Thursday, June 07, 2007

Bush fails again.


Looks like George Bush's top domestic agenda item is just about finished:
A tenuous compromise to overhaul the nation's immigration laws collapsed tonight when senators from both parties refused to cut off debate and move to a final vote, handing the unlikely alliance of Democratic leaders and President Bush a setback on a major domestic priority.

The defeat came after months of painstaking negotiations and weeks of debate as a 45-50 procedural vote fell well short of the 60 needed to break the filibuster. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) then pulled the bill from the floor, while holding out hope that the Senate could resurrect the measure within weeks.
Every single thing Bush does turns into a disaster. Heckuva job Bushie. Read More......

Edwards assails Clinton's terror remarks


From AP:
Speaking on the New Yorkers' home turf — and not far from Ground Zero — Edwards dismissed Clinton's comments in Sunday's debate in which she said the nation is safer now that it was before the terrorist attacks. Clinton's other top rival, Sen. Barack Obama, also has challenged her claim.

"Today, as a result of what George Bush has done, we have more terrorists and fewer allies," Edwards said at a news conference. "There was no group called al-Qaida in Iraq before this president's war in Iraq."

He never mentioned Clinton by name but the subject was obvious.
Read More......

Parent of gay may take Wyoming Senate seat


This could be fun in so many ways. Read More......

Bush immigration bill flounders in Senate today


From AP
A fragile bipartisan compromise that would legalize millions of unlawful immigrants suffered a setback Thursday when it failed a test vote in the Senate, leaving its prospects uncertain.

Still, the measure — a top priority for
President Bush that's under attack from the right and left — won a brief reprieve when Majority Leader Harry Reid (news, bio, voting record), D-Nev., said he would give it more time before yanking the bill and moving on to other matters.

His decision set the stage for yet another procedural vote later Thursday that will measure lawmakers' appetite for a so-called "grand bargain" between liberals and conservatives on immigration.

If that fails, Reid threatened, "The bill's over with."
Read More......

Poll: Everybody hates him


Discuss. Read More......

Obama criticizes Bush anti-gay Surgeon General nominee


Obama is expressing concerns about Bush's choice of an anti-gay bigot, who thinks being gay is something you can "cure," as our next Surgeon General. As he, Dodd, and Hillary are on the committee that needs to confirm this guy, this is important. Read More......

Bill Clinton reportedly told John Kerry to throw gays under the bus during 2004 election. What is he telling Hillary, and is she listening?


The Kerry Edwards 2004 campaign says Bill Clinton tried to throw gays under the bus. Bill Clinton's office says it's not true. Who do we believe? And what does this mean for Hillary Clinton's presidential run?

As Pam Spaulding noted last week, Democratic political consultant Bob Shrum claims in his new book that during the 2004 elections, Bill Clinton advised John Kerry to support the Federal Marriage Amendment, i.e., the anti-gay amendment to the US Constitution that would have banned gay marriage and vitiated scores of other rights that gay couples may have, including health insurance, inheritance, child custody, parenting, and more. Shrum reports that Kerry refused to endorse the amendment.

I decided to check with Bill Clinton's office and the Kerry-Edwards 2004 campaign to find out if this is true. Here is what I found.

Jay Carson, spokesman for President Clinton told me:
"I checked and it's completely untrue. He never advised John Kerry to support the gay marriage ban President Bush was pushing."
A senior Kerry-Edwards 2004 campaign staffer told me:
"It's definitely true. Newsweek had reported that Clinton had said Kerry should support some of the state [anti-gay] ballot initiatives. Clinton believed it would be this grand master stroke to neutralize Bush's base."
I went back to both President Clinton's office and the Kerry-Edwards campaign official, asking them to reconcile the apparent discrepancy. Clinton's spokesman stands by his denial - to the best of his knowledge, it didn't happen. The senior Kerry-Edwards 2004 campaign staffer also stands by their statement that it did happen, noting that Clinton's denial was "typical Clintonian revisionism."

(As an aside, I also went back to Clinton's spokesman to make sure that he wasn't parsing his words - i.e., Clinton never advised Kerry to support the anti-gay amendment that Bush was pushing, but did he advise him to push any other version of the federal amendment? Clinton's spokesman assured me that there was no intent to parse, Clinton never advised Kerry to support any version of the federal constitutional amendment.)

Who to believe? Is there absolute proof that Clinton said it? Not yet. But you've got two sources who say he did, to one source who says he didn't. Then you have to look to the veracity of the sources. Shrum is not well-loved in bloggyland, though I'm not sure he's thought of as a liar - rather the charge is that he's inept at winning. The Kerry-Edwards campaign is not known for its electoral victories either, to be sure, but it's also not known for lying. Then there's Bill Clinton. I'm not going to revisit ancient history, but it certainly "sounds" like something Clinton would say and do, and it sounds like something he'd subsequently deny.

To get a sense of whether this "sounds like Clinton," let's look back at Clinton's record on federal bans on gay marriage. Go back to the Clinton re-election campaign in 1995. Clinton hired Democratic strategist Mark Penn as his pollster and political adviser along with now-conservative pundit Dick Morris. (Mark Penn is also Hillary Clinton's chief strategist for her current presidential run - more on that later). Penn, Morris and Clinton had decided that Clinton was going to win the re-election based on his support for "family values." And family values meant "bashing gays."

From TIME
:
By the time Clinton arrived in Chicago for his party's convention in August, nothing that hinted at liberalism was left hanging on him. When the President, who had begun his term advocating the rights of gays in the military, came around to supporting the Defense of Marriage Act, which barred federal recognition for gay and lesbian unions, Dole was wide-eyed. "Is there anything we're for that he won't jump on?" Dole asked. The answer, essentially, was nothing...
It's no coincidence that after hiring Penn, Clinton signed the anti-gay Defense of Marriage Act and then ran radio ads on Christian radio touting his support for DOMA.

From the Associated Press, October 17, 1996:
After angry complaints from gay-rights advocates, the Clinton campaign on Wednesday replaced an ad running on religious radio stations that boasted of the president's signature on a bill banning gay marriages....

The Clinton spot also touted his signing of the Defense of Marriage Act, in spite of earlier White House complaints that the Republicans' use of the issue amounted to "gay baiting."
DOMA wasn't something Bill Clinton was forced to do, it's something he chose to do, wanted to do, was happy to do. And that explains why Bill Clinton has never repudiated his support for DOMA. I thought at the time, and still thought up until a few days ago, that Bill Clinton was forced to sign DOMA. That the only reason he hadn't repudiated that support - hadn't said "look, it was GOP gay-baiting and I didn't have a choice, no Democrat had a choice" - was because it might put Hillary in a bind, forcing her to also repudiate DOMA, something she of course would WANT to do but couldn't because it might prove politically dangerous. But now it seems Clinton's Choice was much clearer, and more calculated, than that. Clinton thought DOMA was a great idea for him then, and thinks it's a great idea for his wife now. It's not a necessary evil, it's manna from heaven.

The final proof that legislative gay-bashing is still something President Clinton recommends as smart Democratic politics? Bill Clinton wanted to make sure that John Kerry's presidential defeat in 2004 would be blamed on Kerry's unwillingness to sufficiently bash the gays. That's the most sensible explanation for why he made the following leak to Newsweek within days of Kerry's loss (Kerry-Edwards campaign staff tell me that they were not the ones who leaked this to Newsweek, and Clinton and his people were the only other party involved).

From Newsweek:
President Clinton, who signed the Defense of Marriage Act when he was in the White House, advised Kerry in a phone call early in the campaign to find a way to support the state bans. Kerry never considered abandoning his principles to that extent, but he also didn’t take seriously enough the threat.
So now the gays lost Kerry the election. Priceless.

It gives me no joy to bash Bill Clinton. I cannot express sufficiently how much I admire the man's intellect and his political acumen. We had lunch with him last fall, and my first thought was "this is what a real president is like." He possesses so many of the qualities that our party and our politicians lack nowadays. But the man is politically amoral. Not immoral - amoral. And he, along with his amoral campaign aide Mark Penn, are the top advisers to Hillary Clinton's presidential run. And that should give every supporter of gay rights, civil rights, or any other issue, serious pause.

There's already a growing concern in the gay community that Senator Clinton, while "good on paper" on gay issues - and once considered remarkably good personally - will throw us under the bus if and when she becomes president. And let's be clear. We're not talking about some arcane tax policy issue. We're talking about our lives. Having the Democratic party's top two legislative gay-bashers as her top two advisers, men who will betray any cause, any principle, any supporter, for a bump in the polls (read more about Mark Penn's own loyalty problems here and here), does nothing to assuage those growing concerns.

PS And if I'm wrong, if Bob Shrum is wrong, if the senior Kerry-Edwards campaign official is wrong, if history is wrong, then let Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton publicly repudiate DOMA in its entirety. Read More......

Some important news from last night


As you may know, my good friend Chris Ryan, who lives in Paris, France, posts the overnight news for us here at AMERICAblog. Sometimes I worry that the overnight stuff may not get as much attention since the traffic is low and once we get going in the morning it's a non-stop rollercoaster until bedtime. So, occasionally, I'd like to highlight a bit of what Chris posted. Here goes:

Dingell needs to quit blocking anti-climate change programs

Blair prepares for massive retreat on Bush and climate change

Why are pet food makers trying to treat headaches?

And one more from me: Bush Surgeon General nominee: 'Homosexuality Isn't Natural or Healthy' Read More......

Alaska's Senator Ted Stevens admits he's facing FBI investigation


Ted Stevens talked to the Washington Post yesterday:
"They put me on notice to preserve some records," Stevens said in a brief interview about his legal team's discussions with the FBI. He declined to say what kinds of records were involved but confirmed that he had hired lawyers and that his son, former state Senate president Ben Stevens, "is also under investigation."
Read More......

Despite increased death tolls, Lieberman claims he sees progress in Iraq


Lieberman parrots the Bush talking points almost better than any other Republican. He was on CNN spinning away today. He sees progress where no one else does. The message -- Pay no attention to those increasing death tolls:
Read More......

Thursday Morning Open Thread


Bush just shouldn't use words like "hyperventilating." He's such an embarrassment.

Have to give kudos to my sister, Sharon. Last night, she received the "Liz Crandall Leadership Award" from the Maine Women's Policy Center. Ms. Crandall was an "tireless in her efforts to advocate for a woman's right to choose, equal pay, and an end to discrimination in all of its forms." The award is given to a woman leader in Maine "who shares Liz's spirit of commitment and activism." Sharon is truly committed to social justice -- and works at it every day. So, indulge me a shout out to my big sister.

Okay, get threading. Read More......

Why are pet food makers trying to treat headaches?


This tainted pet food scandal becomes more bizarre at every turn. Besides melamine in the food, testers have been finding other odd chemicals in pet food including acetaminophen, the ingredient used for headaches. Not so surprisingly, the FDA seems surprised and is vowing to look into the matter. Oh, they must be shaking in their boots.
At least five dog and cat food samples submitted by worried pet owners and pet food manufacturers contained varying levels of the pain reliever, she said. Only the food, not individual ingredients, were tested.

The medication was found most often with cyanuric acid, a chemical used in pool chlorination, Coneley said. Varying levels of melamine, a chemical used to make plastics, also were found among the hundreds of samples ExperTox tested, she said.

The contaminants were found in foods that are not among the more than 150 brands recalled since March 16, Coneley said. The highest level of acetaminophen was found in a dog food sample submitted by a manufacturer, she said. Coneley declined to identify the company but said its officials were given the results "well over a month ago."

That company should have -- but did not -- notify the FDA, which first learned of the acetaminophen findings after pet owners posted lab reports on the Internet, Arbesfeld said.
The pet food producers are not showing a lot of fear of the consequences for failing to report to the FDA. That says what it says and explains part of the problem, which is that the FDA has become a weakened organization that has no teeth and will fail to take action. Is it asking too much to equip the FDA with more staff and impose much more serious consequences for violations like this? Considering the end result can be death for consumers, this hardly seems out of order. (H/T to Cat.) Read More......

Blair prepares for massive retreat on Bush and climate change


After all those years of firm support when everyone else thought Bush was embarking on a failed plan to invade Iraq and supporting Bush at every turn, Blair gets sand kicked in his face in front of the world. It seemed like only yesterday that Blair was hinting at positive change from Bush (oh, it was just yesterday) but as predicted, Bush hates change and simply does not negotiate with anyone. So in this final major meeting, Blair has proven himself once again to be a foolish poodle, played once again by Bush. How does someone with as much brainpower as Blair get manipulated so often by a guy like Bush?
In a setback to Mr Blair's hopes of securing a major breakthrough on climate change before he leaves office, James Connaughton, the head of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, said the US was "not prepared" to back the 50 per cent reduction proposed by Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor and summit host.

He said the US did not believe the G8 should be the forum for setting targets, telling reporters: "There is significant agreement that those should be established on a national basis, and the only area of disagreement is that the G8 should dictate the national policies of its members."
Sounds pretty similar to what we've been hearing for years from Bush. Read More......

Dingell needs to quit blocking anti-climate change programs


Congressman Dingell owes quite a lot to Detroit and I can appreciate his desire to do what he can to help the automakers that have kept him in Congress but the repeated attempts to block the urgent issue is not doing anyone favors. Dingell has been an active enabler for Big Auto and look what good that did for everyone. Dingell has helped block efforts to develop fuel efficiency so the US now has only two high efficiency models available compared to 103 available models in Europe. This is pathetic.
Pelosi issued a statement late Tuesday, a day after the measure tucked into a draft bill by Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va., came to light. Boucher's plan drew angry opposition from environmentalists, California legislators and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration.

"Any legislation that comes to the House floor must increase our energy independence, reduce global warming, invest in new technologies to achieve these goals and create good jobs in America," Pelosi said.

"Any proposal that affects California's landmark efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions or eliminate the EPA's authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions will not have my support."
Speaker Pelosi is furious with this latest move by Dingell as it would stop California and other leaders in the fight against climate change who are pressing for serious progress and not just words and delay, as we've seen from Big Auto and Dingell for decades. It's no longer the 1950's and Detroit has blown it with plenty of help by enablers and apologists, so let's get serious about this problem and scrap this latest rubbish from Dingell. Read More......

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