Skip to content

Month: August 2015

Jimmy and the vote

Jimmy and the vote

by digby

Rick Perlstein is working on a book about the late 70s and the rise of Reagan, so is immersed at the moment in Jimmy Carter’s presidency.On the news of Carter’s cancer diagnosis, he wrote this piece for the Washington Spectator about an episode I’d guess most of us have forgotten if we ever knew it at all:

Frequently, Carter’s approach to those complexities produced political disasters; “The Passionless Presidency,” James Fallows’s classic 1979 essay on his time as one of Carter’s White House speechwriters, will forever remain the best account of that. But Carter’s approach to governing also could lead to a glorious kind of democratic prophetic witness. Coincidentally, I was writing about one of those moments, from the spring and summer of 1977, last week when the news of Carter’s diagnosis broke. This moment reveals Carter at his very best. It also reveals American conservatives at their venal worst—and provides one more precedent to help us understand and contend with their ongoing deformation of our democracy now.

It was March 22. President Carter, concerned that America ranked 21st in voter participation among the world’s democracies, transmitted a package of proposed electoral reforms to Congress. He had studied the problem. Now he was ready to administer a solution.

Everyone loved to talk about voter apathy, but the real problem, Carter said, was that “millions of Americans are prevented or discouraged from voting in every election by antiquated and overly restricted voter registration laws”—a fact proven, he pointed out, by record rates of participation in 1976 in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota, where voters were allowed to register on election day. So he proposed that election-day registration be adopted universally, tempering concerns that such measures might increase opportunities for fraud by also proposing five years in prison and a $10,000 fine as penalties for electoral fraud.

He asked Congress to allot up to $25 million in aid to states to help them comply, and for the current system of federal matching funds for presidential candidates to be expanded to congressional elections. He suggested reforming a loophole in the matching-fund law that disadvantaged candidates competing with rich opponents who funded their campaigns themselves, and revising the Hatch Act to allow federal employees “not in sensitive positions,” and when not on the job, the same rights of political participation as everyone else.

Finally, and most radically, he recommended that Congress adopt a constitutional amendment to do away with the Electoral College—under which, three times in our history (four times if you count George W. Bush 23 years later), a candidate who received fewer votes than his opponent went on to become president—in favor of popular election of presidents. It was one of the broadest political reform packages ever proposed.

It was immediately embraced. Legislators from both parties stood together at a news briefing to endorse all or part of it. Two Republican senators and two Republican representatives stepped forward to cosponsor the universal registration bill; William Brock, chairman of the Republican National Committee, called it “a Republican concept.” Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker announced his support, and suggested going even further: making election day a national holiday and keeping polls open 24 hours. House Minority Leader John Rhodes, a conservative disciple of Barry Goldwater, predicted it would pass “in substantially the same form with a lot of Republican support, including my own.”

A more perfect democracy. Who could find this controversial?

You guessed it: movement conservatives, who took their lessons about Democrats and “electoral reform” from Republican allegations that had Kennedy beating Nixon via votes received from the cemeteries of Chicago.

Ronald Reagan had been on this case for years. “Look at the potential for cheating,” he thundered in 1975, when Democrats proposed allowing citizens to register by postcard. “He can be John Doe in Berkeley, and J.F. Doe in the next county, all by saying he intends to live in both places … Yes, it takes a little work to be a voter; it takes some planning to get to the polls or send an absentee ballot … That’s a small price to pay for freedom.” He took up the cudgel again shortly after Carter’s inauguration, after California adopted easier voter registration. Why not a national postcard registration program? “The answer to that is the one the American general gave to the German demand for surrender at the battle of Bastogne in World War II: Nuts.…. Government by the people won’t work if the people won’t work at it.”

He continued. “Why don’t we try reverse psychology and make it harder to vote?”

Then came Carter’s electoral reform package. There had always been a political subtext to such arguments. Now, the subtext came to the fore: “Election ‘Reform’ Package: Euthanasia for the GOP,” blared a banner atop an issue of Human Events. The current system, the conservative newspaper argued, had never disenfranchised a single person—at least “no citizen who cares enough to make the minimal effort.” So why was Carter proposing to change it? Not because he was a reformer, but because he wanted to steal elections. Carter, after all, had won Wisconsin by a tiny margin, defying electoral predictions. So why wouldn’t he want to expand the scam to all 50 states?

There also had always been a racial subtext to such arguments. Now, that subtext, too, came to the fore.

Human Events cited a Berkeley political scientist who said national turnout would go up 10 percent. They observed that it was “widely agreed that the bulk of these extra votes will go to Carter’s Democratic Party”—“with blacks and other traditionally Democratic voter groups accounting for most of the increase.” The Heritage Foundation put out a paper arguing that instant registration would allow the “eight million illegal aliens in the U.S.” to vote. In his newspaper column, Reagan said the increase in voting would come from “the bloc comprised of those who get a whole lot more from the federal government in various kinds of income distribution than they contribute to it.” And if those people prove too dumb to vote themselves a raise, “don’t be surprised if an army of election workers—much of it supplied by labor organizations which have managed to exempt themselves from election law restrictions—sweep through metropolitan areas scooping up otherwise apathetic voters and rushing them to the polls to keep the benefit dispensers in power.”

And Electoral College reform? All but ventriloquizing the argument John C. Calhoun made in the 1840s, Reagan responded: “The very basis for our freedom is that we are a federation of sovereign states. Our Constitution recognizes that certain rights belong to the states and cannot be infringed upon by the national government.”

Fascinating, no? And very familiar.

It’s always something,isn’t it? They know that those they’ve marginalized and treated with disdain are hardly likely to vote for them if they are given the chance. Why would they? So they have to keep them from doing it.

One of Carter’s post-presidency projects was going all over the world to monitor elections.

Click over to the whole story. You won’t be sorry.

Village talking points

Village talking points

by digby

This is a useful little article that tells you what the Village decrees to be important and true, saving you lots of time and energy. It was tweeted out by Meet the Press so you can probably also skip watching that on Sunday and go to the beach instead.

What mattered

1. Biden’s my heart and soul “are pretty banged up”: Different people could interpret Joe Biden’s remarks on that DNC conference call differently. But they – along with NBC’s and Politico’s additional reporting – suggest that Biden, at the very least, is trying to calm down the presidential speculation. The 2016 door remains open, but he’s not running through it just yet.

2. Jeb mixes it up with Trump: Bush’s decision to engage Donald Trump – again – appears to be an effort to diminish the rest of the field, as well as to show some strength to Republican voters. But it has a clear drawback, too: If Jeb is willing to draw a rhetorical sword, Trump is always going to pull out a gun – or a cannon – in response.

3. “Anchor babies” = Asians: Jeb Bush was factually correct that wealthy Chinese nationals come to the United States to have children who will be American citizens. But extending the “anchor baby” debate to Asians is also a sure-fire way to alienate Asian Americans, who have been swing voters in the past.

4. Democratic leaders are increasingly nervous about Hillary’s emails: Two points to make about this week’s New York Times story: One, Democrats are nervous creatures by nature (remember the handwringing over Obama’s debate performance in Denver?). Two, this nervousness will become a MAJOR problem if the FBI doesn’t quickly close the door on its investigation. But Clinton backers received some encouraging words from national-security writer David Ignatius: “Using the server was a self-inflicted wound by Clinton, but it’s not something a prosecutor would take to court.”

What didn’t matter as much

1. Last Saturday’s Biden-Elizabeth Warren meeting: Yes, the news fanned the flames of the Biden presidential buzz. But be sure to read the Boston Globe to see that Biden and Warren aren’t exactly BFFs – or a presidential-campaign team in the making.

2. Hillary takes “responsibility” for not using two different emails: Sure, it was a change in her rhetoric for using a private email account (and server) as secretary of state. And it signaled some contrition. But shouldn’t she have said this months ago?

3. Trump and Cruz teaming up to oppose the Iran deal: The announcement that Donald Trump and Ted Cruz will appear together in DC next month to oppose the Iran deal probably isn’t the best way to convince fence-sitting Democrats to nix the deal, right?

I’m going to take a wild guess and say that Cruz and Trump are doing this as a joint presidential campaign event more than an actual attempt to influence legislation.

And of course it doesn’t matter what Clinton said about the mails. Nothing she says matters and neither does the truth, practice or reality.

The good news is that one hopes Clinton is getting a first hand reminder of just how intrusive the government is when they want to be — and perhaps she’ll have some sympathy for the average American’s concerns about mass surveillance that requires all of our communications to be stored just in case the authorities want to make a case against you or humiliate you in public.

.

Tales from the crypt #Cheneyofcourse

Tales from the crypt

by digby

Marcy Wheeler has a piece up at Salon today about why anyone who listens to Dick Cheney on the issue of Iran has rocks in his head:

Before joining the Bush Administration, Halliburton CEO Dick Cheney opposed sanctions against Iran because American businesses would be “cut out of the action” (Halliburton is still one of the biggest likely beneficiaries of the easing of Iran sanctions).

Cheney spent much of the Obama Administration thwarting negotiations with Iran at a much earlier stage in its nuclear program. Had those negotiations happened then, they might have mitigated the concerns he and others now express about the nuclear deal. Indeed, as Poindexter had years earlier, Cheney’s office reportedly worked back channels to undercut the Iranian regime just as negotiations began.

Cheney’s real contribution to the Iran situation he claims to despise, however, was in championing a war against Iraq to undercut Weapons of Mass Destruction — including a nuclear program — that didn’t exist. The war created a vacuum of power in the region and a Shia-led government in Iraq, both of which Iran managed to exploit to increase its regional posture. While railing against Iran, Dick Cheney made it stronger. At the same time, the Bush (and Obama) Administration’s successful regime change in Iraq and Libya, but not in North Korea, showed the value of a nuclear program as a deterrent against US-led regime change.

Yeah, he’s the guy we really need to hear from on this issue.

.

10 years ago today

10 years ago today

by digby

This was happening:

2AM CDT — KATRINA UPGRADED TO CATEGORY 4 HURRICANE [CNN] 

7AM CDT — KATRINA UPGRADED TO CATEGORY 5 HURRICANE [CNN] 

MORNING — LOUISIANA NEWSPAPER SIGNALS LEVEES MAY GIVE: “Forecasters Fear Levees Won’t Hold Katrina”: “Forecasters feared Sunday afternoon that storm driven waters will lap over the New Orleans levees when monster Hurricane Katrina pushes past the Crescent City tomorrow.” [Lafayette Daily Advertiser]
9:30 AM CDT — MAYOR NAGIN ISSUES FIRST EVER MANDATORY 

EVACUATION OF NEW ORLEANS:“We’re facing the storm most of us have feared,” said Nagin. “This is going to be an unprecedented event.” [Times-Picayune] 

AFTERNOON — BUSH, BROWN, CHERTOFF WARNED OF LEVEE FAILURE BY NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER DIRECTOR: Dr. Max Mayfield, director of the National Hurricane Center: “‘We were briefing them way before landfall. … It’s not like this was a surprise. We had in the advisories that the levee could be topped.’” [Times-PicayuneSt. Petersburg Times] 

4PM CDT — NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ISSUES SPECIAL HURRICANE WARNING: In the event of a category 4 or 5 hit, “Most of the area will be uninhabitable for weeks, perhaps longer. … At least one-half of well-constructed homes will have roof and wall failure. All gabled roofs will fail, leaving those homes severely damaged or destroyed. … Power outages will last for weeks. … Water shortages will make human suffering incredible by modern standards.” [National Weather Service] 

LATE PM — REPORTS OF WATER TOPPLING OVER LEVEE: “Waves crashed atop the exercise path on the Lake Pontchartrain levee in Kenner early Monday as Katrina churned closer.” [Times-Picayune] 

APPROXIMATELY 30,000 EVACUEES GATHER AT SUPERDOME WITH ROUGHLY 36 HOURS WORTH OF FOOD [Times-Picayune] 

LOUISIANA NATIONAL GUARD REQUESTS 700 BUSES FROM FEMA FOR EVACUATIONS: FEMA sends only 100 buses. [Boston Globe]

The horror was beginning. We knew it was bad. But we had no idea how bad it was going to get.

I can still hardly believe it.

This is what I wrote that day:

Sunday, August 28, 2005

 
The Battle Of New Orleans

This hurricane looks to be a living nightmare. I went through a bad one in the same area in 1965 — Hurricane Betsy — and these things are scary. My father was working on a NASA test site in Mississippi and had word that the storm was going to be bad so he moved us up north before it hit — ahead of everyone else. We were lucky. The town we lived in was pretty devastated.

I was just a kid, and the creepiest thing I remember about it was that when we returned to our house there were snakes all over the place. And we had a rather large boat in our front yard — that had been in the bay several blocks away.

Man, I hate to see New Orleans get hit. It’s one of the greatest cities in the world with some of the greatest people in the world. Let’s hope this thing isn’t as bad as they say it’s going to be.

.

From commenter antifa later that night:

I called Mama Marisol, got her on her cell phone. She had her crystal ball in the front seat, and she was ‘leavin-leavin, cher.’

Heading up Basin Street past St. Louis 1, she saw all the skeletons sitting on top of their tombs, rolling their bones and readin’ em, shakin’ their heads at her.

This won’t end well.


If it keeps on rainin’, levee’s goin’ to break
And the water gonna come in, have no place to stay

Well all last night I sat on the levee and moan
Thinkin’ ’bout my baby and my happy home

If it keeps on rainin’, levee’s goin’ to break
And all these people have no place to stay

Now look here mama what am I to do
I ain’t got nobody to tell my troubles to

I works on the levee mama both night and day
I ain’t got nobody, keep the water away

Oh cryin’ won’t help you, prayin’ won’t do no good
When the levee breaks, mama, you got to lose

I works on the levee, mama both night and day
I works so hard, to keep the water away

I had a woman, she wouldn’t do for me
I’m goin’ back to my used to be

I’s a mean old levee, cause me to weep and moan
Gonna leave my baby, and my happy home



*by Kansas Joe McCoy and famously covered by Led Zeppelin. 

Trump’s Jesus

Trump’s Jesus

by digby

I wrote about Trumps religious right outreach today for Salon. It’s much more strategic and long standing than you probably knew:

I noted the other day that Sen. Ted Cruz is very effectively working the Religious Right, making sure they know he is one them. (And he is.)   But it appears that he’s got some serious competition — and it’s not from Scott Walker or Mike Huckabee, the two candidates previously assumed to have the inside track with the conservative evangelical crowd. (As with most every constituency that was presumed to naturally be in his corner, Walker has stumbled badly with this group, but he’s plugging away. Huckabee just seems like old news.) Instead, Cruz — whose Iowa state chairman introduces him by saying that “God has prepared” him to “go to Washington and throw the money-changers out” — is being challenged for evangelical affections by none other than the billionaire braggart Donald Trump. 
In South Carolina this week, Trump explained that evangelicals love him, and he loves them. And he loves the Bible more than anything, even his own book, “The Art of the Deal,” which he loves very, very much. He declined to identify his favorite Bible passages, because he says the Bible is so intensely personal to him, but he was more forthcoming awhile back when pollster Frank Luntz asked him if he’d ever asked God for forgiveness. 
“I am not sure I have. I just go on and try to do a better job from there. I don’t think so. I think if I do something wrong, I think, I just try and make it right. I don’t bring God into that picture. I don’t…” Trump said. “When I drink my little wine — which is about the only wine I drink — and have my little cracker, I guess that is a form of asking for forgiveness, and I do that as often as possible because I feel cleansed. I think in terms of ‘let’s go on and let’s make it right.’” 
His piety and spirituality are very moving. 
The funny thing is that while it may not be quite correct that evangelicals “love” him, they are, so far, supporting him over the other candidates in the race. Last month a Washington Post poll had him at 20 percent support among evangelicals, followed by the far more doctrinaire Walker and Huckabee at 14 and 12 percent respectively. His poll ratings went up dramatically among Iowa evangelicals after his debate performance and leaders such as Franklin Graham have publicly praised him on Facebook for “shaking up” the race. This is a man who has been married three times, previously supported abortion and gay rights and has pretty much been a poster boy for urban, elite decadence. So what gives? 
According to writer Amy Sullivan, who covers the religion beat, evangelicals are not that different from other Republicans, in that they are perpetually let down and disappointed in their leaders, but more than anything are just looking for a winner after 8 years of living in a liberal horror movie. Apparently, they are just as mad as hell as the rest of the GOP base and Lord knows Trump is the one who’s most effectively channeling that rage. 
But this article in The Daily Beast, by Betsy Woodruff, shows that Trump has surprisingly been cultivating the religious right for several years, making substantial donations to various Christian organizations and reaching out to Christian leaders and organizations. All the way back in 2012, he spoke at Liberty University where Jerry Falwell Jr. called him “one of the great visionaries of our time” and praised him for his leadership and political skills in “singlehandedly forcing President Obama to release his birth certificate.”

There’s more at the link.

Conservatives like it when people pander to them — it is a demonstration of their power. Indeed, they actually trust hypocrites more because they believe they will not take them for granted. And Trump seems to have a goo feel for how this works.

.

Influencers

Influencers

by digby

You may or may not have seen this 1990 profile of Trump but this is certainly interesting in light of … a lot of things, not least of which is his huge popularity among white supremacists:

Last April, perhaps in a surge of Czech nationalism, Ivana Trump told her lawyer Michael Kennedy that from time to time her husband reads a book of Hitler’s collected speeches, My New Order, which he keeps in a cabinet by his bed. Kennedy now guards a copy of My New Order in a closet at his office, as if it were a grenade. Hitler’s speeches, from his earliest days up through the Phony War of 1939, reveal his extraordinary ability as a master propagandist.

“Did your cousin John give you the Hitler speeches?” I asked Trump.

Trump hesitated. “Who told you that?”

“I don’t remember,” I said.

“Actually, it was my friend Marty Davis from Paramount who gave me a copy of Mein Kampf, and he’s a Jew.”

“I did give him a book about Hitler,” Marty Davis said. “But it was My New Order, Hitler’s speeches, not Mein Kampf. I thought he would find it interesting. I am his friend, but I’m not Jewish.”

Later, Trump returned to this subject. “If I had these speeches, and I am not saying that I do, I would never read them.”

Uh huh.

Looking before leaping by @BloggersRUs

Looking before leaping
by Tom Sullivan

Many refugees. Fewer solutions. Even fewer explanations.

Grim news from Austria:

A truck full of refugees discovered abandoned on an Austrian motorway on Thursday contained more than 70 bodies, the interior ministry said on Friday, announcing an updated death toll.

Austrian police had originally put the toll at up to 50 and are due to announce the exact number within hours. The vehicle had come to Austria from Hungary.

Dozens more perished in a sinking off the coast of Libya:

A boat reportedly packed with people from Africa and South Asia bound for Italy has sunk off the Libyan coast, raising fears that dozens have died.

A security official in Zuwarah, a town in the North African nation’s west from where the overcrowded boat had set off, said on Thursday there were about 400 people on board.

While an official death toll has not been announced, sources told Al Jazeera that dozens of people died in the incident, with many reported to have been trapped in the cargo hold when the boat capsized.

In Vienna, just east of the truck filled with bodies, European leaders at a scheduled summit struggled with a response:

“Never before in history have so many people fled their homes to escape war, violence and persecution,” German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said. “And given the large number of unresolved conflicts in our neighborhood, the stream of refugees seeking protection in Europe will not abate in the foreseeable future.”

The gruesome discovery of the truck brings the total of refugee deaths to more than 2,390 this year, according to the International Organization for Migration, compared to 2,081 on the same date in 2014. Many die aboard boats or rubber dinghies on the Mediterranean Sea, or while jumping onto trains as they try to reach the United Kingdom from France’s port city of Calais, where about 3,000 people live in squalid camps near the Eurotunnel entrance.

The BBC has this explainer on the source of the migrants and refugees. The Guardian attempts to dispel some of the misinformation: “Far from being propelled by economic migrants, this crisis is mostly about refugees.” Nearly two-thirds are fleeing “countries torn apart by war, dictatorial oppression, and religious extremism.”

What you won’t find is much analysis about what precipitated the conflicts in Libya and Syria, and one of the largest refugee crises since the end of the Vietnam War, from which we apparently learned little about looking before leaping. Hullabaloo readers can probably fill in those blanks without much prompting. Then again, one London tabloid has an explanation to warm chickenhawks’ hearts: We didn’t intervene enough.

So it goes.

What are these facts you speak of? #PlannedParenthood

What are these facts you speak of? 

by digby

Can you see what’s wrong with this picture?

Hugh Hewitt retweeted that obviously without seeing the picture and the real headline.

Not that it matters.  The Planned Parenthood jihad is underway and fact don’t matter to the Republicans as Hewitt demonstrates.

Here are the facts as they see them. Women are the worst mass murderers in the history of the world. Of course.

.

Challenging the autopsy

Challenging the autopsy

by digby

Remember when the Republicans did their famous post 2012 autopsy and decided they need to seriously change their policies toward latinos if they expect to win national elections?

Well …

Lindsay Graham, by the way, famously complained about Mexican women coming over the border to “drop a baby” as if they are animals so …

And the chart doesn’t include trump’s most popular policy: deportation of all undocumented immigrants and their American children.

.