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March 5, 2012, 11:37 am
By
Brent Budowsky
If you are tired of the gaseous bigotry of Rush Limbaugh and the verbose inability of Mitt Romney (the "weather vane") to directly criticize Limbaugh, check out the hearing about the State Department budget from Feb. 29. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) exchanged civil and respectful words about President Obama's recent apology regarding Afghanistan. This exchange suggests why Ron Paul runs better against Obama than most other Republicans, why Hillary Clinton towers above all other national political figures in popularity, and why other Republicans could learn a lot from Ron Paul about how they could avoid the landslide defeat that might be approaching them.
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Archived under:
Lawmaker News, Presidential Campaign, The Administration
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March 2, 2012, 9:22 am
By
Bernie Quigley
The Post's top lead today tells us that everyone in the small town of Washington, Okla., lives the conservative life. The same could likely be said about the rest of Oklahoma. Those who feel differently, like Elizabeth Warren, might move to Massachusetts. Having lived in every New England state except Connecticut, which is really part of New York, I'm glad Warren is here. She's a good fit. She belongs here and I'd vote for her if I lived in Massachusetts. But why should the rest of Oklahoma be forced to be dominated by us New Englanders? That is the question Olympia Snowe should be asking when she returns to Maine. And this one: Why should we in New England be dominated when Texas and Oklahoma run against our moral being? Like in the invasion of Iraq?
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Archived under:
Lawmaker News
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February 28, 2012, 2:47 pm
By
Sabrina L. Schaeffer
It really does seem like anything goes this election season.
The controversy over the HHS mandate requiring “free” coverage of contraceptive services — and the recent hearing on religious liberty — has breathed new life into the already tired Democratic message that Republicans are waging “war on women.” (Read what I’ve already written about it here.)
Leading the charge for the Democratic Party is Rep. Carolyn Maloney (N.Y.), who yesterday signed a fundraising letter for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee that is absolutely absurd:
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Archived under:
Healthcare, Lawmaker News
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December 24, 2011, 2:49 am
By
Brent Budowsky
The No. 1 issue next year will be that President Obama, Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and Democrats will be fighting for working people while Republicans will be fighting for millionaires who they believe should make no sacrifice for America.
Immediately after Congress passed the payroll tax cut and jobless benefits extension, Harry Reid renewed the battle for a surtax for those making a million bucks a year to join the rest of America in being part of the solution.
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Archived under:
Economy & Budget, Lawmaker News
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December 23, 2011, 12:07 pm
By
A.B. Stoddard, columnist, The Hill
Ouch. House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) has a hideous job on any day, trying to keep his fractured conference together, but yesterday was one for the history books. In conceding on the payroll tax extension package the Senate had passed and his conference had opposed all week, Boehner made clear he had fought for fighting's sake, and that doing the right thing isn't always easy — which he reiterated several times. But it was clear he knew his conference has reached the point of diminishing returns with their lonely, losing payroll tax cut battle.
There are indications that tensions arose between House GOP leaders over this fight, and that Boehner should have known last Friday, when the two-month payroll tax cut extension was first introduced behind closed doors, that it would present problems for his conservative members. Yet Boehner allowed Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), with whom he works quite closely and has known for many years, to believe that passing a bipartisan bill and leaving town was fine. He was bucked by his members on Saturday, then chose to stick by them as they walked off a political cliff.
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Archived under:
Lawmaker News
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December 22, 2011, 10:50 am
By
Brent Budowsky
When House Republicans turned off C-SPAN cameras to prevent Democrats being seen championing the payroll tax cut for 160 million Americans, it was a pathetic GOP confession of humiliation and defeat. This is how Vladimir Putins runs Russia. This is not the way we do business in the land of the free and the home of the brave.
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Archived under:
Economy & Budget, Lawmaker News, Presidential Campaign
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December 20, 2011, 11:28 am
By
Brent Budowsky
I have worked for House Democratic leaders and senior Democratic senators and cannot remember any time when there has been a breakdown of trust the way there is today.
Harry Reid is a legislator of the first order, a dealmaker and a man of his word. There is now a very clear and recurring pattern of the White House and Senate Democrats reaching agreements with Republicans, and coming to believe, with reason, that Speaker Boehner reneged on those agreements.
This has happened a number of times. It is very troubling to those of us who believe that integrity and trust are the coin of the realm in this town.
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Archived under:
Lawmaker News
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December 19, 2011, 10:57 am
By
Brent Budowsky
Regarding the latest pre-recess fiasco surrounding the payroll tax cut: In my view, which I have conveyed at very high levels, they are all wrong. Americans look at these regular Kabuki humiliations and conclude that the president, Congress, Democrats and Republicans are all incompetent and weak.
There are no winners from either party except the highly paid political consultants, from both parties, who convince elected politicians that voters are stupid and can be fooled.
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Archived under:
Lawmaker News
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December 8, 2011, 4:40 pm
By
Peter Fenn
This is a very bad week for Congress. Paralysis reigns. Gridlock prevails. Accomplishments are nonexistent.
And the public gets it.
Let’s review where we are:
1) Two hundred and eighteen members of the House of Representatives have co-sponsored legislation to prevent insider stock trades by Congress. That, folks, is a majority. But Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) forces Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.) to pull the bill from getting marked up and passed. What?
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Archived under:
Lawmaker News
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December 1, 2011, 12:14 pm
By
Peter Fenn
I have known Barney Frank for nearly 30 years, but I have not known him as well or as long as my good friend Bill Black. Bill has written an extraordinary personal piece I want to share — Bill is a senior executive at Fleishman Hillard, a former chief of staff to several members of Congress. But, as you will see, it was not always thus. Thank You, Barney Frank
Barney Frank had more impact on my life than any human being outside my immediate family. I was 27 years old and adrift. I was in the final semester of UMass/Boston after a bumpy eight-year odyssey toward an undergraduate degree in political science. I had been working as a stock boy at the Stop & Shop for 11 years and was contemplating the exciting prospect of being promoted to frozen food manager at Store 431 in Roslindale, a blue-collar neighborhood of Boston. Then everything changed.
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Lawmaker News
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