Tag Archives: Republican

Leader Pelosi says …we can deliver a stunning setback to the Republicans’


A message from Leader Pelosi

This Tuesday, we can deliver a stunning setback to the Republicans’ reckless agenda by winning a special election right in their own backyard.

This is no ordinary election. A Republican loss in a ruby-red district like New York’s 26th would deal a devastating blow to the GOP plan to end Medicare but protect tax breaks for the wealthy and Big Oil. We cannot let this opportunity pass.

We must raise $87,000 by Midnight Tonight to fight back against Republican attacks. This is our moment to go all-in

http://www.dccc.org/page/m/1d63ca69/1b9dd8ab/4ac465a2/4e0ce943/1074550503/VEsH/

Our volunteers are mobilizing but so are the right-wing shadow groups with their secretive money. Right now, they’re outspending us nearly 2-to-1. Every dollar you contribute will help us knock on more doors, call more Democratic voters, and fight back with more ads against misleading right-wing attacks.

With the world watching, let’s show just how determined we are to fight for our most cherished Democratic values.

Onward,

Nancy Pelosi

Democratic Leader

TGIF &some News …


The Political climate in the country is sort of reflecting the current weather, which has been violent at times, frequently changing agitated by furious thunder or uproar and commotion… just like what is happening from everyone involved in the Paul Ryan Plan, which includes ending Medicare, as we know it

“The tempest in my mind/Doth from my senses takes all feeling” (Shakespeare).

As Senate Democrats go back to work for the People Republicans continue to act recklessly and create mayhem on both the State and Federal levels. The facts are becoming clear which Political Party will be considered on the right side of history by all the efforts they have shown trying to vote for and implement legislation that would change the way immigration, insurance, wall street, climate change, and jobs which were mishandled and or neglected by the last guy and his republican crew in office.

The current issue mishandled by this crew of Republicans in Congress, among others is the Paul Ryan Budget Plan. The Republican Party pushed it, backed it as if it was the best thing in the world though the particulars were not clear. Fortunately, a Democratic member of Congress challenged the content, structure and announced that the plan would not only make the Bush Bonus dollars permanent, had a health care mandate , a voucher system, probably end Medicaid as well. I don’t know about you but the lack of detail in this Budget Plan given by Republicans before and during their break just proved the Ryan Plan is was not what they say it is. In an attempt to hide or assume no one would actually read “the Plan” which was portrayed by Ryan and his crew as a matter of little or no importance like a tempest in a teapot. It is obvious in reality this plan has created a great big disturbance and or uproar in the Democratic Party but Republican constituents are feeling the betrayal and it is not just Seniors. The plan, aside from the other ill-advised requirements or stipulations listed on this plan is set to affect those 55 and under once considered no big thing quickly moved into something else.

The saying that keeps coming to mind is “a tempest in a teapot”, which is how I felt Republicans were acting. Now, well now that tempest has definitely turned into a storm and has raged out of control. The tempestuous relationship between the Democratic Party and Republicans has promoted violent behaviour by some, emotional responses by all in a time when both sides of the aisle need to come together to create and pass laws. Instead, the party of no has done whatever can do to ruin the President which is being done off the backs of the Middle Class let alone snatch whatever help is left for the working class and the poor. I have news for Republicans and it is that even your constituents are beginning to see the light though i won’t hold my breath i am expecting and demanding that the Democratic Party stand up an out for We the People and help continue that path toward the 21st Century by supporting Barack Obama efforts for a 2nd term.

Other News …. CSPAN

Obama to Meet with Israeli Prime Ministerhttp://c-span.org/Events/Obama-to-Meet-with-Israeli-Prime-Minister/10737421660/

AFL-CIO President to Address Unions and 2012 Campaignhttp://c-span.org/Events/AFL-CIO-President-to-Address-Unions-and-2012-Campaign/10737421671/

Report: Pakistan In Need of Reform

Stability and development at risk – http://c-span.org/Events/Report-Pakistan-In-Need-of-Reform/10737421672/

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ).  http://c-span.org/Events/Medical-Update-on-Rep-Gabrielle-Giffords-D-AZ/10737421663/ 

A moment of Opportunity -the Middle East as a “historic opportunity in Mid East and North Africa.”   http://c-span.org/Events/Obama-Outlines-United-States-Mideast-Policy/10737421632/

President Obama Addresses Women’s Leadership Forumhttp://c-span.org/Events/President-Obama-Addresses-Women39s-Leadership-Forum/10737421662/  

Obama Letter to Boehner: Blocking Property of Senior Officials of the Government of Syriahttp://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/05/18/text-letter-blocking-property-senior-officials-government-syria

Congress: Empty until 5/23


The Senate Convenes at 2:00pmET May 23,2011

Following any Leader remarks, the Senate will be in a period of morning business until 3pm with Senators permitted to speak therein for up to 10 minutes each.

Following morning business, the Senate will resume the motion to proceed to S.1038, a bill to provide for the extension of expiring provisions of the PATRIOT Act until June 1, 2015 with the time until 5pm equally divided and controlled between the two leaders or their designees.

Votes:

At 5:00pm, there will be a roll call vote on the motion to invoke cloture on the motion to proceed to S.1038.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The next meeting in the House is scheduled for May 23, 2011

Senate Republicans today blocked Goodwin Liu


Imagine senators of one party filibustering a judicial nominee who has been hailed as one of his generation’s great legal minds by legal experts of both parties and across the ideological spectrum on the grounds that he is *too* qualified.

 www.pfaw.org

Well that’s exactly what happened today.

In what could be the most egregious example of the GOP’s partisan obstruction of judicial nominations to date, Senate Republicans today blocked Goodwin Liu from receiving an up or down vote. Liu, a law professor and dean at U.C. Berkeley who as a nominee has the American Bar Association’s highest rating, was nominated for a seat on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals by President Obama over a year ago, and has since been approved by the Judiciary Committee three times.

His credentials and grasp of the law and Constitution are impeccable. Liu’s only mistake: being too qualified.

At age 40, his confirmation to the 9th Circuit could put him in position to be the first Asian American Supreme Court nominee. Because of his intellectual heft, his commitment to Americans’ constitutional rights and his commonsense understanding of how the law impacts people’s lives, the prospect of Liu’s future elevation, and even his influence on a Circuit Court of Appeals, terrifies corporate special interests and right-wing ideologues … the same people calling the shots with Republican senators.

Shame on them. The concocted justifications Republican senators used in their opposition to Liu were based on unbelievable distortions of his record by Radical Right activist groups, as well as Liu’s testimony in opposition to Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s confirmation. They rested their opposition on lies because they know that a Liu filibuster makes a mockery of the supposed agreement between parties to employ a filibuster only in “extraordinary circumstances.” Everything about Goodwin Liu’s record and the breadth of his support indicates a legal expert squarely in the mainstream — the only thing “extraordinary” about him is how good he is, and how deserving he was of confirmation.

Every GOP senator except Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski participated in the filibuster. If one or both of your U.S. senators are Republicans, CALL them right now and let them hear it. Tell them, “shame on you for filibustering Goodwin Liu,” and let them know that you will be working hard to hold them accountable in their state.

Make sure you SIGN our “Stop the Obstruction” petition to the Senate and let senators of both parties know that the continued obstruction of the president’s nominees is hurting our country and will not be tolerated.

We need Republicans to feel the pressure about their judicial obstructions just like they are feeling it about their attacks on Medicare. And Democratic leaders in the Senate need to know that they must be using every tool in their arsenal to combat this obstruction.

Demand an end to the obstruction. And tell others to do the same.

I hope you’re as outraged as we are. And I hope you channel that outrage into activism. Thank you for all you do!

 www.pfaw.org

Sincerely,

Michael Keegan, President

P.S. We hope that Goodwin Liu will be renominated and that he will be willing to continue this fight. We have not given up on ultimately confirming this stellar nominee.

Voter ID: The Phantom Menace


At a time when states are struggling to close record budget deficits and grappling with important issues on everything from education to health care, Republican-led state legislatures across the country have fixated on a problem that doesn’t exist, but is politically advantageous: voter fraud. Although voter fraud is exceptionally rare and, when it does occur, is usually the result of confusion rather than malicious intent, Republicans have used the crisis atmosphere to advance laws that require voters to present certain approved forms of identification before they can cast their ballots. In this legislative session, at least thirty-seven state legislatures are considering or have considered voter ID or proof of citizenship legislation. As ThinkProgress has documented, these laws disenfranchise millions of voters and disproportionately affect key progressive constituencies, including seniors, college students, minorities, and low-income voters. Although voter ID laws cost states millions to implement, Republican governors and state legislatures have often pushed them through as “emergency measures” that demand expedited consideration for the sake of the budget. As Campus Progress first reported, the original prototype bill for voter ID legislation was drafted by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a conservative organization linked to the billionaire Koch brothers. In the run up to the 2012 election, these bills have a clear partisan intent and are predicted to depress voter turnout, in addition to robbing millions of citizens of their fundamental right to have a voice in the democratic process.

A SOLUTION IN SEARCH OF A PROBLEM: The allegation of widespread voter fraud is, of course, a Republican myth. During the George W. Bush administration, the Justice Department launched an exhaustive investigation of voter fraud – and turned up only 38 cases nationwide between October 2002 and September 2005, of which only 13 resulted in convictions. In 2007, New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice researched Republican charges of voter fraud and found that, “It is more likely that an individual will be struck by lightning than that he will impersonate another voter at the polls.” One article in a South Carolina paper astutely called voter fraud “the phantom menace” and “a non-existent threat.” Yet to hear Republicans tell the tale, voter fraud is a massive epidemic so threatening to our democracy that it’s necessary to disenfranchise millions of Americans in order to secure the “integrity of the ballot box.” Of course, making it more difficult for minorities, college students, the elderly, and the poor to vote does precisely the opposite — it weakens our democracy, depressing turnout and making election results less representative of the people’s will. In short, the only fraud being perpetrated is the allegation of voter fraud.

LOCKING THE BALLOT BOX: Yesterday, South Carolina became the tenth state to adopt voter identification legislation. Texas will likely become the eleventh this week or next when Gov. Rick Perry (R) signs the bill presented to him on Monday. Earlier this month, the Florida legislature passed a “sweeping rewrite” of state election law at “head-spinning speed.” Governor Rick Scott (R) is expected to approve the legislation when it reaches his desk. Facing an unprecedented recall effort, Wisconsin Republican have been trying to hustle through their own voter ID bill that will go into effect immediately – a clear sign they are scared of the upcoming elections. The speed at which the state’s bill is advancing has alarmed the board that overseas elections, whose director commented, “There has been no time for the careful evaluation and vetting needed to ensure the best options for voters and election officials is enacted.” And even though New Hampshire’s voter ID bill has not yet become state law, illegal signs have appeared at some polling stations demanding voters show ID before they vote. While dramatically restricting access to the ballot box through ID requirements, Republicans have also successfully limited or prohibited early voting and other provisions intended to make it easier for the most vulnerable citizens to vote. In Florida, a state that implemented early voting as a reform to “prevent embarrassments like the 2000 election,” the voter ID bill under consideration would cut the time for early voting from fourteen days to eight. In South Carolina, Gov. Haley and her Republican allies insisted on a “clean” version of the bill that would not allow early voting. One publication noted that passing a voter ID bill without early voting demonstrates a clear “partisan bias.” On Tuesday, Senate Democrats in Wisconsin spent nine hours proposing amendments to the voter ID bill, including an amendment to ensure the disabled community’s ability to vote absentee. Republicans shot down every motion. While these measures will be disastrous for minority voting rights, they’ve already been good for some political careers. A South Carolina Republican was named “Legislator of the Year” for his relentless efforts over three years to pass voter ID legislation.

THE TRUE COST: The dozens of states considering voter ID laws are discovering just how expensive it is to disenfranchise their citizens. A Brennan Center report points out that these laws impose a huge financial burden on states, and concludes that implementing voter ID legislation “will involve money states simply don’t have.” It will cost Texas taxpayers $2 million next year to implement the proposed law — “not a small amount of money for a state with a budget deficit of about $27 billion.” Florida’s bill will cost more than $5.7 million to implement, at a time when Gov. Scott Walker (R) is claiming the state is broke and needs to restrict public employees’ collective bargaining rights to survive. Of course, the real cost to states and the country isn’t just financial. These laws could disenfranchise up to 12 percent of the American electorate. South Carolina’s new law “immediately disenfranchises eight percent of registered voters in the state,” or 180,000 citizens, according to the NAACP and ACLU. In Wisconsin, 175,000 seniors — 70 percent of them women — do not have a driver’s licenses and may have to “get a ride at least 50 miles round trip to obtain an identification card to enable them to continue their constitutional right to vote,” according to one state senator. In a country with a long history of denying suffrage to minority groups, voter ID bills revive painful memories of racial segregation and disenfranchisement. It’s not hard too see troubling echoes of Jim Crow in the new wave of legislation. When the South Carolina House looked as if it would pass the legislation last year, “members of the Legislative Black Caucus and others stood up and walked out of the House chamber to show their collective disgust.” Democrats say it’s no coincidence that Republicans renewed their disenfranchisement efforts after Barack Obama was elected president. “In 2008, we had too many black folk, too many brown folk, too many poor folk voting,” said South Carolina state Representative David J. Mack III. “They (Republicans) can’t have that in 2012.”