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  March 20, 2010, 9:06 am

VIDEO: Boehner makes closing argument against health reform

By Michael O'Brien

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) made his closing argument against healthcare in the Republican weekly radio address.

View the video of that address below

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  March 20, 2010, 9:00 am

VIDEO: Obama makes case for financial reform

By Michael O'Brien

President Barack Obama on Saturday slammed “the army of lobbyists” working against congressional reforms to the financial rules governing Wall Street.

Watch the video of his weekly radio address below:

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  March 19, 2010, 2:46 pm

Single payer/government-run health care (Rep. John Campbell)

By Rep. John Campbell (R-Calif.)

Wednesday, Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) publicly announced that he will switch his vote on the Health care bill from “no” last time to “yes” this time. With Kucinich’s vote, now all of the most liberal Democrats in Congress are supporting the bill. 87 Democrats co-sponsored a bill to immediately have full blown socialized medicine like Canada or Britain. It appears now that all of those Democrats are supporting this bill that the President and Democratic leadership say is not government-run health care.

Hmmm. So if it’s not government run health care, how did you get 100% of the votes of those who publicly support government run health care and you are having trouble only with the moderates who oppose it?

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  March 19, 2010, 2:38 pm

Chutes and ladders (Rep. Anthony Weiner)

By Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.)

Health care opponents don't have any more excuses.

Yesterday's Congressional Budget Office "score" shows the health care bill would be even better than expected at reducing the deficit. If you're serious about cutting spending, you have to be supporting this bill.

Sometimes it feels more like we're playing a game of "Health Care Chutes and Ladders" - climbing forward one day, slipping back the next - but we're getting near the top of the board.

To finish the job, I challenged 5,000 grassroots donors to show Congress that Americans want real reform. I need your help to meet that goal before the health care vote this weekend.

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  March 19, 2010, 11:01 am

The Big Question: What does the health battle say about leaders?

By Sydelle Moore & John Owre

Some of the nation's top political commentators, legislators and intellectuals offer insight into the biggest story burning up the blogosphere today.


Today's question:

What have we learned about the leadership of President Barack Obama and other Democrats through the push to pass healthcare reform legislation?


Hal Lewis, professor of Physics at UC Santa Barbara, said:

Nothing we didn't already know, but it has been driven home. The Obama crowd will coerce, buy, or steal enough votes to accomplish their ends, utterly without conscience or any sense of history or concern for the future. And will call that leadership. What is really remarkable is that the Republican party itself has many contesting subspecies, but the Obamacrats  have been so flagrant, tone deaf, and dictatorial that even the Republicans are unanimous in their opposition. And this from a President who was elected on a promise of a transparent and bipartisan  administration. The only people he has in fact treated with deference and respect are our foreign enemies---the folks who clamor openly for our death.


Justin Raimondo, editorial director of Antiwar.com, said:

We've learned that the Democratic leadership style is artless, while the President's is spineless. We've learned (again) that lobbyists rule Washington, and that the Democratic party is ultimately beholden to the Big Triumvirate -- Big Government, Big Business, and Big Labor.


Richard Kirsch, national campaign manager of Health Care for America Now, said:


In the past two months, since the Massachusetts election, President Obama and Democratic leadership in both houses have shown true grit. They’ve demonstrated the depth of their commitment to health care reform. It is clear that the President, the Speaker, the Majority Leader, and a great many Democratic members are deeply, personally committed to passing legislation that will make health care a right, not a privilege, in America. It is clear that they understand the historical significance of this. And it is clear that the President understands his ability to deliver on the promises of 2008 hangs in the balance. We’ve also learned that while the President’s instinct is to reach out to interest groups and reach across the aisle, he’s willing to take on corporate and political opponents if they are blocking his agenda.



A. B. Stoddard, associate editor and columnist, said:

If President Obama didn't learn during last year's protracted, chaotic and tortured health care reform debate that he needs to take a stronger hand in legislative battles if he wants to meet his substantial goals, then he and his presidency will continue to struggle.
The latitude Obama gave to the Congress with his very first bill out of the gate -- the economic stimulus program -- set the tone for the health care debate and allowed the process to languish while a divided party fought with itself. The Democrats may have majorities in the House and Senate, but there are conservative majorities in the House and Senate when you include Republicans. The Democratic party won numerous Republican seats in 2006 and 2008 and is holding on to fragile control with these swing seats that are now in play. Watch what happens on health care -- the liberals will have to come home, no matter how disappointed they are in the bill, because too many conservative Democrats will have to vote no.
 Next year, should Democrats keep control of the Congress, they will have fewer seats and more divisions. Think the 52 Blue Dogs were difficult to corral this year? Just wait until their group gets smaller. If Obama thinks he can let Congress take the lead in every debate, after losing a year and much political capital in the health care battle, then he will use up his first term migthy fast.


David Schanzer, director of the Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland Security, said:

If the bill passes, what we’ve learned is that the Democrats understand that to be taken seriously as a governing party, they have to show the ability to govern effectively.  You cannot be taken seriously if you campaign on an issue in repeated election cycles, announce this as a priority, start down the legislative path with much fanfare, have your president stake most of his political capital on the issue, engage in a national debate, use the platform of a joint address to Congress – and then fail to follow through.
There may be electoral consequences in November if caricatures of what the bill actually will do continue to dominate public opinion.  But the electoral consequences of not passing the bill would be enormous:  Democrats would have managed to anger friend and foe alike, undercut their own popular president, and made a mockery of themselves as a serious party capable of governing.
 



­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Grover Norquist
, president of Americans for Tax Reform, said:
There is no amount of taxpayer dollars that Obama/Reid/Pelosi will not spend to buy votes to extract more money from taxpayers to buy future votes to do same ad infinitum.



Alan Abramowitz
, professor of political science at Emory University, said:

Steven Pearlstein said it best in his column in today’s Washington Post:
“Over the past year, anyone following the health-care drama has been tempted, at various points, to question the judgment and the leadership of President Obama, his staff and the Democratic leaders in Congress. Should they succeed this weekend, however, there is no disputing that it will be a remarkable political achievement, the result of a combination of focus, determination, flexibility and patience not seen since the early Reagan years.”


 

John F. McManus, president of the John Birch Society, said:

The push to pass healthcare teaches us that high officials in our government will use the enormous clout they possess to reward or punish those who don't "play ball."  Recall the promises made to Nebraska and Louisiana for Senate votes.  We can only guess what Dennis Kucinich was promised on the Air Force One flight with the President. Others are being assured that federal benefits will flow their way if they vote as requested.
 
When government gets as big as ours has become, rewarding "team players" with federal dollars, appointments, etc. can be expected.  That it's completely wrong - even subversive of good order - isn't considered.  Most citizens shrug their shoulders in frustration about this ongoing practice - if they even think about it.

Government is best when it is close to the people.  This is one reason why our federal government was given so few powers.  James Madison explained this feature of the Constitution in Federalist #45:

"The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite.  The former will be exercised principally on external objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce.... The powers reserved to the several States will extend to all the objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State." 
 
The lesson that should be learned from the current push for unconstitutional federal takeover of healthcare is that less government, not more, is the proper course for America.
 
During his recant foray into Ohio, President Obama told a rally, "We are only a few days away from fundamentally transforming America."  That's what he said, and the healthcare measure he wants enacted will indeed transform America toward socialism. Members of Congress who support the President's call for "fundamentally transforming America" are joining with him in betraying their constituents, and betraying America.

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  March 19, 2010, 9:39 am

Financial reform: it's the derivatives, stupid

By Leo W. Gerard, USW international president

Tricky auto loans didn’t cause the financial meltdown on Wall Street. Unscrupulous payday lenders didn’t cost taxpayers a $700 billion “troubled asset” bailout.

So fussing about whether U.S. Sen. Chris Dodd’s financial reform legislation contains an independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency is like worrying about whether you’ll lose your tool shed as a conflagration consumes your home.

Sure, shielding consumer borrowers would be nice. But safeguarding the entire economy from another collapse is essential.

Preserving the economy requires limiting, regulating and exposing derivative trading.  That’s because derivatives – those credit default swaps – took down Wall Street.

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  March 18, 2010, 1:02 pm

The Big Question: Is $18B enough or too much money for jobs?

By Sydelle Moore

Some of the nation's top political commentators, legislators and intellectuals offer their insight into the biggest story burning up the blogosphere today.


Today's question:

Is $18 billion enough to spend on a jobs bill? Is it too much?

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  March 18, 2010, 12:50 pm

Are U.S. Pot laws the root cause of Mexican drug violence?

By Paul Armentano

It was less than one year ago when acting U.S. DEA administrator Michelle Leonhart publicly declared that the escalating violence on the U.S.-Mexico border should be viewed as a sign of the "success" of America's drug war strategies.

"Our view is that the violence we have been seeing is a signpost of the success our very courageous Mexican counterparts are having," said Leonhart, who was recently nominated by President Obama to be the agency's full time director. "The cartels are acting out like caged animals, because they are caged animals."

Well, if the DEA's chief talking head thought that some 6,300 drug cartel-related murders in 2008 was an indication of progress, one can only imagine that she believes that this weekend's south-of-the-border killing spree -- which included the murder of a pregnant U.S. official and her husband -- must be downright victorious.

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  March 18, 2010, 10:39 am

Healthcare takeover will prevent job growth (Rep. Joe Wilson)

By Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.)

For the better part of 2009, hardworking Americans were able to put a serious wrench in plans to rush passage of an irresponsible bill.  They succeeded by using new media tools, community meetings, and rallies to inform their friends and neighbors about the job-killing tax increases and mandates that stockpiled the bill.  As the 11th hour of the countdown to a vote begins, we need concerned citizens across the country to channel the energy they had this summer to stop this health care takeover. We must spread the message that this job-killing health care takeover could not come at a more irresponsible time as unemployment still hovers double digits across the nation.

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  March 17, 2010, 4:55 pm

Chinese currency - not the bargain we're looking for (Sen. Debbie Stabenow)

By Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.)

For 109 years, people in Muskegon, Michigan have been making paper – until last year. The Sappi Fine Paper North America mill shut down in 2009 and 190 workers lost their jobs. Mark Evans, a Sappi employee, said "The [Asian companies] can sell the paper cheaper than we can make it. This is foreign competition killing the American worker again".

Mark was half-right. It's not competition that is killing the American worker – it's cheating.

Some people argue that it really is just fair competition. If only Americans would accept lower wages, dangerous working conditions, and non-existent environmental standards, maybe Mark's plant could have stayed open. But I don’t call giving massive industrial subsidies, stealing American companies' intellectual property, and manipulating your currency a "comparative advantage". I call it what it is – cheating.

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