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Month: April 2012

Goldilocks and the Randroids

Goldilocks and the Randroids

by digby

Ok, this is certainly the strangest post of the year:

After hearing President Obama’s hilarious diatribe against the Ryan budget — a timid document that adds trillions to the deficit, takes a generation to bring the federal budget into balance, and makes zero effort to cancel out the innumerable departments, agencies, and programs that have exploded the federal micromanagement of American life — I have a question for the community-organizer-in-chief.

In light of his froth over this Ryanesque scourge of “Social Darwinism,” does the president favor repealing the laws that prohibit Americans from feeding the animals at the national parks that Obama risibly accuses Representative Ryan of trying to shut down?

You’ve probably seen the signs — they befoul the scenery throughout the Grand Canyon, Acadia, Yellowstone, the Everglades, Yosemite, etc. No food for the fauna. The Darwinists at the U.S. Park Service claim that animals must learn to fend for themselves if they are to survive and thrive. When you feed animals, the bureaucrats coldly explain, they become dependents and no longer function as nature intends. They lose their capacity to make their own way. They fill up on foods that are harmful to their digestive systems. There is a dulling of the instincts that help wildlife avoid danger — they lose the fear of humans and cars, leading many of them to be killed while expecting to find food on the roadside. Some signs are downright mean in admonishing: “A fed animal is a dead animal.”

Mr. President, where is the empathy?

This isn’t the first time a right winger has compared welfare recipients to animals, of course. Or Democratic politicians, for that matter. Even so, I think we can all agree that Andrew McCarthy needs some help with his metaphors.

But I was intrigued by his characterization of the Ryan budget as:

“a timid document that adds trillions to the deficit, takes a generation to bring the federal budget into balance, and makes zero effort to cancel out the innumerable departments, agencies, and programs that have exploded the federal micromanagement of American life.”

Anyone want to make book on how long before Paul Ryan is designated a moderate/centrist by the Village media? After all, the left thinks he’s too hot and now the right thinks he’s too cold.

So he must be juuuuust right.

Update: Oopsie. Rush needs to send Andrew McCarthy a royalty check:

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Using their rhetoric: a primer

Using their rhetoric: a primer

by digby

During the 2008 campaign Rick Perlstein offered some important advice to Democrats on how to steal GOP rhetoric, advice that they have, so far, failed to heed:

Reagan didn’t praise FDR. He stole from him. As in, “This generation has a rendez vous with destiny.” We should steal from Reagan too. As in: “There is no left and right. Only up or down.” He would then use that intro to frame some outrageously right-wing notion as “common sense.” We should do the same for left-wing ideas.

Also, use Reagan to mess with righties’ heads. As in: I agree we need a Reaganite foreign policy. When Reagan realized we were caught in the crossfire of a religious civil war in Lebanon, he got the hell out. He would have done the same thing in Iraq. The rule isn’t “never say anything nice about Reagan.” It’s “use Reagan for progressive ends.”

I couldn’t help thinking about this when I heard Obama’s complaint about “unelected judges” and judicial activism. I think it’s clever to turn their rhetoric around on them, but you have to recognize that these are not people who recognize hypocrisy. Therefore, you have to be more explicit and directly attribute your remarks to one of their heroes — or the Republican party itself.

For instance, he could have said:

“As Ronald Reagan said back in 1986, ‘we’ve had too many examples in recent years of courts and judges legislating. They’re not interpreting what the law says. In too many instances they have been actually legislating by legal decree what they think the law should be.’ I agree with Ronald Reagan and I’m concerned they’re going to do just that with the Affordable Care Act.”

Or,

“In 2008, my opponent and I didn’t agree on many things. But when it comes to this particular issue, I agree with John McCain when he said,”With a presumption that would have amazed the framers of our Constitution, and legal reasoning that would have mystified them, federal judges today issue rulings and opinions on policy questions that should be decided democratically. Assured of lifetime tenures, these judges show little regard for the authority of the president, the Congress, and the states. They display even less interest in the will of the people.”

Now, I realize that’s a mouthful so maybe it wouldn’t have worked. But there are decades worth of quotes he could have used.

At the very least, Democratic operatives should be passing out copies of the Republican Party platforms whenever any right winger has the nerve to clutch his pearls and demand that the president apologize for offending the great majesty and dignity of the Court. Here are a few worth quoting:

1984 Platform:

We commend the President for appointing federal judges committed to the rights of law-abiding citizens and traditional family values. We share the public’s dissatisfaction with an elitist and unresponsive federal judiciary. If our legal institutions are to regain respect, they must respect the people’s legitimate interests in a stable, orderly society. In his second term, President Reagan will continue to appoint Supreme Court and other federal judges who share
our commitment to judicial restraint.

My stars! Fetch me the smellin’ salts Miss Mellie.

1996 Platform:

Some members of the federal judiciary…make up laws and invent new rights as they go along, arrogating to themselves powers King George III never dared to exercise. They free vicious criminals, pamper felons in prison, frivolously overturn State laws enacted by citizen referenda.

The federal judiciary, including the U.S. Supreme Court, has overstepped its authority under the Constitution. It has usurped the right of citizen legislators and popularly elected executives to make law by declaring duly enacted laws to be “unconstitutional” through the misapplication of the principle of judicial review. Any other role for the judiciary, especially when personal preferences masquerade as interpreting the law, is fundamentally at odds with our system of government in which the people and their representatives decide issues great and small.

I’m fainting …

2004 Platform:

In the federal courts, scores of judges with activist backgrounds in the hard-left now have lifetime tenure. Recent events have made it clear that these judges threaten America’s dearest institutions and our very way of life. The Pledge of Allegiance has already been invalidated by the courts once, and the Supreme Court’s ruling has left the Pledge in danger of being struck down again—not because the American people have rejected it and the values that it embodies, but because a handful of activist judges threaten to overturn commonsense and tradition…We believe that the self-proclaimed supremacy of these judicial activists is antithetical to the democratic ideals on which our nation was founded.

I don’t know about you, but those all seem to me to be an attack on the legitimacy of the federal courts, something which was condemned as nearly treasonous and unAmerican by right wingers this week. I suspect one of the reasons they reacted so strongly (other than team solidarity) is that on some level they know that when the president uttered the words “judicial activism” and “unelected judges” it triggered a reflexive recognition on the part of casual observers who don’t know the details.

In that respect, these conservatives are victims of their own success. By sheer repetition, they’ve managed to indoctrinate a good portion of the population to instantly loathe anything associated with those phrases. Obama uttering them probably caused at least some dissonance among their faithful, although they have no problem rejecting anything that he says. But it’s the busy, average voter that could “take that the wrong way” and assume that Obama is just talking common sense. After all, doesn’t “everybody” know that the judiciary is filled with judicial activists who are legislating from the bench? Certainly, that’s all we’ve been hearing from Republicans for the past 40 years.

Update: And yes, there is this. They just can’t help themselves.
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Spitzer on the JOBS bill

Spitzer on the JOBS bill

by digby

I realize it’s fashionable to treat Eliot Spitzer like a clown because he was caught with his pants down (or rather more accurately, Wall Street arranged for him to be caught with his pants down.) Yes, predictable jokes about his personal sexual proclivities are hilarious and I grant that his hypocrisy as Attorney General with respect to prostitution does not reflect well on him. But I think it’s probably a mistake to ignore his history as the first (and practically only) Attorney General who really took on the banks.

Perhaps the following rant is lacking in entertainment value, but it’s good that somebody says it nonetheless:

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Let’s hope we see more of this, by @DavidOAtkins

Let’s hope we see more of this

by David Atkins

If his speech to the Associated Press yesterday is any indication, the President is starting to figure out that the Republicans are simply never going to work with him in any way, shape or form, and that the press is heavily to blame for allowing them to get away with it. I know it’s probably false hope, but it might just mean that there has started to be an awakening on the part of the President and his advisers that they’re living in a nakedly partisan world, and that they might as well recognize and embrace the fact that partisanship cannot be transcended at the federal level because one side has gone totally berserk, and the theoretical media constructs that are supposed to punish the guilty party have utterly failed to do their job.

It was a mostly combative and refreshingly partisan speech, but I think the most eye-opening element came when the President defended his own centrist record to the press with some exasperation. Consider this bit from the Q&A section:

MR. SINGLETON: Thank you, Mr. President. We appreciate so much you being with us today. I have some questions from the audience, which I will ask — and I’ll be more careful than I was last time I did this.

Republicans have been sharply critical of your budget ideas as well. What can you say to the Americans who just want both sides to stop fighting and get some work done on their behalf?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I completely understand the American people’s frustrations, because the truth is that these are eminently solvable problems. I know that Christine Lagarde is here from the IMF, and she’s looking at the books of a lot of other countries around the world. The kinds of challenges they face fiscally are so much more severe than anything that we confront — if we make some sensible decisions.

So the American people’s impulses are absolutely right. These are solvable problems if people of good faith came together and were willing to compromise. The challenge we have right now is that we have on one side, a party that will brook no compromise. And this is not just my assertion. We had presidential candidates who stood on a stage and were asked, “Would you accept a budget package, a deficit reduction plan, that involved $10 of cuts for every dollar in revenue increases?” Ten-to-one ratio of spending cuts to revenue. Not one of them raised their hand.

Think about that. Ronald Reagan, who, as I recall, is not accused of being a tax-and-spend socialist, understood repeatedly that when the deficit started to get out of control, that for him to make a deal he would have to propose both spending cuts and tax increases. Did it multiple times. He could not get through a Republican primary today.

So let’s look at Bowles-Simpson. Essentially, my differences with Bowles-Simpson were I actually proposed less revenue and slightly lower defense spending cuts. The Republicans want to increase defense spending and take in no revenue, which makes it impossible to balance the deficit under the terms that Bowles-Simpson laid out — unless you essentially eliminate discretionary spending. You don’t just cut discretionary spending. Everything we think of as being pretty important — from education to basic science and research to transportation spending to national parks to environmental protection — we’d essentially have to eliminate.

I guess another way of thinking about this is — and this bears on your reporting. I think that there is oftentimes the impulse to suggest that if the two parties are disagreeing, then they’re equally at fault and the truth lies somewhere in the middle, and an equivalence is presented — which reinforces I think people’s cynicism about Washington generally. This is not one of those situations where there’s an equivalence. I’ve got some of the most liberal Democrats in Congress who were prepared to make significant changes to entitlements that go against their political interests, and who said they were willing to do it. And we couldn’t get a Republican to stand up and say, we’ll raise some revenue, or even to suggest that we won’t give more tax cuts to people who don’t need them.

And so I think it’s important to put the current debate in some historical context. It’s not just true, by the way, of the budget. It’s true of a lot of the debates that we’re having out here.

Cap and trade was originally proposed by conservatives and Republicans as a market-based solution to solving environmental problems. The first President to talk about cap and trade was George H.W. Bush. Now you’ve got the other party essentially saying we shouldn’t even be thinking about environmental protection; let’s gut the EPA.

Health care, which is in the news right now — there’s a reason why there’s a little bit of confusion in the Republican primary about health care and the individual mandate since it originated as a conservative idea to preserve the private marketplace in health care while still assuring that everybody got covered, in contrast to a single-payer plan. Now, suddenly, this is some socialist overreach.

So as all of you are doing your reporting, I think it’s important to remember that the positions I’m taking now on the budget and a host of other issues, if we had been having this discussion 20 years ago, or even 15 years ago, would have been considered squarely centrist positions. What’s changed is the center of the Republican Party. And that’s certainly true with the budget.

Let’s ignore the argument over whether centrism is the best approach. It isn’t, of course, but that’s not the point. The point is that the President is finally coming to terms with the fact that he’s not about to get credit for it. Which led in turn to this response to the next question about the deficit (notice how obsessed the press seems to be with the deficit?):

I said this a few months after I was elected at the first G20 summit. I said the days when Americans using their credit cards and home equity loans finance the rest of the world’s growth by taking in imports from every place else — those days are over. On the other hand, we continue to be a extraordinarily important market and foundation for global economic growth.

We do have to take care of our deficits. I think Christine has spoken before, and I think most economists would argue as well, that the challenge when it comes to our deficits is not short-term discretionary spending, which is manageable. As I said before and I want to repeat, as a percentage of our GDP, our discretionary spending — all the things that the Republicans are proposing cutting — is actually lower than it’s been since Dwight Eisenhower. There has not been some massive expansion of social programs, programs that help the poor, environmental programs, education programs. That’s not our problem.

Our problem is that our revenue has dropped down to between 15 and 16 percent — far lower than it has been historically, certainly far lower than it was under Ronald Reagan — at the same time as our health care costs have surged, and our demographics mean that there is more and more pressure being placed on financing our Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security programs.

So at a time when the recovery is still gaining steam, and unemployment is still very high, the solution should be pretty apparent. And that is even as we continue to make investments in growth today — for example, putting some of our construction workers back to work rebuilding schools and roads and bridges, or helping states to rehire teachers at a time when schools are having a huge difficulty retaining quality teachers in the classroom — all of which would benefit our economy, we focus on a long-term plan to stabilize our revenues at a responsible level and to deal with our health care programs in a responsible way. And that’s exactly what I’m proposing.

And what we’ve proposed is let’s go back, for folks who are making more than $250,000 a year, to levels that were in place during the Clinton era, when wealthy people were doing just fine, and the economy was growing a lot stronger than it did after they were cut. And let’s take on Medicare and Medicaid in a serious way — which is not just a matter of taking those costs off the books, off the federal books, and pushing them onto individual seniors, but let’s actually reduce health care costs. Because we spend more on health care with not as good outcomes as any other advanced, developed nation on Earth.

And that would seem to be a sensible proposal. The problem right now is not the technical means to solve it. The problem is our politics. And that’s part of what this election and what this debate will need to be about, is, are we, as a country, willing to get back to common-sense, balanced, fair solutions that encourage our long-term economic growth and stabilize our budget. And it can be done.

One last point I want to make, Dean, that I think is important, because it goes to the growth issue. If state and local government hiring were basically on par to what our current recovery — on par to past recoveries, the unemployment rate would probably be about a point lower than it is right now. If the construction industry were going through what we normally go through, that would be another point lower. The challenge we have right now — part of the challenge we have in terms of growth has to do with the very specific issues of huge cuts in state and local government, and the housing market still recovering from this massive bubble. And that — those two things are huge headwinds in terms of growth.

I say this because if we, for example, put some of those construction workers back to work, or we put some of those teachers back in the classroom, that could actually help create the kind of virtuous cycle that would bring in more revenues just because of economic growth, would benefit the private sector in significant ways. And that could help contribute to deficit reduction in the short term, even as we still have to do these important changes to our health care programs over the long term.

If these words are put into action during a second term, it may well be that a disillusioned and chastened President Obama may be the President in his second term that many of us hoped he would be in his first. It’s not terribly likely, admittedly, but one can certainly hope. The positive signs are there.

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Science for sociopaths

Science for sociopaths

by digby

I think the worst part of this horrible story is that these blithering idiots use the word “science” to bolster their hideous cruelty. It’s bad enough that they forced this woman to give birth to her dying child out of insane zealotry, but that they have the utter gall to call the medical diagnosis into question is almost too much to take.

Danielle Deaver was 22 weeks pregnant when her water broke and doctors gave her a devastating prognosis: With undeveloped lungs, the baby likely would never survive outside the womb, and because all the amniotic fluid had drained, the tiny growing fetus slowly would be crushed by the uterus walls.

“What we learned from the perinatologist was that because there was no cushion, she couldn’t move her arms and legs because of contractures,” said Deaver, a 34-year-old nurse from Grand Isle, Neb. “And her face and head would be deformed because the uterus pushed down so hard.”

Just one month earlier, Nebraska had enacted the nation’s first fetal pain legislation, banning abortions after 20 weeks gestation. So the Deavers had to wait more than a week to deliver baby Elizabeth, who died after just 15 minutes.

“They could do nothing to make it better but tell us to wait, which made it worse,” Danielle Deaver said. “Every time I felt movement, I was terrified she was hurting and trying to push the uterus away from her.”

Horrifying, right? Well, not according to this awful person from Oklahoma, who knows better:

Taking the lead from Nebraska this week, the Oklahoma House of Representatives voted 94 to 2 to similarly ban abortion later than 20 weeks of gestation in what it called the “Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act.” Bill 1888 will go on to the state Senate.

“It’s a very sad situation all around,” said Rep. Pam Peterson, who sponsored the Oklahoma bill. “It’s about the humanness. These unborn babies are in excruciating pain in the abortion process at 20 weeks.”We know they feel pain early on — there is medical evidence.”

She also said that the fact that Deaver’s baby was reported by her mother as “perfect and beautiful in her arms” showed the “discrepancy” in the medical advice she was given that the skull would have been crushed.

“Thirty-eight years ago when Roe v. Wade passed, we didn’t have the scientific evidence, but now this bill has caught up with the science,” said Peterson. “Back in 1973, we were told they were a clump of cells and we didn’t know the difference. Now we do fetal surgery and give anesthetics.

Keep in mind that this woman is a complete idiot and her scientific misinformation is propaganda. But worse than that is the fact that she would second guess real doctors about this diagnosis — as well as the mother who was terrified that she was causing the terminally ill fetus pain! Evidently, the only thing this terrible woman from Oklahoma believes causes fetal pain is abortion.

Literally, nothing matters but forcing women to go through childbirth even if, according to their own beliefs, the fetus could be in terrible pain until such time as the woman delivers the dying child. How sick and twisted can these people get?

Lucky for them their fetal pain propaganda isn’t true. But if any of their religious beliefs are true, they’re still going to hell for what they’re putting these families through.

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Bipartisan authority: *everybody* wants a strip search

Bipartisan authority

by digby

Greenwald points out a little known detail about the strip search decision:

What virtually none of this anti-Florence commentary mentioned, though, was that the Obama DOJ formally urged the Court to reach the conclusion it reached. While the Obama administration and court conservatives have been at odds in a handful of high-profile cases (most notably Citizens United and the health care law), this is yet another case, in a long line, where the Obama administration was able to have its preferred policies judicially endorsed by getting right-wing judges to embrace them:

In 1979, the Supreme Court ruled that in the interest of security, prisons could conduct visual body cavity searches of all detainees after they had contact with outsiders. For years after that ruling, lower courts ruled that the prison had to have a reasonable suspicion that the arrestee was concealing contraband before subjecting him to a strip search upon entering the facility.

But in recent years, some courts have begun to allow a blanket policy to strip search all arrestees.

The Obama administration is siding with the prisons in the case and urging the court to allow a blanket policy for all inmates set to enter the general prison population.

“When you have a rule that treats everyone the same,” Justice Department lawyer Nicole A. Saharsky argued, “you don’t have folks that are singled out. You don’t have any security gaps.”

As The Guardian said yesterday: “The decision was a victory for the jails and for the Obama administration, which argued for an across-the-board rule allowing strip-searches of all those entering the general jail population, even those arrested on minor offenses.”

Oh hell, I give up.

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Women don’t care about contraception

Women don’t care about contraception

by digby

Nikki Haley wants to keep the government out of the bedroom. Or something:

“All of my policy is not based on a label,” Haley remarked. “It’s based on what I’ve lived and what I know: Women don’t care about contraception. They care about jobs and the economy and raising their families and all of those things.”

“We care about contraception too,” co-host Joy Behar interrupted.

“But that’s not the only thing they care about,” Haley replied, slightly revising her earlier assertion. “The media wants to talk about contraception. … While we care about contraception, let’s be clear. All we’re saying is we don’t want government to mandate when we have to have it and when we don’t. We want to be able to make that decision.”

Well hell, why didn’t anyone tell me that the government was going to mandate when women had to have contraception and when they didn’t? That would be terrible.

Here I thought that contraception only had to be offered at no cost as part of insurance policies’ preventive care package. I should have known the Obamacommies wanted the government to intrude into the intimate details of women’s reproductive lives. Thank God the social conservatives are out there fighting against that. Oh wait …

Update: Nicole Belle has the video and more.

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Blue Dog Rebranding, by @DavidOAtkins

Blue Dog Rebranding

by David Atkins

Oh how cute! The Blue Dogs are starting to realize that their brand might be getting a little tarnished, so they’re remaking themselves. Behold: The “Blue Dog Research Forum” is now…Center Forward.

They have the following quote prominently displayed on their site:

America is neither right nor left. Republican nor Democrat. Red nor blue. The solutions that will move us forward come from where they always have – the center.

Most political agendas engage in a level of historical revisionism, but this one takes some serious chutzpah. The level of blind mythmaking in this comically inaccurate statement is breathtaking.

It was radical revolutionaries who helped birth this nation and free it from the British crown. It was centrists who urged on the disastrous compromises on slavery prior to the Civil War, including and especially the Compromise of 1850. It was Centrists who encouraged Lincoln to simply allow the South to secede. It was Lincoln who took the radical step of insisting on fighting the war and emancipating the slaves.

Social Security and the New Deal were not centrist legislation, nor was much of anything FDR did centrist. The one major “centrist” move FDR made to appease the Blue Dogs of his day was the attempt to close the deficit in 1937, and it was a disaster.

It was radicals who earned women the right to vote, radicals like Rosa Parks who helped end Jim Crow and segregation, radicals who earned 18-year-olds the right to vote, and radicals who pushed through Medicare. And today, it is radicals who have fought and clawed their way to allow LGBT Americans to live relatively openly and share in most of the same civil rights as their fellow straight Americans.

On the conservative side of the aisle, it was not the Eisenhower and Rockefeller Republicans who were responsible for the movement that begat Ronald Reagan, but rather the insurgent and radical conservatives of the Goldwater stripe. As a progressive, I view the Reagan ascendancy as a very negative thing, but insofar as any of the Reagan mythology is to be believed, it wasn’t centrists who created him, but conservative revolutionaries.

On the Affordable Care Act, it was centrists like Baucus and Nelson who delayed and stalled the passage of the bill, demanding bribes in exchange for their votes and attempting futilely to earn the support of even of a few Republicans even as the nature of the bill shifted further and further to the right.

In fact, centrists have almost never helped create the solutions that have moved us forward in our nation’s history. They have either been irrelevant, or actively harmful. There is nothing honorable or noble about the centrist position in American politics, partly because the system is intrinsically so resistant to change and easily corruptible that radicals are the only ones who are ever able to move things in any direction except in favor of moneyed interests.

Which leads us to the first issue listed in the Center Forward Solution Center: opposition to greater taxes on the wealthy.

Politicians often cite the fact that Warren Buffet’s secretary pays a lower effective tax rate than he does as Exhibit A on why the tax code is unfair. But as our economy claws its way back from a recession does it make sense to target one particular group of taxpayers with a tax increase? In this series, we examine opinions from the center left and right on how we can make our tax code fairer without impeding economic growth.

Hmmmm…I wonder where the center of American public opinion is on this question. Oh, right:

Americans favor raising taxes on the wealthy to pay for President Barack Obama’s proposed jobs plan by a margin of two-to-one, a new Gallup poll Wednesday says.

Sixty-six percent of respondents said that they backed increasing income taxes on individuals earning over $200,000 and families earning at least $250,000, while only 32 percent were opposed.

An even greater majority thought that taxes should be raised on corporations, with 70 percent of respondents favoring hiking taxes on corporations by eliminating tax deductions and 26 percent were opposed.

Centrism, ladies and gentlemen. It has little to with what the American people want or need, or with the solutions that make sense and have worked in the past. It has everything to do with what the narrow band of people who happen to fall in between the modern Democratic and Republicans political parties happen to think Americans deserve. And it’s just an amazing coincidence that it happens to align with the interests of the nation’s most well-off.

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The voice of progressivism

The voice of progressivism

by digby

From Howie:

Blue America was the first national group to endorse Ilya Sheyman and we were sad that the DCCC and other DC conservatives were able beat him in the primary last month. But we were as happy as can be that just to the southeast of his district, another outstanding movement progressive, Dr. David Gill, turned back those same forces and triumphed the same night that Ilya faltered. Hopefully Ilya will run again and win– and be greeted on the steps of Congress by David Gill, who has run several times already. Sometimes, as we saw with Donna Edwards and Alan Grayson, it takes more than one try.

Illinois’ newly redrawn 13th congressional district is very different from the one Dr. Gill has run in previously. It’s a D+1 district that voted for Obama by 11 points. But his opponent, conservative Republican Tim Johnson, David told us, “is still voting like he’s in his old 60-40 Republican district. He’s now voted for the extreme Ryan plan to end Medicare twice. He refused last summer to vote to raise the debt ceiling, an action that was necessary because of his votes for Bush’s wars and tax cuts for the rich. He’s been in Congress for six terms and he’s a 40-year politician. He’s out of touch with the district.”

David is a 20 year member of Physicians For a Single Health Payer Plan. “I became interested in running because of what I see on a daily basis in the health care industry as an ER doctor. We have a two-tiered system of access to healthcare in America and, frankly, the American health care system is failing a lot of people.” But if health care was got him interested in running originally, he’s as far from a one-issue candidate as you’ll find.

“Health care is one symptom of many. There are many areas impacted by our corporate governance. Retirement security, jobs, healthcare, education and restoring the health of our planet are all areas where private interests are trumping the public good in Congress. People get to Washington, spend too much time around corporate lobbyists and suddenly forget that Social Security is in better financial health than the Federal budget that’s been decimated by Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest. They forget that Climate Change is the biggest crisis we are facing today, not the deficit. They forget that we have a jobs crisis to fix. They’ve forgotten that government should be working to solve problems for regular people.”

And David was an outspoken opponent of the war in Iraq. He’s also opposed to the continued occupation of Afghanistan. “I’ve come to the realization the past few years that our presence in Afghanistan has outlived its usefulness. It’s time to end our mission there and get our troops out of harm’s way as soon as possible.”

He can win this race and bring a healthy dose of Prairie State populism to Washington.[With our help.] David just defeated a DCCC and New Democrat-backed congressional challenger who outspent him 5-1. He ran a strictly grassroots, people-powered campaign and he won without compromising his progressive values. as you can see in the video above. “I was willing to stand up and fight back against the Republican War on Women and special interest-domination of Congress and the residents of IL-13 responded and were willing to put their trust in me.”

David joined Howie for a live chat earlier today at Crooks and Liars. Here’s a sample of what a winning progressive sounds like:

Howie: The Beltway conventional wisdom is that it’s better to run as a “moderate”– by which they mean a conservative– in a swing district like IL-13. They seem to think voters aren’t ready for progressive solutions that have been caused by conservative policies. And you seem to embody a whole package of progressive solutions and from what I’m reading and hearing you’re campaigning hard on all the tough topics of the day that the DCCC tells their candidates to run away from. Forget for a moment Democratic voters who will vote for the Democratic candidate and Republican voters who will vote for the Republican candidate. Let’s just look at independents and swing voters. You’re meeting them and talking with them. Are they ready for your messages about hot social issues and about accountability for Wall Street crooks and the even issues that fly in the face of the official Democratic Party line. I’ve seen on your campaign website, for example, that you don’t favor the corporate trade policies that Democrats like Clinton and Obama push but that you’re an advocate for fair trade over so-called “free” trade. Do swing voters understand that kind of stuff?

David Gill: One of the big reasons Republicans won the House in 2010 was the ‘Mediscare’ Ads they ran telling seniors that the Affordable Care Act was going to cut their Medicare. Tim Johnson has now voted twice for the extreme Ryan Plan to end Medicare as we know it. Swing voters in this district, not just Democrats, want to know that Medicare and Social Security will be there for them and that politicians won’t take it away. As I recently told Bernie Schoenberg of the State Journal-Register (Springfield), my health care plan for “Improved Medicare For All” would be a way for people to have better health care, while also hanging on to more of their money by stopping the flow of 40 percent of our health care dollars into a black pit known as the private health insurance industry. And so, I don’t consider that an extremely progressive position. I consider it a people-oriented position.

If you saw the Gallup poll released yesterday, you saw Romney absolutely tanking with women in swing states. That’s no surprise to us. There’s a perception in Washington that women outside ‘Blue’ areas feel
differently about their right to contraception and women’s reproductive health services. They don’t. I think that in particular Tim Johnson’s participation in the Republican War on Women is going to really motivate previously apathetic women on the large college campuses (Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Springfield, Illinois State, Southern Illinois at Edwardsville) in this district to vote him out.

This district has a history of electing tough, independent-minded progressives. A good chunk of it was in the old IL-17, and was represented by Lane Evans and Phil Hare for many years. People I talk to at diners and county fairs nod in approval when I tell them that they may not all ways agree with me, but they’ll always know where I stand.

As far as how swing voters’ reaction to trade policy, in the very center of this district is Decatur, a national focal point of labor unrest in the 1990s. This district has seen its share of factory closures and layoffs and it’s all too aware of the effect that corporate free trade policies have had. From the reaction I’ve gotten from average voters, I expect my support for working people in this district to be a wedge issue that takes votes away from Tom Johnson and not a liability. People are fed up with Washington and people are fed up with Wall Street.

Read the whole chat if you have the chance. He’s a very smart candidate who’s thought through all these issues. The Party machine is unhappy that he won, of course, and are dong what they can to sow destructive dissent in the district. At this point I have to believe they’d rather lose the majority than back a progressive who doesn’t toe their line. (At the very least I have to question their arrogant assumption that they know best who can beat Republicans. If they were that good, Nancy Pelosi would still be speaker.)

David Gill’s a fighter for all the values and all the principles Blue America stands for. Congress will be a far better place if he’s elected. Please consider giving what you can. This is where we begin.

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Quote ‘O the day- Atrios

QOTD – Atrios

by digby

Oh this is going to be fun. Atrios is counting down the top ten wankers of the decade. And he’s doing it in style. Here’s an excerpt from today’s post on the 9th runner-up, Megan McArdle:

With McArdle we have the pinnacle of glibertarianism, though “fuck you I’ve got mine” has morphed into “oh fuck I don’t have quite enough I’d better be more creative even my defenses of plutocracy” as the years have passed. This post will probably be seen as unfair somehow, as apparently she’s on a blogging break to write a book. Its title is, dear me, PERMISSION TO SUCK, about “how risk aversion is sapping America of its core strengths.” Now I do think we should have a bit of permission to suck, to have a few career fails in our lives, but the problem isn’t risk aversion, it’s that the consequences of a bad coin toss are catastrophic for those of us without significant parental support in our do the trapeze without a social safety net world. A few of the fortunate do, indeed, have permission to suck. And suck they do.

He’s also running a spring fundraiser. Everyone who’s enjoyed the wonder that is Atrios over the past ten years should throw a couple of bucks in the kitty if they can.

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