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Month: March 2013

Wake me up when September comes

Wake me up when September comes

by digby

There’s only one kind of spending that is sacred:

House Democratic leaders have decided against uniting their party’s rank and file in opposition to a Republican spending bill that would fund the government.

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said the GOP’s continuing resolution (CR) both threatens the economy and violates the spending levels agreed to under the 2011 Budget Control Act (BCA). But in an acknowledgment that the Democrats are all but powerless to block the CR on the House floor, Hoyer said leaders would not pressure their troops to oppose it.
[…]
“We’re not whipping at this point in time,” Hoyer told reporters in the Capitol. “We don’t want to shut down the government.”

Hoyer’s comments came just an hour after Rep. Nita Lowey (N.Y.), senior Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, said the proposal will be “devastating” to vulnerable Americans and she’s “recommending” that Democrats oppose it.

Hoyer acknowledged Lowey’s opposition campaign, but clarified that party leaders won’t be twisting arms.

So, there’s that. No government shutdown. But federal worker furloughs and other cuts. But lest you think that the terrorist boogeyment will be coming to kill you in your beds:

Under current law, the government’s spending authority expires on March 27. The Republicans’ CR, unveiled Monday, would extend that authority through Sept. 30. The $984 billion package takes steps to cushion the effects of the sequester on the Pentagon and veterans programs, but the $85 billion cuts would hit almost all other agencies, stirring an outcry from Democrats that federal programs aimed at helping low-income people will be harmed.

Naturally they will be able to find ways to cushion the blow on defense. There are some cuts that neither party will make. Veteran’s programs are vital, of course — but then so are many of the programs they’re cutting. Unfortunately they don’t have the same bipartisan constituency that the military has.

It does go to show how ridiculous the sequester “devil’s bargain” really was. The idea was that Democrats would balk at cutting domestic programs and Republicans would balk at cutting defense. Turns out that the only programs both parties are balking at is defense. Surprise.

But all is not lost. Greg Sargent reports that we’re already looking to the next debt ceiling showdown. Seriously.

The question remains, though, whether conservatives will pressure the House GOP leadership to provoke another standoff around the debt ceiling and to demand more spending cuts — such as to entitlements, which are mostly exempt from the sequester — in exchange for any hike. And here, you have to hope that John Boehner will be able to tamp down any desire for further confrontation by pointing out that Republicans are already getting deep spending cuts with the sequester. But this is hardly assured.

And to add to the complexity, all this could unfold even as Democrats are hoping to exploit the pain the sequester will cause to force Republicans back to the table to replace the sequester with some kind of “grand bargain” that trades entitlement cuts for new revenues.

What could go wrong?

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It depends on what the definition of common sense is

It depends on what the definition of “common sense” is

by digby

At least he didn’t call it a gang:

President Barack Obama, unable to persuade Republicans to accept higher taxes, is attempting to cobble together what he calls a “common-sense caucus” among lawmakers to help resolve U.S. budget woes and push his legislative agenda.

On Monday and in recent days, Obama has made individual phone calls to a number of senators in a search for common ground on $85 billion in budget cuts that went into effect last week, as well as his top priorities like deficit reduction, gun control and an overhaul of U.S. immigration laws.

Gene Sperling, the White House senior economic official, said on the CNN program “State of the Union” on Sunday that Obama was contacting to lawmakers to talk about compromises that could include reforms to both the tax code and entitlement programs, which include Social Security retirement benefits and Medicare healthcare for the elderly and disabled.

I’ve written too many times about the possibility of some sort of deal that includes temporary tax “reform” in exchange for “entitlement” cuts, so I won’t say it again. But that’s what this sounds like to me. They will rationalize this by pointing out that the Chained-CPI will bring in revenue as well as cut benefits. And they will convince lots of liberals that this is the best they could do, Paul Ryan is even worse — and not to worry because the extra revenue they get from the Chained-CPI will be put to good use so it’s all good.

I don’t know that the Republicans will go along with this but I suppose if Boehner could cobble together just enough Republicans to get it over the hump, this could be a way out.

It may not be as easy as they think, however. Howie writes:

Is it possible that the political elites want to make it so painful that the public will accept the dreadful Simpson-Bowles Grand Bargain scenario? I think so– and that’s why the letter sent around Congress by Alan Grayson and Mark Takano states flatly– no wiggle-room– that “we will vote against any and every cut to Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security benefits– including raising the retirement age or cutting the cost of living adjustments that our constituents earned and need.” These are the signatories to this very bold, very line-in-the-sand letter:
• Alan Grayson (D-FL)
• Mark Takano (D-CA)
• Corrine Brown (D-FL)
• Matt Cartwright (D-PA)
• Kathy Castor (D-FL)
• John Conyers (D-MI)
• Danny Davis (D-IL)
• Peter DeFazio (D-OR)
• Keith Ellison (D-MN)
• Gene Green (D-TX)
• Raul Grijalva (D-AZ)
• Luis Gutierrez (D-IL)
• Alcee Hastings (D-FL)
• Marcy Kaptur (D-OH)
• Barbara Lee (D-CA)
• Ed Markey (D-MA)
• Jim McGovern (D-MA)
• Jerry Nadler (D-NY)
• Grace Napolitano (D-CA)
• Rick Nolan (D-MN)
• Jose Serrano (D-NY)
• Nydia Velázquez (D-NY)
• Maxine Waters (D-CA)

This is the gold standard for Members of Congress willing to put their own careers on the line to protect working families…

It’s especially important because Boehner is being pressured from the right for more and deeper cuts and because Obama is looking for a way to keep the amount of cuts but to redistribute them more to his own liking. The fatal flaw– and it is proving very fatal throughout Europe– is that the government should be working on growth and stimulating job creation, not obsessing over already shrinking budget deficits in the middle of a severe economic crisis for working people. 

Chuck Todd didn’t go as far as saying Obama and Boehner are collaborating on this, just that they have a truce that will lead to the Grand Bargain everyone in the Village– like Todd, of course– is praying for.

And if everyone gets a break and if the sequester cuts do have impact in the next few months, count us as ones who are a bit optimistic that a Grand Bargain on the budget could be reached in September. Yes, we know that a Grand Bargain has been harder to find than the Loch Ness Monster.

But here’s how it could happen: After some breathing room, after both parties let their budget processes play out, and after evidence that the U.S. economy has been negatively impacted by the sequester, both sides could determine that a Grand Bargain is in their interest– Republicans decide they really, really want entitlement reforms and are willing to put up some additional revenue; Democrats decide they really, really want additional revenue and are willing to put up additional entitlement reform. And in September, the president and Democrats will have this response when Boehner and Republicans say, “The president got his tax increases.” They’ll be able to say, “The Republicans got their spending cuts.”

And that’s where a strategy like the one from the Grayson-Takano letter comes into play. It exempts cuts to the threadbare programs that most directly impact the people in the most need, the ones with the least clout inside the Beltway. To have a stalwart progressive, like Ed Markey (D-MA), who’s in a tough primary battle with ConservaDem Stephen Lynch, sign the Grayson-Takano letter is a real mark of political courage.

In fact, Blue America is starting a page to encourage people to show their gratitude to Grayson, Takano and to fearless progressives like Markey. Lynch, of course, has refused to sign the letter. The new ActBlue page is right here. Please visit it.

I’m sensing a total collapse among the liberal cognoscenti on this so it will be up to progressives to hold the line. The sequester is doing its magic. And it’s certainly possible that the GOP will never agree to anything ever. They really are that crazy.

But at some point I still believe the defense cuts are going to force some kind of a deal. And I have to think that at some point the Republicans will recall that the most successful ad campaign of their triumphant 2010 election was this one:

Update: Alan Grayson says:

“With the Norquist pledge, the Republicans have lined up on the side of millionaires, billionaires and multinational corporations. With our No Cuts pledge, we are lined up on the side of seniors, sick people, and poor people. We are comforting the afflicted, and they are comforting the comfortable.”

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Keeping you-know-what alive in their minds so they can kill it over and over again

Keeping it alive in their minds so they can kill it over and over again

by digby

Either they just copied and pasted their last budget or they really are this dumb:

A new short-term budget bill introduced on Monday by House Republicans includes a bizarre provision banning federal funding to anti-poverty group ACORN, despite the fact that the group has already been stripped of federal funding — and has been defunct for nearly three years.

ACORN leaders announced that the group was disbanding in March 2010, after Congress cut off all federal funding to the organization. The provision in the current GOP budget bill [PDF], buried on page 221 of 269, would duplicate legislation that has already passed, to target an organization that does not exist.

Or maybe they just have to keep ACORN alive in their minds so they can kill it over and over again.

But that’s got to get old, right? There must be some new ways to humiliate poor people and dogwhistle certain members of their base. Oh, I know:
4

To fight the specter of poor people spending taxpayer money on drugs, a Republican congressman has reintroduced legislation to make welfare applicants pee in cups to prove they’re clean.

Rep. Stephen Fincher’s (R-Tenn.) bill would require states to randomly test 20 percent of people receiving benefits from the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, which spends roughly $16 billion per year supporting poverty-stricken parents with monthly checks averaging $392.

“Currently the federal government enables drug abusers a safety-net by allowing them to participate in the TANF program,” Fincher said in a statement. “Instead of having to make the hard-choice between drugs and other essential needs, abusers are able to rely on their monthly check to help them pay their bills.”

The dream will never die.

The oddest allies in the conservative movement have one thing in common

The oddest allies in the conservative movement have one thing in common

by digby

I’ve always found the alliance between libertarians and conservative Christians to be one of the strangest political bedfellows. One might expect that the people who seek to legalize drugs would have little in common with those who are dedicated to social control through Biblical principles. In fact, I’ve often made the point that libertarians have as much in common with Democrats as Republicans but, for some reason, always seem to vote with the GOP. Why would they align themselves with the party that worships militarism across the board, while at least the Democrats have a fairly significant anti-war faction. Anyway, I’ve always guessed it was because what they really care about is taxes and that the whole freedom and anti-war thing thing is of secondary concern.

But Ed Kilgore gives an answer I hadn’t thought of before and I think it’s right. He’s discussing the latest buzz in conservative circles: how an alleged libertarian hostility against crony capitalism will bring the populists into the GOP fold. He writes:

While disclaiming support for corporate cronyism is a fine idea for either party, the odds that there will ever be a popular majority for any political gathering that is distinctly libertarian (other than in temporary positioning rhetoric) are very remote. Aside from the fact that such libertarian first principle as free trade and hard money are perpetually unpopular (at least when they have any real impact), while libertarian boogeymen like minimum wage laws and corporate taxation are perpetually popular, there’s the issue of libertarianism’s inherent hostility to democracy. Serious libertarians do not tend to consider their public policy beliefs as historically conditional or as requiring popular sanction for their validity; instead, they reflect eternal, natural laws, among which the most important is individual liberty.

This is the basis for the much-misunderstood but very real alliance of libertarians and Christian Right activists in the Tea Party movement: for very different reasons involving somewhat different issues, Randists and theocrats feel strongly about their policy prescriptions being permanently enshrined via constitutional measures, whether it’s an “originalist” interpretation of founding document or subsequently adopted supermajority requirements against public spending or taxation. Wherever their positions coincide (as with absolute property rights or the inalienable individual rights of the fetus), there you will find the “conservative movement” in full voice.

Yes. These are people who place their beliefs in their preferred sacred texts, whether it’s the constitution, Atlas Shrugged or the Bible. And only they are the self-anointed priests allowed to interpret them. For different reasons, they just don’t care for democracy and wish to permanently bind everyone else to their belief system.

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Your moment of zen: papal conclave edition

Your moment of zen

by digby

Papal Conclave edition:

An Australian man dressed as a bishop sneaked into the meeting of more than 100 cardinals at the Vatican Monday, managing to commiserate with the Catholic princes before being thrown out by Swiss Guards.

The man, identified as Ralph Napierski, donned a short cassock, “an unusual” cross necklace, and a purple Episcopal sash that was actually a scarf, according to Italy’s Gazzetta del Sud.

He told reporters his name was “Basilius,” and a member of the “Italian Orthodox Church,” which does not appear to exist.

Before being found out, the faux-bishop told reporters the church “made a mistake by moving priests” who were accused of pedophilia around to different parishes, according to Agence France-Presse…

“All I can say is that everyone seated for the congregation is a real cardinal,” Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, said after Napierski was busted, according to AFP.

Ralph Napierski (left), chats up Cardinal Sergio Sebiastiana and later joined him inside a key meeting Monday, though he was later booted by the Swiss Guards.

Who knew the FBI was such a laugh riot?

Who knew the FBI was such a laugh riot?

by digby

These are some funny, funny guys:

The Federal Bureau of Investigations told lawmakers in a recent letter that across-the-board cuts resulting from sequestration “will cause current financial crimes investigations to slow as workload is spread among a reduced workforce. In some instances, such delays could affect the timely interviews of witnesses and collection of evidence.”

Investigations yet unseen may also be harmed. “In some instances, such delays could affect the timely interviews of witnesses and collection of evidence. The capacity to undertake new major investigations will be constrained,” FBI Director Robert Mueller III wrote in the letter, addressed to Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.), the chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

The warning closed with the type of reasoning that critics of the lack of investigations would readily support. “Left unchecked, fraud and malfeasance in the financial, securities, and related industries could hurt the integrity of U.S. markets,” Mueller offered. “In addition, the public will perceive the FBI as less capable of aggressively and actively investigating financial fraud and public corruption, which would undercut the deterrence that comes from strong enforcement.”

Haha. Joke’s on you.

More than four years after the financial crisis, not a single Wall Street executive has been jailed for playing a role in the creation of the toxic financial products that fueled the real-estate bubble, which were in some cases designed simply to fail.

The statue of limitations must almost be up on much of the criminal activity. How convenient to be able to blame the sequester. (Because I’m sure they’re right on the verge of indicting dozens of big players. Right?)

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Alternative Media Imbalance, by @DavidOAtkins

Alternative Media Imbalance

by David Atkins

Senator Menendez appears to be innocent:

An escort who appeared on a video claiming Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) paid her for sex has told Dominican Republic police that she was instead paid to make up the claims in a tape recording and has never met or seen the senator before, according to court documents and two people briefed on her claim.

The woman identified a lawyer who approached her and a friend to make the videotape, according to affidavits obtained by the Post. That man has in turn identified another lawyer who gave him a script for the tape and paid him to find women to fabricate the claims, the affidavits say.

The “story” about Menendez bubbled up through the right-wing “news” site The Daily Caller and gained traction from there in the traditional media.

It reminds me of the time that some liberal hacks paid off people to lie about a Republican Senator, the story “broke” on Daily Kos, and then the entire media world talked about it for months.

Oh wait. That didn’t happen, because it would never happen. The Washington press is wired for Republican control, and that includes the credibility given to alternative media sources.

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Today’s dispatch from the rabbit hole: Rick Scott is a hippie

Today’s dispatch from the rabbit hole: Rick Scott is a hippie

by digby

You almost have to laugh:

Florida Governor Rick Scott’s plan to expand Medicaid coverage to cover about 1 million more poor people suffered a setback on Monday when the proposal failed to make it out of a key state legislative committee hearing.

On the eve of convening of the 2013 session, the House Select Committee on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act rejected the expansion. A Senate counterpart committee postponed consideration of the issue, which is sure to be one of the biggest controversies of the session.

Scott, a Republican who bitterly fought President Barack Obama’s national healthcare plan as a candidate and in his first two years as governor, stunned conservative supporters on February 20 when he endorsed a three-year expansion of Medicaid, provided the federal government picks up the full cost for the first three years as promised.

“There’s definitely a fight between the governor and the (state) legislature over this. The Republicans in the legislature are much more fiscally conservative than his actions have shown him to be,” said Susan MacManus, a Tampa-based political scientist at the University of South Florida.

Republican legislative leaders have been openly hostile toward the plan, emphasizing that state lawmakers will make the final decision in drawing up a budget for next fiscal year.

While Democrats have pushed for full implementation of so-called “Obamacare,” the controlling Republican leadership has warned that the federal government might not keep its end of the bargain, leaving the state with a million more Medicaid recipients and reduced federal funding to cover them.

You have to laugh. The reason they know the federal government won’t keep its end of the bargain is because Republicans in Washington will make sure of it. Sweet.

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Yes the GOP is nuts. But so are the Democrats who play their game.

Yes the GOP is nuts. But so are the Democrats who play their game.

by digby

I know that anyone who has been reading the blog regularly since January of 2009 knows all about this, but this piece by Dean Baker just lays it all out so crisply:

Now that we are counting up the days of the sequester instead of counting down, it would be a good time to cast blame. And my candidate is President Obama.

I’m not blaming Obama for the reasons that Bob Woodward came up with in his fantasyland. I am blaming President Obama and his administration for trying to be cute and clever rather than telling the public the truth about the economic crisis. The result is that the vast majority of the public, and virtually all of the reporters and pundits who deal with budget issues, do not have any clue about where the deficit came from and why it is a virtue rather than a problem.

He goes on to explain why that is and how the emphasis on deficits has been a terrible mistake:

We will never know if President Obama could have garnered support for more stimulus and larger deficits if he had used his office to pound home basic principles of economics to the public and the media. But we do know the route he chose failed.

He apparently thought the best route to get more stimulus was to convince the deficit hawks that he was one of them. He proudly announced the need to pivot to deficit reduction following the passage of the stimulus and then appointed two deficit hawks, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, to head a deficit commission.

This set the ball rolling for the obsession with deficit reduction that has dominated the nation’s politics for the last three years. Instead of talking about the deficit of 9 million jobs the economy faces, we have the leadership of both parties in Congress arguing over the debt-to-GDP ratios that we will face in 2023.

This would be comical if lives were not being ruined by the charade. The unemployed workers and their families did not do anything wrong – the people running the economy did.

Now the sequester comes along, throwing more people out of work, worsening the quality of a wide range of government services and denying hundreds of thousands of people benefits they need. Yes, this is really stupid policy, and the Republicans deserve a huge amount of blame in this picture.

But it was President Obama who decided to play deficit reduction games rather than be truthful about the state of the economy. There was no reason to expect better from the Republicans in Congress, but we had reason to hope that President Obama would act responsibly.

Well,  he did signal from the very beginning that he saw himself as the president who would solve all  problems for all time with his Grand Bargain, which he explicitly defined as health care reform, “entitlement” reform (including Social Security and medicare) and tax reform. He said we needed to “take a look at our structural deficit, how are we paying for government” and that we’d all have to have “skin in the game.” This project pre-dated the inauguration and certainly pre-dated their excuse that there was no way to get any more stimulus. In fact, when he was saying this the administration was in the midst of a delirious honeymoon in which even hard core adversaries like Sarah Palin were (temporarily)so cowed they were saying they hoped the president would succeed.

And let’s take a look at the assumption that there could be a Grand Bargain on those terms in the first place, shall we? Liberal wags everywhere have suddenly discovered that the Republicans are obstinate ideologues. Stop the presses. (In fact, they are writing columns that could have been lifted verbatim from the average liberal blogger’s daily posts circa 2006 — of course, at the time we were dismissed by many of the same people as shrill gadflies, polluting the discourse.)

Anyway, Rick Perlstein takes us into the wayback machine to look at what an absurd assumption the Obama “post-partisan healing” conceit really was:

I wonder how many folks within the White House, gaming out whether Republicans might not just call the bluff, bothered to consider the fact that an embrace of heedless, profligate, across-the-board budget cuts to all manner of popular government programs is a key component of hardcore conservative ideology. That, when Barry Goldwater proclaimed in his 1960 manifesto Conscience of a Conservative, “I have little interest in streamlining government or in making it more efficient, for I mean to reduce its size…My aim is not to pass laws, but to repeal them…And if I should later be attacked for neglecting my constituents’ ‘interests,’ I shall reply that I was informed that their main interest is liberty,” that Barry Goldwater—and the future millions for whom his sentiments became an ideological touchstone—meant what he said.

Did anyone in the White House notice how many conservatives, including ones in positions of governmental power, after Mitt Romney’s recorded back-room admission that he couldn’t get elected because 47 percent of the electorate is addicted to suckling on the federal teat, responded that what he said was absolutely correct? (Even if they admitted it was unfortunate a public unready to handle it had to hear it.) That conservatives, as an article of faith, see breaking the link between citizens and their government benefits as the only sure way to break the link between voters and the Democratic Party? And that severing that same link is also the best way way to restore the broken moral fabric of the nation? (Which is one explanation Republican governors use to defend their determination not to accept free federal money to qualify more of their poor citizens for Medicaid under Obamacare: they are saving their citizens from wicked dependency. Their other explanation is that Obama must necessarily be lying to them—but that will have to be the subject for another post).

Read on for a fascinating historical note featuring none other than Saint Ronnie arguing for 10% across the board cuts as Governor of California. He didn’t get them all. But his spending cut crusade left its mark. They always do:

In 1967, it happened, inconvenient political reality spiked his administration’s hope to decimate (literally!) the entire state budget. He did, however, decimate where he could. For instance, in the the state’s Department of Mental Hygiene, which seemed a practical notion at the time because, as Lou Cannon noted in his book on Reagan’s governorship, “the population of the mental hospitals was declining, thanks to tranquilizing drugs and new medical procedures.” Although, oops: “the numbers were deceptive. The patients leaving the hospitals were the ones who responded best to tranquilizers; those who remained were more apt to need intensive care. And the state’s mental hospitals had never been adequately staffed.”

I think it goes without saying that our state’s mental health system has never recovered and we are living with the consequences of that disastrous policy even now. Perlstein predicts we will see similar results on a national scale as a result of this current deficit obsession and I think he’s right.

And also this, which I think is a brilliant observation:

Another prediction: sequestration will cause greater budget deficits down the road—because of the simple fact that there are certain things government has to do, and making it harder to do those things at any given moment makes it more inefficient and expensive for government to make up the ground down the road. This conservative retreat from a simple understanding of government spending as investment that pays off down the road is one of the reasons—there are others—Republican administrations end up creating bigger deficits than Democratic ones. Reagan’s gubernatorial administrations, for example: inheriting a $4.6 billion state budget in 1967, he left behind a one in 1975 that cost $10.2 billion. The average individual Californian’s tax burden when he took office was $426. When he left it was almost double that, at $728.

I knew they had a habit of running up deficits on wars and other preferred conservative projects and left the Democrats to clean up the mess but I’ve always wondered how they squared their spending habits in their own minds with their stated small government philosophy. I think that explains it. It all works out in the long run.

But how did we keep them from completely destroying the New Deal programs before now? Well …

Back then, Democrats instinctively and successfully fought what Reagan was up to. This season’s budget decimation, on the other hand, has been underwritten by Democrats—by Democratic naiveté. By a simple refusal to absorb and accept the lesson of history: that some conservative Republicans will always be constitutionally incapable of acknowledging that a cut in government capacity can ever be a bad thing. The fact that they now can claim, even if disingenuously, that the cuts were Barack Obama’s idea in the first place may make their triumph politically only the sweeter.

Indeed it will be. The problem is presidential hubris and a Democratic Party that foolishly ignored one simple truth about the conservative movement: give them an inch and they’ll take a mile.

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