Posts Tagged ‘democratic’

Obama Left Largely Helpless As Judicial Vacancies Reach Crisis

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

The Obama administration is aware of the growing alarm over its inability to fill long-standing judicial vacancies. White House officials frequently voice displeasure with the pace, offer heated indictments of the GOP’s stalling tactics, and occasionally threaten to circumvent the Congressional process. But for all the rhetoric, threats and critiques, even sympathetic observers acknowledge that the president is largely powerless (if not helpless) on the matter. That’s because both he and allies in Congress simply lack the tools to force the Republican Party’s hand. This past Friday, the Associated Press published a rather shocking report about just how poor Obama’s record on judicial vacancies is. “Fewer than half of Obama’s nominees have been confirmed,” the news wire wrote, “102 out of 854 judgeships are vacant,” and “forty-seven of those vacancies have been labeled emergencies by the judiciary because of heavy caseloads.” When pressed about the article’s findings during Tuesday’s daily briefing, however, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs offered only a well-trodden denunciation of the GOP’s tactics. “We have seen a lack of any sort of cooperation in moving a number of these nominees along,” he said. “And look, every president and Congress of different parties is going to have some fights about this but there continue to be an absurd number of judges who have passed… unanimously out of committee that need to be considered quickly by Congress.” Whether Gibbs could have said more and to what effect is debatable — underscoring, in its own way, the scope of the problem the White House faces. Noticeably absent from his response, for instance, was an overt threat to appoint a justice or two during the remaining week of Congressional recess. “I can’t look into my crystal ball and tell you what’s ahead,” he said, when asked about exercising that president power. That may be because few inside the Democratic Party see recess appointments as a viable alternative. While the parliamentary maneuver allows the White House to circumvent congressional confirmation, it would only allow the appointee to serve for a limited time period — a restriction that, as one progressive judicial activist put it, “abandons the notion about why you have lifetime appointments in the first place.” Nor did Gibbs press Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to create floor time for votes on those nominees already passed through the Judicial Committee. That’s because to do so, in any sort of meaningful way, would be to essentially forfeit all additional Senate business. There are currently 17 judicial nominees (five for circuit court, 12 for district court) who have actually been passed through committee and are waiting a vote by the full Senate. Filing cloture on just a single one would spur a 30-hour window of debate. As the Center for American Progress reported in late July: If Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) were to cancel all recesses on August 1 and require the Senate to work 24 hours a day, seven days a week, doing nothing but considering judicial nominees, the last nominee would not be confirmed until well into autumn–and that’s assuming that the Senate passed no bills, confirmed no other nominees, and took up no other matters for this entire period! Progressive activists, to be sure, see a middle ground between making temporary recess appointments and filling up the Senate calendar. That involves having Democratic leadership actually force Republicans to publicly defend their opposition to unanimous consent agreements on a batch of nominees. “The obstruction we are seeing from the Republicans is unprecedented,” said Marge Baker, executive vice president at People For the American Way. “And unfortunately the only way to potentially break the logjam is to call them on their tactics. And that requires a focus and attention and persistence to work through the nominees on the calendar. Call the Republicans’ bluff and see if they are willing to keep the Senate in session.” But whether the parliamentary avenues exist for this to happen is an open debate. At the very least there are some operatives in the party who worry that the GOP would be perfectly content to run out the legislative clock, 30 hours at a time, as the election approaches. Congress returns from recess on September 13 but is off once more on October 8, as lawmakers turn their full attention to their campaigns. There is finally a somewhat informal recognition that, at the end of Congressional sessions, the White House will get a number of its nominees confirmed. But prior to the August break only five judicial appointees made it through the Senate. Currently there are 103 vacancies. Read more: Republican Courts , Obama Courts , Obama , Obama Gibbs , Obama Nominees Judges , Obama Judicial Vacancies , Obama Judicial Nominees , Gibbs Nominees , Politics News

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Obama Left Largely Helpless As Judicial Vacancies Reach Crisis
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Rendell Being Rendell, Calls Republicans ‘Fruit Loops’, ‘Whackos’ And ‘Flat-Out Crazy’

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

In an unofficial start to the last stretch of the 2010 campaign season, top officials throughout the Democratic Party upped the rhetoric on Wednesday, spotlighting the crazier characters and policy positions that could land in Congress with GOP gains. No one, however, brought as much gusto to the pitch as Gov. Ed Rendell (D-Penn.) Introducing DNC Chairman Tim Kaine at the University of Pennsylvania, the retiring Pennsylvania Democrat, known for his oratorical flair, warned about the government being taken over by “whackos.” He called some of the more colorful characters in the Republican Party “fruit loops.” He derided House Minority Leader John Boehner as “the tan guy,” and said that some of the GOP’s positions are “flat out crazy.” “I’m telling you,” Rendell said. “If I’m an independent voter in [Rep.] Patrick Murphy’s district, sure I’m worried about the deficit but I sure as heck am worried about people who want to do away with the 14th amendment. I’m sure as heck worried about people who don’t think the president was born in the United States of America. I sure as heck am worried about people who think that workers are staying home because of unemployment benefits… they are nuts. They are flat-out crazy.” “We are going to turn the reins of the Congress over to these people who are more and more dominated by the whacko right?” he added. Following Rendell on the stage, Kaine took a slightly less rowdy approach to his castigation of the GOP, choosing instead to go through a list of the more outlandish Senate candidates and their inflammatory positions. In all, however, this appears to be the last push Democrats will make as the election looms. The policies passed by the Democratic Congress have not sold as well as planned with the American public. The president doesn’t have the same political sway as he did just months ago. And the economy has yet to recover to a level that leaves the public comforted. The final resort to motivate voters rests in pointing out how much worse a change of power could be. Rendell himself hinted as much when he noted at the beginning of his remarks that if the Democratic Party “can bridge the enthusiasm gap, we can win.” White House Senior Adviser David Axelrod offered as much when he told the Huffington Post that a Republican-controlled Congress in 2010 could push policies worse than those that defined the Bush administration. “I saw that [Alaska GOP Senate candidate] Joe Miller said that he would abolish Social Security if he had the chance and he is not alone,” said Axelrod. “This is akin to what [Nevada GOP Senate candidate] Sharron Angle has said in Nevada and also a number of these other Republicans. So, this could go one step beyond the policies of the Bush administration to something more extreme than we have seen.” Read more: Republican Party , Rendell Republicans , Rendell Gop , Ed Rendell , Rendell Fruit Loops , Rendell Whackos , Politics News

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Rendell Being Rendell, Calls Republicans ‘Fruit Loops’, ‘Whackos’ And ‘Flat-Out Crazy’
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Key Democrats split with Obama on taxes – CNN

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

CNN Key Democrats split with Obama on taxes CNN Washington (CNN) — Despite President Obama's accusation Wednesday that Republicans are holding middle class income tax cuts “hostage” by tying them to an extension of tax cuts for wealthier Americans, the reality is several Democratic senators also … Obama details opposition to extending tax cuts for the wealthy Washington Post Obama won't yield on tax hike for wealthiest The Associated Press Tax-cut extension could help economy, analysts say MiamiHerald.com Los Angeles Times

Barbara Boxer’s airlift to nowhere – Washington Times

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

TPMMuckraker (blog) Barbara Boxer's airlift to nowhere Washington Times California's Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer is not much of a pragmatist when it comes to the US military. She consistently voted to end the war in Iraq long before the outcome was at all certain, supporting numerous measures to put rigid … Sen. Boxer aide arrested for trying to bring pot into Senate office: report New York Post Marcus Stanley Pot Bust: Barbara Boxer Drug Scandal Revealed Right Pundits Capitol Alert: Boxer aide arrested on marijuana charge in Senate building Fresno Bee FOXNews (blog)

Robert Creamer: Time for the Pundits to Take a Deep Breath -Why Democrats Will Not be Routed In November

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Two years ago today, just two months before the 2008 Election, John McCain led Barack Obama for President in the compilation of national polls assembled by Pollster.com. The Democratic polling project at Democracy Corps had McCain up by two points. As everyone knows, on Election Day Obama beat McCain 53% to 46%. A lot can change in 56 days. Time for the pundits and prognosticators to take a deep breath. Despite all of their dire predictions of Democratic demise, the Republicans have not yet seized control of either chamber and I, for one, predict that they won’t any time soon. Democrats will certainly take losses in the coming Mid-terms. But the odds are good that they will emerge from the elections with working majorities in both houses. Read More… More on Democratic Convention

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Robert Creamer: Time for the Pundits to Take a Deep Breath -Why Democrats Will Not be Routed In November
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Dr. Denis Alexander: How Evolution Gets Used and Abused in the Science-Religion Debate

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

The ideological uses of science very often become tangled up in the debate between science and religion. Theories that for the scientist do practical work in the laboratory to make sense of certain data, and help map out the direction for future research, can be deployed in the world outside for or against various political, social, religious or anti-religious agendas. In the process the science becomes socially transformed, the original meanings of words in scientific discourse conveying quite different connotations. This trend goes back a long way, as well illustrated by the authors in the recently published Biology and Ideology: From Descartes to Dawkins (Denis R. Alexander and Ronald L. Numbers, eds, Chicago University Press, 2010). The 13 essays in this volume illustrate the many and varied ways in which biology in particular has been utilized for a wide range of political, religious, and social purposes from 1600 to the present day. The purposes may be beneficial, benign, or harmful in their outcomes, but all are “ideological” in the broadest sense of not being intrinsic to biology itself. With the benefit of hindsight, historians more than others are in a good position to discern such uses and abuses of biological ideas. Whereas the twentieth-century abuses of genetics in eugenics and in racist ideologies are obvious and thoroughly described in the present volume, less obvious are the subtle ways in which the same biological ideas have been used during the same period for quite opposite ideological purposes in different countries, as described by Prof. Shirley Roe and Prof. Peter Hanns Reill. The supposedly “materialistic” biology that in France was utilized by the philosophes to subvert the social order in the eighteenth century was in Britain used as a key resource for natural theology, whereas in Germany it was being used politically as an analogy for the structure of nation-states. Today the ideological uses of biology continue on as much as they ever did. In his chapter entitled “Creationism, intelligent design, and modern biology,” Prof. Ronald Numbers describes how the biological theory of evolution has been invested with ideological overtones, particularly in North America, ever since Darwin published his On the Origin of Species in 1859. For some evolution became a philosophy that threatened to undermine notions of man “made in the image of God.” For others, evolution became a political threat to the social order, subverting campaigns to achieve greater rights for the oppressed. This was particularly the case for the original President Obama who never was, the thrice-defeated Democratic candidate for the presidency of the United States, and campaigner for liberal reform, William Jennings Bryan (1860-1925). Early in 1922, as Numbers recounts, Bryan helped to launch a crusade aimed at driving evolution out of the churches and schools of America. But Bryan’s motivation was as much political as religious. He had become alarmed by the way that the philosophy of “might is right” reputedly fueled German militaristic ambitions during the First World War. Benjamin Kidd’s Science of Power (1918), a book that influenced Bryan, purported to demonstrate the historical and philosophical links between Darwinism and German militarism. It was Bryan’s campaign that helped launch the creationist movement of the early 1920s, leading in turn to the infamous Scopes Trial of 1925. The movement benefited from another leading campaigner of the same era, the Canadian Adventist George McCready Price, who agreed with Bryan that the First World War, during which Germany put “the ruthless ethics of Darwinism … into actual practice,” provided ample evidence of the threat evolution posed to human freedom. What Numbers brings out so clearly in his chapter is the way in which the theory of evolution was socially transformed into a bogey-man for virtually anyone who had an axe to grind. Rather than simply explaining the origins of biological diversity, it became an icon of materialism, or militarism, or atheism, or socialism, or capitalism. In fact evolution has been deployed since 1859 in support of almost every “ism” that exists, many of them mutually exclusive. All kinds of ideological barnacles became attached to the theory to the extent that the actual biology was obscured in the process. Ironically, as Prof. Alister McGrath makes clear in his chapter entitled “Evolutionary biology in recent atheist apologetics,” the presentation of evolution by the “new atheists” is in fact very similar to that of the creationists and more recent proponents of Intelligent Design. Opposite poles are often more similar to each other than either side might be prepared to admit. In the hands of Prof. Richard Dawkins, evolution becomes an ultra-Darwinian philosophy in rivalry with the idea of creation. Dawkins argues that there are at present only three possible ways of seeing the world: Darwinism, Lamarckism, or God. The last two fail to explain the world adequately; the only option is therefore Darwinism. In such claims, McGrath notes, evolution becomes exalted to a metanarrative, infused with the ideological rhetoric of atheism. The ideological uses and abuses of science are bad for science education, because so often the science gets lost in the rhetoric. They are also bad for religion, because scientific theories are always provisional, open to refutation, and simply not up to the herculean task of refereeing between pro- or anti-religious arguments. Darwinian evolution, for example, just happens to be the inference to the best explanation for the origins of all the biological diversity on planet earth. It’s a stunningly successful theory, but it’s best just to let scientific theories do the job that they’re good at, and not invest them with ideologies that have nothing to do with the science.

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Dr. Denis Alexander: How Evolution Gets Used and Abused in the Science-Religion Debate
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Top Democrats Throw Cold Water On Obama Jobs Plan

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

House Democratic leaders are already writing off President Barack Obama’s $50 billion infrastructure proposal, saying that GOP opposition will likely doom any major bills on tap before the November elections. Read More… More on Barack Obama

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Top Democrats Throw Cold Water On Obama Jobs Plan
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Progressive Group: Rahm’s A ‘Cancer On The Democratic Party,’ Should ‘Flatly Go Away’

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

News that Chicago Mayor Richard Daley would not run for reelection produced almost instantaneous speculation that White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, not shy about his ambitions to be Chicago’s mayor, would make a run for the post. It also quickly produced the reflexive Rahm-bashing that has become a staple of the progressive community, which increasingly views him as the point person for the ills that have beset this White House. “Rahm is unfit to represent Democrats in office,” Progressive Change Campaign Committee co-founder Adam Green said. “He’s a cancer on the Democratic Party. Democrats’ current 2010 situation is due to a weak Rahm Emanuel mentality that says water down real reform at the urging of Republicans and corporations, thus making Democratic reform less popular with voters than the real deal would have been. If Democrats had passed the overwhelmingly-popular public option and broken up the big banks when they had the chance, they’d be cruising for a landslide victory right now.” Read More… More on Rahm Emanuel

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Progressive Group: Rahm’s A ‘Cancer On The Democratic Party,’ Should ‘Flatly Go Away’
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Democratic Primary Turnout Lowest in 80 Years, Study Shows – CBS News

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

USA Today Democratic Primary Turnout Lowest in 80 Years, Study Shows CBS News More Republicans voted in this year's statewide primary elections than Democrats, according to a new study, marking the first time GOP turnout has exceeded Democratic turnout in midterm primaries since 1930. Republican turnout exceeded Democratic … Battle royal over health care repeal if GOP wins The Associated Press American University expert: Democratic turnout lowest in 80 years USA Today GOP vote fueled Missouri Top Ten primary turnout increase; Illinois declines St. Louis Post-Dispatch CQPolitics.com

David Axelrod: Republican Congress Could Be ‘More Extreme’ Than Bush (EXCLUSIVE)

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

With polls and prognosticators predicting a massive Republican rout — and the likely election of uncompromising, out-of-the-mainstream conservatives — in the fall, the Obama administration has begun raising dire alarms in its pitch to voters. Remember the Bush administration, the argument goes. It could be worse. “I saw that [Alaska GOP Senate candidate] Joe Miller said that he would abolish Social Security if he had the chance and he is not alone,” said chief adviser David Axelrod. “This is akin to what [Nevada GOP Senate candidate] Sharron Angle has said in Nevada and also a number of these other Republicans. So, this could go one step beyond the policies of the Bush administration to something more extreme than we have seen.” In an interview with the Huffington Post from his West Wing office late last week, Axelrod’s criticism of the president’s Republican critics were some of the most sweeping to date. The senior adviser called the GOP strategy for scuffling Obama, “insidious” if not “clever.” Republican leadership, he ventured, has “put emphasis on throttling things down… hoping that the mess that they created… would be so difficult to clean up that they could then blame us for their problems.” “I think realistically what you have is a Republican Party that is now thoroughly focused on one thing and they have been frankly from the beginning: which is to try and regain power,” he said. “And their strategy is to lock everything down and not let anything happen.” The remarks suggest a White House that is frustrated at the hand it’s been dealt, as well as increasingly concerned about the state of the electorate. Axelrod declined to place a marker on how November will play out. But he did note that history is not on the side of the president he serves. By Monday, that history’s repetition was crystallizing. Stu Rothenberg, editor of the Rothenberg Political Report , released new predictions , putting the number of Republican gains in the House at 37 to 42 seats. Forty-five to 55 seats, he added, are “quite possible.” A poll released by ABC News and the Washington Post the night before, meanwhile, revealed that for the first time in more the four years, the GOP is running even with Democrats in terms of the confidence it earns from registered voters. Faced with the possibility of a major, historic sweep on Election Day, however, the Democratic base isn’t showing signs of turning out in November. “In a sense, we are a victim of our own success, of the expectations that the president aroused, and the fact that we have gotten so much done,” Axelrod said, in attempting to explain the enthusiasm gap between Republican and Democratic voters. “Everyone who has a particular passion says, ‘Well if you got that done why couldn’t you get this done? If you got health care done why couldn’t you get energy reform done? If you got financial reform why couldn’t you get something else done?’ The successes we’ve had have been a double-edged sword. I hope that at the end of the day, however, people will realize that this has been a period of enormous progress. I’m not begrudging people’s desire to get more done. There is a lot of pent-up energy and aspirations and all these things are important. But objectively this has been an enormously productive time and everyone who helped elect the president should feel gratified at what’s been accomplished because it wouldn’t have happened but for their efforts.” The problem facing the White House is that there is little they can do at this point to significantly affect the type of economic or political changes that would appeal to voters of any or all stripes. The president, over Labor Day weekend, laid out a set of fairly robust proposals to spur business growth, including extending tax breaks for research and development as well as money for infrastructure projects. Axelrod, likewise, pledged to have a vote the first day that Congress is back in session on a $30 billion small business tax cut bill that Republicans had stalled in the Senate. But even those measures don’t seem likely to change the trajectory of public opinion or electoral politics. “The depth of the problem that was created, the irresponsible policies, is something we are going to live with for a long time,” Axelrod acknowledged. “People are struggling and you want a silver bullet that will make that all better but there is no silver bullet.” And herein lies, perhaps, the point that causes the most introspection among the Obama communications team — how could they allow so many of those voters looking for a silver bullet to believe that the party that caused the strife in the first place is the one to fix it? An NBC/WSJ Poll released on Monday, for instance, showed that 58 percent of the public thinks Republicans would have different policies than President Bush’s. “Perhaps this is where we have been failing to communicate,” said Axelrod. “[A] large number of people [don't] believe that a Republican Congress would go back to the policies of George W. Bush, even though their own leaders have said as much in public. Pete Sessions said we want to go back to the same exact agenda that was there before this president took office. So our job in the next eight weeks is to make sure that people understand that, that they understand the stakes.” Read more: Axelrod Interview , White House Elections , David Axelrod , Obama Bush , Axelrod Bush , Obama Economy , 2010 Elections , Axelrod Republicans Insidious , Polls Obama , Axelrod Elections , White House Campaign , Politics News

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David Axelrod: Republican Congress Could Be ‘More Extreme’ Than Bush (EXCLUSIVE)
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