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Month: November 2008

Blanket Pardons

by digby

Evidently, there’s talk of Bush issuing a blanket pardon to anyone involved in his torture regime before he leaves office and Salon is also reporting that there are some plans afoot in the Obama camp to initiate a broad congressional inquiry into the whole interrogation program, which would be even more amazing.

As to the pardons, there is precedent for a president to pardon whole categories of people — Carter did it for draft resisters and George Washington did it for those involved in the Whiskey Rebellion. The article discusses some moral distinctions, but it seems clear to me that Bush could do this and there would be nothing anyone could do about it.

In terms of the possible investigations, the article says:

A common view among those involved with the talks is that any early effort to prosecute Bush administration officials would likely devolve quickly into ugly and fruitless partisan warfare. Second is that even if Obama decided he had the appetite for it, prosecutions in this arena are problematic at best: A series of memos from the Bush Justice Department approved the harsh tactics, and Congress changed the War Crimes Act in 2006, making prosecutions of individuals involved in interrogations more difficult.

Instead, a commission empowered by Congress would have the authority to compel witnesses to testify and even to grant immunity in exchange for information. Should a particularly ugly picture emerge, the option of prosecutions would still theoretically be on the table later, however unlikely.

In Obama’s camp, there is a sense among some that such a commission would essentially mean letting Bush get away with crimes. “People have called for criminal investigations,” one person familiar with the talks told me this summer as plans got under way. On Wednesday, a person participating in the talks confirmed that some people involved in the planning felt strongly that the commission would amount to “bullshit” and that Bush officials should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

But few think prosecutions are realistic, given the formidable legal hurdles and the huge policy problems competing for Obama’s attention. Among them is the complicated task of closing down the military prison at Guantánamo Bay, which Obama advisors say is a priority. Some observers outside the Obama camp are also questioning how much Democrats really want exposed with regard to interrogation, since top Democrats in Congress were briefed in secret on some of the harshest tactics used by the CIA and appear to have done little, or perhaps nothing, to stop them.

A congressional commission would be great. But at the risk of sounding cynical, the odds of that happening are about as good as Sarah W. Palin becoming a Supreme Court justice. We’re now heavily into let bayhgones be bayhgones mode and I’d be shocked if this congress would do it. (Besides, Joe Lieberman might hold his breath until he turns blue and they can’t let that happen.)

If this isn’t just a couple of insiders playing a reporter to see what might happen, it’s possible it is leak designed to put the CIA and the military on notice that Obama has no intention of prosecuting them, but also throw out there that if Bush decides to do this pardon, the congress may find it impossible to resist empowering this commission — and all hell will break loose. If this is a trial balloon of some sort, I think this is mostly about trying to keep a lid on an early, ugly partisan battle — a blanket pardon would be like firing on Ft Sumter. They’re trying to put the onus on Bush (although why they’d trust him I wouldn’t know.)

It’s possible, of course, that they’re serious about empowering this investigation. But it’s hard to see why the reasons they cite for not wanting to prosecute don’t apply equally to a congressional commission. And it’s not like the country really gives a shit — the only ones who care about this are human rights activists, civil liberties cranks and constitution lovers and nobody cares about them. They’d have to do it because they really believe its necessary. I don’t see that argument anywhere.

I’ll be very happy to be wrong about this and if a commission on torture is formed I will be thrilled and vastly relieved. It just doesn’t scan for me in this environment. The priority is obviously going to be the economy and they are are unlikely to risk their plans on something so emotional and risky. But it’s something to keep our eyes on.

If Bush does the pardons all bets are off.

Update: And there is simply no doubt that Bush would invoke this to avoid cooperating. He already has.

H/t to bb

He Made Us

by digby

I just watched Evan Bayh try to explain to Rachel Maddow why Lieberman needs to keep his chairmanship. Bayh explained that they have no choice because Lieberman is threatening to leave the Senate if he doesn’t get his way — and the Connecticut Governor will then name a Republican who will never vote with them. And if he stays and doesn’t get what he wants, he will be “embittered” and then vote against them on close votes out of spite. So in order to do what’s necessary for the country they need to give him what he wants.

I guess that’s what putting “country first” means.

Bayh was just embarrassing. He’s going to have to pop a fistful of viagra and watch some “24” just to persuade himself that his testes are still descended after that pathetic performance.

They should just get this over with. Watching these people willingly (pretend to) cower like beaten dogs before Holy Joe’s threats is just depressing. Just do it already.

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Every Vote Counts

by dday

We’ve been following the Ted Stevens/Mark Begich race in Alaska, which initially seemed to be more than a little strange, what with its low turnout despite the first Alaskan on a major-party Presidential ticket in history. Well, they kept finding extra votes, not a few at a time but thousands and thousands of them, so that the turnout is relatively in line with expectations, though still low (of course, the Presidential race was essentially called at 4pm local time, so some drop-off can be expected). And they’ve started to count those votes. And based on the latest tally, Begich leads by three.

Not three points. Three votes.

I don’t know if that includes Track, Bristol, Willow, Trig, Twig, Salad Spinner, Lipitor or Stag Tunnel Palin, who is the crucial swing vote.

There are still about 40,000 votes left to count, and they apparently come from areas that favored Begich in the initial count.

Anything that keeps Sarah Palin out of the US Senate and all over cable news where she apparently belongs is a good thing.

…davenoon at LGM notes that the Alaska Independence Party candidate got 10,000 votes, which at last count is a lot more than three. Big thanks to Todd Palin for contributing to their growth.

NOTE: It’s up to an 814 vote lead for Begich now.

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Without Missing A Beat

by digby

I wrote something the other day about the right’s retirement of hypocrisy and intellectual violence (which Bob Cesca expands on today ) at the end of which I said:

…failing to truly grok just how pernicious this right wing rejection of hypocrisy really is and how much power it gives them is a foolish mistake.

I think we’re about to get schooled. Again. The torture loving right is dusting off its completely hypocritical “government is full of jack-booted thugs” playbook — and it’s going to drive us all completely crazy.

Here we go:

COULTER: Sounds like there’s gonna be a lot more Waco raids, Elian Gonzalez snatchings. I don’t know, I don’t know. I mean, I think this — I think Obama is a frightening candidate. We’ll see.

GRANT: I want to play a portion of Barack Obama’s speech last night, which I think is the most bizarre aspect of his program. Listen to this.

OBAMA : We cannot continue to rely only on our military in order to achieve the national security objectives that we’ve set. We’ve got to have a civilian national security force that’s just as powerful, just as strong, just as well-funded.

GRANT: Ann, what do you make of that?

COULTER: Sounds like there’s gonna be a lot more Waco raids, Elian Gonzalez snatchings. I don’t know, I don’t know. I mean, I think this — I think Obama is a frightening candidate. We’ll see.

After all the years of supporting everything from torture and domestic spying to turning the office of president into an elected monarchy, you’re not going to believe what “civil libertarians” these people are suddenly going to be. I wouldn’t count on being able to work together on anything that you would expect to last beyond a Democratic presidency, however. To these people, civil liberties are a partisan cudgel and nothing more.

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Trials and Tribulations

by digby

To those who are incessantly complaining about bloggers being “concern trolls” for responding to stories about various possible appointments, priorities or policies of the new administration, I can only assume that you aren’t aware of something called a “trial balloon” and its purpose.

Here’s the definition:

A trial balloon is information sent out in order to observe the reaction of an audience. It can be used by companies sending out press releases to judge reaction by customers, or it can be used by politicians who deliberately leak information on a policy change under consideration. In politics trial balloons often take the form of an intentional news leak to assess public opinion.

They actually want us to “concern troll” them so thy can gauge how the activist base, the mainstream media and the political establishment will react. It’s not an act of “disloyalty” or a sign of hysteria to respond to these things any more than it is an act of disloyalty to respond to a poll or write a letter to the editor. It’s the point.

Relax. This is a normal part of politics.

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Hagen Daze

by digby

I am always a little bit skeptical of claims of sweeping change, but I have to say that I think this really is good news (made possible by Youtube and the ease of contributing online):

It’s no surprise to Steve Lowe that being an atheist is considered taboo.

But when the head of the Washington Area Secular Humanists saw Sen. Elizabeth Dole’s “godless” campaign ad, he did something he’d done only once before — he sent money to a political candidate.

Turns out, Sen.-elect Kay Hagan got 3,600 contributions within 48 hours of Dole airing of the controversial ad, which centered on Hagan’s attendance at a fund-raiser at the Boston home of someone active in the atheist community. The Democrat from Greensboro had immediately used the “godless” ad as an e-mail fund-raising tool, and it paid off.

“I told Hagan’s campaign, ‘This is the reason you’re getting money from me — I want you to know this is not hurting you, this has helped you,'” said Lowe said, who gave $50 to Hagan and called Dole, R-N.C., several times to complain.

The 3,600 donations came from a cross-section of society.

“We got responses from people who identify themselves as atheists and every religion under the sun who found that ad offensive,” said Hagan spokeswoman Colleen Flanagan, who said the campaign hadn’t yet calculated the dollar figure raised as a result.

This story about how the ad was created makes it clear why this happened:

Critics of the ad from the right and the left accused Dole of questioning Hagan’s faith. Hagan, a Sunday school teacher and elder in her Presbyterian church in Greensboro, called the ad “despicable” and ran her own ad accusing Dole of “bearing false witness against fellow Christians.”

But Davis insists the commercial was not designed to question Hagan’s faith. He said it was about her decision to attend the fundraiser.

The people who made that ad assumed that everyone believed it was outrageous to even be in the same room with people who don’t believe in God. What they didn’t understand was that there are many people, religious and atheist alike, who would see that ad and be disgusted, many of them probably because of the inflammatory ending which implied that Hagen was “godless.” But it also disgusted people who didn’t like the charge of guilt by association. Saying that someone shouldn’t even attend a fundraiser at the home of an atheist was a bridge too far for all but the most bigoted, fundamentalist types.

Hagen was smart enough to use her email list to solicit support and donations from people who don’t like smear merchants and bigots instead of those who do. Good for her.

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Baucus’ Move

by dday

There’s been a lot of ink spilled about the failure of Clinton-era health care reform, but certainly legislators inside the Democratic caucus, particularly Blue Dogs and moderates, had a hand in sinking the proposal. Maybe it was because they felt cut out of the negotiations, or because they just didn’t believe in the scope of the problem. Well, the best indication that 2008 is different is that Max Baucus, not a progressive, has boldly sketched out a universal coverage plan just a week after Barack Obama’s election. There is good reason to be skeptical, however.

Here’s the birds-eye view of Baucus’ plan:

Without waiting for President-elect Barack Obama, Senator Max Baucus, the chairman of the Finance Committee, will unveil a detailed blueprint on Wednesday to guarantee health insurance for all Americans by facilitating sales of private insurance, expanding Medicaid and Medicare, and requiring most employers to provide or pay for health benefits […]

The proposals are all broadly compatible with Mr. Obama’s campaign promises. But Mr. Baucus’s 35,000-word plan would go further than Mr. Obama’s in one respect, eventually requiring all people — not just children — to have coverage.

“Every American has a right to affordable, high-quality health care,” Mr. Baucus said. “Americans cannot wait any longer.” Far from being a distraction from efforts to revive the economy, he said, “health reform is an essential part of restoring America’s economy and maintaining our competitiveness.”

Mr. Baucus would create a nationwide marketplace, a “health insurance exchange,” where people could compare and buy insurance policies. The options would include private insurance policies and a new public plan similar to Medicare. Insurers could no longer deny coverage to people who had been sick. Congress would also limit insurers’ ability to charge higher premiums because of a person’s age or prior illness.

People would have a duty to obtain coverage when affordable options were available to all through employers or through the insurance exchange. This obligation “would be enforced, possibly through the tax system,” the plan says […]

In his plan, Mr. Baucus makes these proposals:

¶People age 55 to 64 should be able to buy Medicare coverage if they do not have access to a public insurance program or a group health plan. More than four million people in this age group are uninsured.

¶Medicaid would be available to everyone below the poverty level, providing at least seven million more people with access to the program. In many states, adults with incomes well below the poverty level — $17,600 for a family of three — are ineligible for Medicaid.

¶The State Children’s Health Insurance Program would be expanded to cover all uninsured youngsters in families with incomes at or below 250 percent of the poverty level ($44,000 for a family of three). This would raise the income limit in about half the states.

You can read the white paper here. This is basically the generic Democratic health care plan, not much different from what Obama campaigned on. Obviously, the big difference here is that the plan would include an individual mandate to buy health care, which was part of Hillary Clinton’s plan during the primary but not Obama’s. I don’t think Obama is unaware of that fact – his chief of staff during the general election campaign, James Messina, held the same position for Baucus. And Obama has said that Congress should take the lead on this issue.

And there would be a public option to compete with the insurance companies. Jon Cohn has this:

It look a lot like the plan Barack Obama touted on the campaign trail: Expanded Medicaid and S-CHIP for the poor; a pooling mechanism that allows individuals and the uninsured to buy coverage at group rates; a new public insurance plan, modeled vaguely on Medicare, that would be available to people buying coverage through the new pool; subsidies to offset the cost of insurance coupled with efforts to restrain the cost of medicine in the long term; and regulations that force insurers to sell to everybody, regardless of pre-existing condition.

I think a lot of this may be a matter of jurisdiction. If Baucus comes out first with a big proposal, it becomes the spine for the eventual legislation. The Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions would presumably have some control over this as well, and right now that’s chaired by Ted Kennedy. The good news is that Kennedy has come out with praise for Baucus’ effort. But we have no idea what’s going on behind the scenes, where it matters.

These sorts of jurisdictional battles can be damaging. And they have real effects. HELP is a liberal committee that could pass a fairly pure bill that might have problems on the floor. Finance has a moderate, bipartisan history and would probably pass a heavy, consensus-oriented bill that will be built to smoothly pass once brought to the floor. I’ve heard talk, in the past, of setting up a special Committee of some sort that would include members of HELP and Finance (and probably Clinton and some others) to build health reform, but so far as I know, that’s not gone anywhere. Then there’s the wild card of Kennedy’s health. WIthout Kennedy, HELP has nothing.

I’m not sure we should all cheer Baucus’ outline, although the addition of universality and the recognition that we need reform is very important. First, the good. Fixing health care is the fiscally conservative thing to do. The only entitlement program with the potential to bust the federal budget is Medicare, and that’s directly attributable to out-of-control costs. We currently spend more than any country in the industrialized world per capita on health care and achieve less results. The insurance and pharmaceutical industries have gamed this system for decades and the horror stories are legion. What’s more, business is coming to the realization that they can’t compete without government relieving the health care burden that makes it impossible for them to succeed. Despite the neo-Hooverist cant that Obama has to go slow on things like health care until the economy is sound, the fact is that expanding health care would provide an immediate stimulus for individuals and business. In addition, the unions are in full support of the measure and willing to spend on crafting public opinion. Politically speaking, those are a lot of allies in our corner. And by attacking this early, you get the sense of a “liberal shock doctrine,” with progressive ideas used to combat a looming crisis.

Now, the bad. Mandates can be a forced market for insurance companies – in fact, they favor it in exchange for health care reform. Baucus’ proposal is not a single-payer system. He came right out and said today that “I don’t think a single payer health care system makes sense in this country, we are America, we will come up with a uniquely American health care system that’s a combination of public and private.” That kind of exceptionalism just makes no sense against economic reality. If the insurance industry can pawn off the sick onto the public plans, those costs will rise while insurers take in record profits. There is a clause in the proposal that “Private insurers offering coverage through the (Health Insurance) Exchange would
be precluded from discrimination based on pre-existing conditions,” which is great, but insurers have used other means, like recsission (retroactively kicking people off the insurance rolls when they file a claim because they “lied on their forms”), to get out of paying for treatment. There also doesn’t appear to be any language that insurers must spend a significant portion of their premiums of actual care. As for the cost controls, there’s this clause, “The plan also considers careful reforms of medical malpractice laws that
could lower administrative costs and health spending throughout the system, while ensuring that injured patients are compensated fairly for their losses,” which sounds like another round of tort reform to me.

It’s hard to fully trust Baucus. He wrote the first Bush tax cut and he helped shepherd the Medicare Part D prescription drug bill which was a giveaway to industry. But Baucus also helped stop the Social Security privatization scheme and outflanked Republicans to get a Medicare fix passed this summer. His record is mixed at best, and that’s not the greatest profile to have when you’re the point man on universal health care:

His appetite for pork — and his skill at wresting it for his state — is so legendary that The Washington Post branded him a “High Plains grifter.” As one former Baucus staffer put it to me, “He’s like the city councilman for the state of Montana.” And, he’s well known for his tendency to break with the Democratic Party. In 2001, he was so instrumental in passing Bush’s tax cut that he stood behind the president at the bill-signing ceremony, a visual that featured prominently in his 2002 campaign ads. (In 2003, however, Baucus voted against the second round of tax cuts.) He voted to repeal the estate tax and earned a 70 percent approval rating from the Chamber of Commerce.

Also helpful is the fact that Baucus never enters an election underfunded. “One of the rewards I was told about before I selected the committee,” says Durenberger, “was someone said, ‘You have to run for re-election. This is the best place to raise money.'” Much of Baucus’ cash comes from the industries most affected by his committee’s legislation. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, this cycle has seen Baucus raise almost $800,000 from securities and investment firms, $565,000 from the insurance industry, and $462,000 from the pharmaceutical industry. Ninety percent of his funds have come from out of state. In total, he’s raised more than $10 million. (Some of which has gone to the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee; Baucus bragged to me that he had more than doubled the target contribution set by Sen. Chuck Schumer.) […]

When I meet with Baucus at the City Grille in Denver, he is eager to emphasize this chapter in his story. “When Reid put me in charge of stopping the privatization of Social Security, man that was fun. That was the right thing to do,” he says. “I remember President Bush came to Great Falls, Montana, and I set up a meeting with seniors at the same time, just across town, just right in his face. I relished the opportunity just to beat down privatization flatly and squarely.” His message is clear: I can fight.

Unbidden, Baucus then launches into a retelling of his fight in July to block the 10.6 percent cut in Medicare physician reimbursement. Here too, the message is clear. “I walked away from Senator Grassley,” he says. “I tend to work with Senator Grassley. But there comes a time when you just gotta say, ‘Sorry.’ These things get watered down too much, it’s just not right, so I just broke with him on that and pushed through a Medicare bill that finally got 60 votes. We had to work hard to get those 60, because Grassley didn’t agree, but that was the right thing to do. So when Ted Kennedy walked on the floor to cast the 60th vote, that’s a moment I’ll always treasure.”

I’ll take Baucus at his word that he is serious about the health care crisis. But a new reform must be the right kind of reform – it can’t be a watered-down giveaway to industry that keeps them alive for no significant reason. I recognize that conservatives have bashed “socialized medicine” for so long that there needs to be a lot of education around the issue before you frontally assault it. But if you waste this moment once again, and create a system that rewards insurers more than people, all of the trust built up in this historic campaign will fade away.

It’s crucial that we make perfectly clear that health care should be at the top of the agenda for the incoming Democratic majority. But it’s not enough to demand its presence – we have to actively shape the reform itself as well. This legislation is by no means final – in most areas it’s deliberately vague. Sen. Baucus is trying to control the pathway through which health care must travel. We the public must get a tollway on that path as well.

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Done Deal

by digby

It is an old truism that the Senate is the most exclusive club in the world and that all of its members believe they would make a better president than the current one. It’s been proven time and again that if a president wants an easy confirmation all he has to do is nominate one of the club members and that person will likely sail through. They do not like to see one of their own treated with anything but kid gloves — after all, that means it could happen to them too.

So, this doesn’t surprise me:

Several top Democratic senators have launched a behind-the-scenes effort to save Sen. Joe Lieberman’s chairmanship, despite calls from a Democratic base seeking retribution for Lieberman’s vocal support of John McCain’s presidential campaign.

Sens. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), Ken Salazar (D-Colo.), Tom Carper (D-Del.) and Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) are all involved in the effort, according to top Senate Democratic aides. These four senators — along with other Lieberman allies — are reaching out to the rest of the Democratic Senate caucus to try to ensure Lieberman survives a secret ballot vote on whether to strip him of his chairmanship of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

This effort, along with kind words from Majority Whip Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) last night about Lieberman, is giving the Connecticut senator some serious momentum heading into next week’s secret vote.

With Durbin behind it and his own statements about “not holding grudges” it seems obvious that Obama doesn’t think there’s a problem with Lieberman keeping his chairmanship either.

I think it’s also pretty clear that if anyone thought there would be any investigations into Bush administration atrocities or judiciary committee hearings into the abuses of the executive branch, they can forget it:

Also driving the effort to save Lieberman — an outcast with the progressive left — is the spirit behind Barack Obama’s victory.

“He’s got momentum, and we need to keep him in the caucus, and this fits into Barack Obama’s message of change and moving forward,” said one Senate Democratic aide familiar with discussions. “The message here is that we don’t want to start off a new era with retribution.”

The zombies are going to lick their wounds and take a rest. But they will live to fight another day.

Update: Jane Hamsher makes the case for why keeping Lieberman at Homeland Security is a huge mistake, pointing out that there is a simultaneous push to scale back plans on green technology among other things since there “isn’t enough money”:

Good governance is going to be about more than passing new legislation, it’s going to be about cleaning up the mess that has been made over the past 8 years. It’s going to be about weeding out the graft and greed and corruption that has caused American taxpayers to foot the bill for outrageous deficits. The military industrial complex has been bilking the Pentagon and the Department of Homeland Security with no-bid contracts for things nobody needs that we’re not allowed to know about for years now. The only way we’re going to find out about these abuses, and right then, is if our elected officials accept that responsibility.

Not only is Joe Lieberman not doing that job, as Chairman of the Department of Homeland Security Committee he’s keeping anyone else from doing it. He happily allowed a seat on the Homeland Security Advisory Council to be doled out as political patronage to a corrupt Bush Pioneer. He has no interest in cleaning up the mess he helped to make.

Is his continued happiness worth the cost of healthcare? Of the environment? Of putting Americans back to work? Of reducing our dependence on oil and getting the economy back on its feet?

My cynical quick answer is, of course, yes. There is no interest in revisiting any of this stuff. I’ll let you speculate as to why that might be.

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Seeking Input

by digby

The Obama transition office announced on Wednesday that the president-elect will send two representatives to meet with delegates attending the G-20 economic summit being held this weekend: former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, a Democrat, and former Congressman Jim Leach, a Republican. The pair, according to a press release, will hold “unofficial meetings to seek input from visiting delegations on behalf of the President-elect and Vice President-elect.” Afterward, Albright and Leach will brief Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Leach is both a curious and obvious choice. First, the obvious: he’s a Republican who led the Republicans for Obama effort during the presidential campaign. By calling on Leach, who had a long career in the House as a liberal GOPer, Obama can show he does believe in bipartisanship. Now the curious: during part of his stint in Congress, Leach chaired the House banking committee and shared responsibility for passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley legislation, which broke down the wall between commercial banks and investment banking.

Well, clearly he’s an expert.

Meanwhile:

Lobbyists Swarm the Treasury for Piece of Bailout Pie

When the government said it would spend $700 billion to rescue the nation’s financial industry, it seemed to be an ocean of money. But after one of the biggest lobbying free-for-alls in memory, it suddenly looks like a dwindling pool.

Many new supplicants are lining up for an infusion of capital as billions of dollars are channeled to other beneficiaries like the American International Group, and possibly soon American Express.

Of the initial $350 billion that Congress freed up, out of the $700 billion in bailout money contained in the law that passed last month, the Treasury Department has committed all but $60 billion. The shrinking pie — and the growing uncertainty over who qualifies — has thrown Washington’s legal and lobbying establishment into a mad scramble.

The Treasury Department is under siege by an army of hired guns for banks, savings and loan associations and insurers — as well as for improbable candidates like a Hispanic business group representing plumbing and home-heating specialists. That last group wants the Treasury to hire its members as contractors to take care of houses that the government may end up owning through buying distressed mortgages.

The lobbying frenzy worries many traditional bankers — the original targets of the rescue program — who fear that it could blur, or even undermine, the government’s effort to stabilize the financial system after its worst crisis since the 1930s.

I just don’t know what to say. It’s like a parody — unbelievable.

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FWIW
by digby

Almost everything we read right now is just crap, so take all this with a grain of salt. But it features a fun flow chart and at least explains where some of these names you hear being dropped are coming from. I have no idea if any of it is even remotely true or if it’s out there as a trial balloon or what. We’ll find out soon enough.

Obama transition team boss John Podesta threw open the curtains of his operation today to reporters, signaling that the president-elect wants to move quickly, but not hastily, to set up his government…Now the above transition flowchart.(PDF) It is making the rounds in Washington tonight, though our source would not reveal the actual source of the document. It lists suggestions for top cabinet posts, many of which have been rumored for days inside and outside the new administration. Of note: Al Gore might be under consideration for a “climate czar” position; Colin Powell could be education secretary; Howard Dean might get health and human services; Robert F. Kennedy Jr. might be the head of the Environmental Protection Agency; and Caroline Kennedy could be the ambassador to the United Nations. It’s just an unofficial guide but a fun one to follow.

They don’t mention that Colin Powell is also on the list for Sec Def and secretary of State, which I assume is just a joke.

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