Listerine test, after the eight-word slogan: Listerine kills the germs that cause bad breath.

It defines the problem, and gives a solution that sounds like it might work. Its what advertising calls a reason to believe. Hillary didnt have one. She had a goal statement: An economy that works for everyone, not just those at the top.

The very first question of the very first debate came from [moderator] Lester Holt, and it was: Secretary Clinton, why are you the better choice than your opponent to create the kind of jobs that will put more money in the pockets of American workers? And her answer listed 14 different policies, but with just a few grace notes to connect them. That was the moment at which I became convinced she wasnt going to win.

That is not her problemit is a party problem.

So if that is the problem that Democrats have had, what is the solution as you see it?

The PowerPoint that weve been sharing around Washington is trying to convince the powers-that-be that they need to create an office for this. That they need to put someone in charge of thisbut there needs to be sustained attention, with somebody of stature leading the effort to make sure that we dont get to the end of the 2018 election with the same self-criticism that weve had in three previous elections.

Right now, theres five think tanks, each hiring their own messaging and research team to try and solve this.

What were trying to say is, we dont need a ten-point plan, but a ten-word explanation of the logic behind the plan.

Have you made any attempts to take these [PowerPoint] slides and create a smaller overarching message out of them, to boil it down further?

What is needed is much more of a process. First, Democrats dont realize theyre missing the Listerine statement. They just keep going back to the same thing. They say: We have these economic policies that test popularly; if we just say the word jobs enough, if we just say were for fairness, and say middle class enough, people will get theres an idea here. We have managed the economy better than the Republicans, but we are trailing Republicans when it comes to public trust to manage the economy. When they say, Im gonna cut taxes, and cut those job-killing regulations, people get it.

Talk a little more about that process. What exactly do you envision?

I think we need leadership from somebody whos a real convener.

Somebody needs to convene a process where we say: Yes, all that intent is on opposing Trump right now, but if we spend the entire 2017 and 2018 letting him set the agenda, and us opposing it, were going to be in real trouble in 2018. Instead, we need to not just point out his weaknesses but also address our own weaknesses.

Do you envision a summit, a commission? Lets get down to the nitty-gritty.

Whether its at a think tank, a party committee, at one of the PACs, what I think we need is a permanent office doing this.

I think what we need is a high-level, continuous process of working with our party leader and elected officials at all levels, as well as our communications and research and constituent groups, to continually improve several messages at once, so that people have choices to make. So that by the time we get to election time, there are a lot of resources; so that messages are supported with the facts that are needed; so that theyve been discussed on the ground with real voters.

What are the challenges? How do you anticipate bringing together what might be called the Elizabeth Warren-Bernie Sanders wing of the party with what might be considered the more establishment wing of the party?

There was a lot of discussion after the election that we missed white working-class voters, or we missed working-class voters. We didnt have an economic message. Period. Full stop.

We already have consensus on our policies. If we develop better messaging, I dont think thats going to lead to roadblocks and divisions. I think it will lead to more people [who] can get behind one or several good messages.

Could you describe the impetus behind this? Where and when did it start?

This started with frustration that goes through the three campaigns that we lost. So in 2010, we felt that the core problem was a lack of an economic message. Coming out of 2014, we developed the understanding that Democrats economic message was I will create jobs, here are three policies. We also read everybodys postmortems, and wrote a summary of those postmortems, and pretty much to a person, everybody said we lacked an economic message in 2014.

Our experience of 2016 was different than most peoples, because we were just focused on: Whos ahead in the economic message? And we never believed Clinton was ahead of Trump. We were tracking a different number, and so we went through our Trump depression a year before everyone else did, and came out of Election Day ready to try to solve the problem yet again.

Do you perceive Democrats as divided, and if so, where are the dividing lines?

I do not see Democrats as divided, I really dont. I think that there is a huge inside-versus-outside vision in all of our politics right now, which was exploited to the detriment of Democratic and Republican officeholders in Washington, and that was the message of the 2016 election. Our institutions, including our elected leaders, have a real followership problem.

I think theres a lot of unity on [Capitol] Hill, and I think opposition does that to you. So I dont think Democrats are divided; I think theyre deluded. I think they spent all of 2016 thinking they were winning when they were losing, and I think 2017 has not shown a big realignment of that pattern. There is a widespread belief that the American public is going to reject Trump for some reason, as they didnt in 2016. And I think Democrats are banking on that happening as their main strategy to get back. And I think that that is wishful thinking rather than analysis of where we are.

We havent got an answer to how our ideas on the economy are better than [Trumps], and if we dont, were not going to win.

How can they forge a positive agenda while also satisfying their constituents calls to resist Trump?

My emphasis right now is on developing the positive agenda, rather than necessarily taking it to the media right now. Right now, there are only two stories in the newspaperTrump, and anti-Trumpand I dont know that you can get another story going in the media. But I dont think our anti-Trump message is based around setting up an economic contrast, other than [that] hes got billionaires in his cabinet, and thats running the same play that didnt work in 2016. So our focus now is on figuring out what it is we want to say. Party chair [Tom] Perez says that our problem is organizing, and he wants a conversation on every doorstep, in every ZIP code, in 50 states. My emphasis is on: Well, lets make sure that conversation is compelling and convincing.

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Q&A: Democrats Must Deliver an Economic Message - The American Prospect

Pelosi says Democrats willing to deal on health care fixes if GOP reaches out – USA TODAY

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi speaks at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast on March 10, 2017.(Photo: Michael Bonfigli, The Christian Science Monitor)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosisaid Friday that Democrats would be willing to compromise with Republicans on a revised health care law if the GOP reaches out to them.

Pelosi said Democrats will continue to fight Republican efforts to scrap the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. But, if Republicans can't get their own fractious caucus to agree on a replacement bill, Pelosi said Democrats would be willing to work with the GOP to improve the existing law.

"We would be able to swallow, I think, some things (that Republicans want), if that's the price to pay to get the rest of it," the California lawmakersaid at a newsmaker breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor.

Specifically, Pelosi said she would be willing to accept Republicans' plan to expand Health Savings Accounts, which are tax-exempt accounts that people can use to pay for medical expenses. The Republican health care bill, called the American Health Care Act, would increasethe amount of contributions that people can make to their accounts from $3,400 to $6,550for individuals and from $6,750 to $13,100 for families.

Pelosi said she doesn't like that ideabut would be willing to include it in a compromise bill if Republicans were willing to accept the expansion of Medicaid, which provides care for low-income families and disabled Americans. Obamacare expanded the number of people who were eligible for Medicaid. The Republican plan would phase out that expansion.

"Would they (Republicans) accept the expansion of Medicaid? That would be very important," Pelosi said.

Read more:

4 key ways the House Republicans' health care bill changes Obamacare

White House seems more eager than Speaker Paul Ryan to cut Obamacare deals

Republican leaders warn that changing health care bill would doom it in Senate

Still, the Democratic leader said she is skeptical that House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and other Republican leaders would ask for Democratic help, even if their bill fails to pass because of a lack of support within the GOP.

"I would hope that if it doesn't pass, they would make an overture," Pelosi said. "But they may not give up. They may say, 'OK, we didn't pass this, let's go back to the drawing board.' "

She said Republicans may be forced to do just that after they see how much their bill is going to cost and how many Americans could lose their health care coverage if it passes. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office is expected to come out with its estimate of those numbers on Monday.

Pelosi pointed to a prediction by Brookings Institution experts on Thursday that the CBO report will estimate that 15 million people will lose their health care coverage if the Republican bill is approved.

"They (Republicans) do not know what they're talking about (without seeing the CBO estimates)," she said.

The U.S. Secretary of Health Tom Price distinguished which health care plans will be changed by the proposed replacement for Obamacare during a news conference at the White House. USA TODAY NETWORK

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A closer look at the draft legislation House Republicans hope will replace the Affordable Care Act. USA TODAY NETWORK

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Donald Trump says a replacement for Obamacare will be offered with the confirmation of his health secretary. And he tells reporters that repealing and replacing President Barack Obama's health care law would be done "essentially simultaneously." (Jan. 11) AP

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Five Republican senators are offering a budget resolution amendment which would extend the deadline for a repeal of Obamacare. Buzz60

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Between November 1 and December 24 approximately 11.5 million people signed up for health plan coverage under President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act. USA TODAY

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House Speaker Paul Ryan says the GOP's budget bill defunding Obamacare could include language to block Planned Parenthood's federal funds. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

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The estimate from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget includes the repeal's effect on the economy. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

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The President-elect says the Republican party 'doesn't want to own' Obamacare. He says the repeal and replace transition will happen 'essentially simultaneously'.

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President-elect Donald Trump, who had repeatedly campaigned on a promise to repeal the Affordable Care Act, said Friday that he would consider keeping certain parts of the health care law after meeting with President Obama at the White House. Time

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Donald Trump told 'The Wall Street Journal' that he may retain certain parts of the Affordable Care Act, a shift in tone since he promised to repeal it during his campaign. USA TODAY NETWORK

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Over 100,000 people signed up for Obamacare plans the day after the presidential election. It's the largest number since open enrollment starts on November 1. USA TODAY NETWORK

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U.S. Health Secretary: Changes are about patients

Obamacare replacement bill unveiled by Republicans

Trump: Obamacare Plan is 'Repeal and Replace'

Republican Senators push to slow Obamacare repeal

11.5 million people signed up for Obamacare

Paul Ryan: GOP will defund Planned Parenthood and Obamacare

Repealing Obamacare: What it could cost and what it could save

Trump claims transition from Obamacare will be simultaneous

Donald Trump says hes willing to preserve parts of Obamacare

Trump suggests parts of Obamacare may stay

Trump election helps spur record Obamacare signups

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Pelosi says Democrats willing to deal on health care fixes if GOP reaches out - USA TODAY

Poll: 87 percent of Democrats, 53 percent of Republicans say anti-Semitism a ‘serious’ problem – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Melanie Steinhardt comforting Becca Richman at the Jewish Mount Carmel Cemetery in Philadelphia, Feb. 26, 2017. (Dominick Reuter/AFP/Getty Images)

(JTA) Seventy percent of American voters see anti-Semitism in the country as a very or somewhat serious problem, up from 49 percent a month ago, according to a new poll.

The responses differed by party identification, with an overwhelming majority of Democrats, 87 percent, seeing anti-Semitism as a very or somewhat serious problem, and slightly more than half of Republicans, 53 percent, seeing it as such, according to the poll released Thursday.

The survey was was conducted by Quinnipiac University atthe beginning of March.

Jewish institutions, including community centers and Anti-Defamation League offices, have been hit withmore than 100 bomb threats so far this year, all of them hoaxes. In the past three weeks, Jewish cemeteries were vandalized in Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Rochester, New York.

Respondents were split on President Donald Trumps response to the bomb threats and vandalism, with 37 percent approving and 38 percent disapproving. Most Republicans, 71 percent, approved of Trumps response, while most Democrats, 66 percent, disapproved.

The poll also found that 63 percent of American voters think hatred and prejudice has increased since Trumps election, while two percent say it has decreased and 32 percent say it has stayed the same.

Trump has come under fire for his delayed response to the incidents. Concerning the threats on Jewish establishments, Trump at first deflected questions and in one instance shouted downa reporter who asked him about it before calling them horrible.

Last month, the president noted the bomb threats and vandalism of cemeteries in his first address to a joint meeting of Congress.

Recent threats targeting Jewish community centers and vandalism of Jewish cemeteries, as well as last weeks shooting in Kansas City, remind us that while we may be a nation divided on policies, we are a country that stands united in condemning hate and evil in all its forms, Trump said.

The Kansas City incident occurred after a patron ejected from a bar after hurling racial epithets at two workers from India allegedly returned with a gun and killed one of the men and wounded another.

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Poll: 87 percent of Democrats, 53 percent of Republicans say anti-Semitism a 'serious' problem - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Democrats Demand That DeVos Explain How She Is Going To Protect Trans Students – Huffington Post

Weeks after President Donald Trumps administration rescinded anObama administration guidance protecting transgender students, a group of Democratic senators are demanding that Education Secretary Betsy DeVos explain how she plans to defend the rights of these children.

Several Democrats on the Senate Committee for Health, Education, Labor and Pensions sent DeVos a letter Friday asking for a briefing with her to better understand how she will enforce civil rights for all students. The letter headed by Senator Patty Murray (D-Wash.) also featured prominent Democratic co-signers like Sens. Al Franken (Minn.) and Elizabeth Warren (Mass.). Their message expressed outrage at the secretarys decision to rescind the guidance, and says the move has sent schools around the country into a tailspin of confusion. The letter also asks DeVos to respond to written questions over how she plans to enforce Title IX for all students by the end of March.

The letter comes after a whirlwind week for transgender students and their families. On Monday, the Supreme Court decided not to rule on the case of Gavin Grimm, a Virginia teen whose school does not allow him to use the bathroom that is consistent with his gender identity. The Supreme Court cited Trumps decision to revoke the guidance as a factor in its decision.

On Wednesday, a small group of LGBTQ organizations, families and students met with DeVos to inform her of the challenges and discrimination transgender children face in schools.

DeVos has not made her opinions on this issue clear. While she has publicly stood by the decision to revoke the Obama guidance, calling it an example of federal overreach, various reports say that she privately opposed the move. The letter from the senators addresses these rumors, saying that the suggestion that the Department jeopardized the health or well-being of any student because of political pressure is extremely alarming.

DeVos has repeatedly said that she still plans to make sure LGBTQ children are provided with a safe learning environment. In a statement released following the rescission, DeVos said the this is an issue best solved at the state and local level. She has also emphasized her commitment to fulfilling a federal mandate and moral obligation to protect all children. However, the letter from senators also call these statements misleading and deeply problematic considering the recent repeal.

Senators are now pressing DeVos to explain how transgender students have been made safer through the revoking of Obamas guidance, as well as how the withdrawal of this guidance is compatible with her departments federal mandate and moral obligation to defend students. It also asks for her to elucidate how the decision to revoke this guidance was made and whether or not any transgender people were consulted in the process.

Further, the senators press her on how the Departments Office of Civil Rights will make sure transgender students rights are protected.

By revoking the transgender guidance, you have put the safety and well-being of transgender students at risk, the senators wrote in the letter.

After meeting with DeVos Wednesday, parents of transgender students told The Huffington Post that DeVos was attentive and respectful of their concerns. The secretary also said in a statement that she was grateful for the opportunity to speak directly with these families, students and community leaders, adding that she is committed to advocating for and fighting on behalf of all students.

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Democrats Demand That DeVos Explain How She Is Going To Protect Trans Students - Huffington Post