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Month: July 2009

Exposing The Get

by digby

I’m with Atrios on this. I have heard some pooh poohing from reporters about The State’s expose of the media bigfoots (and smallfoots) jockeying for interviews with Mark Sanford, because it’s all so very common that nobody should even be interested in such a thing. But the truth is that most people are unaware of this aspect of journalism. When you see the backbiting and ego massaging, you see that it isn’t particularly pretty. More importantly, it shows that there is a “deal making” spirit among journalists that hints rather broadly at a willingness to at least slant things a certain way if not totally tailor their reporting to the specifications of the subject.

I think people want to believe that political journalism is adversarial — crusading muckrakers, speaking truth to power. But mostly it’s a sort of transactional business at best and symbiotic social solidarity at worst. (The Washington Post Pay2Play scandal incorporated all of that and more, putting actual money on the table, which was actually only a difference in degree not substance.)

People don’t really understand how it actually works, at least not in “serious” journalism. For whatever reason, The State decided to break ranks and expose the backstage wheeling and dealing among reporters and their subjects and good for them. Revealing these people whoring their journalistic integrity for “the get” is against the unspoken rules of the game — but it’s actual journalism.

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Throwing Elbows

by dday

I don’t know if the White House is still enamored with bipartisanship or not, but this was a nice little move against blowhard Jon Kyl and St. McCain:

On ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos this past Sunday, Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) argued that the $787 billion stimulus package “hasn’t helped yet. … What I proposed is, after you complete the contracts that are already committed, the things that are in the pipeline, stop it.”

The next day Arizona Republican Gov. Jan Brewer received letters from four Obama administration officials — Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan and Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar — pointing out the billions headed for Arizonans. LaHood wrote:

“The stimulus has been very effective in creating job opportunities throughout the country. However, if you prefer to forfeit the money we are making available to your state, as Senator Kyl suggests, please let me know.”

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) quickly fired back on Tuesday, saying that he “strongly support the comments of Senator Kyl and call[s] on the administration to retract its threat against the citizens of Arizona.”

What McCain calls a threat I call “asking the Governor of Arizona if she wants to do what her junior Senator suggests.” In other words, following right-wing policies is a threat against American citizens. Now I agree with that, but it’s funny for John McCain to agree.

If Republicans want to say that all government spending is bad they should be able to live with the consequences. But they never do, of course. Good for Obama and the White House for pushing back.

And here’s another Democrat, Bernie Sanders, forcing Republicans, including John McCain, to confront their own rhetoric.

Sanders: I don’t want to shock anybody here, and have people dashing out of the room, but the VA is a socialized health care system, right Mr. McCain? That’s what it is. That’s not public insurance, but socialized medicine.

McCain: Not exactly my description, but…

Sanders: OK. And, you know, the VA has its problems, we all know that. But by and large, I think it’s fair to say, when we go home, we talk to our veterans, you know what, they feel pretty good about the VA […] All right, that’s socialized medicine in the United States of America, anyone want to bring an amendment up to eliminate the VA? I would suggest the chairman accept that amendment. I don’t hear too many people.

Beautiful. The dirty secret about Republicans is that nobody wants to live in the type of world they’d construct. Not even them.

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Catching Up With Village Wisdom

by digby

Chris Matthews says that the President is out there selling his health care plan. Has anyone seen the president’s plan? I’m kind of curious to see what it is.

Chuck Todd (who Greenwald eviscerates today) came on to explain that Obama just wants to sign something and then he’ll spend the next six months convincing the people that the plan was actually health care reform. The president was meeting as they spoke with what some people call hard right Senators (he calls them” pragmatic conservatives”) Bob Corker and Saxby Chamblis. So maybe there’s hope of a biaprtisan understanding.

Matthews mused that if Obama would only reach out to Republicans instead of shunning them the way Teddy did with Carter and Clinton did with Jim Cooper, then he could get something passed that would be bipartisan, which everyone knows is really the only way to get something the public will accept. He wants Obama to get the Republicans to sign on so that he doesn’t have to go around selling his plan after the fact.

Meanwhile, here’s the man who not one elected member of the Republican party feels he or she can publicly criticize, earlier today:

And we had a call earlier, a drive-by call – wasn’t able to hang on. “Rush, you’re over-reading this. Obama doesn’t know what he’s doing. He’s over his head.” Well let me allow for that; somebody knows what they’re doing then. Rahm Emanuel, Soros, Axelrod, Mayor Daley who’s running his show. Somebody knows what they’re doing if he’s just a figure – I don’t care. My guess is he knows exactly what – he’s been raised by communists. Frank Davis, Saul Alinsky — his mentors — Reverend Wright. He’s been raised by people who despise free markets and capitalism. It’s unjust and it’s immoral and it’s unfair. I don’t care whether he’s a figurehead and they put the words for him on the prompter and his job is to go out and sell it and bone up on enough so that he can sound intelligent when he’s talking about — I don’t care. Somebody’s doing it.

Obama’s got a very tough sell on his hands, I’d say.

The House Republicans did offer a plan of their own that Obama could agree to if he wants to get their cooperation:

The four-page Republican health care outline lays out a plan that would allow states, associations and small businesses to pool together to offer health insurance. It would give tax credits to low and modest income Americans to help them buy health insurance. It would also let dependents under twenty-five stay on their parent’s health insurance.

And this came from the Senate Republicans:

“This supposed health care fix is a health care failure and a disaster for the American people,” Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., said. “We still have time to turn this process around instead of steamrolling our country into a sub-par government-run plan, but it will require serious action from Democrats and Republicans and a pledge to put politics aside.”

If Todd is right (which would be unprecedented) this would be what Obama would have to accept to get “pragmatic conservatives” like Chamblis and Corker to sign on. They will not agree to anything that restricts the insurance companies in any way or creates a true public option. And they might not even sign on to that if it meant they would be seen as “voting for health care reform” which among their followers is akin to voting against every American’s right to shoot first and ask questions later. But it’s the only chance there is of bipartisan health care reform — basically doing nothing.

Chris and Chuck have great health care themselves, so it isn’t a big problem for them. To them legislation is all a game, which is scored by how many members of the opposing team the president is able to convince to vote with him. The more Republican votes he gets, the bigger the win. By their reckoning, George W. Bush getting substantial Democratic votes for his worst decisions meant that he was a successful president. And if it weren’t for the strong disagreement of the American people, they would have scored him exactly that way.

The only thing that matters is if it works. Let’s hope that Obama’s vaunted pragmatism is applied to that reality instead of embracing the silly beltway establishment definition of success. Right now, bipartisanship is a recipe for failure.

Update: Should have included this, which indicates that the administration really is getting off the biaprtisan bandwagon. We think.
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Charts ‘N Graphs

by digby

So the Republicans are partying like its 1994 and have brought out one of their cute little charts to prove how horribly complicated the health reform plan is — so complicated that poor Real Murkans will be all lost and confused if they are forced to try to figure it out.

Luckily for us, the health wonks at TNR anticipated this little gambit and helpfully designed a chart depicting the wonderful, simple health care system we already have:

(click to enlarge)

Seriously, this makes health care reform look like what it actually is — streamlining the health care system, not complicating it. Indeed, it’s hard to imagine how it could be any more complicated.

To be sure, most people get their health insurance through their employer, which is a relatively painless transaction (until you get sick) but all that’s getting more complicated too with more deductibles, co-pays, hidden exclusions and the like. And if things don’t change, fewer and fewer people will be covered that way. It’s too expensive and cumbersome for many employers, especially in tough times. And if this job market continues, there will not be much incentive for employers to offer expensive benefits — there are plenty of people willing to take jobs on almost any basis. Beggars can’t be choosers.

It’s pretty amazing that the Republicans are reduced to producing a pale imitation of their 1994 anti-reform campaign, but it’s not surprising. It does, however, point out once more what a unique moment this is and why real reform simply has to pass. The Republicans are not going to be living this “Friends” re-run forever. At some point they will their act together (at least more than this pathetic showing.) And the economy is in such a state that many more people than usual are without or in fear of losing their health insurance. It’s a rare harmonic convergence of opportunity that the country cannot afford to waste.

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Forget Bipartisanship

by dday

The Senate HELP committee held four weeks of markup hearings on their health care bill. They accepted 160 Republican amendments. They allowed virtually every amendment, every concern of Republicans to a free and open vote. And in the end, the bill split entirely along party lines.

A Senate committee became the first congressional panel to advance healthcare reform legislation this year, marking a significant step toward the achievement of President Obama’s foremost domestic initiative.

On a party-line, 13-10 tally, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee voted to move its portion of the upper chamber’s healthcare reform legislation to the floor […]

HELP Committee ranking member Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.) slammed the bill and the partisan nature of the panel’s proceedings. “The bill lays the groundwork for a government takeover of healthcare,” Enzi said.

I don’t know how many times you have to say this. Republicans will not vote for health care reform. If so much as one of them does, I would be stunned. And it appears that the political staff in the White House understands this as well.

Both Axelrod and White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel said taking a partisan route to enacting major health-care legislation isn’t the president’s preferred choice. Yet in separate interviews, each man left that option open.

“We’d like to do it with the votes of members of both parties,” Axelrod said. “But the worst result would be to not get health-care reform done.” […]

Emanuel, making a theoretical case for a party-line vote, offered a definition of bipartisanship based not on roll-call votes but on whether Democrats have accepted Republican ideas during the process of negotiations.

He said Democrats already have passed that test, pointing to Republican amendments that the Democratic-controlled Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee has adopted.

“That’s a test of bipartisanship — whether you took ideas from both parties,” Emanuel said. “At the end of the day, the test isn’t whether they voted for it,” he said, referring to Republicans. “The test is whether the final product represented some of their ideas. And I think it will.”

Now Republicans will stick out their pinkies and rattle their teacups about the shocking partisanship on display, and whine about how they’ve been shut out of the process. But they would always say that, and predictably, it’s not true.

This is the right approach, and now the President needs to collect the votes necessary for passage. Organizing for America released an ad today that will air in key states, targeting moderate Democrats and a few moderate Republicans, and imploring them to get health care done. It has no specifics, but collects a series of health care horror stories and shows the broken nature of the current system.

This will be the toughest lift of the Obama Presidency, but if he really wants it, he can get it done.

…Here’s the acting chair of the HELP Committee, Chris Dodd, offering to accept 64 amendments by unanimous consent, but the Republican leader refuses to allow it in an effort to drag out the process. This is the minority’s entire raison d’etre on this bill.

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Not Your Grandfather’s Bigotry

by digby

Liberals who follow politics closely are no doubt disoriented to see someone as accomplished as Sonia Sotomayor attacked for being a bullying racist by a bunch of racist bullies, but I think we should probably get a grip and understand that this is what racism looks like in 2009. The assertion of white male privilege through whining victimization is one of the main ways it will be manifested going forward. And it’s quite effective — it appeals to people’s own hidden prejudices in a way that doesn’t socially embarrass them and allows them to use fairness as a weapon, which is a great relief to bigots who have been on the defensive for decades.

But it’s important to remind good people who are possible recruits to the reverse discrimination claims that the world is still overwhelmingly run by wealthy white men and any protestation that they need affirmative action is laughable. The day that they become a minority in positions of leadership to the same extent that women are today, despite being half the population, is the day I will become sympathetic to the cries of unfairness coming from wealthy, white conservatives. Until then, all this rending of garments over a Latina being “biased” sounds suspiciously like Scarlett O’Hara’s lady friends chattering nervously about the slaves getting uppity.

*And btw, I hope that the next time someone like David Broder tries to sell us on the idea that Huckleberry Graham is some kind of reasonable moderate, that his condescending sexist questioning yesterday is stuffed down his throat. Graham is a nasty little piece of work.

Update: Not that the mainstream media is any better. This tripe from the NY Times was sadly, written by a woman too. I guess we should just be grateful they didn’t decide to speculate on her sex life.

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Wingnuts Getting Restless

by digby

This week Newsweek published an essay by Rick Perlstein on the current state of the Republican Party. They chose him for the task for obvious reasons: he’s the foremost historian of the modern conservative movement. And the point he makes is an important one: the rift between the elites and the grassroots in the party — as represented by Sarah Palin — is very significant:

For decades it has remained a Republican article of faith: white, lower-middle-class, “heartland” masses, fundamentally socially conservative, were an inexhaustible electoral resource. So much so that Bill Clinton made re-earning their trust—he called them the Americans who “worked hard and played by the rules”—the central challenge in rebuilding Democratic fortunes in the 1990s. And in 2008 the somewhat aristocratic John McCain seemed to regard bringing these folks back into the Republican fold so imperative that he was moved to make the election’s most exciting strategic move: drafting churchgoing, gun-toting unknown Sarah Palin onto the GOP ticket.

But beneath the surface, some Republicans have been chafing at the ideological wages of right-wing populism. In intellectual circles, writers like David Brooks and Richard Brookhiser have argued for a conservatism inspired by Alexander Hamilton, the least democratic of the Founding Fathers, over one spiritually rooted in Thomas Jefferson, the most democratic. After Barack Obama’s victory, you heard thinkers like author and federal judge Richard Posner lamenting on his blog that “the face of the Republican Party had become Sarah Palin and Joe the Plumber. Conservative intellectuals had no party.”

Such discomfort has been dormant for some time. Under the influence of philosophical gurus like Leo Strauss and Irving Kristol, the sotto voce tradition arose of flattering the sort of voter who drove a pickup truck even if he wasn’t the sort you might want to socialize with. (Take, for example, “jes’ folks” Mark Sanford of South Carolina. Long before his jet-setting affair, after all, he met the jet-setting, Georgetown-educated Yankee investment banker who became Mrs. Sanford at a Hamptons beach party.) But Palin has raised the “class” question publicly among conservatives as seldom before.

He’s not making this up. You can read guys like Richard Posner, David Frum, Michael Barone and others’ writing on the subject all over the place. But for some reason, despite the fact that Perlstein is simply observing a phenomenon and putting it into historical context, the Falafel King and his little dog Bernie had had a complete meltdown over it:

So, the problem is that Newsweek didn’t reveal that Perlstein is a “far-left zealot.” Now there are those about whom who one might make such a claim, but Perlstein isn’t one of them. In fact, he has more friends on the intellectual right than Sarah Palin does.

Perlstein has always had a unique relationship with the conservative movement. They know he’s a liberal, but they respect his historical work because it’s very fair and accurate. And he’s always had respect for them as well — indeed, he has a rather strange kind of affinity for movement conservative intellectuals and a genuine affection for the rank and file on many levels — far more than most liberals do, including me. It’s a testament to the robotic, empty headedness of Billo and Goldberg that they don’t know this — and that they are unable to have a decent discussion of the phenomenon Perlstein describes without attacking the messenger and accusing Newsweek of palling around with far-left zealots.

O’Reilly is angry because Perlstein says in his piece that the conservative intellectuals have left the stage to the O’Reillys, Becks and Limbaughs, who were once confined to the far right fringe. (I’m sure O’Reilly likes to think of himself as one of the elite intellectuals, when he’s actually a highly paid sideshow act for the rubes.) But I suspect this truth is what got him (and Rupert Murdoch, I’m sure) fuming:

Why the change? For one thing, populism has never been an entirely comfortable fit for elite conservatives. Majorities of middle-class Americans can be persuaded to support tax cuts for the rich—even repeal of the estate tax—out of an optimism that they may eventually become rich themselves. But they are also susceptible to appeals like the one George Wallace made in the recession year of 1976. He built his campaign on both hellfire-and-brimstone moralism and a pledge of soak-the-rich tax policies. The elite conservative fears that the temptation to woo working-class voters will, you know, shade into policies that actually advantage the working class. That fear surfaced recently when Rush Limbaugh—whom Frum himself has singled out as one of the dangerous populists dragging the Republicans down—dismissed those who criticized the AIG bonuses as “peasants with their pitchforks” who must be silenced for the sake of conservative orthodoxy. But it’s harder to persuade the economically less fortunate to respect conservative orthodoxy during a recession. That’s starting to make some conservatives nervous.

Teabag parties are good fun and all as long as they stick to calling Obama Hitler and ranting about capntradetortreformsecretballot nonsense. But if the grassroots start to get really restless, they might just begin to question why they are following millionaire gasbags like O’Reilly, Limbaugh and Goldberg over a cliff in service of Goldman Sachs and Newscorp. Can’t have that. It’s very important that anyone who brings up this topic be relegated immediately to the category of far-left zealot, regardless of their academic standing or respect among conservative intellectuals. If O’Reilly’s avid listeners ever figured out who is actually screwing them, things could really get ugly. And he and his owners know it.

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Look Who’s Talking

by digby

With all the creepy, crypto racist Ron Fournier AP commentary about the Sotomayor hearings and this piece of fetid offal, this dispatch is a welcome bit of balance — and context:

WASHINGTON – Sen. Jeff Sessions, the Republican equating Sonia Sotomayor‘s supposed empathy with racial bias, was blocked from the federal bench himself two decades ago for making insensitive remarks about the Ku Klux Klan and the NAACP. The third-term Alabama senator, this week at least, is the face of a party without a clear leader. His role strikes some as hypocritical. But arguably, no one knows more intimately what a political minefield race has been for the GOP. Nominated by President Ronald Reagan to the federal bench, Sessions, then a federal prosecutor, was attacked by liberals for “gross insensitivity” on matters of race. Notably, he is reported to have joked that the KKK — a violent white supremacist group during much of its history — wouldn’t be so bad but for their use of marijuana. The NAACP and the American Civil Liberties Union, he allegedly said, were communist-inspired and tried to force civil rights down people’s throats. Sessions’ nomination never made it to the Senate floor. His home-state senator, the late Howell Heflin, voted against him. Flash forward two decades and Sessions, 62, is more than just a survivor; he was one of the biggest winners in the 2008 elections. Sixty-four percent of his state voted to return him to Washington in a year when the electorate roundly rejected Republicans nationally.[…]Sessions is the personification of a party with an overwhelmingly white, Southern, religious membership.

And if they let Sessions continue to be the voice of the party that’s all they’ll be for a long, long time.

Update: Media Matters points out that none of the major newspapers have noted that Sotomayor’s interlocutor on race has a truly ugly racist past.

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Big Release

by digby

As dday mentions in the previous post, the House has finally released its plan “America’s Affordable Health Choices Act” and, pending those issues dday talks about, according to Jonathan Cohn, it looks pretty good:

The three House committees writing health care legislation have just released the full text of their bill. And my immediate, admittedly tentative reaction is strongly positive. Once fully implemented, this reform plan will accomplish most of the goals on my mental checklist:

  • Generous subisidies, available to people making up to 400 percent of the poverty line
  • Expansion of Medicaid to cover people making less than 133 percent of the poverty line
  • Guarantees of solid benefits for everybody, with limits on out-of-pocket spending
  • Strong regulation of insurers, including requirements that insurers provide insurance to people with pre-existing conditions without higher rates
  • An individual mandate, so that everybody (or what passes for everybody in these discussions) gets into the system and assumes some financial responsibility
  • A public plan, one that appears to be strong, although I’ll reserve judgment on that until I hear from the experts
  • Choice of public and private plan, at first just for individuals and small businesses, but later for larger businesses and–possibly–eventually for everybody
  • Efforts at payment reform, if not necessarily as strong as they could be
  • Investment in primary care and prevention, which is not sexy but potentially important for general health .

Cohn says it takes longer to come fully online than he would have hoped, but that is likely due to the arbitrary budget cap.

The “public plan” is actually several public plans, all of which will be available as soon as the plan is operational. (This should not be confused with the HCAN requirement of “available on day one” which was in response to the trigger option, which is not included. It was never intended to be a requirement that everyone be covered the day the bill was signed, which would be physically impossible.)

As dday points out, this plan is self-financing, so any nonsense about “taxpayers being forced to pay for things they don’t believe in” (in my case, paying for John Ensign’s Viagra) must be ignored. Premiums will pay for this, so if you don’t like what it covers, don’t buy it.

I’ll look forward to reading everyone’s impressions of the bill as the wonks get their grubby paws on it. But remember, it’s only step one. We stil have to see what emerges from the House of Lords. And then the games really begin.

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Ordinary Patriotism

by digby

Watching the All Star game opening ceremony, I was struck by the fact that for the first time since 9/11, we didn’t have an exclusively martial pageant at one of these events. Instead, the theme was all about ordinary Americans giving back and the flag was put to use as a symbol of something other than war. They even said “thank you for your service” to people who aren’t in the military. The soldiers were there, of course, holding the flag, and a big stealth bomber flew overhead when they sang the National Anthem, but the program wasn’t a non-stop battle cry like it has been.

It’s a small thing, but I’m glad to see patriotism becoming more broadly defined again. It’s a good sign that we are finally coming back down to earth a little bit.

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