Posts Tagged ‘house’

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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Sen. Bob Casey: Focus on the Family Stands Up for Bullying

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Focus on the Family has launched an odd attack on legislation I introduced in the Senate to help prevent and respond to bullying in schools. Their legislative bullying highlights the type of intolerance and ill-informed divisiveness that contributes to the harassment in schools that this legislation seeks to prevent. The Safe Schools Improvement Act, introduced in the House by Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez, would require schools and districts receiving designated federal funds to adopt codes of conduct specifically prohibiting bullying and harassment, including conduct based on a student’s actual or perceived race, color, national original, sex, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity or religion. This bill has widespread support from educators, administrators, civil rights organizations and the National PTA. Yet, Focus on the Family has launched a campaign to brand the bill part of a vast LGBT conspiracy “to promote homosexuality to kids” and to push a “pro-gay curricula.” These charges are, of course, false. The legislation would not affect curriculum. The only goals are to help ensure that every child receives a quality education that builds self-confidence and that no child is so afraid to go to school for fear of unchecked bullying and harassment. What is true and inescapable is the countless news reports in recent years which have shown that bullying and harassment are widespread and affect millions of students every day. According to the Department of Education, nearly one in three school children between grades six through ten are affected by bullying and harassment. Studies show that the impacts of bullying and harassment have long-term consequences, including decreased concentration in the classroom, increased absenteeism, and lower student achievement. In extreme cases, some victims of bullying have even committed suicide as a result of rampant bullying left unchecked by school administrators. Without support from teachers and counselors, this behavior can have devastating effects on young people. In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, one girl says she was bullied by a group of boys almost daily throughout sixth and seventh grade and that this bullying contributed to her development of anorexia nervosa. The school’s guidance counselor allegedly told her that “boys will be boys” and the bullying was allowed to continue. She has since enrolled in a private school where her mother pays tuition to ensure her daughter attends a safe school. In Springfield, Massachusetts, Carl Walker Hoover resorted to suicide after facing endless taunting from fellow students who called him “gay” and made fun of his clothes. He was in just the sixth grade. A few months later in a nearby town, Phoebe Prince, 15, also committed suicide after facing a barrage of harassment both at school and online through Facebook. This legislation would ensure that schools and school districts implement effective prevention programs in order to better prevent and respond to incidences of bullying and harassment both in school and online that have an impact in the classroom. It would also require that states report data on incidences of bullying and harassment to the Department of Education. The only way to combat intolerance and harassment is to have an open and honest dialogue — that counts for the public policy arena as a well as the classroom.

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Sen. Bob Casey: Focus on the Family Stands Up for Bullying
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Speculation swirls as top Obama aide mulls mayoral run – Reuters

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

The Guardian Speculation swirls as top Obama aide mulls mayoral run Reuters WASHINGTON, Sept 8 (Reuters) – Nobody at the White House would be surprised if President Barack Obama's influential right-hand man, Rahm Emanuel, decides to run for Chicago mayor and already there is speculation as to who would replace … Rahm “F—ing Retarded” Emanuel to Discuss Civility CBS News Rahm Emanuel making nice? He must be running for something. Christian Science Monitor White House Shake Up? Rahm Emanuel Departure Would Auger 'Change' ABC News FOXNews

Andy Miah: Will Citizen Journalists Take Over the London 2012 Olympic Games?

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Two years from now, the London 2012 (@London2012) Olympic and Paralympic Games will draw to a close, concluding what will become known as the first social media Olympic Summer Games. The city of London is promising to make the city a pervasive wi-fi zone and the British government’s move towards a “Digital Britain” ( @DigitalBritain ) coincides with this period. But, what impact will social media have on how the games function in the long-term? Will the Olympic Games of the next decade continue to be founded on complex broadcast exclusivity, or will the era of freemium and AdSense come to dominate this elite club of transnational corporations? At the Vancouver 2010 games earlier this year, the International Olympic Committee launched its entry into the new media world, by teaming up with Yahoo! to produce a Flickr meet up. As well, since 2008, the IOC has been broadcasting Olympic content online through YouTube and its Facebook and Twitter accounts now occupy an integral part of their communications strategy. Computer games are even on their radar, thus bringing an end to an era of pretending that computing is somehow at odds with a healthy, active lifestyle. All of this indicates the IOC’s commitment to opening up to new media, but what challenges does this present for them and Olympic fans? Will the IOC be able to retain a strong control of its intellectual property, or will it develop new methods of making money? For London 2012, these challenges are particularly apparent, as these games have been positioned as the nation’s games. Some funding has even been devolved to all parts of the United Kingdom and plans are in place to ensure that the games are celebrated throughout the country notably through an extended body of cultural activity. This framework provides space for citizens outside of London to critically engage with the games, while also enabling a route towards celebrating the sports. However, the media structures that underpin the games-time period all converge on the Olympic capital, leaving little space for anything else to gain a platform. So, who will hear about these other stories? One route will come in the form of citizen journalists, an increasingly prevalent character within Olympic community. At a Summer Olympics, around 20,000 official journalists descend on the Olympic capital, while a further 15,000 unaccredited journalists are expected in London. Yet, it is the blogger and social media journalist that is set to dramatically transform these figures. In Vancouver, citizen journalists self-organized to create independent media centers, covering everything other than sports, from local heritage to critically discussing aspects of the Olympic program and values. One of them, True North Media House (#TNMH), embraced the most liberal approach to accreditation, asking its journalists to download a template media pass, attach their own photograph and laminate it themselves. These trends towards a more open media environment, promise a different media landscape at an Olympic Games and, on October 4 this year, people within the UK will have their first taste of this alternative future for the Olympic and Paralympic media at an independently funded unconference. Hosted by the Abandon Normal Devices festival (@ANDfestival, #ANDfest) the #media2012 event will bring experts from recent and forthcoming Olympic & Paralympic host countries, notably Canada, Russia and Brazil into contact with the UK to consider crowd source solutions for the games’ media coverage and to find a way of making #media2012 a dominant hashtag for the Olympic and Paralympic period. One clear target is to radically transform the amount of coverage the Paralympic Games receives, which is always the poor relation of the Olympics in terms of profile. In the aftermath of the Vancouver 2010, where vast amounts of public funding were cut after the games and amid economic downturn, the need for renegotiating the terms by which journalism takes place around mega-events — and more generally — is significant. Indeed, in such circumstances, the need for independent media becomes even greater, as traditional media organizations experience diminishing or fragmented audiences and as greater vigilance over governmental decisions is needed. In London, arts and culture are likely to lose at least 25% of government funding and, perhaps up to 40 % over the current administration. While many citizen journalists will celebrate the games, they are also likely to find space to criticize what it should have achieved, beyond hosting safe competitions. While the accredited journalists are housed in their official facilities, eating McDonalds and drinking Coca-Cola, citizen journalists will own the streets of London, capturing what happens in the Olympic grey zones. Whether or not their contribution will transform the international view of what symbolizes the London 2012 Games remains to be seen. However, with a little bit of organization, there is a good chance that official media may need to become part of this new wave of gonzo journalism to fully do their job of reporting what these games were all about. Yet, the biggest challenge is not convincing professional journalists that their power is waning or that they need to reskill towards the blogosphere. Indeed, most innovative media organizations are already doing this. Rather, the bigger problem is the public relations officers who have spent years cultivating relationships with professional journalists on the belief that this will get their organizations kudos and coverage. This loyalty to a diminishing power can frustrate collaborations between professional and citizen journalists. If the hashtag #media2012 fails to dominate social media coverage during the London 2012 Games, or if citizen journalists remain fragmented, then this may reveal its failure to bring about change. That is, unless the concept of a hashtag and Twitter have ceased to exist by then.

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Andy Miah: Will Citizen Journalists Take Over the London 2012 Olympic Games?
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Emanuel Would Face Field of Candidates in Race for Chicago Mayor – FOXNews

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Ha’aretz Emanuel Would Face Field of Candidates in Race for Chicago Mayor FOXNews White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel may be considering a run for the top job in Chicago after Mayor Richard Daley announced he would not seek re-election. (AP) The race for Chicago mayor, a contest that kicked off Tuesday afternoon when Richard … The race to replace Rahm is on CNN International Emanuel for Chi-town mayor? Obama aide assesses options USA Today The Daley Years The Atlantic The Canadian Press

What to Do If You Get the Flu

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

So what do you do when someone in your house has the flu? Here’s a countdown for your flu-fighting days.

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What to Do If You Get the Flu
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Obama to challenge Republican foes on economy – AFP

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

CNN International Obama to challenge Republican foes on economy AFP WASHINGTON — US President Barack Obama Wednesday threw down the gauntlet to Republicans on the economy, as the lagging recovery and crippling unemployment threaten Democrats with a mid-term election meltdown. Obama was traveling to Cleveland, Ohio, … GOP sets sights on statehouses Dallas Morning News Q+A: Congressional midterm elections Reuters Grim outlook for Democrats puts House up for grabs The Associated Press Washington Post (blog)

Shelly Palmer: Truthiness In A Connected World – Part 3

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

By Shelly Palmer and Jared Palmer – Over the past few weeks, we’ve been discussing the concepts and constructs of Truth (with a capital “T”), truth (with a lower case “t”), truthiness (as coined by Stephen Colbert), reality, wikiality (also coined by Stephen Colbert) and facts as they apply to our connected world. You can read part one by clicking here and part two by clicking here . It’s time to look at trust circles, truth clusters and the way information travels. We’ll try to map Truth, truth and facts, and think about ways to navigate the body of knowledge as we continue to explore truthiness in our connected world. In part two, I highlighted a story in the New York Post about the John Concepcion case. The Post reported that Concepcion (a convicted murderer who had damaged his own liver by attempting suicide) had somehow made it to the top of the transplant list ahead of seemingly more deserving people, and been given a liver transplant. If you remember, I had a Socratic debate with Judge Jeanine Pirro in the make-up room at Fox 5 about how this happened and what could be done about it. We had a lively discussion. Both of us retained our point of view, no minds were changed and the facts of the case were never in dispute. Sadly, this story was not a Truth, truth nor fact. On July 28th, 2010, the Post corrected itself, saying that they could not actually verify that the transplant took place. The correction was made in a tiny 2×3 box on the inside flap. (Author’s note: I read the paper version of the New York Post almost every morning, it is one of my guilty pleasures. It is not my intention to beat them up over a mistake. This particular incident just happens to work perfectly for our truthiness thesis.) This week I also ran into Judge Jeanine Pirro in the make-up room just before our respective segments on Fox 5. We chatted about stuff and then I asked her if she saw that I mentioned her in last week’s piece. Remarkably, Her Honor had not seen the Post’s retraction and she did not know that Mr. Concepcion had not received a liver transplant. The facts didn’t change Jeanine’s opinion about how the hypothetical situation should have been handled, but it did render our discussion moot. Now, Jeanine Pirro is very smart, and she had no trouble adjusting her worldview to incorporate the new evidence. But, there are hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of people who did not see the Post’s retraction. And they are still operating under the assumption that John Concepcion received a liver ahead of other, possibly more deserving, people. I’d like to examine how this information traveled around the InterWeb, but first, we need some definitions. Let’s define a “trust circle” as our immediate, must trusted sources (friends, relatives, colleagues, thought leaders). Our test being that we would trust their opinion over Brian Williams’. (You can use your own benchmark for trust, we trust Brian!!!) Let’s define a “truth cluster” as a group of trust circles with similar beliefs. And, just for fun, let’s imagine a “super cluster” as a group of truth clusters. Although this story was initiated in print by a New York Post credentialed journalist — within a remarkably short time, it was broadcast in the local market using both radio and television. While it was not known to be true, the Post’s standards and practices allowed it to print the story as fact. And, due to the sensationalist nature of the story, emotions on both sides of the issue instantly came into play. Significantly faster than the story was translated from print to broadcast media, it put the InterWeb in OverTweet. There were dozens of blog posts, tweets, status updates, comments, emails, smoke signals, and carrier pigeons flying all over the place telling all kinds of stories about this story. There were no facts, just the “truth” with a small “t” printed in the New York Post. However, this truth became a Truth, with a capital “T” to some and was assumed to be a fact by others. The idea that a convicted murderer who damaged his own liver while trying to commit suicide was somehow put on the top of the liver transplant list, made people’s blood boil. Trust circles embraced the idea and a huge super cluster of complete misinformation appeared within hours. In a physical explosion, the energy would have dissipated by now. And so it did with this story. It’s no longer in the news cycle, practically forgotten by all. Except, the misinformation can never be unpublished and the rhetoric can never be unsaid — it is all part of the body of knowledge of the InterWeb, the blogosphere, the tweetosphere, Facebookistan, etc. We have all seen this kind of behavior before. It’s not new. People make mistakes or simply lie all the time. Storytelling is an art form and there is always plenty of artistic license taken no matter who is telling the story. However, this is the first time in history that we have seen trust circles empowered by instantly scalable technologies. In the next and final installment of this series we will look at message management in the information age and explore the techniques that may help us find truthiness in our connected world. Shelly Palmer is the host of ” Digital Life with Shelly Palmer ,” a weekly half-hour television show about living and working in a digital world which can be seen on WNBC-TV’s NY Nonstop. He is Managing Director of Advanced Media Ventures Group, LLC an industry-leading advisory and business development firm and the President of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, NY (the organization that bestows the coveted Emmy® Awards). Mr. Palmer is the author of Television Disrupted: The Transition from Network to Networked TV (2008, York House Press) and the upcoming, Get Digital: Reinventing Yourself and Your Career for the 21st Century Economy (2010, Lake House Press). You can join the MediaBytes mailing list here . Shelly can be reached at shelly@palmer.net For information visit www.shellypalmer.com

GOP sets sights on statehouses – Dallas Morning News

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

New York Daily News GOP sets sights on statehouses Dallas Morning News The midterm elections are being closely watched to determine whether Republicans will have a majority in Congress for the next two years. But it is the outcome of a lower-profile battle over state legislatures that could strengthen the Republican Party … Grim outlook for Democrats puts House up for grabs The Associated Press Study: Democratic turnout for primaries lowest in 80 years USA Today Dem base told: Fear Tea Party The Hill Crosscut