Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

Impeach Trump? Democrats need to take a deep breath – San Francisco Chronicle

It was great entertainment, but for all the hype, the Senate Intelligence Committee hearings that featured former FBI Director James Comey failed to deliver a knockout punch.

You are not going to get another All the Presidents Men out of this story.

At least not yet. The facts are not there. Yes, Russia meddled in the presidential election, and yes, President Trump wanted Comey to drop the investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynns contacts with Russian officials.

But so far, there is no silver bullet that will bring the president down. As tempting as it is for the Democrats to push the idea that Trump could be guilty of obstruction of justice and push for impeachment, that could ultimately backfire on them it raises public expectations, but if it doesnt happen, it looks like you tried to do something and failed.

That wouldnt just hurt the party this time. If a real Trump scandal comes along, the Democrats will be haunted by a decision to spend their political capital and credibility on a scandal that came up short.

My advice would be to sit back, be polite and let special counsel Robert Muellers investigation take its course.

Let the questions hang out there in the publics mind, and leave the speculation to MSNBC.

The Senate Intelligence Committees hearings gave the whole world an opportunity to see our junior senator, Kamala Harris but not always to hear her.

On the first day of testimony, when she was sharply questioning Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, Harris was basically told by committee Chairman Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., to shut up.

As Rosenstein bobbed and weaved and Harris tried to pin him down, Burr cut her off and demanded that she provide the witnesses the courtesy, which has not been extended, fully across, for questions to get answered.

Male dominance is still part of the Golden Club of 100 U.S. senators, as Sen. Elizabeth Nevertheless, She Persisted Warren can attest. After Burr disrespected Harris, Warren tweeted that silencing Californias junior senator for not being courteous enough is just unbelievable. Keep fighting, Kamala!

Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, tweeted that Harris was getting facts onto the record. I was not interrupted by (Burr) when I asked tough questions. She was.

Earlier, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., pleaded with Burr to rein Harris in. Too bad for him that she didnt return the favor during his incoherent questioning of Comey the next day.

Harris, however, was right on target Thursday when she brought up the private conversation between Trump and Comey on the status of the investigation into Flynn.

I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, Trump supposedly told Comey.

Harris likened the presidents statement to a robber holding a gun to somebody's head and saying, I hope you will give me your wallet.

The word hope was not the most operative word at the moment, Harris said.

It was hard to tell what Comey was more interested in during his Senate testimony, protecting the country or protecting his own career.

The former FBI director gave just enough to Democrats and Republicans for each side to form talking points Democrats could portray Trump as a lying egomaniac, while Republicans could maintain that the president didnt actually order Comey to do anything. But neither side could declare victory.

It was the same soft-shoe dance we saw Comey perform during his up-and-down pronouncements about Hillary Clintons emails during the 2016 campaign.

That hasnt stopped Trump and his operatives from trying to destroy him. The president first called him a showboat, then accused him of perjury. Trumps personal lawyer claimed Comey had leaked classified information.

John Kerry would recognize this Republican strategy call it swift-boating the showboat.

Movie time: Wonder Woman. A fabulous and fun movie on many levels. It has a star in Gal Gadot. It has a great plot and solid characters, and you wont go deaf from the special effects.

What was amazing for me was the number of parents who took their little daughters to the show. No doubt the girls will return to the theaters as teenagers for the sequel.

The Lovers: Somehow this comedy about a middle-aged couple in a dead-end marriage works.

Neither of the lead characters is particularly good-looking or sexy. Both are involved with someone else who is waiting for them to get a divorce. Then, right on the verge, they spark again. And so does the movie.

The Warriors are the best team in basketball. They may be too good.

Playoffs need to go seven games now and then. Games have to be interesting into the fourth quarter.

If the Warriors keep this up next year, and the year after that, what will be the point of watching?

Its tough being President Trumps mouthpiece. PR man Lee Houskeeper notes that overnight, Sarah Huckabee Sanders became Sarah Shuckabee.

Want to sound off? Email wbrown@sfchronicle.com

See the original post:
Impeach Trump? Democrats need to take a deep breath - San Francisco Chronicle

Capitol Affairs: Democrats get seats at the Republicans’ budget table – Fayetteville Observer

House Democrats are serving on the Republican-controlled budget committee, but do they have any sway?

RALEIGH Eight state House Democrats, including Rep. Elmer Floyd of Fayetteville and Rep. Marvin Lucas of Spring Lake, were invited to the Republican-controlled table to help negotiate the final version of the $22.9 billion North Carolina budget this month.

But in a legislature where the Republicans hold veto-proof majorities, does being invited to that table have real meaning for the Democrats?

Lucas said there is some note to it, but he does not expect to have much influence.

House and Senate lawmakers began meeting behind closed doors this past Monday to work out their differences in the budget, which they are supposed to pass into law no later than June 30. Lucas said on Thursday said he had not yet been invited to attend one of the work sessions.

Still, Lucas is hopeful that he will be able to protect a $5.5 million request that Cumberland Countys lawmakers put in for construction of a fitness center at Fayetteville State University. There are other items he has an interest in, he said. He wouldnt discuss them, as that would be showing his cards to the Senate.

In these negotiations, Lucas said, its better to keep quiet about what you want because the other side can use that against you.

Another Democrat, state Rep. William Brisson of Bladen County, also is on the conference committee. He was more optimistic than Lucas on having a say on the final budget. Brisson expects to have some input on health and human service matters, which have been a focus for him during his legislative career.

Brisson may have more sway than the legislatures other Democrats because he often votes with the Republicans on partisan issues. He also is a co-chairman of one of the Houses budget committees, an unusually high position for a Democrat.

In all, 13 House Democrats voted for the Houses version of the budget.

In serving on the budget conference committee, House Democrats are faring better than their Senate counterparts. No Democratic senators were appointed.

Thats no surprise when the Senate approved its edition of the budget on May 11, the Democrats conducted a scripted, theater-like debate to that harshly criticized the Republican-drafted spending plan and praised Democratic Gov. Roy Coopers proposals.

State Sen. Ben Clark of Hoke and Cumberland counties said this was his idea, an effort to gain more public attention for the Democrats ideas.

The Senate Democrats added salt when the budget came up with its final Senate vote shortly after midnight on the morning of May 12, a Friday. The final vote scheduled for that time was to meet the constitutions requirement that the budget must be voted on twice, and on separate calendar days.

Historically, if the second vote comes shortly after midnight, the lawmakers only briefly debate and then conduct a vote that is essentially pro forma.

The Democrats werent having that. They repeatedly filed amendments to the budget, dragging the debate toward 1 a.m. while the Republicans had to spend time shooting them down.

Finally, the Republicans stopped the session for two hours. They came back around 3 a.m. with their own amendment. They took money for education programs in some Democratic districts.

Then the Republicans approved the whole budget over the Democrats' objections.

And that worked out well for the Democrats, Clark said. The maneuvers generated a lot of publicity for the Democrats and their budget position, he said, and criticism of the Republicans.

This is publicity the Democrats hope to carry into the next elections.

Staff writer Paul Woolverton can be reached at pwoolverton@fayobserver.com, 486-3512 and 261-4710.

Go here to read the rest:
Capitol Affairs: Democrats get seats at the Republicans' budget table - Fayetteville Observer

The Democrats’ New Economic Agenda Will Solidify Their Minority Status – Forbes

The Democrats' New Economic Agenda Will Solidify Their Minority Status
Forbes
In a column from December of 2015, the Wall Street Journal's Mary O'Grady unveiled a rather inconvenient fact that poverty warriors on the American left and right would perhaps prefer remain hidden: from 1980 to 2000, when the U.S. economy boomed, the ...

Follow this link:
The Democrats' New Economic Agenda Will Solidify Their Minority Status - Forbes

Okla. Democrats pin hopes on new 24-year-old leader – ABC News

Oklahoma Republicans like to boast that their state is the reddest of the red, with their party holding every statewide elected office and every one of the state's seats in Congress.

Democrats hoping to chip away at the Republican stranglehold have pinned their hopes on Anna Langthorn, a 24-year-old woman who has logged more than five years in the political trenches.

While acknowledging her age may raise eyebrows, the newly elected chairwoman of the Oklahoma Democratic Party hopes it will also help her to fan a growing enthusiasm in the state, especially among other young people, to shake up Oklahoma's political system.

"There are a lot, a lot of voters who just aren't voting because they haven't been engaged, and a lot of those are young people," she said from her bustling new office in Oklahoma City. "If we can present them with a party organization that reflects their values but also has a face they can relate to, they're more likely to be engaged."

Oklahoma went hard for Republican Donald Trump in November, to no one's surprise. But Langthorn said she's seen a dramatic increase in the number of young people showing up to local and state Democratic Party organizational meetings since Trump took office.

"All of those were tripled in attendance across the state," she said. "We've had counties in western Oklahoma, in rural Oklahoma, that have not been active in the last decade, in some cases 20 years, that for the first time this year had people showing up who wanted to participate."

In a special election for an open House seat last month in rural central Oklahoma, the Democratic candidate lost by about 2 percentage points in the same district a Republican won in November by 33 points.

Langthorn is among a growing number of millennials who have been tapped to lead state parties in recent years, including 28-year-olds William McCurdy II in Nevada and Kylie Oversen in North Dakota.

While North Dakota Democrats suffered major losses in 2016, including Oversen's own state House seat, a growing dissatisfaction with Trump and an enthusiasm among younger voters could shift things dramatically for Democrats in 2018, said Ken Martin, leader of the Democratic Party in Minnesota and the president of the Association of State Democratic Chairs.

"We have seen young people in the past serve in these positions, but what I am seeing right now is just a wholesale new energy throughout the country," Martin said.

Less than 45 percent of U.S. voters ages 18 to 34 cast ballots in November's election. That figure was even lower in Oklahoma, where less than one-third of registered voters in that age group voted, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Those are voters that Langthorn hopes to engage.

Langthorn has her work cut out for her, especially healing a rift that deepened during last year's Democratic presidential primary election between supporters of Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. While acknowledging the division, Langthorn said she believes she's the right person to help bridge the two factions.

"My hope is that I can marry those two groups in who I am as a person, that I do have very progressive values and beliefs and want to move the party in that direction, but I also recognize that there are people who have given 30, 40 and even 50 years of their life to serving this party, and their contributions and wisdom are still valuable," she said.

Follow Sean Murphy on Twitter at https://twitter.com/apseanmurphy

Read the original here:
Okla. Democrats pin hopes on new 24-year-old leader - ABC News

Democrats have a bright future but only if they can fight on multiple fronts and avoid distraction – Salon

If theres one thing Democrats need to learn to do right now, its multitask. In effect, to claw its way back to power, the opposition party must walk and chew gum at the same time. President Donald Trump and the Republican leadership have offered Democrats such a target-rich environment, the only way they can lose is by shooting themselves in the foot in all the excitement. That, however, remains all too likely. Too many voices are still echoing past battles, but its both possible and necessary to pursue more than one strategy at the same time, build a unified resistance both within the party and beyond it and win in 2018.

Its possible to be critical of Russia and Vladimir Putin, for example and committed to finding the truth about the Trump campaigns possible collusion with Russia without demonizing them the way conservatives demonized the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Its possible to do all that without overlooking serious problems with our own intelligence agencies, or losing sight of other issues that hit ordinary Americans closer to home.

Its possible to defend Hillary Clinton and female political figures in general against misogynist attacks without ignoring other factors in her defeat. Its possible to rebrand and reshape the Democratic Party without needless attacks on House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.

Those are a few of the false dichotomies were routinely asked to accept. We need to develop the habit of rejecting them.

Take my first example: My critical views of Putins regime are fully engaged, simply based on his kleptocratic, authoritarian behavior. But theres more to the story than that. I wrote about the role of neo-Nazis in Ukraine back in 2014, for example reflecting a decades-long history of U.S. involvement with them as well as role of neoliberalism in laying the groundwork for Putins rise more recently. (That global tendency produced an extreme re-concentration of wealth that coincided with nothing less than a full-scale 1930s-type depression for the vast majority of Russians.)

Putins rise, in short, reflected a tremendous experience of loss, and many who oppose him are no angels, either. None of that lessens the fact that Putin poses a threat to our democracy it just calls for a more sophisticated response.

Its also possible to pay close attention to the Trump-Russia affair without turning a blind eye to problematic aspects of our own intelligence community. After the Washington Post broke its story about Jared Kushner supposedly asking Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak to set up a secret communication channel, historian Kathleen Frydl (author of The Drug Wars in America, 1940-1973) wrote perceptively about both sides of the threat involved.

It serves no democratic purpose to receive intelligence leaks, and reprint them, Frydl wrote, without also raising the dilemma raised by Roman poet Juvenal: who will guard the guardians?

Frydl points out that two serious narratives are involved: The story of the Trump campaigns relations to Russia, which is gradually coming to light, and the story about that story.

On the first narrative, she contendsthat its a grave mistake to argue over criminal intent and go looking for a smoking gun:

Instead the story and basic culpability of the Trump campaign begins well before the election, even before Russian hacking, and extends beyond the elections result. It is a story of an incompetent and uncaring campaign, allowing for all manner of interlopers, even some bent on infiltration.

She draws an analogy to the theory of the case against Purdue Pharma, the makers of OxyContin, which convinced the company to seek a settlement:

The theory being: you can sell highly addictive drugs (in this case, opioids), but you cant market them aggressively; and if you choose to market them aggressively, you damn well better market them accurately.

There was no smoking-gun document saying, We plan to kill tens of thousands of people, and there didnt need to be. Reckless disregard was quite enough. So too with the Trump campaign. The president has repeatedly claimed there was no collusion with Russia. Well, there didnt need to be:

In the analogy drawn, the theory would be: you can be incredibly careless in handling the operations of your campaign, but you cant then engage in policy discussions with Russians; and if you engage in policy discussions with them, you damn well better not accept help from them at the same time.

So the Trump-Russia story, properly understood, is a damning indictment of Trump. But the second narrative, the story about the story, puts the shoe on the other foot. Leaking intelligence is not like other leaks from the EPA, for example. Intelligence is a monopoly by necessity, Frydl writes, but the implicit contract inherent in tolerating this incredible concentration of power is that this universe of information is not then selectively revealed in such a way so as to influence politics. We might be happy to see Trump brought down by the forces of the so-called deep state, but who would be next? Who will guard the guardians? Frydl concludes:

Two forces endanger a democratic republic; neither one new, but both newly emboldened. One is a political apparatus that has lent itself to profiteering at the expense of the public interest; the other, a secret government that operates beyond the purview of democratic accountability. The Trump story is the catastrophic culmination of one; and the story about the story suggests that we have much to worry about regarding the other.

Although Frydl doesnt say this, theres a bit of a silver lining here: A more accurate framing of Trumps culpability significantly reduces the need for leaks. One could even argue that, properly understood, a case for impeachment already exists in plain sight. We may not always escape such a dire dilemma, but this time we surely should be able to if we are willing to face it rather than spend so much energy in denial, blame-shifting or other forms of evasion.

Nor do we need to ritualistically refight past fights, rather than learning from them and synthesizing multiple truths. Supporters of both Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have fallen into this trap, in both straightforward and convoluted ways. We can all do better, without abandoning what matters most to us.

A case in point was the more-heat-than-light response to former Salon writer Rebecca Traisters recent New York magazine feature on Hillary Clinton. To keep things manageable, Ill choose a single sane response, which is not meant to be exhaustive.

Collins is a political scientist who went on to write:Yes, sexism was a real factor in the election, citing research by Brian Schaffner and colleagues [chart]. And in an election decided by narrow margins in a few states, thats enough to flip an election. But thats different from saying that sexism is an insurmountable barrier . So yes: sexism real factor in 2016 election, but also yes, women who run can win, since sexism not sole or even central factor.

Collins also raises a number of other complicating points.On one hand, he notes that the effect of gender attitudes on vote choice are far smaller than other factors, like party. See Kathleen Dolan [link]. If that seems to minimize the importance of sexism, Collins also notes that when the percentage of women in our national legislature lags behind that found in Saudi Arabia, America needs many more women to take the plunge and run.

There was a similar but unrelated freakout over Nina Turner, a former Ohio state senator who is regarded as a Bernie Sanders surrogate. Two days after the story about Jared Kushners dubious contacts with Kislyak broke, Turner appeared on CNNs State of the Union and observed that the Trump-Russia scandal was not Americans top concern. Hows this playing in Ohio? asked guest host Dana Bash. Turner responded at length:

No one in Ohio is asking about Russia. I mean, we have to deal with this. We definitely have to deal with this. Its on the minds of the American people. But if you want to know about people in Ohio they want to know about jobs. They want to know about their children.

I was just in California, where California folks, especially the national nurses, are pushing for Healthy California, a single-payer, Medicare-for-all kind of thing. I talked to [an] African-American baby boomer who lives right here in D.C. Russia is not in his top five [concerns]. He believes that both parties are failing. I talked to a Gen-Xer white male who is in a union; he wants a third party. We are losing.

The president should be concerned about this, all Americans should be concerned about this. But if we were to go to Flint, they wouldnt ask you about Russia and Jared Kushner. They want to know how they are gonna get some clean water and why some 8,000 people are about to lose their homes.

We are preoccupied with this. Its not that this is not important, but every day Americans are being left behind because its Russia, Russia, Russia. Do we need all 535 members of the Congress to deal with Russia? Can some of them deal with some domestic issues?

Turner wasnt simply offering her opinion. Just a few days before, results of the latest HuffPost/YouGov poll were announced, showing that 47 percent of Americans saw health care as a top concern, followed by 38 percent for the economy and 20 percent for immigration. In contrast, The relationship between the Trump administration and Russia, which has dominated headlines in recent weeks, scores far below, with just 12 percent naming it as a top issue. Whats more, health care topped Russia among Hillary Clintons voters by a huge margin, 55 to 31 percent, as well as among non-voters and third-party voters.

But the response to Turner, at least in some quarters, quickly went from critical to unhinged.

I question why Turner, a Democratic rep and prominent Sanders surrogate, would run interference on the Russia investigation. So should you, tweeted Melissa McEwen, editor of Shakesville.

Nina Turner is poison for democrats. The future is Kamala Harris, Ted Lieu, Maxine Waters, Adam Schiff they are fighting back, read another heavily retweeted comment. Get that witch outta our party!! a since-deleted tweet added.

Those Twitter users probably didnt know that Rep. Maxine Waters, perhaps the most outspoken Russia investigation advocate in the House and a close Clinton ally, agreed with Turner. Aday after the March for Truth, MSNBC host Joy Reid asked Waters whether Democrats were making a mistake by focusing so much on Russia, when most Americans would rather hear about jobs and the economy. Waters responded:

Well, we do both. Absolutely. Democrats are talking about jobs and the economy, and were pushing back on this presidents budget thats undermining all of our cities and towns, our seniors. And so we talk about the budget, we talk about job creation. Where is [Trumps] infrastructure item that he promised in the budget? He doesnt have any infrastructure program. Obama presented an infrastructure program that created a lot of jobs. We want that, but we also are going to continue to talk about how this president and his allies I believe, and others believe colluded with the Russians to undermine our democracy. And were not going to stop talking about it, because this is extremely important to the future of this country. And so we do both.

Theres nothing remarkable about how Waters responded aside from the fact that its become remarkable to respond that way over the past couple of decades. Waters was talking the way most Democrats did in the years before Bill Clinton and NAFTA. She and Nina Turner both wantDemocrats to get back to their roots.

So does former MSNBC host Krystal Ball, founder of the new Peoples House Project, who appeared on Joy Reids showthe day before Waters. The host asked Ball whether her new organization was sort of controversially trying to de-Pelosi the Democratic Party. Ball rejected that forcefully:

What were trying to do is restore the brand of the Democratic Party in the heartland and specifically in the Rust Belt and Appalachia. And that means running candidates who are connected to their communities more than to the donor class. And thats been interpreted as de-Nancy Pelosi-ing the party. But I think weve really got to work to restore that credibility with voters there, and also to add to our very strong civil rights plank having an economic message, thats strong and connects to voters in that region.

The idea, more precisely, is to find candidates who already resonate with their communities, and then interest donors in them, rather than the other way around. The logic of Balls strategy is as as sound as Turners. In 1993, the Democrats representing Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin in the Housevoted against NAFTA almost unanimously, 33-2, while Republicans from those same states supported it, 24-4.

As I wrote about those votesjust after the November election, It could not possibly have been more clear whose interests each party represented in these key states. Heedless of their House members, the neoliberal Democratic establishment abandoned the partys base. Democrats have been paying the price ever since, but never as painfully as on Election Day 2016.

In 1993, Democrats held a majority of House members from those four states. Today, 40 of the 56 House members from those states are Republicans, even though Democratic presidential candidates (at least before Trump) have typically carried all four of them. Thats largely due to gerrymandering, as former Salon editor David Daley explained in his book Ratfucked: The True Story Behind the Secret Plan to Steal Americas Democracy,but the NAFTA vote played a huge role in getting the ball rolling. To start rolling it back again, Democrats will need candidates like the ones who voted overwhelmingly against NAFTA. Candidates like Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, for example. Or like Nina Turner.

Balls concern about Democrats returning to their New Deal/Great Society roots is nothing new. Although she supported Hillary Clinton in 2008, in February 2014 she made a controversial on-air plea for Clinton not to run again:

It is clear now that we have two economies: one for a thin slice of educated elite and one for everyone else. That is the moment we are in now. So I ask you, does Hillary Clinton sound to you like the right person for this moment? Is someone who recently took $400,000 to give two speeches at Goldman Sachs the person we need to wrest control of the asylum back from the banking inmates? In a time when we badly need to be inspired, rallied, and made to believe that America can once again be true to the American dream, we desperately need someone who is mission driven.We need someone who is clearly passionate, who is living and breathing and feeling in their bones the plight of the worker and the middle class, and who is unafraid to stand up to the Wall Street titans. That person is not Hillary Clinton.

That was not a widely shared view at the time, but it seems quite compelling in retrospect. My point, however, is not to recycle old arguments but to glean something forward-looking from them. That something is this: Democrats represent a diverse constituency, whose views will always be imperfectly integrated. There is no one right way to bring this about.

The more useful question is, Which way is better? And the answer to that should help improve the quality of all the options. The economic populist argument is a powerful one, and attempts to deflect or distract from it do not produce better options.

Similarly, it isnt helpful to ignore the ways the Trump-Russia scandal can distort our politics. On the contrary, the more conscious we are of potential pitfalls as discussed above the more likely we are to succeed, without creating a whole new round of future problems.

Forty years ago, Zbigniew Brzezinski national security adviser under Jimmy Carter thought it was a brilliant response to the Vietnam War to give the Soviets their own Vietnam. So began the wars in Afghanistan wars that have mutated and multiplied and now have tentacles on every continent save Antarctica. Possibilities that must have seemed remote, if not unimaginable, turned out to dwarf the immediate goals in the long run, with no conceivable end in sight. Do we really want another success like that? Or do we want to welcome the most wide-ranging, disciplined and critical examination of what were getting ourselves into before its too late?

Whether puzzling out how to deal with Trump-Russia, how to prioritize progressive issues or how to structure our arguments, our greatest strength will come from developing a multitude of options and then testing out ways of connecting them. Polarizing, single-issue politics are well-suited to conservatives. When progressives fall into that kind of dichotomous thinking, we become our own worst enemies. There is no one true right way forward except together.

More here:
Democrats have a bright future but only if they can fight on multiple fronts and avoid distraction - Salon