Good morning! Here is your news for Thursday February 13, 2020.
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Feb 13, 2020
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Good morning from Washington, where many lawmakers don’t question the radical LGBT agenda. Our Fred Lucas talks to two of three girls who are going to court because they’re forced to run track against biological males. On the podcast, Concerned Women for America’s Penny Nance takes on the revival of the Equal Rights Amendment. Plus: abortion is a big subject on a Chinese-owned social media app, and our favorite problematic women address millennials’ mental health. One hundred years ago today, the League of Nations, predecessor to the United Nations, recognizes the “perpetual neutrality” of Switzerland. |
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THE EPOCH TIMES
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DAYBREAK
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— There are mixed signals from Bernie Sanders’ narrow victory in New Hampshire, but for now he’s supplanted Joe Biden as a weak frontrunner for the nomination. — Overall, though, the race remains very uncertain as the scene shifts to the more diverse states of Nevada and South Carolina. — Center-left candidates got substantially more support than progressive ones in New Hampshire, but the center-left vote split in such a way that Sanders was able to win. Pete Buttigieg has slightly more delegates so far, though. Sanders now a weak frontrunnerIn the wake of his victory in the New Hampshire primary, Bernie Sanders seemed to some like an unstoppable frontrunner. To others, he seemed like a spent force. That there is evidence backing up both arguments is a testament to the uncertainty of the Democratic race following the first-in-the-nation primary. The argument for Sanders is not only that he won New Hampshire, but also that the person who seemed throughout 2019 like the biggest obstacle to him winning the nomination — Joe Biden — sputtered to a pitiful fifth-place finish, failing to crack double digits. Sanders’ other seeming top rival, Elizabeth Warren, is arguably in even worse shape than Biden: At least Biden can try to make last stands in more diverse Nevada and particularly South Carolina, where he hopes that the state’s majority African-American electorate can resuscitate his flagging campaign. Warren has no such redoubt: Iowa and New Hampshire could or should have been good states for her; she did OK in the former, and terribly in the latter. Meanwhile, Pete Buttigieg probably would have won both Iowa — which he narrowly carried in terms of delegates over Sanders despite Sanders receiving more votes — and New Hampshire had Amy Klobuchar thrown in the towel after her mediocre fifth-place finish in the Hawkeye State. Instead, Klobuchar used a strong debate performance Friday night as a springboard into a solid third place in New Hampshire, finishing closer to Sanders and Buttigieg in first and second than to Warren and Biden in fourth and fifth. Here again, Sanders benefits from this alignment of rivals: While Sanders has not demonstrated widespread appeal to African Americans — a backbone demographic of the Democratic Party that has not really been heard from yet — Buttigieg and Klobuchar are significantly weaker among black voters than Sanders is, at least right now. Sanders was threatened by a candidate who could dominate the black vote against him. Biden might’ve been that candidate, and hypothetically still could be, but it seems likelier now that the black vote might splinter, which probably helps Sanders. As Michigan State University political scientist Matt Grossmann argued Tuesday night, “Bernie won & both his main national competitor (Biden) & his ideological faction competitor (Warren) lost badly. But field remains too muddled for him to see full assault. All good for Bernie.” Note, though, that the pro-Sanders argument we just made above largely focuses on the challenges of his rivals, as opposed to his own performance. While it’s unfair to Sanders to measure him by his 60% vote share in a head-to-head race in New Hampshire against Hillary Clinton, his 26% plurality in a much larger field put him a few points behind his pre-election polling average in New Hampshire, and this was less than half his share from four years ago. He turned in this weak performance even as Warren sank, meaning that Warren’s former support probably split among several other candidates as opposed to flowing mainly to her colleague, Sanders, on the leftward edge of the Democratic Senate caucus. So if Warren were to drop out, we can’t assume Sanders would disproportionately benefit. Sanders did great among younger voters and liberals, but not necessarily with other kinds of voters. While turnout was up from 2016, the demographics of the turnout were not really favorable to Sanders, calling into question his claims that he can expand the electorate in his favor in both a primary and general election setting. And, as Grossmann added at the end of the tweet quoted above, “media coverage does not seem likely to help him bounce or expand his coalition.” It makes some sense to compare this race to the 2016 GOP contest, at least in the sense that both featured large fields and a New Hampshire primary winner who party elites didn’t really like (Donald Trump and now Sanders). Trump got 35% in New Hampshire four years ago, finishing about 20 points ahead of second-place finisher John Kasich. Sanders’ win was much more of a nail-biter, and he only got 26% of the vote, a historically weak showing for a Granite State primary winner. Trump benefited from GOP nominating rules in 2016 that made it easier for plurality winners to accumulate delegates earlier in the process. For instance, Trump followed up his New Hampshire win by taking 32% in South Carolina, but he won 100% of the state’s delegates while doing so. The uniform Democratic rules, which require at least 15% support to be included in a proportional allocation, can distribute the delegates much more evenly. Sanders tied with Buttigieg in delegates in New Hampshire, and the upstart former South Bend, Indiana mayor actually leads the veteran senator by two in the overall delegate count (granted, there is a long time to go — the two lead-off states, combined, awarded only about 1.5% of the total pledged delegates available). There is more below as we update our UVA Center for Politics/Decision Desk HQ delegate tracker. Biden clearly took a hit in Iowa, and New Hampshire only exacerbated his problems. National polling, where Biden has almost always led, has moved against him, and Sanders has taken the top spot. Michael Bloomberg, powered by his eye-popping television advertising, has seemed to benefit more from Biden’s fall. Friend of the Crystal Ball Chaz Nuttycombe noted Wednesday morning that, over the last month, Bloomberg is up 7.5 points in the FiveThirtyEight national polling average, while Biden is down that same exact total, 7.5 points. The field is so fractured and fluid that it would be wrong to suggest Bloomberg is siphoning all his newfound support from former Biden supporters, but it’s also not a total coincidence, particularly as one notes the growth of Bloomberg among black voters in polling crosstabs while Biden slips among that same demographic. Honestly, it may be that the current numbers are catching Biden only in the midst of an ongoing freefall. Politico’s Natasha Korecki, Marc Caputo, and Maya King reported a telling quote from Quentin James, who runs a PAC that backs black candidates: “Black voters are starting to leave him now. … A big reason lots of black voters were with Biden is they thought he was the best person to beat Trump. And they thought one reason for that is that he had the support of white voters. Now they see he has done so poorly with white voters and he no longer looks like the electability candidate.” Or, as Theodore Johnson, an expert on black voting patterns, put it, “For a bloc whose top priority is defeating the president, electoral pragmatism necessarily rules the day.” Black voters may have been attracted to Biden out of pragmatism; could they move in sizable numbers to Bloomberg, Buttigieg, or Klobuchar out of that same kind of pragmatism, rooted in a belief held by at least some Democrats that Sanders is too left-wing to win a national general election? Potentially. The possibility of a single candidate winning a significant share of the black vote against Sanders has always seemed like a major threat to his nomination, and it remains a threat — just a diminished one thanks to the diminished standing of Biden. How does one sort this out? Sanders has replaced Biden as the race’s weak frontrunner, and certainly Biden is nowhere near being a frontrunner. Sanders can bolster his case with a strong showing in the next contest, Nevada, nine days from now. We are flying blind into Nevada, a caucus state where there is no fresh polling as of this writing. Our best guess is that Sanders would win it if the caucus were held today but, as we’ve seen, this is a fluid race. There will be another debate, next Wednesday, and Bloomberg may be on the stage. He probably would prefer not to be given his strategy of carpet-bombing the airwaves while fending off increasingly negative coverage, including widespread reporting of comments he made defending the New York City police’s “stop and frisk” policy that struck many as racist. Given how Klobuchar surged following last Friday’s New Hampshire debate, the other candidates perhaps can hold out hope that they can benefit from the next encounter. New Hampshire winnowed the field a little — Andrew Yang, Deval Patrick, and Michael Bennet ended their campaigns — but not substantially (only Yang, who acquitted himself well as a newcomer candidate, had any measurable level of support). We’ll also have to see whether Tom Steyer enters the mix now; he hardly registered in either Iowa or New Hampshire, but he has polled decently in Nevada and South Carolina. For Sanders, the more viable candidates remain, the better his position. New Hampshire did not demonstrate his ability to win a wide breadth of support, but no one else can demonstrate such support either. In a race where everyone seems to have a ceiling, it helps to have a high floor, which Sanders does appear to possess. Before the voting started, Biden appeared to benefit from split opposition. That description now fits Sanders. He seems better-positioned than the others, but not overwhelmingly so. New Hampshire: A closer lookThroughout much of the night, Sanders retained a slim lead, which Buttigieg came tantalizingly close to surmounting. Perhaps not surprisingly, Sanders tended to run best in the rural counties that touch his home state of Vermont; he carried all but a handful of towns bordering Vermont. His best county in 2016, Cheshire — the southwestern corner of the state — again gave him the highest share of any county. Despite New Hampshire’s proximity to her own home state, Warren didn’t perform especially well with the voters that would presumably be most familiar with her. In fact, the opposite was true — across the 18 Granite State towns that border Massachusetts, she took just 8%, a tick under her statewide share. Instead, much of the Greater Boston towns acted as a base for Buttigieg (Map 1). Map 1: 2020 New Hampshire Democratic primary by townMap 2: 2020 New Hampshire Democratic primary, second placePolitical distinctions among voters who do and do not have a degree have become highly salient. White voters without a degree powered Donald Trump in both the 2016 Republican primary and general election, although he pushed away some white degree-holders in the process. On the Democratic side, the non-college vs. college distinction has also been salient, particularly because the electorates in both Iowa and New Hampshire have both been roughly evenly divided between voters who do have degrees and those who do not. That’s according to the Associated Press/Fox News VoteCast, which is essentially an alternative to the exit polls that other news agencies conduct in conjunction with each other. Table 1 shows the Iowa and New Hampshire VoteCast results based on whether respondents did or did not have a degree. As polling throughout 2019 suggested, Bernie Sanders was stronger with voters who don’t have a degree. Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar are stronger with those who do. That seemed to be the case with Pete Buttigieg too, but his level of support among these two groups was basically the same in New Hampshire. Table 1: IA/NH college vs. non-college preferences among top five candidatesThe results in the 20 most highly-educated towns bears this out. Note that Buttigieg ran just a tiny bit ahead of his statewide share in these locales, while Klobuchar ran a little ahead and Sanders a little behind. This is based on the most recent U.S. American Community Survey estimates of four-year college attainment. Statewide, 36% had a bachelor’s degree or higher, compared to 63% in this group. Table 2: New Hampshire primary results in 20 best-educated townsHanover, which houses Dartmouth College, is the most highly-educated municipality in the state — 81% of its residents over 25 years old hold a college degree. Buttigieg carried this Ivy League area but Sanders tended to dominate in towns that house public universities. As the youth vote is a valuable demographic to Democratic candidates, the contrast — or, perhaps, accord — between public and private colleges could be a persistent hallmark in other state primaries this season. Strong turnout on both sidesAfter a disappointing turnout in Iowa, Democrats beat the high-turnout 2008 Democratic primary in terms of raw votes cast (about 300,000), although that might not be quite as impressive as it seems once one takes population growth into account. Still, those looking at turnout as a sign of overall Democratic engagement — we’re honestly not sure whether it has any predictive value for November — had to be more heartened by voter participation in this contest than in Iowa. By the way, Donald Trump was also running in the New Hampshire Republican primary. He got 84% of the vote, which is a pretty good showing even for a shoo-in nominee (his performance was on the higher end of the range enjoyed by the last four reelected presidents: Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama). Polling has consistently shown Trump with very solid support from his own party, and the results from Iowa and New Hampshire reinforce the polling. Additionally, Trump got significantly more than double the vote of Bush in 2004 or Obama in 2012 (about 130,000 votes). So Republicans could point to strong engagement on Trump’s behalf as well. Split opposition facilitates Sanders pluralityGoing into the primary, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Biden were competing for supremacy of the “moderate” lane while Sanders and Warren tailored their campaigns to more progressive-minded voters. Though Sanders ultimately prevailed, with 26%, in this very fractured field, 53% of Tuesday’s vote went to more center-left candidates, compared to 35% for the main progressive candidates (Map 3). If establishment elements within the Democratic Party are hoping to preclude Sanders’ potential pathway to the nomination, this is a sharp reminder that they must better unify their efforts behind a single candidate. Map 3: Aggregate center-left vs. progressive vote share in New HampshireThe delegate mathFor nearly a week after the conclusion of the Iowa caucuses, we held off on counting IA national delegates due to the slow tabulation and identified errors. The Iowa Democratic Party put out final numbers — pending a partial recanvass — for the caucuses, including official national delegate counts. As a result, we updated our 2020 delegate count for the first time, confirming those numbers barring changes to the underlying SDEs in a recanvass. We also have a delegate count for New Hampshire, and full New Hampshire results can be found at results.decisiondeskhq.com. While Bernie Sanders won the most first and final alignment votes in Iowa, national delegates are awarded based off of state delegate-equivalents, which does not necessarily align with the former two vote measures. Pending recanvassing, Pete Buttigieg has narrowly beaten Bernie Sanders in SDEs, 364.3 to 361.5. As a result, he gains a small edge in statewide delegates. Buttigieg did especially well in CD3, while CD2 was Sanders’ best district. Klobuchar gained one delegate as a result of her performance in CD4, the only location where she cracked the 15% threshold. Table 3: Current Iowa delegate allocationTable 4: New Hampshire delegate allocation |
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How to Fix the Presidential Primary Process | |||||||
By Larry J. Sabato Editor in Chief, Sabato’s Crystal Ball |
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Of parties, presidential politics, and the quadrennial orgyImagine that a convention of clowns met to design an amusing, crazy-quilt schedule to nominate presidential candidates. The resulting system would probably look much as ours does today. The incoherent organization of primaries and caucuses, and the candidates’ mad-dash attempts to move around the map, would be funny if the goal — electing the leader of the free world — weren’t so serious. Few want to go back to the bad old days when party “bosses” chose presidential candidates in smoke-filled rooms. Primaries and caucuses are now fundamental to our conception of popular democracy in presidential selection. But there is such a thing as ineffective popular democracy, especially when it is hopelessly disorganized. A good-size piece of the problem can be labeled “Iowa and New Hampshire.” These two states seem to assume that the Constitution guarantees that they should go first, but a close reading of the text finds no such clause. The New Hampshire lead-off primary was initiated in 1920, and it has arguably been very influential since 1952, when it played a role in both the decision of President Truman not to seek reelection and Dwight Eisenhower’s successful quest for the GOP nomination. New Hampshire reprised its 1952 incumbent-toppling when Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy came within a few percentage points of President Lyndon Johnson in the 1968 Democratic primary, leading in part to LBJ’s decision shortly thereafter not to seek another term. The Iowa caucus has only played a role since 1968, and its true national debut came in 1972, when George McGovern scored well there on his way to a surprise, ill-fated Democratic nomination. Just four years later, the Iowa caucus propelled a little-known former Georgia governor, Jimmy Carter, to the Democratic nomination and the presidency, assisted also by Carter’s subsequent narrow victory in New Hampshire. In both the Hawkeye and Granite states, Carter received less than 30% of the votes, but in a crowded Democratic field of candidates, this low percentage was enough to prevail. Why should two small, heavily white, disproportionately rural states have a hammerlock on the making of the president? The truth is that Iowa and New Hampshire have a franchise they are determined to keep at all costs. New Hampshire even has a law that requires its secretary of state to do whatever is necessary to keep its primary first. Without a constitutional requirement, there is simply no solution to a situation that deteriorates every four years. Try as they might, the national party committees cannot orchestrate a fix. In the end, they can only punish a recalcitrant Iowa and New Hampshire in minor ways, by cutting the size of their convention delegations or giving the delegates bad hotels and seating at the party conclaves. The candidates who campaign in states holding contests earlier than permitted can also be penalized by having the national parties deny them any delegates they may win in those states. But a handful of lost delegates is trivial compared to the whirlwind of positive publicity secured by victory in early states. These penalties, light as they are, may not even materialize. By the time of the national conventions, the parties are unlikely to want to alienate swing states such as Iowa and New Hampshire as the general election campaign begins. Nor will the parties want to aggravate their candidates by penalizing them at a time when they are attempting to fully unify their forces at the convention. Congress has some power to intervene in the state-based, party-centered nominating process, yet the federal legislature would be highly unlikely to step into that briar patch. Presidential nominating reform has never been a priority for Congress, in part because of the traditional rights of the states and the parties to organize this sector of politics. It is highly doubtful that Congress will generate the will to clean up the nomination mess anytime soon. For one thing, the senators and representatives from Iowa and New Hampshire would be willing to do anything to stop congressionally sponsored reform, quite possibly with assistance from colleagues who would see their own presidential ambitions at stake. A senator who becomes a hero in Iowa and New Hampshire for saving the caucus and primary would be halfway to a presidential nomination! And realizing this, most or all of the senators with presidential aspirations would jump to back the Iowa/New Hampshire status quo. (It’s a rare ambitious senator who doesn’t get up in the morning and see a president in the mirror.) Thus, the only possible, comprehensive answer is likely to be a constitutional one. In the 21st century we the people need to do what the founders didn’t even perceive as necessary in their pre-party, pre-popular-democracy age. The guiding principle should be one that all citizens, in theory, can readily embrace: Every state and region ought to have essentially an equal chance, over time, to influence the outcome of the parties’ presidential nominations, and thus the selection of presidents. We are one nation, and simple equity demands that all of us, regardless of our state of residence, should have the opportunity at some point to influence the selection of presidential nominees by filling one of the precious, early voting slots. The nominating process ought also to be moved back into the four months leading up to the party conventions. Presidential politics now takes fully one fourth of a president’s four-year term — whether he is running for reelection or not — and with front-loading accelerating, it soon may consume even more of it. Not only is this bad for the presidency as an institution, but it causes the electorate to tire of the never-ending political campaign. It should be possible to create a system that flows from the first primaries and caucuses beginning in March or April directly into August party conventions, and then into the Labor Day kickoff for the autumn general election. Not only is this not rocket science; it doesn’t even qualify as elementary mathematics. It is easy, if the will and the means are present. The electorate must supply the will, and the Constitution should outline the means. There have been dozens of proposals to revamp the primary scheme, though none has been offered as a constitutional fix. Clearly, that is both because the Constitution currently ignores the politics of the system almost entirely and because a constitutional insertion — virtually written in stone — would have to be as fair and foolproof as possible. The following plan, the product of much discussion and thought, is proposed in that spirit. The regional lottery plan for the new ConstitutionThe Congress should be constitutionally required to designate four regions of contiguous states (with contiguity waived for Alaska and Hawaii, and any other stray territories that may one day become states). The regions would surely look something like the ones in Map 1, with natural boundaries denoting the Northeast, South, Midwest, and West. All of the states in each region would hold their nominating events in successive months, beginning in April and ending in July. The two major-party conventions would follow in August. This schedule, all by itself, would cut a couple of months off the too-long process currently prevailing in presidential years. Map 1: National regions for hypothetical primary systemBut how would the order of the regions be determined? In many cases, there would still be a bonus in going first. The establishment of a U.S. Election Lottery, to be held on New Year’s Day of the presidential election year, would yield fairness and also add an element of drama to the beginning of a presidential year. One of the nation’s famous lottery machines with the popup ping-pong balls would finally find a purpose beyond bestowing untold riches on people who can’t handle it. Four color-coded balls, each representing one of the regions, would be loaded into the machine, and in short order — the length of a 10-second lottery TV drawing — the regional primary order would be set. Since none of the candidates would know in advance where the political season would begin, part of the permanent presidential campaign would be dismantled. After all, even a very wealthy candidate wouldn’t waste the money necessary to organize all 50 states in advance, and the four-year-long homesteading in Iowa and New Hampshire would be gone forever (a note from the perspective of 2020 — OK, maybe Michael Bloomberg would or could). Much more important, the “law” of averages would give every state and each region, over time, the precious opportunity of going first. Clearly, there is no guarantee that a particularly lucky region would not be repeatedly chosen to start the process, but the equal-access principle is key to the fairness in this plan. These new constitutional provisions would “repeal” the nonexistent constitutional right to go first that Iowa and New Hampshire have appropriated for themselves. Another benefit of the Regional Lottery Plan would be the reasonable spacing between contests, allowing candidates potentially to recover from setbacks in one region and to regroup prior to the next set of contests. The news media and voters in each region would certainly be on the same page on this critical matter, demanding their fair share of attention. One additional facet should be added to the plan in order to enhance its effectiveness. The best argument made for Iowa and New Hampshire is that their small populations allow for highly personalized campaigning. The candidates are able to meet individual citizens for lengthy and sometimes repeated conversations about the issues, and these voters are able to size up potential presidents at eye level, without the candidates having the protection of the usual large retinue of image makers and staffers. In that sense, lightly populated states can serve as a useful screening committee for the rest of us. The United States is a continental country, after all, and each large region is still enormous in size. There is a way to combine the advantages of small-state scrutiny of candidates with the inherent fairness of round-robin regional primaries. We can achieve the best of both worlds by adding a second lottery on Jan. 1. The names of all states with four or fewer members in the U.S. House of Representatives (at present, 21 states) would be placed in a lottery machine, and two balls would be selected. This plan excludes the island territories, which are far-flung and don’t influence the November presidential outcome because they have no electoral votes. The District of Columbia should be included, however, and this would mean 22 jurisdictions would have a chance to be selected in the second lottery. With a larger population than Wyoming, and with three electoral votes assigned in November, the District’s citizens — currently and shamefully without full voting representation in either house of Congress — would no doubt relish and deserve this opportunity, should Lady Luck in the lottery deliver it to them. The two small states (or D.C.) with relatively low populations would lead off the regional contests, and they would be held on or about March 15 — at least two full weeks before the initial contests would begin in the first region. These two states would be free to stage a primary or a caucus, and the candidates would be free to participate in none, one, or both. As a practical matter, most candidates would choose both, unless a prominent candidate hailed from one of the lead-off states. Traditionally, a home candidate gets deference and is sometimes unopposed for the state’s delegate votes. Of course, the other party can still have a full-fledged fight in the state’s primary or caucus. No doubt, all the candidates would rush to these lead-off states right after the lottery on January 1, and they would have two and a half months to campaign. But there would be no permanent, four-year campaigns there, and personalized, one-to-one campaigning would be a large part of the effort. In other words, the two states would offer all the advantages of Iowa and New Hampshire, without having to always be Iowa and New Hampshire. Additionally, the guarantee of at least two weeks of decompression after the leadoff states make their choices gives voters in the first region a chance to evaluate the results and reevaluate the winners — and possibly to make different choices. In sum, the Regional Lottery Plan would achieve many good things simultaneously for a selection process that currently makes little sense. The election campaign would be shortened and focused, a relief to both candidates and voters. All regions and states would get an opportunity to have a substantial impact on the making of the presidential nominees. A rational, nicely arranged schedule would build excitement and citizen involvement in every corner of the country, without sacrificing the personalized scrutiny of candidates for which Iowa and New Hampshire have become justly known. And all of this can only come about by putting the politics of nominations and elections in its proper place — the United States Constitution. Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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THE FEDERALIST
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AMERICAN THINKER
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Roger Stone, the DoJ and the Rule of Law
Plus, a Wisconsin House primary provides a glimpse at the modern GOP.
The Dispatch Staff | 19 min | 1 |
Happy Thursday! A plane, a train, and an automobile officially have all your Morning Dispatchers back together again in the office after a week apart. Expect lots of rediscovered synergies in the days ahead.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Former White House chief of staff John Kelly unloaded on his former boss during a speech at Drew University in New Jersey. Kelly defended Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman for reporting his concerns about President Donald Trump’s Ukraine telephone call, and he offered pointed criticism of Trump’s approach to North Korea and his rhetoric on immigration, among other topics.
- Deval Patrick, former governor of Massachusetts, suspended his longshot campaign for president after failing to gain any traction since joining the race in November.
- Troy Price, the president of Iowa’s Democratic Party, has resigned his position following last week’s caucus fiasco.
- The Senate will vote later today on a war powers resolution limiting President Trump’s authority to launch military strikes against Iran. The measure is expected to receive enough Republican support to pass, but not enough to override a presidential veto.
- The Pentagon is backing additional restrictions on Chinese telecommunications company Huawei, according to a Politico report.
- The Department of Education is launching an investigation into Harvard and Yale Universities in response to their alleged failure to “report hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign gifts and contracts.”
Rule of Law or Rule of Trump?
In yesterday’s Morning Dispatch, we covered the Justice Department’s unprecedented decision to overrule its own line prosecutors working on the Roger Stone case, filing a new brief informing the judge that Justice considered the seven- to nine-year sentence prosecutors had sought to be “excessive and unwarranted.” The move provoked widespread outrage, most of it predicated on the assumption that Trump himself had leaned on the Justice Department—in particular, his loyal attorney general William Barr—to step in on the Stone case.
While several Trump administration officials spent Wednesday seeking to downplay suggestions of presidential meddling, their boss took to Twitter and validated those very suspicions, continuing to rage against the Stone prosecutors and commending Barr for stepping in.
Barr, who was appointed to serve as attorney general after Trump fired Jeff Sessions from the post for not doing enough to head off the Mueller investigation, had not been directly tied to the decision to intervene in the Stone case. That is, until President Trump tweeted his congratulations to Barr for “taking charge”:
Speaking in the Oval Office Wednesday afternoon, Trump again left the possibility of a pardon for Stone open: “I don’t want to say yet,” he told reporters. “People were hurt viciously and badly by these corrupt people.”
A quick refresher about Stone’s misdeeds: In 2017, a (GOP-led) House committee investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election examined the role WikiLeaks played in the Russia-orchestrated theft of a trove of emails from the Democratic National Committee and the Hillary Clinton campaign. Stone, who had shown suspicious foreknowledge of WikiLeaks’ release of that trove, was called before the committee to testify. Speaking under oath, Stone claimed that he had never asked his sources to communicate messages to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and that he had never discussed WikiLeaks with his friends on the Trump campaign. The court established that these were lies. In order to cover up his lies, Stone also tried to badger his associate Roger Credico into lying to Congress as well.
It’s worth taking a moment to drill down on exactly what the problem is here. The argument that Stone shouldn’t have to serve seven to nine isn’t unreasonable on its face—indeed, for a first-time non-violent offender, there’s a case to be made that this was a reach. (To arrive at that figure, prosecutors relied heavily on Stone’s threats against his Credico to keep him from ratting Stone out, including a message telling him to “prepare to die, c—sucker.” Credico testified that he didn’t feel actually threatened by the messages, which he chalked up to typical Stone theatrics.)
The problem is that the Trump administration has given us no reason to believe that the Justice Department intervened out of altruistic concern that their prosecutors were behaving overzealously in one of their cases, and every reason to believe that they intervened because Trump wanted them to do so for a personal ally who had shown him loyalty by not flipping at trial.
On the home page, we have an insightful look at all of this from Jack Goldsmith, a Harvard Law professor who served as Assistant Attorney General and head of the Office of Legal Counsel under George W. Bush.
To understand the significance of President Trump’s intervention in Justice Department guidance about the Roger Stone sentence, consider President Barack Obama’s interview with Steve Kroft on 60 Minutes on October 11, 2015. Kroft asked Obama about the Hillary Clinton private email investigation. Obama said that Clinton’s email use was a “mistake” but that the issue had been “ginned up in part because of politics” and was “not a situation in which America’s national security was endangered.” Obama added: “We don’t get an impression that here there was purposely efforts … to hide something or to squirrel away information.”
Obama made similar points in an interview with Chris Wallace on April 10, 2016. “I can tell that you this is not a situation in which America’s national security was endangered,” he said. Obama added that Clinton “would never intentionally put America in any kind of jeopardy,” and then suggested that Clinton did not have highly classified information on her server. When Wallace ask for assurances that there would be no political influence on the investigation, Obama said: “I do not talk to the Attorney General about pending investigations. I do not talk to FBI directors about pending investigations. We have a strict line, and always have maintained it.”
Obama here correctly described the norm that had governed White House-Justice Department relations since Watergate. The problem was that his public comments about the case expressed a view about how it should be resolved—a view known in short order to both the Attorney General and FBI Director. By publicly talking about the case and expressing a view about the merits, Obama violated the very norm of Justice Department independence that he articulated…
Republicans were furious when Obama prejudged the Clinton case, and when Bill Clinton visited Attorney General Sandra Lynch on the Phoenix airport tarmac, which also posed a least an appearance problem. They were furious because the president’s statements and the attorney general’s actions seemed to violate Justice Department independence and presented at least an appearance of self-serving law enforcement. That is an important principle.
But where are Republicans on that principle today, when President Trump violates it much more often and much more crassly and in much more obviously self-serving ways, all of which are enormously destructive to public confidence in law enforcement by the Justice Department? The answer is familiar but still ugly: They don’t care about the principle when ignoring it serves their political interests. Which means: they don’t care about the principle.
As for Attorney General Barr: He has contributed to the perception of politicized law enforcement by giving interviews and speeches that appear to prejudge the investigation of the origins of the 2016 FBI investigation into president Trump, and that, more broadly, indicate that he sees many law enforcement and law-compliance issues through a left-right political lens. But now he has acted in a manner consistent with the president’s overt and highly political wishes to minimize Stone’s sentence, and the president has praised him for it. Whatever the reality of Barr’s decisonmaking process, it definitely appears that he bowed to the President’s politically self-serving wishes.
Barr has a large conception of the president’s power to control investigations. But he is also, I still believe, a man of principle who loves the Justice Department. For his sake, and for the Department’s, he needs to make the president stop barking politicized commands to the Department. Or he needs to stop acting in ways consistent with those orders and provocations. Or, if he cannot do one of those two things, he should quit.
We haven’t heard the last of this story. On Wednesday, Attorney General Barr agreed to testify before the House Judiciary Committee about the Stone affair. That testimony will take place March 31.
Running on Trump
The national media has been glued to the Democratic presidential primary so far this year—and rightly so. But as we inch closer to the 2020 election, there’s going to be more and more interesting and offbeat races to pay attention to down-ballot, which we at The Dispatch hope to shine a spotlight on over the coming months.
One of those contests is taking place next week: the GOP primary in a special election to replace retired Wisconsin Rep. Sean Duffy, who stepped down from Congress last year to help care for a child who was born with serious medical issues. Over at the site today, Andrew has a piece previewing the primary in Wisconsin’s 7th Congressional District, which pits Tom Tiffany, a state senator and veteran of Scott Walker’s celebrated fiscally conservative government, against Jason Church, a military veteran and double-amputee, with a remarkable backstory and a Trumpian rhetorical flair:
Unsurprisingly, given the makeup of their district, both Church and Tiffany have taken every opportunity to declare their unwavering allegiance to Donald Trump. In his ads, Tiffany touts his “experience draining the swamp” in Madison and pledges to “help President Trump clean out the three-ring circus in Washington.” Church does the same: “President Trump is making tough decisions. He’s trying to secure out border. He’s trying to create jobs. But he needs help. He needs people who come from outside politics, people who don’t owe anything to anyone. People who just want to do what’s right.”
But if you’d never heard of the man before talking to Tiffany and Church, you might walk away from the conversation thinking they must have been describing two different presidents.
In Tiffany’s telling, Donald Trump is a model free-market, small-government, pro-business conservative: “I just look at the actions of the president, the tax cuts. I’ve seen how it’s turbo-charged the economy. I see it right here in Wisconsin, the regulatory reform that is near and dear to my heart, because I’ve worked on those issues. When I hear ‘drain the swamp,’ I think about the regulatory stuff, with all those alphabet agencies that you have out in Washington, D.C., that put so much red tape that strangles businesses large and small, that puts great restrictions on our economy.”
It’s not surprising that Tiffany plays up those elements of the Trump agenda. “In the case of Tiffany, it’s playing to his strengths because that’s the type of thing that he does in the state legislature,” said Wilkerson, who has endorsed Tiffany in the race. “Tom Tiffany is definitely a small-government conservative; he’d have been very comfortable as a conservative under Ronald Reagan.”
But it’s also hard to argue that Church isn’t the candidate who’s more directly channeling the parts of Donald Trump that made him appealing to so many white working-class voters in the first place.
“I’ll tell you why I’ve supported him from day one,” Church said. “And that’s because President Trump identified something that we all here in northern Wisconsin have felt for a long time. And that is that our culture was under attack. I mean, people like Omar and AOC, when they start pushing things like multiculturalism and intersectionality, what they’re really doing is they’re pointing a finger at someone here in Tomahawk, someone here in Bloomer, in Hudson, in Wausau. And they’re saying, ‘You’re what’s wrong with America.’”
Worth Your Time
- A week after his acquittal by the Senate, President Trump is demonstrating he feels emboldened like never before. TheWashington Post’s Philip Rucker, Robert Costa, and Josh Dawsey report Trump “is testing the rule of law … seeking to bend the executive branch into an instrument for his personal and political vendetta against perceived enemies. And Trump—simmering with rage, fixated on exacting revenge against those he feels betrayed him and insulated by a compliant Republican Party—is increasingly comfortable doing so to the point of feeling untouchable, according to the president’s advisers and allies.”
- Steven Levy has been covering Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg for nearly 15 years, and his book Facebook: The Inside Story will be published later this month. In this excerpt published in WIRED, he details some of Zuckerberg’s earliest visions for what his company would become: “He wanted Facebook to be wide open eventually, but on the pages of the notebook, you could see him grappling with the implications. What distinguished Facebook from other social networks was the assumed privacy provided by its gated setup. Open Reg would throw open those gates to the masses. But would people then no longer see Facebook as a safe space? In designing Open Reg, he posted one final question to himself. “What makes this seem secure, whether or not it actually is?” He seemed at least as concerned about the perception of privacy as with privacy itself.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Presented With One Comment
Andrew Yang dropped out of the presidential primary last night, telling supporters he is “not someone who wants to accept donations and support in a race that we will not win.”
Other candidates have a different approach.
Something Fun
Bernie Sanders is back in the news, reminding us of this poor guy from 2016. Not every balding older white guy is a leading presidential candidate and/or multimillionaire showrunner!
Toeing the Company Line
- In his latest Vital Interests newsletter, Thomas Joscelyn draws from a presentation by director of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center William Evanina to take a look at China’s quest for global dominance, and why it is an “all-encompassing threat.” Give the whole thing a read here.
- Jonah was joined on The Remnant podcast earlier this week by AEI scholar Derek Scissors to discuss all things China: Its trade agreement with the U.S., Huawei, coronavirus, and more. You can listen to their conversation here.
Let Us Know
Mike Bloomberg is apparently paying Instagram influencers to post memes that let “everyone know [he’s] the cool candidate.”
Our question to you: How much should we here at The Morning Dispatch demand when El Bloombito inevitably comes knocking?
- $30: Lunch for Andrew and Declan. Good enough.
- $1 billion: This newsletter is prime real estate. We’re not going to give it up for just anyone.
- $61.8 billion: To win our approval, he must sacrifice the entirety of his fortune, thereby rendering himself toothless in the Democratic primary.
- N/A: There is no price. We would never do such a thing; we value our readers’ trust too much—happy, Steve?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photograph of Donald Trump by Alex Wong/Getty Images.
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Granny Winebox Is Going to Hand This Election to Trump
They Can’t Really Be This Stupid, Can They?
There was a time when I used to have nothing but praise for Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s political instincts and acumen, despite the fact that she represented the other side. In her first incarnation as Speaker of the House, Pelosi was extraordinarily shrewd and powerful. She managed to get members of her own caucus to give up their careers for Obamacare.
Her second turn in the job is making me seriously consider that some sort of intergalactic space invader body-snatching may have happened here.
Evidently so drunk that she’s unaware her first attempt blew up in her party’s face, Pelosi is once again going on about investigating President Trump.
When I first read the news I did a double, then a triple take. Then I called several people close to me to make sure I hadn’t recently suffered any head trauma.
The House investigation and impeachment of the president last year were, by any objective measure, monumental failures. Trump emerged from the tawdry spectacle stronger than ever. After being harangued and slandered by every Democrat on Capitol Hill throughout the impeachment drama, the president’s approval ratings actually got better. It was the radioactive spider that bit him and gave him superpowers.
Now the Democrats are looking for more spiders.
The Democrats have just suffered through a miserable ten-day stretch. New Hampshire didn’t help, anointing a front-runner that no one in the party establishment wants to get the nomination. Pelosi should be leading the party in a direction that at least gives the appearance of wanting to find cohesion and a path to victory. Instead, she wants to revisit her greatest failure, which just happened to have wrapped up a week ago.
The cluelessness about impeachment runs all through the Left. Just yesterday, a reporter asked the president what he learned from impeachment, a question that was wholly out of context. Trump handled it brilliantly:
Don’t get me wrong, I am having a great time watching the Democrats flail about like this. For months, I’ve been joking that Trump may not even have to campaign to win re-election. All he has to do is exist, which drives all Democrats into such a state of irrational frenzy that better judgment becomes anathema to all of their political calculations.
If Nancy Pelosi wants to open another investigation into the president it will basically be an in-kind contribution to his re-election campaign.
So crawl back into that box of Merlot, Granny. Republican voters everywhere would like to thank you in advance.
Your Frequent Reminder That the Roman Catholic Church Is Still the Roman Catholic Church
PJM Linktank
Ruth Bader Ginsburg Puts the Final Nail in the Coffin of the ERA
Elizabeth Warren Tells Heartwarming Anecdote About Taking Half of a Supporter’s Money
Trump’s Economic Numbers Crush Past Presidents in Reelection Years
Justin Trudeau Is Up to His Old Tricks Again, as Canada Heads Down the Totalitarian Road
Rhetorical, right? Do Democrats Hate Democracy?
Devin Nunes Links Trump’s NSC ‘Friday Night Massacre’ to General Mike Flynn and … Whoa.
VIP
VodkaPundit: The Left Comes to Kick the Corpse of Joe Biden’s Campaign
From the Mothership and Beyond
Why Christian Movies Are Gaining More Viewers and Higher Earnings
Straight-up fascism. Schumer Wants To Regulate Gun Parts As Whole Guns
Michigan Lawmaker Proposes Second Amendment Sanctuary State Resolution
PJ Media Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.”
ROLL CALL
Morning Headlines
After divided presidential results in Iowa and New Hampshire, some congressional Democrats say they’re bracing for a lengthy primary fight, which they worry could hurt voter enthusiasm in November. One strategist summed up the Democrats’ views this way: “Everybody’s kind of wary … but it’s not a full-blown panic.” Read More…
Senate Republicans left it to a federal judge Wednesday to sweep away questions of improper political influence by the White House in the criminal case against Roger Stone — even as President Donald Trump tried to cast doubt on fairness ahead of his longtime adviser’s sentencing. Read More…
The Democratic divide is not just between moderates and progressives
OPINION — Are frightened Democrats in the middle of an ugly fight to the death between the so-called progressive and moderate wings of the party? To observe the weeping and gnashing of teeth after the New Hampshire primary, you might think so. Let’s just say, that reaction is premature and missing the point. Read More…
Rep. John Moolenaar’s leadership PAC spent over $22K on Vail hotel and snow sports
Over a three-year span, Rep. John Moolenaar spent $22,839 on ski and snowmobile activities, lodging at the Four Seasons, and catering in and around Vail, Colorado, from his leadership political action committee. Read More…
Matson to accept 2019 Berryman Award
CQ Roll Call cartoonist RJ Matson will receive the 2019 Berryman Award for editorial cartooning at the National Press Foundation’s annual journalism awards dinner on Feb. 13. Matson has been with CQ Roll Call since 1986. Read More…
This ‘Act of Congress’ can serenade you with catchy pop music
When Chris Griffin and Adam Wright decided to form their band over a decade ago, they called it “Act of Congress.” The name stuck. Four albums and two new members later, they still get asked what it means. Read More…
Sometimes a red rose is just a red rose, even on Capitol Hill
Red is the go-to choice on Valentine’s Day, but nothing is that simple in political Washington, home of questions like, “Does this tie make me look like a Republican?” With flower deliveries set to descend on Capitol Hill for the holiday, I asked an expert how to stay thoroughly neutral. Read More…
Democrats blast Puerto Rico aid hold at budget hearing
The White House’s top budget official took flak from House Democrats for withholding previously appropriated funds, including emergency aid to Puerto Rico, during a hearing on President Donald Trump’s fiscal 2021 budget proposal Wednesday. Read More…
Mnuchin defends Treasury tax law implementation
At his first Capitol Hill appearance defending President Donald Trump’s new budget request Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin found himself parrying allegations that his department’s regulations carrying out the 2017 tax code overhaul added more than $100 billion in corporate tax benefits Wednesday. Read More…
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
DRIVING THE DAY
G’morning from NASHVILLE.
IF A FEW CAMPAIGN CONSULTANTS were sitting at a bar and dreamed up how they’d run a nationwide presidential primary campaign with no constraints, no qualms and no care for tradition, it would look a lot like MIKE BLOOMBERG’S 2020 run.
WHEN A 77-YEAR-OLD MAN WITH TENS OF BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, nothing to lose, an obsession with metrics and efficiency and a deep well of distaste for DONALD TRUMP runs for president, it goes a little something like this:
— THEY GIVE THE MIDDLE FINGER to Iowa and New Hampshire, because why waste time spending months ingratiating yourself with a population that represents 4% of the delegates you need to become the Democratic nominee? Tradition is cute, they say privately, but nostalgia is not a good way to spend money, or win an election.
TEAM BLOOMBERG has their eyes fixed on the following states, which they believe represent their best chance to get the nomination: ARKANSAS, where Bloomberg is in first, and has 31 delegates; FLORIDA, where public polling has him second (219 delegates); MISSOURI, where he’s been in second (68 delegates); NORTH CAROLINA, where he’s been in third (110 delegates); TEXAS, where he has a staff of more than 90 (228 delegates); and CALIFORNIA, home to 415 pledged delegates. (He’s in N.C. and Texas today, and Virginia later this week.)
— HE SPENDS GOBS OF MONEY on everything. There’s the television advertising, the Facebook spending and lavish staff salaries guaranteed through December, with apartments in New York. The events — anchored by GREG HALE, a longtime Dem advance man who founded the Markham Group — are the envy of the field, and look much more like a late-stage general election than a primary rally.
THE GOAL HERE is to create an air of professionalism and invincibility. That’s why they’re rolling out congressional endorsements almost daily. (A source told us that in calls to some leaders in Super Tuesday states, BLOOMBERG was the first candidate to reach out.)
— THEY MAKE SURE VOTERS KNOW WHAT HIS MONEY HAS BOUGHT THEM: Quite amazingly, BLOOMBERG takes credit for the impeachment of TRUMP. He said this Wednesday in Chattanooga, and some version of it later in the day here: “In 2018, I helped flip the House, 21 seats that made [Nancy] Pelosi the speaker and let Pelosi and the House do what the Constitution says they should do — hold the president accountable, and they started the impeachment process but it all came from that.”
— AND THEY MAKE SURE TO RIB THE DEM FIELD — LIGHTLY: Sure, a handful of his policies as mayor make many Democrats uneasy. But he did raise teacher salaries, improve New York schools and cut crime. “We don’t need a revolution. We want evolution and we need a nominee who can deliver it,” Bloomberg says, in about as hard as he will go at his fellow Democrats.
— HE PLAYS THE HUMBLE GAME QUITE WELL. HE SEEMS TO ACT SHOCKED at crowds. For example, he said Wednesday in Nashville that he was “speechless” about an overflow crowd — as he stood on a stage with speakers and a microphone — and that he wished they could fit inside his rally. For a man not known for being shy, this could be a useful tool.
— AND, PERHAPS, MOST NOTABLY, HE SLAGS TRUMP to no end. He tries to get under his skin, saying his wealth is phony. He calls him “Donald.” According to BLOOMBERG, “Donald Trump is the world’s biggest schoolyard bully, with no respect for civility, decency or the facts.” Trump’s insults “do not bother me,” Bloomberg said, and he talks about sending him back to Mar-a-Lago for good.
IN TEAM BLOOMBERG’S VIEW, much of their strategy has been validated this week, given the muddle in Iowa and New Hampshire and JOE BIDEN’S inability to stay afloat. Voters are looking for not only someone who has a history of enacting good policies, which they say Bloomberg has, but someone who can win. In their view, no one checks those two boxes better than him.
THAT’S NOT TO SAY THAT BLOOMBERG is without issues. He’s a billionaire at a time when they’re out of vogue. He has a history of controversial political positions. (See the latest AP rocket: “Bloomberg once blamed end of ‘redlining’ for 2008 collapse”)
HIS CAMPAIGN STUMP SPEECH is a bit sedate. He doesn’t do retail politics — or hasn’t much yet. He has yet to qualify for a debate — which will be an important step in his evolution, should he get to the stage. He’s not really doing television interviews, although he can only resist that for so long. And, on the trail, he’s notoriously dismissive of questions he doesn’t like to answer.
FOR EXAMPLE: We asked him Wednesday if he could become the nominee without winning a single state.
— HE SAID: “I don’t know the math, I think it’s conceivable but the question is, if you got lots of delegates but you had one less than the person that’s ahead in every single one of the 50 states, you’d probably have more than the person that was ahead in some of the states and not others. It’s an interesting speculation but I don’t know what the difference is, and why it matters.”
THE NORMAL WAY a politician might answer that question is: We expect to win states and we’re working hard to do so. He also has a rich history of stepping on his message.
BUT HE’S READY WITH AN ANSWER WHEN ASKED ABOUT UNITING the party: “Not everybody’s going to be happy with any one candidate. But if the alternative is Donald Trump, I think you’ve got a very good chance of pulling everybody together. This is a more unique situation where the alternative is so bad that no matter what the differences are between people in one party. If the other party is abhorrent to it. Yes, I think you can do that.” Perhaps.
BLOOMBERG 2020 is either an ostentatious play in a confused and muddled national political moment, or a colossal waste of money and time. But he can’t be ignored.
TO WIT … SARAH FERRIS, HEATHER CAYGLE and MARIANNE LEVINE: “Biden’s House allies eye Bloomberg as frontrunner crumbles”
NEW … ANOTHER ENDORSEMENT … FLORIDA REP. TED DEUTCH is endorsing BLOOMBERG this morning. DEUTCH, who represents South Florida — including Parkland — said it was due, in part, to BLOOMBERG’S work on gun control.
— SALLY GOLDENBERG and CHRIS CADELAGO: “Inside Bloomberg’s 48-hour dash to contain his stop-and-frisk crisis”
NYT, A1, one col.: “DEMOCRATS SPLIT DEEPENS ANXIETY AMONG CENTRISTS … SANDERS ON THE ASCENT … Without a Clear Favorite, Some Moderates Give Bloomberg a Look,” by Alex Burns and Jonathan Martin, with a Manchester dateline
TRYING TO SHOW SOME FIRE IN THE BELLY — “Biden on phone call: ‘I’ll be damned if we’re gonna lose this nomination’” by Laura Barrón-López: “Former Vice President Joe Biden — after his pair of devastating losses — tried to reassure supporters on an evening call Wednesday that ‘things haven’t changed’ and that there’s been ‘no drop off in our endorsers.’
“Arguing that the primary is ‘still wide open,’ Biden said he was ‘confident we can win South Carolina. I think we’ll win Nevada, but it is a caucus which is a little bit different,’ according to a recording of the roughly 13-minute call obtained by POLITICO.”
— RELATED … MAGGIE SEVERNS: “Black donors fear 2020 candidates are falling flat”
Good Thursday morning.
NEW … YOUTUBE has removed a video clip of Sen. RAND PAUL (R-Ky.) on the Senate floor, asking what Chief Justice JOHN ROBERTS blocked him from asking in the impeachment trial. The question included the name of a man many on the right believe to be the whistleblower.
PAUL TOLD US THIS: “It is a chilling and disturbing day in America when giant web companies such as YouTube decide to censure speech. Now, even protected speech, such as that of a senator on the Senate floor, can be blocked from getting to the American people. This is dangerous and politically biased. Nowhere in my speech did I accuse anyone of being a whistleblower, nor do I know the whistleblower’s identity.”
YOUTUBE’S IVY CHOI says: “Videos, comments, and other forms of content that mention the leaked whistleblower’s name violate YouTube’s Community Guidelines and will be removed from YouTube. We’ve removed hundreds of videos and over ten thousand comments that contained the name. Video uploaders have the option to edit their videos to exclude the name and reupload.”
THE STONE MESS … ANGST INSIDE DOJ … NYT, via Katie Benner, Charlie Savage, Sharon LaFraniere and Ben Protess: “Prosecutors across the United States, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid reprisals, said this week that they had already been wary of working on any case that might catch Mr. Trump’s attention and that the Stone episode only deepened their concern. They also said that they were worried that [Attorney General Bill] Barr might not support them in politically charged cases.”
— EYE-OPENING QUOTE from Barr’s old boss at DOJ: “‘With Bill Barr, on an amazing number of occasions … you can be almost 100 percent certain that there’s something improper going on,’ said Donald Ayer, the former deputy attorney general in the George H.W. Bush administration.” POLITICO
— WHAT’S NEXT: “Trump takes on Judge Amy Berman Jackson ahead of Roger Stone’s sentencing,” by WaPo’s Ann Marimow
BIG PICTURE … WAPO’S PHIL RUCKER, BOB COSTA and JOSH DAWSEY: “Trump seeks to bend the executive branch as part of impeachment vendetta”: “President Trump is testing the rule of law one week after his acquittal in his Senate impeachment trial, seeking to bend the executive branch into an instrument for his personal and political vendetta against perceived enemies.
“And Trump — simmering with rage, fixated on exacting revenge against those he feels betrayed him and insulated by a compliant Republican Party — is increasingly comfortable doing so to the point of feeling untouchable, according to the president’s advisers and allies.”
— THE ATLANTIC: “John Kelly Finally Lets Loose on Trump,” by Peter Nicholas in Morristown, N.J.: “Over a 75-minute speech and question-and-answer session, Kelly laid out, in the clearest terms yet, his misgivings with Trump’s words and actions regarding North Korea, illegal immigration, military discipline, Ukraine, and the news media.
“Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general, said that Vindman is blameless and simply followed the training he’d received as a soldier, migrants are ‘overwhelmingly good people’ and ‘not all rapists,’ and Trump’s decision to condition military aid to Ukraine on an investigation into his political rival Joe Biden upended longstanding U.S. policy.”
DEPT. OF BELIEVE IT WHEN IT HAPPENS — “Manchin voted to oust Trump. He could endorse his reelection,” by Burgess Everett: “Joe Manchin thinks President Donald Trump abused his power and voted to remove him from office. But he also thinks Trump can still be a ‘tremendous president’ and is eager to reconcile.
“The West Virginia Democratic senator surprised his Republican colleagues by denying Trump a bipartisan acquittal last week. But he can’t quit Trump entirely — and is even open to supporting Trump’s re-election campaign.
“‘I don’t rule anything out. I really don’t rule anything out,’ Manchin said in an interview in his office amid a series of attacks from the president. ‘I’m always going to be for what’s best for my country. Everybody can change. Maybe the president will change, you know? Maybe that uniter will come out, versus the divider.’”
THE PRESIDENT is going west next week, per AP’s ZEKE MILLER, also an avid watcher of the skies (and himself a pilot). According to FAA notices, Miller tweeted TRUMP is planning to go to Las Vegas on Tuesday through Thursday. He is going to Phoenix and Colorado Springs for rallies, and LA for a dinner, as well.
… AND THIS: “Trump to visit Palm Springs area next week for fundraising event at Oracle chairman Larry Ellison’s estate,” by The Desert Sun’s Sam Mintz
TRUMP’S THURSDAY — The president will meet with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo at 3 p.m. in the Oval Office.
PLAYBOOK READS
JOHN HARRIS column: “Sanders Joins Trump in Telling the Media to Go to Hell”
CORONAVIRUS LATEST … AP/BEIJING: “China reports 254 new virus deaths and 15,152 daily cases,” by Yanan Wang: “China has reported 254 new daily deaths and a spike in new daily virus cases of 15,152, after new methodology was applied in the hardest-hit province of Hubei as to how cases are categorized.
“The total deaths from the more than 2-month-old outbreak as reported on Thursday stood at 1,367, with the total number of confirmed cases mounting to 59,804. The change in categorization appeared to push forward the process to a doctors’ on-the-spot diagnosis rather than waiting for the results of laboratory tests.”
— “China Ousts High-Level Officials as Coronavirus Cases Soar,” by WSJ’s Stu Woo in Beijing: “The high-level firings of the Communist Party secretaries of both Hubei province and its capital of Wuhan, where the contagion is believed to have started last month at a market with live, wild animals, demonstrated Beijing’s disapproval of how they handled a threat that has since mushroomed into an epidemic killing more than 1,000 people and halting business across the country.
“The leadership changes also helped to put some distance between the outbreak and the central government in Beijing. News of the sackings spread quickly on Chinese social media, with citizens praising the moves.” WSJ
THE INVESTIGATIONS CONTINUE: “House Democrats ask Secret Service for details about its payments to Trump’s company,” by WaPo’s David Fahrenthold and Jonathan O’Connell: “The House Oversight Committee on Wednesday asked the Secret Service to provide a full accounting of its payments to President Trump’s private company after The Washington Post revealed that the Secret Service had been charged as much as $650 per night for rooms at Trump clubs.
“In a letter to the Secret Service, signed by Chair Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) and member Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.), the committee asked for records of payments to Trump properties, and copies of contracts between the Secret Service and Trump clubs.” WaPo
FOR YOUR RADAR — “Kirsten Gillibrand’s new bill would establish a U.S. data protection agency,” by Protocol’s Issie Lapowsky: “The so-called Data Protection Act of 2020 would create the country’s first data protection agency to oversee how privacy laws in America are enforced and guide Congress on the development of those laws. The agency would be empowered to impose penalties on companies that violate people’s privacy, taken them to court, field consumer complaints, and launch investigations.” Gillibrand’s announcement
WHAT THEY’RE READING IN CAMBRIDGE AND NEW HAVEN — “Education Department Investigating Harvard, Yale Over Foreign Funding,” by WSJ’s Kate O’Keefe: “The Education Department opened investigations into Harvard and Yale as part of a continuing review that it says has found U.S. universities failed to report at least $6.5 billion in foreign funding from countries such as China and Saudi Arabia, according to department materials reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
“The investigations into the Ivy League schools are the latest in a clash between U.S. universities and a coalition of federal officials including law enforcement, research funders such as the National Institutes of Health, and a bipartisan group in Congress that have raised concerns about higher-education institutions’ reliance on foreign money, particularly from China.” WSJ
FUN READ — “Greetings from the alternate universe where Oprah and Michelle Obama are running for president,” by WaPo’s Maura Judkis in New York
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
NEW … HILL PROMOTION: Speaker NANCY PELOSI will announce later today that KATE KNUDSON will be chief of protocol for the House. Knudson will add this to her duties as director of interparliamentary affairs. In these roles, Knudson serves as the primary point of contact for the House of Representatives with the Washington diplomatic corps, overseeing visits of heads of state and other foreign dignitaries to the Capitol.
SPOTTED: Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) at Emilie’s on Wednesday night. … Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) and Daniel Goldman, House impeachment counsel, at Charlie Palmer.
SPOTTED at the National Association of Manufacturers’ 125th anniversary celebration at the Conrad Hotel, which kicked off a $14 million “Creators Wanted” campaign Wednesday night: Ivanka Trump (who was honored with an award) and Jared Kushner, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, and Reps. Mike Conaway (R-Texas), David Kustoff (R-Tenn.), Steve Scalise (R-La.), Kevin Brady (R-Texas), Greg Walden (R-Ore.), Terri Sewell (D-Ala.), Dan Meuser (R-Pa.), Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), Warren Davidson (R-Ohio), Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) and Haley Stevens (D-Mich.).
SPOTTED at Tracy’s Kids’ 15th annual Red Carpet Hollywood Awards event to support kids with cancer at Lucky Strike and Regal Gallery Place on Wednesday night: Matt Gerson, second lady Karen Pence, Sens. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) and Doug Jones (D-Ala.), Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) and Gayle Wicker, Sen. Pat Leahy (D-Vt.) and Marcelle Leahy, Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) and Myrna Cardin …
… Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Eve Schiff, Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.) and Amey Upton, Reps. Greg Walden (R-Ore.), Ted Deutch (D-Fla.) and Bill Johnson (R-Ohio), David Cohen, Mitch Rose, Tim Keating, Reinhard Wieck, Mike Huppe, Wendy Donoho, Gordon Smith, Henry Waxman, Howard Berman, Brendan Daly, and Tom and Alissa Clees.
MEDIAWATCH — Greg Bensinger will join the NYT as a tech opinion writer and member of the editorial board. He most recently has been a WaPo reporter in San Francisco. Announcement
TRANSITION — Danny Friedman is joining Voto Latino as managing director. He previously was deputy national organizing director at the ACLU.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Andrew Malcolm, COS to the chief strategy officer at Exelon and a Greg Walden alum, and Liz Malcolm, a clinical psychologist at Georgetown Psychology, on Feb. 6 welcomed Henry Willard Malcolm, who came in at 5 lbs, 10 oz. Pic … Another pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Bill McCarren, executive director of the National Press Club. A fun fact about him: “At our house we raise and train service dogs for wounded warriors and others with disabilities. Andrea does most of the actual training and takes the dog to work every day. We are on our third dog now. Our current guy is Maverick, and we will have him for about two years and then he will go change somebody’s life. It is very hard to raise a dog from a puppy and give him away. But it really does help make life possible for people who have done so much for our country. The fun comes in because there is almost always a puppy in the house. That part is really great.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) is 74 … Rep. Filemon Vela (D-Texas) is 57 … Rep. Lizzie Fletcher (D-Texas) is 45 … Jeanne Mancini, president of the March for Life … Chip Smith … former Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon is 64 … Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitution Center … Ryan Dollar, NRSC general counsel, is 3-0 … Stacie Sherman, New Jersey bureau chief at Bloomberg … Raven Reeder … Lila Nieves-Lee of Sen. Tim Scott’s (R-S.C.) office and the Senate Banking Committee … Megan Becker … Danielle Baussan … Lauren Huston … Mae Stevens, EVP at Signal Group … Brian Szmytke of i360 (h/t Jana Lovett) … Les Francis (h/t Jon Haber) … KPMG’s Sven Erik Holmes (h/t Jeff Solnet) … Elizabeth Lewis, who leads external engagement on climate and impact investing at the International Finance Corporation …
… Alex Burgos, VP of federal policy, government relations and communications at TechNet, is 4-0 … Samantha Slater, director of comms at Columbia World Projects at Columbia University … Jerry Springer is 76 … Kit Conway … Jill Barclay, director of operations at Red Curve Solutions … Alexa Den Herder … Fox News’ Cailin Kearns … Mike Spector, U.S. corporate crisis correspondent at Reuters, is 39 … retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Charles E. “Chuck” Yeager is 97 … Sheldon Silver is 76 … Alex Hinson, Interior deputy press secretary … Erum Haider … Peter Lettre … Sunny Mehta … Shannon Murphy … Rob Crampton … Jeffrey Banasiak … Siemens’ Camille Johnston … Betsy Ankney … Allison Ryan … George Kundanis … Jeff Stein … Mark Cohen … J.R. Claeys … Unjin Lee … Mary Cownie … Ryan Cunningham … Matt Sheffield … Nick Baer
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Opinion: The Rot Is Deep (Part III)
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NBC
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann FIRST READ: America’s system of checks has become imbalanced in the Trump Era Now that we’ve moved on from New Hampshire, it’s time to turn to two of the most consequential political stories over the last week playing out in DC.
Donald Trump’s purge after his impeachment acquittal.
And what seems to be his clear effort to reduce Roger Stone’s recommended prison sentence.
Beyond Trump punishing those who complied with the law and rewarding those who broke it, and beyond how normalized this behavior has become, what stands out is how paralyzed Washington is to do anything about it. Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images Democrats already impeached the president, and it just seems to have emboldened him after Senate Republicans voted to acquit him.
And while some Republicans have expressed concern (“I think this is a situation where [Trump’s] tweet [on Roger Stone] was very problematic,” Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said yesterday), there’s still no penalty at all from the GOP.
Our system of government is built on checks and balances.
And we’re seeing what happens when those checks and balances go away.
By the way, former White House chief of staff John Kelly is speaking about Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman’s ouster from the White House after Trump’s acquittal.
“[Vindman] did exactly what we teach them to do from cradle to grave,” Kelly said a speech Wednesday, per the Atlantic. “He went and told his boss what he just heard.”
It’s just that others – especially those in Congress – aren’t speaking out.
And not doing anything about it.
Sanders says it would be “divisive” if pledged-delegate winner doesn’t become nominee, contradicting ’16 position One of the reasons why some believe that Bernie Sanders is the frontrunner for the Dem nomination is that, in a multiple-candidate field, he might have the easiest time to get a PLURALITY of pledged delegates in the delegate race.
And, the thinking goes, if you get the most pledged delegates – whether it’s 51 percent, or 47 percent, or 35 percent – the Democratic superdelegates (who would get to vote on a second ballot) wouldn’t overturn that result.
Speaking with MSNBC’s Chris Hayes last night, Bernie Sanders articulated that view.
“In general, I think it is a fair statement to say that it would be very divisive. The convention would have to explain to the American people, ‘Hey, Candidate X got the most votes and won the most delegates at the primary process, but we’re not going to give him or her the nomination.” I think that would be a divisive moment for the Democratic Party.”
Except Bernie Sanders, his campaign and his supporters didn’t exactly share that opinion in 2016, when it was clear by April’s New York primary that Hillary Clinton had a plurality of pledged delegates (she would get a majority of pledged delegates by June).
Check out this Politico article from March 2016: “Sanders’ campaign thinks the next few weeks of the campaign calendar favor him and is preparing plans to make the uphill case to the superdelegates—the 718 activists and elected officials who can vote however they please—that his late-breaking momentum would make him a stronger nominee that they should support over Clinton.”
In other words: The superdelegates DON’T have to automatically break to the winner of the pledged delegates.
In fairness to Sanders, he eventually did endorse Clinton.
But his campaign back then wasn’t arguing that it would be “divisive” to deny the nomination to the pledged-delegate winner.
AP Photo/John Locher
TWEET OF THE DAY: Sanders supporters vs. the Culinary Union
2020 VISION: Goldilocks and the three other candidates The exit poll from Tuesday’s Democratic primary in New Hampshire showed some interesting numbers on voters’ perceptions of the major candidate’s ideology.
Bernie Sanders: 50 percent too liberal, 3 percent not liberal enough, 43 percent about right.
Joe Biden: 8 percent too liberal, 39 percent not liberal enough, 45 percent about right.
Elizabeth Warren: 40 percent too liberal, 10 percent not liberal enough, 44 percent about right.
Pete Buttigieg: 6 percent too liberal, 21 percent not liberal enough, 66 percent about right.
On the campaign trail today: Later this evening, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar and Tom Steyer attend a LULAC town hall in North Las Vegas, while Bernie Sanders participates via livestream… Elizabeth Warren holds a town hall in Arlington, Va… And Michael Bloomberg stumps in the Super Tuesday states of North Carolina and Texas.
Dispatches from NBC’s campaign embeds: Michael Bloomberg isn’t apologizing for comments he made about stop-and-frisk caught on tape, per NBC’s Maura Barrett: “It was five years ago and it’s just not the way that I think, and it doesn’t reflect what I do every day. I led the most populous, largest city in the United States and got re-elected three times,” Bloomberg said. “The public seemed to like what I do.” Asked multiple times if he would apologize for the content of the recordings, Bloomberg did not apologize.
And South Carolina officials aren’t ready to get behind Sanders, NBC’s Gary Grumbach flags this from Rep. Joe Cunningham, “South Carolinians don’t want socialism,” Cunningham said in the Post & Courier. “We want to know how you are going to get things done and how you are going to pay for them. Bernie’s proposals to raise taxes on almost everyone is not something the Lowcountry wants and not something I’d ever support.” Asked if he would support Sanders if he becomes the Democratic presidential nominee, Cunningham rejected the premise of the question. “Bernie Sanders will not be the nominee,” he said.
Data Download: And the number of the day is … 457,000 457,000
That’s the total turnout number in the 2020 New Hampshire primaries, according to secretary of state Bill Gardner.
The sum includes 300,000 voters in the Democratic primary and 156,000 on the Republican side, surpassing Gardner’s predictions and breaking the record for the number of ballots cast in the state in a year with an incumbent president.
THE LID: Spreadsheet jockeys Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at how much we’re all about to care about delegate math.
ICYMI: News clips you shouldn’t miss The chair of the Iowa Democratic Party, who oversaw the caucus process, is out.
Mike Bloomberg is spending big on Facebook.
And Bloomberg is taking heat for his past comments linking the recession to the end of “redlining.”
Tom Steyer may have become a factor with black Democrats in South Carolina.
And Steyer’s wife is moving to South Carolina.
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ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 16 new items) |
- Learning From Lincoln
- Buttigieg and the Abortion-Infanticide Democratic Party
- The Results, Shredding The Constitution, Justice For Jussie
- Berned-Out . . .
- Democrats Expect Military To Counter Iran With Hands Tied
- Tyranny of the Tamiflu-natics
- Bum Steer . . .
- Trump: Good, Bad, Ugly
- Can Trump Win 20% of the Black Vote in 2020?
- How Venezuela’s Good Citizens Were Disarmed is a Lesson For Us
- New Norms in Government
- Jussie Smollett Should Not Be Rewarded for his Crime
- After Years of Paying Illegal Union Fees, Government Workers Seek Refunds
- A More or Less Perfect Union
- Bernie Takes New Hampshire From Mayor Pete As Two-Way Race Emerges, Biden, Warren On The Ropes
- Kerry Endorses Biden and Gives Us a Gun-Control Endorsement to Remember
Learning From Lincoln
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 09:49 PM PST
by Edwin J. Feulner: George Washington was lauded as “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen,” in the words of Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee. But even our nation’s first president couldn’t prevail over the desire for a three-day weekend. Washington’s birthday, which falls on Feb. 22, was celebrated for decades on the actual day. But then, according to the History Channel’s website, “the holiday became popularly known as Presidents Day after it was moved as part of 1971’s Uniform Monday Holiday Act, an attempt to create more three-day weekends for the nation’s workers.” The result: Our first president—as well as President Abraham Lincoln, whose birthday falls on this day—are simply swallowed up in the name “Presidents Day”—which, the History Channel notes, “is now popularly viewed as a day to celebrate all U.S. presidents, past and present.” That is, simply put, ridiculous. Are we seriously expected to put Washington on par with the scandal-ridden Warren G. Harding? Or place the Great Emancipator on the same level as James Buchanan, whose inability to deal with the slavery question helped hurtle the nation to the brink of civil war? Yes, all Americans should have at least a passing acquaintance with all 45 occupants of the Oval Office. But only a few deserve to be celebrated. Head and shoulders above the rest are Washington, who was indispensable to the creation of our union, and Lincoln, who saved it. Lincoln’s roles in steering the country through the Civil War and in ending the scourge of slavery are well known—and rightfully so. But we sometimes forget that it was, in large measure, his deep understanding of the Constitution that enabled him to rise to such greatness at the moment of crisis. Take his view of the judiciary’s role in our structure of government. Lincoln, of course, deplored the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in the 1857 Dred Scott case, which denied full citizenship rights to African-Americans. But in expressing his opposition, he affirmed the court’s role as a co-equal branch of government: May it always be our dream as well. Tags: Edwin J. Feulner, Heritage Foundation, The Daily signal, Learning from, Abraham Lincoln To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Buttigieg and the Abortion-Infanticide Democratic Party
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 09:26 PM PST by Newt Gingrich: It is easy to forget how far Democrats have come from former President Bill Clinton’s 1992 commitment that abortion should be “safe, legal, and rare.” Even as late as 2008, then Senator Hillary Clinton repeated the formula by affirming that abortion should be “safe, legal, and rare.” In recent conversations with voters, Pete Buttigieg has shown how much more radical the Democrats have become on the issues of abortion and infanticide. Kristin Day, a pro-life Democratic voter, recently put Buttigieg on the spot at a Fox News Townhall, when she said: “So, do you want the support of pro-life Democrats, pro-life Democratic voters? There are about 21 million of us. And if so, would you support more moderate platform language in the Democratic Party to ensure that the party of diversity, of inclusion really does include everybody?” When Buttigieg told her that he was pro-choice and then gave a waffling answer, moderator Chris Wallace asked if Day was satisfied with the answer she received. She was not: “No, I was not, because he did not answer the second part of my question. And the second part was, the Democratic platform contains language that basically says that we don’t belong, we have no part in the party, because it says abortion should be legal up to nine months, the government should pay for it, and there’s nothing that says that people have a diversity of views on this issue should be included in the party. “In 1996, and I guess several years after that, there was language in the Democratic platform that said that we understand that people have very differing views on this issue, but we are a big tent party that includes everybody. And so, therefore, we welcome you, people like me, into the party so we can work on issues that we agree on. “So my question was, would you be open to language like that in the Democratic platform, that really did say that our party is diverse and inclusive and we want everybody?” Buttigieg’s radical stance on abortion (he said that life begins when a baby take its first breath, i.e., after being born) approaches the pro-infanticide position of Democratic Governor of Virginia Ralph Northam – who is, ironically, a pediatric neurologist supposedly dedicated to saving babies. Speaking to WTOP about late-term abortions, Northam said: “When we talk about third-trimester abortions, these are done with the consent of obviously the mother, with the consent of the physician — more than one physician, by the way — and it’s done in cases where there may be severe deformities. There may be a fetus that’s non-viable. “If a mother is in labor, I can tell you exactly what would happen. The infant would be delivered. The infant would be kept comfortable. The infant would be resuscitated if that’s what the mother and the family desired, and then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother.” New York Governor Andrew Cuomo also fits perfectly with the abortion-infanticide Democrats. His highest priority in 2019 was enacting the Reproductive Health Act. According to The Washington Times, the law “decriminalizes abortion and drops most of the state’s previous restrictions on abortions after 24 weeks. It also allows midwives and nurse practitioners to perform abortions.” As the newspaper reported, Cuomo thought passage of the law was so great a The One World Trade Center, the Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge, the Kosciuszko Bridge, and the Alfred E. Smith Building in Albany, “were lit pink in celebration of the law.” Buttigieg, of course, is not that different from the other Democratic candidates on abortion. Former Vice President Joe Biden reversed his position on the Hyde Amendment, which says taxpayers do not have to pay for abortions. By a majority of 57 to 36, Americans agreed in 2016 that their tax dollars should not be used for abortions. Now, Biden is in favor of tax-paid abortions, as well as for a litmus test on the issue of abortion for US Supreme Court nominees. Former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg also aligns closely with the extremist pro-abortion group. When running for mayor, he proposed that anyone studying to be a gynecologist or obstetrician should be forced to learn how to perform abortions. (Under enormous public pressure, he backed off and allowed moral and religious exemptions). Allow me to answer Day’s question: The 2020 Democratic presidential candidates and the platform they’ll adopt in Milwaukee will be radically pro-abortion – possibly including Governor Northam’s infanticide phraseology. Bernie Sanders made it clear when he said, “I think being pro-choice is an absolutely essential part of being a Democrat.” So, there will be no room for pro-life Democrats. If rightly understood, this radical anti-life position will cost Democrats the support of outspoken pro-life groups, including many Protestant Christians, Mormons, Orthodox Jews, Catholics, and Muslims. If there indeed are 21 million pro-life Democrats, as Kristin Day asserted, such an extreme position on abortion and infanticide undoubtedly will lead to a landslide defeat à la George McGovern. This is the ordeal Democrats have coming down the road. Tags: Newt Gingrich, commentary, Pete Buttigieg, Abortion-Infanticide, Democratic Party To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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The Results, Shredding The Constitution, Justice For Jussie
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 09:10 PM PST
by Gary Bauer, Contributing Author: The Results
Abbas’s About Face By the way, where are the mobs in the Arab street condemning the peace proposal? Once again, just like moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, the “conventional wisdom” was all wrong. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, apparently thinking Barack Obama was still president, came up with the really bad idea of going to the United Nations to get a vote to condemn the plan. The White House immediately informed various U.N. member states that such a vote would not be looked upon favorably in Washington, D.C. Yesterday, Abbas suddenly withdrew his request for a vote after discovering there was a good chance he might lose at the U.N. Ambassador Ron Prosor, a former Israeli representative to the U.N., said, “The Palestinians’ inability to put forward a vote tonight shows the change that the international community has gone through in recent years.” How many times have you heard the left and its media allies claim, “America is alone, isolated with no allies all because of Donald Trump”? Well, they’re wrong. This is a tremendous victory, and, of course, the media are completely ignoring it. Shredding The Constitution
Justice For Jussie I’m glad Smollett is not going to get away with lying to the police about something so serious. What he did was unacceptable! He smeared conservatives and white Chicagoans, wasted police and taxpayer resources, and could have ignited racial violence. That should be a serious crime, not just a slap on the wrist. By the way, Jussie’s MAGA smear reminds me of another attempt to shame a proud conservative. It didn’t go well for that intolerant liberal either. Tags: Gary Bauer, The Results, Shredding The Constitution, Justice For Jussie To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Berned-Out . . .
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 08:42 PM PST . . . Today’s Democrats are just as much Communist as Bernie Sanders, they just prefer to hade from voters
Tags: Berned-Out, Today’s Democrats, just as much Communist, Bernie Sanders, prefer to hade, from voters To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Democrats Expect Military To Counter Iran With Hands Tied
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 08:41 PM PST
SENATE MAJORITY LEADER MITCH McCONNELL (R-KY): “[Taking out Qassem Soleimani] was not some reckless act. It was a calculated and limited response to a significant, growing threat of attack against U.S. personnel in Iraq by an emboldened adversary. Years ago, Soleimani had concluded America was a paper tiger whose people he could kill with relative impunity. It was a strike designed to stop an escalation cycle we all knew was under way. To restore deterrence and reduce the risk of war. And yet, when Soleimani’s record of brutality was brought to an end, some Washington Democrats immediately suggested President Trump was leading us into World War III…. But thus far, it appears the Soleimani strike has indeed had the intended effect. As I observed back in January ‘We appear to have restored a measure of deterrence in the Middle East. Let’s not screw it up.’ Well, I’m afraid that’s just what our colleague’s resolution would do. Just as we have successfully sent Iran this strong signal of our strength and resolve, a blunt and clumsy War Powers resolution would tie our own hands.” (Sen. McConnell, Remarks, 2/11/2020)
“[President Obama] declared explicitly that his administration would use force — a ‘military component,’ as he put it — only as a last resort to prevent Tehran from acquiring a bomb. … Mr. Obama’s remarks built on his vow in the State of the Union address that the United States would ‘take no options off the table’ in preventing Iran… from acquiring a weapon. But he was more concrete in saying that those options include a ‘military component,’ although after other steps, including diplomatic isolation and economic sanctions.” (“Obama Says Iran Strike Is An Option, But Warns Israel,” The New York Times, 3/02/2012) SEN. CHUCK SCHUMER (D-NY): “I believe that when it comes to Iran, we should never take the military option off the table. But I have long argued that economic sanctions are the preferred and probably most effective way to choke Iran’s nuclear ambitions.” (Sen. Schumer, Congressional Record, S7390, 12/04/2012) SEN. TIM KAINE (D-VA): “Look, a president should take action to defend the United States against imminent threat. You have to. The president has to do that. Now exactly what action? You would have to determine what your intelligence was, how certain you were of that intelligence, but you would have to take action.” (Vice Presidential Debate, Farmville, VA, 10/04/2016)
SEN. BEN CARDIN (D-MD): “Regardless of whether Congress rejects the JCPOA, discomfort with aspects of the agreement remains across the ideological spectrum. That is why I will introduce legislation backed by supporters and opponents of the deal designed to strengthen the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act and U.S. regional security strategy…. It sets as U.S. policy that Iran will never be permitted to obtain a nuclear weapon and that all options remain on the table, including military options.” (Sen. Cardin, Op-Ed, “Sen. Ben Cardin: I Will Vote Against The Iran Deal,” The Washington Post, 9/04/2015) ABC’s DAVID MUIR: “I do want to take this to Vice President Biden next because we know that the Obama administration was aware of the threat that Soleimani posed, so was the Bush administration before it. I’m asking tonight as commander-in-chief though, would you have ordered the strike?” FORMER VICE PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN: “No.” (Democratic Presidential Debate, Manchester, NH, 2/07/2020) MUIR: “Senator Sanders, you have called this assassinating a government official. You would not have ordered the strike.” SEN. BERNIE SANDERS (I-VT): “Look, here is the danger, David. There are very bad leaders all over the world…. You cannot go around saying you’re a bad guy, were going to assassinate you, and then you’re going to have if that happens, your opening the door to international anarchy that every government in the world will then be subjected to attacks and assassination…. What we have got to do is bring countries around the world together with our power and our wealth and say, you know what? Let us sit down and work out our differences through debate and discussion at the UN …” (Democratic Presidential Debate, Manchester, NH, 2/07/2020) MUIR: “Given what you know about Soleimani, if your national security team came to you with an opportunity to strike, would Soleimani have been dead, or would he still be alive under your presidency?” FORMER MAYOR PETE BUTTIGIEG: “In the situation that we saw with President Trump’s decision, there is no evidence that that made our country safer…. It’s also the case that if we learned nothing else from the war in Iraq, it’s that taking out a bad guy is not a good idea if you do not know what you are doing. This president has moved us this much closer to the brink of war.” (Democratic Presidential Debate, Manchester, NH, 2/07/2020)
“Soleimani had overseen a network of paramilitaries, militias and terrorist groups across the Middle East and beyond that furthered Iranian interests by often undermining those of the United States and its allies. The Pentagon, for instance, had linked him to the introduction into Iraq of sophisticated roadside bombs that killed hundreds of U.S. troops and wounded thousands more during the peak of fighting there in the mid-2000s.” (“Qasem Soleimani: The Pentagon Had Tracked Iranian General For Years Before He Was Killed,” USA Today, 1/3/2020) “Soleimani took command of the Quds Force [in 1998], and in that time he has sought to reshape the Middle East in Iran’s favor, working as a power broker and as a military force: assassinating rivals, arming allies, and, for most of a decade, directing a network of militant groups that killed hundreds of Americans in Iraq. The U.S. Department of the Treasury has sanctioned Suleimani for his role in supporting the Assad regime, and for abetting terrorism.” (“The Shadow Commander,” The New Yorker, 9/23/2013)
“Soleimani led the Quds, which is designated a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. and was considered the most powerful intelligence operative in the Middle East, for more than two decades.” (“Who Was Iran’s Qassem Soleimani And Why Does His Death Matter?” NBC News, 1/03/2020)
“His track record includes support of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The United Nations had imposed an asset freeze and travel ban on him in 2007, and the U.S. sanctioned him again in response to his alleged involvement in the Syrian war in 2011.” (“Who Was Iran’s Qassem Soleimani And Why Does His Death Matter?” NBC News, 1/03/2020)
FORMER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE JAMES MATTIS: “Everywhere you look, if there is trouble in the region, you find Iran.” (“Indications Iran Doubling Down On Use Of Proxy Forces,” Voice Of America, 5/31/2017)GEN. MICHAEL HAYDEN, Former CIA Director: “Iran is arguably the largest state supporter of terrorism in the world. Its proxy, Hezbollah, is helping to keep the regime of Bashar al Assad in power in Syria and, as recently as 2006, engaged in a major war with Israel. Iran is seeking regional hegemony, has supported Palestinian terrorism and has also worked to destabilize Iraq. I reported to National Security Advisor Steve Hadley in 2007 that it was the policy of the Iranian government, approved at the highest levels of that government, to facilitate the killing of American and other coalition soldiers in Iraq. More recently Iran has fostered and supported Shia domination in Iraq, a pattern of behavior that has caused Sunni alienation and facilitated the rise of ISIS.” (U.S. House Of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee Hearing, 7/14/2015) 2012: “Senior U.S. and Arab officials say it was Gen. Soleimani’s idea to harass and bleed American forces for years in Iraq by arming Shiite militias there. The general’s elite Qods Force of soldiers and spies oversees Iran’s support for groups fighting Israel, including Hezbollah and Hamas.” (“Iran’s Spymaster Counters U.S. Moves in the Mideast,” Wall Street Journal, 4/6/2012)
2014: “Iran has supplied weapons, money and training to the Shi’ite Houthi militia that seized Yemen’s capital in September, as Tehran steps up its regional power struggle with Saudi Arabia, Yemeni and Iranian officials say.” (“Iranian Support Seen Crucial For Yemen’s Houthis,” Reuters, 12/15/2014)
2016: GEN. HAJIZADEH, Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps: “Iran’s missile program will not stop under any circumstances.” (“Iran Vows To Keep Firing Ballistic Missiles,” The Washington Post, 3/10/2016)
2016: “Iran has stepped up its harassment of U.S. Navy ships in the Persian Gulf, angering the U.S. military … Since the international nuclear deal with Iran was implemented in early January, the number of incidents involving U.S. and Iranian ships in the Gulf has approximately doubled. The Navy has counted at least 31 interactions with Iranian naval forces deemed ‘unsafe,’ ‘unprofessional,’ or both, according to a defense official.” (“US Military: Iranian Behavior Getting Worse In Persian Gulf,” The Hill, 9/10/2016)
2017: “A former CIA analyst said Monday the Iranians are continuing to help North Korea with weapons technology as Pyongyang’s new missile test over the weekend was described as ‘a significant advance.’” (“Former CIA Agent Says Iran Aiding North Korea As New Missile Test Emboldens Pyongyang,” CNBC, 5/15/2017)
And In Just The Last Year Iran Was Responsible For An Escalating Series Of Provocations And Attacks On America And Her Allies In The Middle East
June 2019: “The spate of alleged Iranian attacks on oil ships in the Gulf of Oman has raised global fears of a return to the ‘Tanker Wars’ of the 1980s, when oil tankers were regularly targeted and US warships fought cat-and-mouse battles with Iranian forces. Shipping analysts said that [June’s] attack on two oil tankers had sent tensions in the Gulf to their highest point since 1987, when Iraq and Iran began destroying each other’s oil infrastructure … The Tanker Wars ended only after the US deployed its largest naval convoy since the Second World War to protect Kuwaiti oil vessels and after American forces engaged in direct combat with Iranian ships.” (“Attacks On Oil Tankers In Gulf Spark Fears Of Return To 1980s ‘Tanker Wars,’” The [UK] Telegraph, 6/17/2019) August 2019: “The US blamed Iran [in August] for the shooting down of a US MQ-9 drone over Yemen by a surface-to-air missile, an apparent escalation of tensions between Washington and Tehran. The US believes the missile was provided to Houthi rebels by Iran, a US official said … The downing of a US drone by Iran in June nearly led to a US military strike …” (“US Blames Iran After Drone Is Downed In Yemen,” CNN, 8/21/2019) September 2019: “Iran has activated a chain of advanced centrifuges to speed up uranium enrichment in defiance of a 2015 nuclear accord, a senior Iranian official said Saturday… Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said this week that Iran would set aside the accord’s restrictions on nuclear-related research and development and would expand its use of advanced centrifuges.” (“Iran Now Operating Advanced Centrifuges In Breach Of Nuclear Pact,” The Washington Post, 9/7/2019) September 2019: “Explosions and towering fireballs struck the heart of Saudi Arabia’s oil empire on Saturday in an apparent wave of drone attacks claimed by Yemen’s Houthi rebels. The blows knocked out more than half the kingdom’s oil output for days or more and threatened to drive up already high tensions between Iran and its foes in the Persian Gulf. The predawn blasts on facilities of the state-run oil giant Aramco — which the rebel group claimed were carried out by a fleet of 10 drones — marked one of the most devastating strikes into Saudi territory claimed by the Iranian-allied Houthis in more than four years of war in Yemen. It was also the most serious attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure in decades …” (“Saudi Arabia Oil Output Takes Major Hit After Apparent Drone Attacks Claimed By Yemen Rebels,” The Washington Post, 9/14/2019)
December 2019: “A U.S. contractor was killed and four U.S. troops were wounded when more than 30 rockets were fired Friday at an Iraqi military base, a U.S. defense official said. … The Trump administration hasn’t said which group is suspected of carrying out the attack. But the U.S. military is focusing on a possible link to Kataib Hezbollah, a Iraqi Shiite militia backed by Iran, the U.S. official added.” (“Rocket Attack in Iraq Kills U.S. Contractor, Wounds Four U.S. Troops,” The Wall Street Journal, 12/28/2019) December 2019: “President Donald Trump on Tuesday blamed Iran for a breach of the U.S. embassy compound in Baghdad, asserting that the Islamic Republic ‘will be held fully responsible’ for the siege on the heavily guarded American facility. … Tensions between Tehran and Washington have continued to play out in Iraq this week, reaching a boiling point in Baghdad on Tuesday as dozens of Iraqi Shiite militiamen and their supporters broke into the American embassy compound.” (“Trump Blames Iran For Attack On U.S. Embassy Compound In Baghdad,” Politico, 12/31/2019) January 2020: “Iran attacked two bases in Iraq that house American troops with a barrage of missiles early Wednesday, Iranian official news media and United States officials said, fulfilling Tehran’s promise to retaliate for the killing of a top Iranian commander. … Iraqi military officials said that Iran had fired 22 missiles at two military bases in Iraq where American troops are stationed.” (“Iran Fires On U.S. Forces At 2 Bases In Iraq, Calling It ‘Fierce Revenge,’” The New York Times, 1/7/2020) Tags: Democrats, Expect Military, To Counter Iran, With Hands Tied To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Tyranny of the Tamiflu-natics
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 07:09 PM PST by Michelle Malkin: Beware of clickbait character assassins masquerading as “journalists.” This is a lesson America should have learned after the mass media defamation of the Covington Catholic schoolboys last year. Just a few weeks ago, innocent teenager Nick Sandmann won a multimillion-dollar settlement against CNN for leaping to conclusions and attempting to ruin his life in pursuit of a political agenda driven by confirmation bias. The Washington Post and NBC News face similar lawsuits for potential damages totaling more than a half-billion dollars. False allegations have consequences. And yet, here we are again. In Colorado last week, a young family was hurled into a national firestorm created by a single, powerful NBC News vigilante with an ideological ax to grind. “Investigative reporter” Brandy Zadrozny, right, lit the fuse on Feb. 6 with a Twitter post announcing that a 4-year-old had died of the flu. According to the Centers for Disease Control, an estimated 10,000 Americans (including nearly 70 children) have died of the flu this season. So what made this Colorado toddler’s tragic death newsworthy? The NBC News journalist condemned the boy’s mom for having reached out to a Facebook health-centered parents’ group whose members recommended that she not give her child Tamiflu medicine that a pediatrician had prescribed. Some commenters on the group had advised home remedies, including essential oils and vitamin C. Zadrozny linked to her incendiary hit piece on the mom and the “Stop Mandatory Vaccination” Facebook group, which was titled: “On Facebook, anti-vaxxers urged a mom not to give her son Tamiflu. He later died.” The toxic inference is clear: “Anti-vaxxers” are guilty of spreading online “misinformation” that led the mom to withhold a purportedly life-saving modern medicine—and Facebook is guilty for not stopping it. Zadrozny is a self-anointed and self-appointed social media policewoman whose main focus is pressuring Facebook to shut down discussion groups she doesn’t like. She labels all vaccine skeptics as conspiracy theorists without refuting facts or responding to peer-reviewed journal citations and historical data. She uses her bully pulpit to harangue Facebook into censoring laypeople seeking alternatives to “mainstream” medicine. Zadrozny quoted “experts” fretting about parents who discuss their objections to coercive mandates and missives of Big Pharma and Big Government. Her article sneered at “natural remedies.” The magic words “anti-vaxx” triggered the Two Minutes Hate theater that sent “Tamiflu” trending on Twitter. The nicer messages called for the boy’s grieving mom to be arrested and imprisoned. Many advocated that she die, including one Twitter warrior who wrote that since “she’s an anti-vaxxer, lethal injection would be appropriate” and another who fumed that “she and everybody in that (Facebook) group should get the death penalty.” User Ann raged that the mother should “go to prison.” User Hayden chimed in: “She clearly should be executed, as should the person who posted the nonsense on FB, as well as anyone who liked said nonsense, ALL EXECUTED!!” Zadrozny’s inciting tweet now has nearly 40,000 retweets, 5,000 comments and 72,000 likes. Lost in all of these crazed point-and-sputter diatribes were some pertinent, pesky facts. “Investigative reporter” Zadrozny never actually interviewed the parents, Geneva Montoya and Najee Jackson Sr., and relied solely on the Facebook postings and information from their GoFundMe page without independently discovering whether they had changed course after Montoya had commented to the Facebook group. Nor did she independently verify whether the parents were “anti-vaxx” or what vaccines besides the controversial flu vaccine (whose effectiveness has been challenged worldwide by health officials) they had chosen to avoid. A local television station, however, did the reporting Zadrozny failed to do. It turns out the entire family, except for 4-year-old Najee Jr., had been suffering from influenza B. A 10-month-old brother who had been running a high fever had been seen at my neighborhood Children’s Hospital in Colorado Springs the afternoon before Najee Jr. fell ill. Montoya told Fox31 TV in Colorado Springs: “We called the doctors. We called the hospital. We gave them the medicine we were instructed to give. We did everything.” Those who have already prejudged the mom respond that she must be lying. What if she is telling the truth? And why hadn’t Zadrozny updated her story as of Feb. 11? I asked the online social media monitor that question publicly on Twitter, but she failed to respond by my deadline. More to the point, it’s quackery to suggest that Tamiflu would have saved Najee Jr.’s life. The respected Cochrane researchers in Britain have concluded there is no evidence the medicine reduces mortality or hospitalizations. In 2006, the FDA updated the Tamiflu label indicating that it could cause psychiatric problems. Japan banned Tamiflu for teenagers amid concerns about deleterious side effects. Just days before Zadrozny crucified Najee Jr’s family, a Denver mom publicly warned that her 8-year-old daughter suffered hallucinations from Tamiflu. Earlier this week, a 16-year-old girl in Leesburg, Va. with the flu died of cardiac arrest. She had been prescribed Tamiflu. Another 16-year-old in Ohio died of the flu last month after suffering a stroke. She, too, had been prescribed Tamiflu. Their cases didn’t make NBC News headlines, because they don’t fit the dissent-squelching narrative. Tamiflunatics, vaccine bullies and their media gatekeepers spread misinformation that destroys lives. They are the true public health threats. Tags: Michelle Malkin, Tyranny, Tamiflu-natics To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Bum Steer . . .
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 07:01 PM PST . . . Mitt Romney let his hate, envy, and resentment for Trump stop him from doing the right thing on his Impeachment vote. Tags: Editorial Cartoon, AF Branco, Mitt Romney, Bum Steer To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Trump: Good, Bad, Ugly
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 06:50 PM PST
by John Stossel: President Donald Trump “saved the United States,” says former Trump adviser Steve Bannon. He’s one of the “smartest, most clever, and successful” presidents, says Fox’s Jeanine Pirro. No, he’s “dumb and racist,” says comedian Seth Meyers, and guilty of “rampant corruption,” say commentators on MSNBC. The man divides opinion like no one else in America. My latest video looks at the “good, bad and ugly” of Trump. The good is wonderful. Unemployment is down, and the stock market is up. Trump deserves credit for that. By criticizing “job-crushing regulations” and appointing some regulators who fear government overreach, Trump signaled people that government would not crush you merely because you make a profit or want to try something new. As a result, 6 million more Americans were hired. Unemployment fell during Barack Obama’s presidency, too, but under Obama, fewer Americans chose to even look for work. People dropped out of the labor force. Once Trump was elected, more people applied for jobs again. Why? I say it’s because his administration sent a new message. Instead of telling people: “You’re victims of an unfair system! You need handouts,” Trump said: “You don’t need welfare. Most of you can get a job.” Even disability claims, which had been steadily rising, have declined. Trump did other good things, like appointing judges that tend to rule in favor of free speech and private property. On the other hand, Trump’s done a lot of bad. To undermine a political opponent and expose the sleaziness of the opponent’s son, Trump sleazily withheld aid to an ally. Then he lied about it. Trump lies about all sorts of things — big and small. He said his inauguration had “the biggest audience in… history.” He kept saying it, even after reports showed it wasn’t true. He broke his promises about ending America’s wars. Unlike his predecessors, he hasn’t started new wars — but he’s increased bombings. The USA is now dropping more bombs on Afghanistan than at any time in the last 10 years. Trump broke promises about spending. He promised he’d “cut spending, big-league.” But he did the opposite. Spending has increased by half a trillion dollars since Trump was elected. Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, is a Trump supporter, but he’s upset that Trump’s gone along with a big increase in the national debt. Davidson complained to his fellow Republicans, but suddenly, they didn’t seem to care much about the debt now that someone from their party was president. This week, Trump proposed a budget that would slow the growth of most unsustainable welfare programs. But he knows that won’t get through Congress. Probably, he’ll sign the gusher of spending that Congress produces instead. “We are on a path to bankrupting our country,” says Davidson. Trump also says false things about trade. He claimed our $500 billion trade deficit means the U.S. is “losing on trade with China.” But that’s absurd. “He’s telling people trade isn’t win-win; there’s a winner and a loser.” I complained to Davidson, adding, “I don’t think Trump understands trade.” “He has a metaphor that the average American understands,” responded Davidson. “But it’s a wrong metaphor, right?” I asked. “It is technically inaccurate,” said Davidson. Trump is also a bully. That’s his ugly part. He calls people “stupid,” “pathetic,” “a low-IQ individual.” He makes fun of their looks and weight. It’s unpresidential. “Some of his words certainly have been ugly,” Davidson agreed. “He’s like a 3-year-old!” I said. “We’re supposed to outgrow that narcissism when we’re an adult.” “This is all baked into Donald Trump,” replied Davidson. “He is true to who everyone knows Donald Trump as, and they love him anyway.” “You love him anyway?” I asked. “I do,” said Davidson. “His policies have been great, and the results are measurably great.” Many are. And Trump is likely to be reelected, according to the odds on my site ElectionBettingOdds.com. So it looks like we’ll see much more of him. I hope we get more of the good and less of the bad and ugly. Tags: John Stossel, President Donald Trump. Good, Bad, Ugly, To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Can Trump Win 20% of the Black Vote in 2020?
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 06:40 PM PST . . . Democrats should be afraid because there are cracks in the Democrats’ facade.
by Willie Richardson Jr.: If you want to get the black vote, all you have to do is give a small percentage of black people options. Options that are long lasting and meaningful like funding historically black colleges and universities. Options that promote the welfare of their families like opportunity zones. Options that are expensive in taste, but at a low price like school choice. Options that give a voice to the voiceless like the First Step Act. Well, how about that! The Trump administration has met all of the basic wants and needs of the black community. Generational wealth. Check. Better education in higher performing schools. Check. Reuniting with a loved one who got involved in nonviolent offenses. Check. Providing higher learning for first-generation college students. Check. All the boxes are being checked, and leftists’ feet are to the fire. Democrats have far too long had the black vote in their back pocket. It’s like snow falling in the winter in Antarctica. You know what you’re going to get. The conversation goes something like this: Democrat Party: Hey baby, how’re you doing? Black Vote: Hey, who is this? Democrat Party: Hey, you know who this is. The Democrat Party! Black Vote: Oh, hey how are you? It’s been some time since we spoke, like four years now? Democrat Party: Well, I know. I’ve been really busy lately. Black Vote: So, what’s up? Democrat Party: Well, you know it’s election time and I’m going to need your help. Black Vote: You know, I’ve always been there for you, but you never seem to be there for me when I need you the most. Democrat Party: What do you mean? You know you’re the apple of my eye. Black Vote: Yeah, I thought I was until things between us just keeps spiraling out of control. One day you’re for me, the next you’re saying there’s more work to be done elsewhere. Democrat Party: Now, wait a minute. Didn’t I give you your first black president? Remember what you felt? Black Vote: Yeah, that was amazing! I just don’t think looking back that it was enough for our communities. Everybody else gets your attention, but I’ve given you my undivided attention for 50 years and what do I have to show for it? Democrat Party: That’s not true. You seem to be very unthankful. Black Vote: You fight for homosexuality, same-sex marriage, the abortion of our babies, and socialism. It seems like I’m at the front when you need me, but at the back when you’ve used me up. I’m tired of this. I need to explore my options. Democrat Party: Options? What options? You know those Republicans only want to get richer and you get poorer. Haven’t I told you about them? Black Vote: That’s the point! I’ve listened to what you’ve had to say, but never researched to find out for myself what’s on the other side. Democrat Party: Well, you know they say the “grass isn’t greener on the other side.” Black Vote: Oh, so we’re married now? Besides, I just want what’s best for me and my family. I shouldn’t feel obligated to support you. What have you done for me lately? Democrat Party: Now you’re making me angry! Look, get you and all your folks down to the polls and vote! Vote or Die! Black Vote: What? Really? That’s enough. I want out! I feel like I have to turn against my beliefs in order to support you. Democrat Party: I am all you have! Get over yourself. Without me you have nothing! Black Vote: Click (phone hangs up) Jones continued, “We’ve got to wake up, folks. There’s a whole bubble thing that goes on, saying, ‘Well, he said s—hole nations. Therefore, all black people are going to hate him forever.’ That ain’t necessarily so. And I think what you’re going to see him do is say, ‘You may not like my rhetoric, but look at my results — look at my record,’ to black people. If he narrowcasts that, it’s going to be effective. Trump will never win a majority of the black vote. But he doesn’t have to. If he follows through on his current strategy, he has a massive opportunity to win a greater share of it in 2020 than the 5% to 10% that Republicans have received since 2008. If Trump gets even 20% of the black vote in swing states such as Michigan, Florida, and Pennsylvania, then Democrats will simply have no path to victory.” The Trump administration has already prepared the way to receive even more support from the black community. The State of Union address laid everything out perfectly. Trump supports the Philadelphia fourth-grader, Janiyah Davis, and her mother, Stephanie Davis, for school choice. The president surprised Janiyah and her mother with a scholarship so she could attend a better school. She had been formerly on a long waiting list. The president also honored a 100-year-old Tuskegee Airman, Charles McGee. During the Super Bowl a commercial aired that show the commuted sentence of Alice Marie Johnson by President Trump. The 63-year-old was released after serving 21 years of a life sentence for a first-time nonviolent drug offense and money laundering. Trump is ahead of the black vote curve and if he can win 20% of the black vote in swing states, it’s a wrap for 2020. The black vote is actually simple. You must preach “pocketbook politics” in a way that is economically measurable. You must preach “social justice” in a way that benefits those who cannot defend themselves. Finally, you must preach “educational opportunities” in a way that black voters can see the benefits for their children. I am excited for this election! Tags: Patriot Post, Will Richardson Jr., can trump win 20% of black vote, 2020 To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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How Venezuela’s Good Citizens Were Disarmed is a Lesson For Us
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 06:16 PM PST
by Susanne Edward: When I was a little girl in the early 1990s, my father worked in the energy industry and often flitted off to South America. He brought us back postcards and chucherías from this faraway land of Venezuela, describing it as the most picturesque nation in Latin America. The nation was then awash in oil wealth, the highest growth rate in the region, boundless education opportunities, fine foods and world-class beaches. It seemed a mystical paradise where nothing could go wrong. Until it did. When I stepped foot into the embattled nation a year ago to cover the burgeoning humanitarian crisis, none of my experience in war zones prepared me for the calamity that seemed to get worse with every step across the Colombian border. Venezuela had sunk into a violent humanitarian crisis. There was next to no rule of law. The haunting images of desperate women chopping off their luscious hair in order to sell it for a few dollars, of mothers bottling their breast-milk to barter to other women so malnourished they couldn’t produce their own and the chilling sights of females as young as 14 years old selling their precious bodies unfurled around me. Cúcuta, a city straddling the Colombian and Venezuelan border, had become the stuff of nightmares: a microcosm of the conflict burning Venezuela alive. Its citizens had become unable to defend themselves or their families from danger and economic ruin. And the Venezuelans are the first to tell you that so many of them willfully surrendered their right to bear arms in the lead-up to the 2014 crackdown. They told me this as clear words of warning. “Venezuela is paying the price for the gun ban. The civilians are unable to defend themselves from criminal actors and from this Maduro regime’s abuses,” activist and university teacher, Miguel Mandrade, 34, said from the fog-laden, barren city of San Cristobal. “The uprising would have taken a different path and a different result if civilians had the right to defend themselves with the firearms they once owned.” Each morning, as the sun rose over the tropical plains now dotted with homeless people and trash, I would sit by the jagged border crossing and watch as thousands flooded into Colombia from Venezuela carrying everything they owned in little backpacks, their feet swollen and shoes broken from the days and weeks of walking. It was a sight that was hard to digest. Some 4 million have fled the profoundly impoverished nation that, as this was being written, was still led by socialist dictator Nicolás Maduro. Meanwhile, the millions left languishing inside Venezuela’s borders are starving and without critical services and medical care. Homicide and crime rates are escalating as the inflation rate soars. The government has unleashed its forces and proxy militias to wage war on a troubled and defenseless population. But the trigger of gun prohibition wasn’t pulled in an instant. Over several years, Venezuelan authorities chipped away at individual gun rights.As they did so, crime rates crept higher and higher. How They Lost Their Freedom The following year, Caracas banned the commercial sales of guns and shuttered the doors of firearms stores across the country. It was mandated that only military, police and security forces could legally own and buy guns. Then, in 2012, Maduro signed into law the Disarmament and Arms Munitions Control, which carried the explicit objective to “disarm all citizens.” Chávez initially ran a months-long amnesty program urging Venezuelans to swap their arms for electrical goods; however, only 37 surrenders were recorded, while more than 12,500 guns were seized by force. The government held grandiose decimation displays in the streets by bulldozing firearms en masse in front of large crowds in a bid to demonstrate their commitment to supposedly end gun violence. In 2014, a further 26,000 firearms were confiscated or crushed—coincidentally, Venezuela clocked in as having the world’s second-highest homicide rate that very same year. Each year that the gun-control reins were pulled tighter, murder rates increased. In 2001, according to gunpolicy.org, 6,568 homicides were recorded in Venezuela. By 2014, that number had jumped to 19,030. Not-so-coincidentally, the black market in weapons also began to boom, with an estimated 6 million illegal guns in the country. “The market works through international borders, in maritime and land areas, and the government itself has been a gun provider,” said Walter Márquez, a Venezuelan historian and former National Assembly Representative. “The government took legal weapons away from private people, disarming all those who could oppose it.” Inside Venezuela’s Black Market The seller, a man with bloodshot eyes who offered no name, explained that handguns start at around $250 and rifles around $500. As I heard these prices, I knew that the overwhelming majority of the Venezuelan population is lucky to receive a few dollars a month in their socialist government stipend. Even the black market is run by corrupt government officials who exploit their positions of authority. They access contraband items and sell them at high prices to those who can pay. I learned all this through my intermediaries who watched day after day as those appointed to the government found ways to profit off their positions. “Not surprisingly, the individuals with the funds to purchase weapons are usually narco-traffickers or other bad actors; however, the black market is also used by many expat Venezuelans who want to purchase food and medicine for their families,” said Ephraim Mattos, executive director of Stronghold Rescue & Relief, which issues humanitarian aid to fleeing Venezuelans. “These expats earn money in other countries and illegally send the money to government officials in Venezuela who then deliver the goods to the expat’s family.” He pointed out that the very same firearms which were turned over by the law-abiding citizens to the government in the so-called buy-back schemes have, in turn, been given to government-sponsored armed groups that now directly oppress the law-abiding citizens who turned in their guns. The most egregious offenders are known as the “colectivos,” or collectives. They are armed by Caracas and deemed vital to Maduro’s survival. The collectives ruthlessly oppress opposition groups, giving Maduro a cosmetic cover. When we saw them, we ran for cover. When a few learned that we had crossed the fragile border without paying off the number of people we were supposed to, they chased us through the thick crowds of fleeing people. A few heart-in-throat moments later, after a panicked exchange between my interpreter and the half-masked men, I was instructed to leave the area. I was one of the lucky ones. “Venezuelans will often travel to neighboring countries with valuables to sell, such as jewelry and electronics,” Mattos said. “The colectivos will stop the travelers at random and steal those items—women are often raped during these stops as well.” “At the border, the colectivos usually charge a tax to cross as well,” he continued. “The Venezuelan people are suffering for the simple mistake of giving up their ability to protect themselves from a socialist government. They willingly invited the enemy into their own home. The destruction of the country was not the sudden result of an armed overtake of the government, but rather it was the insidious lies that slowly crept in and infected the country.” Chavez, Maduro’s predecessor, was democratically elected by the Venezuelan people, and he is the one who began the process of socializing the Venezuelan economy. Venezuela is a Lesson Americans Must Understand “The Venezuelan population trusted the government at all times that it would always use its authority within certain boundaries, and whenever it got out, we thought it would be solved by democratic or legal mechanisms. Our political and public behavior confirmed our cultural naivety in this sense,” said Javier Vanegas, 29, a Venezuelan teacher. “We are paying the price of not having had a strong gun culture.” Before the 2012 changes, there were only eight registered gun stores scattered across the nation of 31 million people. The process for law-abiding citizens even to obtain a legal gun permit and a firearm was a months-long ordeal hamstrung by protracted wait lines, high costs and demands for bribes. Only one department, which operated under the Ministry of Defense, had the authority to issue civilian permits. In late 2017, when Venezuela was in the clutches of its spiraling economic catastrophe, Maduro announced he would distribute some 400,000 arms to his patriots—claiming a U.S.-led coup was coming—and the civilian population was left as sitting ducks. Since April of that year, hundreds of Venezuelans protesting the government, armed with little more than stones and paper signs, have been shot or have disappeared in retaliation. “If citizens had access to guns, and if they had been armed since before the arrival of Chavez, it would have been, at least, a powerful obstacle to the socialist agenda,” said Vanegas. “Socialism thrives in chaos. The perfect tool for chaos in most of Latin-America is criminality. If the people had had the tool to defend themselves, instead of resorting to more state power to end the criminality (an end the government never intended to give), then, of course, it would have made a huge difference.” In recent years, he said, the daily life of the unarmed Venezuelan has been shaped by crime. “People have stopped going out. Businesses and businessmen and women went broke or closed shop and left. The youth began to be fearful of spending time out in the city,” Vanegas said. “I personally had one family member and two friends kidnapped for ransom.” The stuff of nightmares quickly became normal to the likes of Vanegas, who reflected that his complacency has been shattered as his beloved country has fallen apart. Scores of ailing Venezuelans told me that even before the protests sparked five years ago, calling the police to report a crime entailed long wait times and pressure to bribe officers not only to come, but to process the case per the book. Now, even making such a call is basically useless. One person I met on my travels in the region whispered in hushed tones that those who dare keep an old gun beneath their bed—or those who have the finances to find one on the black market—risk the punishment of 20 years behind bars. This person confessed that he kept an old revolver that once belonged to his grandfather. He worried that if he used it to save his own life, the Maduro regime would then come to take him away to prison. Tags: Susanne Edward NRA, America’s 1st Freedom, Venezuela, Good Citizens, Disarmed, Lesson For Us To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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New Norms in Government
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 05:54 PM PST by Kerby Anderson: The impeachment trial may now be history, but the Mueller investigation and the impeachment investigation and trial have set new norms for our federal government. Last month Victor Davis Hanson wrote about this in what he called “The New Post-Trump Constitution.” Here are just a few of them. First, private presidential phone calls will be leaked and printed in the media. This is how the impeachment inquiry started, and it seems likely that this will happen again and again. Second, impeachment of a president now has become a casual affair. It doesn’t have to be due to “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.” It doesn’t necessarily have to have overwhelming public support. It doesn’t even need bipartisan support. We might also add that apparently there is no time limit on an impeachment. You can put the articles of impeachment on the shelf and pull them out weeks or even months later. Third, it appears that the leadership of the FBI, the CIA, and the NSA are immune from any reasonable oversight. Surveillance (what most of us would call spying) was justified with the thinnest of evidence. So far there haven’t been any repercussions for an FBI director or anyone in the intelligence community lying to Congress. No indictments, much less convictions, have been brought against anyone involved. Fourth, the FISA courts have been misused and abused but no one has been held accountable. They may now be used as agencies to grant the FBI or the DOJ power that can be used against candidates and officeholders. This is the new political climate brought about by politicians and bureaucrats who wanted to investigate and remove the president. Ironically, some of them now want to seek refuge and relief in the customs and norms they previously abolished. But it may not be possible to undo what they destroyed. Tags: Kerby Anderson, Viewpoints, Point of View, New Norms, in Government To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Jussie Smollett Should Not Be Rewarded for his Crime
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 05:41 PM PST
by Lloyd Marcus: Actress Taraji P. Henson and other cast members of the Empire TV show are lobbying for former cast member Jussie Smollett to be allowed back on the show for the finale. Taraji said, “We can’t end the show without him. He’s such an integral part to the show.” Folks, Jussie Smollett is the openly homosexual black professional actor who staged a hoax, purposely attempting to ignite racial hatred and violence against Trump-supporters. Smollett claimed he was attacked one night by two white guys who yelled, “This is MAGA country!” Smollett said they poured bleach on him and tried to tie a rope around his neck. The problem is, it was all a huge lie. In essence, this evil man attempted to launch a race war. I only mentioned Smollett’s homosexuality because Democrats, Hollywood, and fake news media exploited it to promote their lie that Trump-supporters hate blacks and homosexuals. The Chicago mayor and police department were outraged when the state’s attorney dropped all 16 felony charges against Smollett for staging the hoax. The city of Chicago demands that Smollett pay the $130,000 for the cost of investigating his bogus attack. Despite documented evidence that Smollett staged a hoax, he is still arrogantly claiming he did nothing wrong. Seniors, women, and even teens who wear MAGA caps are being assaulted and severely beaten because of deranged Trump-resisters like Smollett spreading lies about Trump and his supporters. Apparently, Taraji thinks we should get the heck over it because Smollett is good for her TV show. Smollett attempted to generate racial violence and arrogantly remains unrepentant. Justice requires that his career be over. Folks, why are progressives never held accountable for promoting racial hate, hatred for achievers, hatred for Christians, hatred for straight white men, hatred for successful blacks who do not vote Democrat, and hatred for police? Progressives are not even held accountable for promoting and implementing violence upon anyone who disagrees with their radical agenda? Jussie Smollett should be all over media apologizing to Trump, his supporters, and America. Bets are that will never happen. Tags: Lloyd Marcus, Jussie Smollett, Should Not Be Rewarded, for his Crime /b> To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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After Years of Paying Illegal Union Fees, Government Workers Seek Refunds
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 03:37 PM PST
by Kevin Mooney: After successfully leading a nationwide charge against government-sanctioned union mandates, Mark Janus could end up back before the Supreme Court. In a continuation of his legal case, the former child support specialist for the Illinois government asked the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rule that union officials must refund thousands of dollars in union fees taken from his paycheck. But a three-judge panel of the appeals court ruled in November that Council 31 of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees could keep the fees it collected from Janus. Janus asked for a refund of fees the union collected prior to the Supreme Court’s landmark June 2018 decision in his favor, the 7th Circuit panel explained, saying it was not clear whether that decision was meant to be retroactive. In Janus v. AFSCME, the Supreme Court decided that under the First Amendment government workers cannot be forced either to join a union or pay union fees as a nonunion member. The decision affects about 5 million government employees in 22 states who no longer are required to financially support the political activism of public employee unions. Janus has petitioned the full 7th Circuit to rehear his case seeking retroactive refunds of union fees taken from his paycheck without his consent since 2013. Within the next few weeks, Janus will petition the Supreme Court to address this same question, Brian Kelsey, a lawyer with the Liberty Justice Center, a nonprofit, public interest law firm, told The Daily Signal in an interview. Janus’ petition to the high court is due in early March. The Janus case is one of several cases—sometimes described as “clawback cases”—filed by the Illinois-based Liberty Justice Center on behalf of public employees in partnership with the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, a Virginia-based nonprofit that supports right-to-work initiatives outlawing union mandates. More than 30 “Janus-related cases” could result in over $120 million in refunds, according to a press release from Liberty Justice Center. “These fees were illegally taken from workers and that’s why we are asking the courts to give them back,” Kelsey said, adding: In his majority opinion, Justice Samuel Alito made it clear that the deduction of union fees from a non-member’s wages without his or her consent violates the First Amendment. “Justice Alito said that there must be compelling evidence that a worker wanted money taken out of their paycheck,” Kelsey said. “But we have workers who did not want money taken out of their paycheck, who never gave any sort of consent, and that’s why those funds should come back. We have several cases coming to help flush out what consent looks like for workers.” Among the clawback cases in which Liberty Justice Center has partnered with National Right to Work is a second case in Illinois against the same AFSCME local, which is up in the air pending the outcome of the Janus case. Two cases are in Pennsylvania, one filed against SEIU Local 668 that is on appeal to the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and another against AFSCME Council 13. A case in New York, currently stayed, was filed against AFSCME DC 37. The biggest case so far comes out of Maryland, where 19 state employees filed suit against AFSCME Council 3. They seek a refund of nonmember union fees collected between Sept. 4, 2016, and June 2018, the span permitted under the state’s statute of limitations. Liberty Justice Center estimates that the plaintiffs and almost 10,000 other Maryland state employees had about $7 million in union fees taken from their paychecks during this time period. The Daily Signal sought comment from AFSCME and SEIU, but neither union had responded by publication time. Gary Mattos, a dietary officer with the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services, is the lead plaintiff in the Maryland case. He has been on the job for more than 20 years. When he was hired in 1999, Mattos worked in an “open shop” environment without any union mandate, he said in an interview with The Daily Signal. But in 2011, a law went into effect requiring nonunion employees to pay a union “fair share” fee. “I remember I had an AFSCME member come to my door [who] told me for just a few dollars more I could become a union member,” Mattos said. “But I wouldn’t join the union for even a few pennies more because what they did was wrong, and I don’t think it’s right to force people to pay these fees.” After doing some research, Mattos found that he had paid more than $2,200 in union fees over the years, but under the statute of limitations he could get back only about $800. “So basically, one way to look at it is I had to pay about $400 a year to keep my Maryland state job,” Mattos said, adding: “Unlawfully seizing union fees from workers and then refusing to return them in utter defiance of the Supreme Court’s Janus decision shows how little AFSCME officials care about the rights of the very workers they claim to represent,” Mark Mix, president of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, said in a press release. “Union bosses across the country have profited to the tune of billions of dollars by violating public employees’ First Amendment rights. This case joins dozens of others coast-to-coast in seeking the return to workers of money that the Supreme Court has affirmed should never have been taken from them in the first place,” Mix said. A statute of limitations is operative in all the clawback cases. Janus himself, for example, seeks a refund dating to March 23, 2013, which is as far back as he can go under Illinois law. Liberty Justice Center said it plans to file additional cases this year. Tags: Kevin Mooney, The Daily Signal, After Years of Paying, Illegal Union Fees, Government Workers, Seek Refunds To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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A More or Less Perfect Union
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 03:01 PM PST
by Dr. Walter E. Williams: The three-part documentary TV series “A More or Less Perfect Union,” produced by Free to Choose Network, will air on various PBS stations across the nation this month. The documentary is a personal exploration of the U.S. Constitution by Justice Douglas Ginsburg, who served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and is now a senior justice on that court. Ginsburg explores the Constitution and features interviews with, and perspectives from, constitutional experts of all political views—liberal, conservative, and libertarian. He examines the key issues of liberty in the U.S. both from a historical and contemporary perspective. Among those issues are freedom of the press and religion, slavery and civil rights, the Second Amendment, separation of powers, and the number of ways that the Constitution’s framers sought to limit the power of the federal government. The first episode, titled “A Constitution in Writing,” examines the contentious atmosphere that arose among the delegates in that hot, humid Philadelphia summer of 1787. State delegates were sent to Philadelphia to work out the problems of the Articles of Confederation, which served as the first Constitution of the 13 original states. This part of the documentary examines some of the efforts to deal with those problems while maintaining its guiding principle to preserve the independence and sovereignty of the states. It also examines the compromises and struggles that led to the document we know as the Constitution. Some of the framers, particularly the Anti-Federalists, led by Patrick Henry, saw the Constitution as defective. They demanded amendments be added that contained specific guarantees of personal freedoms and rights and clear limitations on the federal government’s power. They swore that they would never ratify the Constitution unless it contained a Bill of Rights. The second episode is titled “A Constitution for All.” One major emphasis is the examination of the Supreme Court decisions that undermined racial justice both for slaves and later ex-slaves for a century after the Civil War. Several constitutional scholars discuss how the courts and states ignored and weakened the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments. Known collectively as “the Civil War amendments,” they were designed to ensure equality for recently emancipated slaves. The episode also discusses the Bill of Rights guarantees to those accused of a crime. The second episode also further explores the Bill of Rights guarantees of free speech and religious freedom, and the notion that “due process of law” be part of any proceeding that denies a citizen “life, liberty or property.” This forced the government to compensate citizens when it takes private property for public use. Episode three, “Our Constitution at Risk,” examines the many ways that the Constitution is under assault today. It points out that the framers would be shocked by how all three branches of government have grown as a result of what we the people demand from our elected representatives. There’s a discussion about how some of our Bill of Rights guarantees mean absolutely nothing today, namely the 9th and 10th amendments, which reaffirm personal liberty by specifically limiting the federal government to its “enumerated powers.” “A More or Less Perfect Union” is not just a bunch of academics and constitutional experts preaching. It features interviews with everyday Americans weighing in with their visions on the rule of law, the branches of government, and the debate over originalism. A companion book, titled “Voices of Our Republic,” was edited by Ginsburg. It is a collection of thoughts about the Constitution from judges, journalists, and academics. The book includes the thoughts of Supreme Court Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Neil Gorsuch, former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, New York Times publisher Arthur Sulzberger, Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, actor and former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, golf legend Jack Nicklaus, Kiss bassist Gene Simmons, historians Joseph Ellis and Ron Chernow, and many others. The most important audience for “A More or Less Perfect Union” is high school and college students. It is they who stand a good chance of losing the liberties that made our nation the greatest and freest on earth. Tags: Walter Williams, commentary, A More or Less, Perfect Union To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Bernie Takes New Hampshire From Mayor Pete As Two-Way Race Emerges, Biden, Warren On The Ropes
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 02:51 PM PST by Robert Romano: A two-way race has emerged in the Democratic presidential nomination as Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-Vt.), a self-professed democratic socialist, narrowly defeated former Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D-Ind.) in the all-important New Hampshire primary, 25.7 percent to 24.4 percent. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and former Vice President Joe Biden (D-Del.) were distant fourth and fifth place showings, putting their campaigns on life support without wins in the first two contests. This could be their political swan songs. Now, late-deciding voters in subsequent contests will likely choose between Sanders and Buttigieg — which is what usually happens. In more than three-quarters of the years where no incumbent Democrat was running for president — 1976, 1984, 1988, 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2016 — the nominee had won either Iowa or New Hampshire. It’s winner’s bias. Iowa and New Hampshire narrow the field. If you start off losing, and losing badly, then it’s harder to make a case that your campaign is viable. Do you donate money? Time? Energy? Or do you bet on the candidates who have a shot? History suggests the latter.”>defeated former Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D-Ind.) in the all-important New Hampshire primary, 25.7 percent to 24.4 percent. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and former Vice President Joe Biden (D-Del.) were distant fourth and fifth place showings, putting their campaigns on life support without wins in the first two contests. This could be their political swan songs. Now, late-deciding voters in subsequent contests will likely choose between Sanders and Buttigieg — which is what usually happens. In more than three-quarters of the years where no incumbent Democrat was running for president — 1976, 1984, 1988, 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2016 — the nominee had won either Iowa or New Hampshire. It’s winner’s bias. Iowa and New Hampshire narrow the field. If you start off losing, and losing badly, then it’s harder to make a case that your campaign is viable. Do you donate money? Time? Energy? Or do you bet on the candidates who have a shot? History suggests the latter. There are two notable exceptions. Bill Clinton managed to secure the nomination in 1992 without winning either Iowa or New Hampshire, and so did George McGovern back in 1972. But the difference is that in 1992, Clinton had a case to make with a strong second place showing in New Hampshire with 25 percent to Paul Tsongas’ 33 percent. Same deal with McGovern in 1972 with a strong second place in New Hampshire with 37 percent to Edmund Muskie’s 46 percent. The only candidate who might be able to defeat the two-man contest is Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), who surprised with a strong third place at 19.8 percent. Biden and Warren have a much harder road, and surely late-deciders in South Carolina are taking note. Biden’s only handhold remains on the polls, and so the question is whether Biden can leverage his months-long lead in the polls in South Carolina. The big question is how long will Biden’s lead in those polls last as Sanders and Buttigieg continue to outperform Biden on the campaign trail. A rich undercurrent is the impeachment saga, which predictably harmed Biden’s prospects by highlighting his role in firing Ukraine’s top prosecutor in 2016 who says he was investigating the corrupt natural gas firm his son worked for and destabilizing the region by pushing Viktor Yanukovych out of power there in 2014. Impeachment drove up Biden’s negatives early in the process, and it is clearly showing on the campaign trail. Ironically, this might not have been the case had Democrats not impeached Trump. Democrats interfered in their own campaign and sabotaged their own frontrunner, Biden, who had been leading polls nationally for months uninterrupted. Fox News commentator Sean Hannity called it the “boomerang.” That’s about right. In the meantime, the close race for the Democratic nomination between Sanders and Buttigieg favors President Donald Trump, who easily won the primary in New Hampshire with 85.5 percent of the vote running relatively unopposed. Democrats and independents watching who don’t like any of the Democratic candidates will be ripe for the President’s picking as he exploits chaos in the Democratic field. Who the Democrats choose at this juncture is akin to reading a crystal ball, but in South Carolina and beyond, Sanders’ organization and campaign’s experience may prove determinative as Biden fades. Or, Biden could be about to mount the greatest political comeback in history. Who knows? The next thing to watch for are fresh polls from South Carolina and Nevada. Stay tuned. Tags: Robert Romano, Americans for Limited Government, Bernie Takes New Hampshire, Two-Way Race Emerges, Biden, Warren On The Ropes To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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Kerry Endorses Biden and Gives Us a Gun-Control Endorsement to Remember
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 02:17 PM PST by Frank Miniter: An endorsement for president from a former presidential nominee of your party should mean something. This time, however, former Sen. John Kerry’s endorsement of former Vice President Joe Biden (D) only gave us this amusing gaffe: “You heard from Joe about the things he did with the NRA, that took courage. Delaware’s a tough state. I’m a hunter. I’m a gun owner. Been that all my life,” said Kerry before saying, “but I got news for you, there is not a veteran here that would take an AR-16 [sic] with a long clip out to go out and shoot a deer or to shoot anything.” Oh my, where was the teleprompter for the former Secretary of State? Clearly, Kerry must have meant “AR-15,” and he must have meant “magazine” not “clip,” but just as clearly, he has no idea what he is talking about. Kerry said this a few days before the Iowa Caucus at a campaign event in North Liberty, Iowa. If Biden was hoping for a bump in the polls before Iowans got together to advocate for their first-choice candidates in the caucuses, all Kerry gave him was a reminder of how ill-informed Kerry’s and Biden’s statements and policies on guns have been. For example, in 2004 I was then an editor at Outdoor Life magazine when I asked Kerry if he was a gun owner and, if so, what was his favorite gun. Kerry’s reply would lead to scorn even from The New York Times. “My favorite gun is the M-16 that saved my life and that of my crew in Vietnam. I don’t own one of those now, but one of my reminders of my service is a Communist Chinese assault rifle,” said Kerry. It was unclear whether this “Communist Chinese assault rifle” was a Chinese-made SKS carbine or something else, but given that he said this just as the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban was being allowed to expire by then President George W. Bush, many mainstream-media outlets criticized him a few months before the presidential election. Kerry, however, was hardly finished with making a fool of himself. “I go out with my trusty 12-gauge double-barrel, crawl around on my stomach. I track and move and decoy and play games and try to outsmart them. You know, you kind of play the wind. That’s hunting,” said Kerry about a month later. This had hunters laughing, because, sorry Kerry, that’s not what hunting is like—well, outside of maybe a classic cartoon starring Elmer Fudd. If Iowans remembered that absurd quote—and it did get a lot of attention in 2004—it couldn’t have helped Biden get votes in what is one of the top states for whitetail deer hunting. Kerry, meanwhile, did also say that Biden would “do something” about guns. Some of Biden’s most-absurd quotes on guns can tell us what doing something would mean for Biden: “You don’t need an AR-15. It’s harder to aim, it’s harder to use, and in fact, you don’t need 30 rounds to protect yourself. Buy a shotgun. Buy a shotgun,” Biden said in a town hall event. Biden is wrong, of course. An AR-15 is easy to aim and use. It’s quick, accurate and, in a worst-case scenario, who is to say how many rounds you’ll need? During an interview with Field and Stream, Biden gave this advice to those who want to stop would-be intruders: “Just fire the shotgun through the door.” On so-called “smart guns,” Biden said, “A lot could change, for example, if every gun could only be fired by the person who purchased it.” A “smart-gun” mandate, of course, would be a total gun ban of all the popular and reliable makes and models of firearms now on the market. Plenty more can be said about Biden’s view of your freedom, but that’s enough for now. Tags: Frank Miniter, AR-15, Gun Control, Politics, John Kerry, Joe Biden To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks! |
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NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- UNHRC’s Michelle Bachelet put out an anti-Israel blacklist that highlights socialism’s oppression
- NH primary fallout: The race is now between overt and covert authoritarian socialists
- Diversity dysfunction: UVA’s new Multicultural Student Center has ‘too many white people’
- 61% say they’re better off now than three years ago, a record high: Gallup
- Elizabeth Warren brags about taking half of a broke college student’s savings
- After New Hampshire win, Bernie Sanders is actually in trouble
- Amy Klobuchar’s ‘big win’ in third place does not make her the comeback kid
- Donald Trump Jr. trolls Kamala Harris over Jussie Smollett
- The question of abortion, sometimes reduced to yet another political issue, is personal for Michael Burgess
UNHRC’s Michelle Bachelet put out an anti-Israel blacklist that highlights socialism’s oppression
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 04:08 PM PST A name that is rarely associated with Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, or any other radical progressive politicians in America is Michelle Bachelet. The former Chilean President and current U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) may be unfamiliar to most Americans, but she is everything far-left American politicians hope to be someday. Today, she released a “blacklist” of companies that do business in the “illegally occupied” territories in Israel, including East Jerusalem and parts of the West Bank. This list was a dream victory for the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement because it lends credibility (in name only) to their actions against companies who are friendly with the Jewish state.
Both the United States and Israel withdrew from the United Nations Human Right Council two years ago as it was clear their goals revolved around harming Israel and Israel alone. Despite clear human rights violations in Iran, Saudi Arabia, North Korea, Qatar, Nigeria, China, and dozens of nations that are more of a danger to their own people than Israel ever has been, the singular goal of the UNHRC is to delegitimize Israel’s very existence. Anti-Semitism comes in many forms. For the political far-left, that means attacking Israel with everything possible on political and economic fronts so as not to be seen as anti-Semitic. They claim their attacks are not racially or religiously biased, but their actions tell a completely different story. The notion that Israel is more of a human rights violating nation than countries that commit human rights violations daily is ridiculous, but the Marxists must oppose Israel as much as they oppose conservatism in the United States. Both represent an existential threat to the Marxist ideology because both Israeli and American conservatism operate on a basis of truth. It’s like Kryptonite to the radical ideologies of people like Bachelet, Sanders, and France’s Emanuel Macron. If you want to see how Bernie Sanders or other Marxists would act if given enough power, follow the actions of Michelle Bachelet. Her brand of socialism may be global in nature, but it’s a key example of what happens when collectivists have power. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post UNHRC’s Michelle Bachelet put out an anti-Israel blacklist that highlights socialism’s oppression appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
NH primary fallout: The race is now between overt and covert authoritarian socialists
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 02:53 PM PST It was just so promising in the beginning. Leftists had just ‘re-discovered’ the ancient ideas of collectivism or at least pretended that was the case. These supposedly wondrous concepts could do everything, from miraculously providing free health care, housing, and education to healing the oceans and lowering the planet’s temperature. This was the shining promise of socialism, THE ideology of the 16th century that would solve all of our problems, bringing everyone together by dividing them into groups. They make extraordinary promises or assert that one can enslave others because of a new ‘right’ to their money and viola; those with a little knowledge will flock to the party. Klomentum: Rising in the polls by hiding who you areSenator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) and billionaire Mike Bloomberg ( ? NY) are now rising in the polls because they avoid the ‘s’ and ‘c’ words – socialism and gun confiscation. It was only a few days ago that Amy Klobuchar raised her hand to the question of having a ‘democratic’ socialist in the White House. Similarly, while Mike Bloomberg wants every stepping stone to gun confiscation, he tiptoes on the line better than a Bolshoi ballerina. Both are authoritarian at heart, like the rest of their comrades of the national socialist left. But both hide it well. At least well enough to look reasonable to some voters who remember the abject horrors of socialism or who would like to keep their basic human rights. The majority of the people know the left has lost the plotLet’s face it, the 90% majority of the people in the country know that the left’s socialist national agenda is far worse than being a non-starter, it would be an economic disaster of epic proportions. Just beginning the talk of reaming the rich will send the stock market into a tailspin. Recent polls show that most people know this to be true, outside the cadre of the totalitarian 10%. Most of the people are of a practical perspective and know in their hearts that there is no free lunch, that providing a wondrous benefit to some will entail forcibly taking from others at gunpoint. Many are too busy being productive and living their lives to pay attention to the authoritarians in our midst who preach revolutionary socialism. There always has been the paradoxical situation that for most people, the more you know about socialism, the less you like it. The wise words of Ronald Reagan said it best:
The supreme irony being that it’s the folks from the authoritarian socialist left who project their lack of knowledge on others. Only those with a superficial understanding of socialism believe it can actually work. Delving into it raises all kinds of questions that leftists can’t answer:
These bring forth all manner of contradictions that serve to dismantle the left’s base ideology. Then of course it is the fact that numbers never add up. The ever false Utopian promises of the leftLeftists try to tiptoe around the implication that all of this largess can be paid for with platinum unicorn droppings. Or that waving a magic wand will produce an infinite pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. But those who live in the real world know that is nothing but bovine excreta of the highest order. We are already $23 trillion (with a ‘T’) in debt. There is no more ‘wealth’ to be ‘redistributed’. We are going to have enough of a problem trying to turn around Titanic 2.0 even if President Trump is re-elected. If the cadre of overt and covert authoritarians takes the White House and Congress, there is no telling the carnage – beginning with a second civil war and ending with who knows. The bottom line: Leftists are defined as socialistsWhether or not they admit to the truth, those on the far-left are on the authoritarian side of the political spectrum. That includes Klobuchar, Bloomberg and Buttigieg. One only needs to look at their interpretation of the left’s socialist national agenda to confirm this fact. One way or another, we are going to see a close examination of the scourge of socialism, the modern version of slavery. Coincidentally, in his discussion of the New Hampshire primary, Glenn Beck asked, are we seeing a sea change in America. Are we seeing the beginning of the end of this ‘woke Nazi-ish’ ideology? Are we seeing the start of a pro-liberty push-back in America? His discussion was right in line with our contentions here. The left cannot withstand a close examination of their base ideology. They cannot withstand the fact that it means the death of liberty, democracy and progress. That is why some of them have to hide who they are, but it won’t matter in the end. They are on the wrong side of history. We know it, they know it and soon enough, everyone else will know it. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post NH primary fallout: The race is now between overt and covert authoritarian socialists appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Diversity dysfunction: UVA’s new Multicultural Student Center has ‘too many white people’
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 12:35 PM PST It took four days of the University of Virginia’s new Multicultural Student Center being opened before diversity was officially flushed down the drain. That’s when one student proudly declared there were “too many white people in here” and that the MSC was “a space for people of color.”
The irony of the “public service announcement” is that the person delivering it has no idea that multiculturalism, by definition, is not supposed to exclude people based on, well, anything. The intention of these cultural melting pots is for students to engage with people with diverse backgrounds to foster dialogue and strengthen relationships. The fact that she felt empowered to obliterate the premise of the MSC and replace it with a statement that Caucasians were not welcome exemplifies the growing ignorance in America’s institutions of higher learning. This isn’t multiculturalism. It’s Cultural Marxism.
Bigotry in all of its forms has stained our nation (and every nation that has ever existed) throughout history. But in recent years, old bigotries have been isolated and minimized for the most part. That’s not to say it doesn’t exist, but compared to just three decades ago, we are a much more culturally tolerant nation. Unfortunately, the pendulum is now swinging in the other direction as unprotected groups—Caucasians, cisgenders, men, Christians, and especially those with combined classifications—are being marginalized for not being part of the intersectionality revolution. The whole point of multiculturalism is for diversity that includes ALL cultures. But the University of Virginia’s new MSC is apparently just for “people of color.” That’s not multiculturalism. That’s racism. And still the “woke” students cheered. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post Diversity dysfunction: UVA’s new Multicultural Student Center has ‘too many white people’ appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
61% say they’re better off now than three years ago, a record high: Gallup
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 09:57 AM PST
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Sixty-one percent of Americans say they are better off than they were three years ago, a higher percentage than in prior election years when an incumbent president was running. In the 1992, 1996 and 2004 election cycles, exactly half said they were better off. In three separate measures during the 2012 election cycle, an average of 45% said they were better off. The current results, from a Jan. 16-29 Gallup poll, echo record highs, measured earlier in January, in Americans’ satisfaction with the way things are going in their personal life and in their assessments of their personal finances. Relatedly, 52% of U.S. adults say it is easier for them to ‘go and buy things in the stores’ than it was three years ago, higher than in the 1992, 1996 and 2004 election cycles, when the figures were closer to 40%. Americans’ perceptions of whether they are personally better off, and whether it is easier to buy things, appear to be influenced much more by their party leanings than by their economic situations. Sixty percentage points separate Republicans’ (89%) and Democrats’ (29%) assessments of whether they are better off than three years ago. Independents are essentially in the middle of the two groups, at 60%. Meanwhile, 64% of those in both upper- and middle-income households say they are better off, as do 49% of those in lower-income households. The Republican-Democratic gap is smaller — 44 points — when people indicate whether it is easier for them to buy things than it was three years ago: 76% of Republicans versus 32% of Democrats say it is, as do 49% of independents. The party gaps on the ‘better off than three years ago’ question were much smaller in the past, partly because supporters of the incumbent president’s party were less upbeat about their situations than Republicans are today. In addition to higher ratings among Republicans, today’s higher figures are also driven by more positive ratings among independents — 60% today, compared with ratings near 50% in prior years. My TakeIn 1980, President Reagan famously asked the American people, “Are you better off than you were four years ago?” When he asked this, America was in a terrible economic situation. It was bold nonetheless because all but one of the major polls in October and November had Jimmy Carter ahead of Reagan. Some say it was this self-reflective question asked less than a week before the election that put Reagan over the top. President Trump is in a completely different situation. He’s the incumbent and the economy is soaring. It might behoove him to ask this question time and time again until the election, as some advisers are certain to recommend. If I had the President’s ear, I would tell him to hold the question until the end, perhaps the closing argument of the final debate, before dropping this potent seed in the minds of voters. Republicans and Independents overwhelmingly realize their personal situations are better now than they were under President Obama. Over a quarter of Democrats have to admit it as well. President Trump should ride this fact to victory in November. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Elizabeth Warren brags about taking half of a broke college student’s savings
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 09:22 AM PST Senator Elizabeth Warren desperately wants to be seen as the less radical version of Senator Bernie Sanders. She wants to seem sensible enough to get moderate voters to trust her while extreme enough to get the “woke” crowd on her side. Her favorite tactic to make that happen is to appeal to those who don’t have a lot of money and who blame billionaires for all of their troubles. Unfortunately for her, Bernie has the breadline crowd in his corner and moderates still believe she’s going to take away their health insurance. Nevertheless, she keeps pushing forward with her selfie campaign, bragging about all of the broke people who sent her their life savings like a televangelist who needs a new private jet. Her latest gaffe (which she oddly doesn’t realize is a gaffe) came when she discussed how a broke college student gave $3 of their last $6 to the campaign.
Warren wants to be seen as a fighter, a realist, a capitalist, a progressive, a woman, a non-man, a minority, and anything else that can make her seem relevant in the presidential conversation. It hasn’t worked out for her so far after being the frontrunner just a few months ago. Some candidates get caught on hot mics or called out for statements from the past and have to explain themselves to their voter base. Elizabeth Warren broadcasts her own faux pas to the world willingly. Conservatives on Twitter had fun with her bragging:
It takes an unprecedented lack of self-awareness for a presidential candidate to say these words and think this will make them more appealing to the masses. On the demerits of this statement alone, Warren should end her campaign immediately. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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After New Hampshire win, Bernie Sanders is actually in trouble
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 08:18 AM PST If there’s one thing that bugs me about primary season commentaries, it’s when a way-too-smart analyst makes the case for a win actually being a loss for a candidate, followed closely by analysts who make the case that a loss was actually a win. The intellectual cartwheels necessary to be so nonsensical tarnishes the field of journalism and turns people away from listening to sound analyses. With that said, I’ll make the case that Senator Bernie Sanders’ win in the New Hampshire primary was not as rosy at it may seem on the surface. The difference between this analysis and others like it is that I’m right. The others may be right as well, but I haven’t read them. There were two scenarios that would have put Sanders clearly in the driver’s seat careening down the path to the nomination. The first is obvious. If he had won New Hampshire with anywhere near the support he had there in 2016, the momentum would have likely pushed him to an outright win (the Bloomberg wildcard notwithstanding) with the necessary delegates going into the Democratic National Convention. But he didn’t get that type of support. In fact, he barely won in a state that loved him to the tune of 60% of the votes in 2016. The field is obviously bigger this time and Hillary Clinton isn’t the one he’s fighting against, but to squeak out a win in New Hampshire doesn’t give him a big momentum boost. The second scenario may seem counter-intuitive, but hear me out. He needed Senator Elizabeth Warren to get delegates and finish in a comfortable but not encouraging third place. Sanders is the benefactor of her fall from grace, but he needs her to not fall so fast. He needs her to block other candidates from getting delegates because her delegates are much more likely to select him as their second choice in a contested convention than delegates for any of the other candidates. In a brokered convention, Warren is Sanders’ firewall. She may be flip-flopping back and forth between being a radical progressive and being a sensible moderate, but her delegates will be progressives. With the new DNC rules awarding split delegates in all states, it’s imperative for someone like Sanders to have as many friendly faces in the delegate count as possible. The only delegates who will favor him are his own, of course, and Warren’s. If she fails miserably and continues getting goose eggs in the delegate count, his hopes of winning the nomination in Minneapolis are essentially nil if he can’t get to the magic number on his own. The worst-case-scenario for Sanders has already taken shape. As a brokered convention seems more and more likely, it’s him versus the combined delegate counts of the rest of the field. If he can’t win it outright, he has no chance of being the nominee. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Amy Klobuchar’s ‘big win’ in third place does not make her the comeback kid
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 07:28 AM PST There are three main storylines coming out of New Hampshire following the nation’s first primary vote. The first and second are correct. Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg are both looking good despite deficiencies that could haunt them in upcoming primaries. Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden are looking terrible. The third narrative is that Amy Klobuchar is now a player and may be the “comeback kid,” a reference to Bill Clinton’s New Hampshire second place finish after a terrible Iowa caucus. That entry onto the national stage was the biggest reason Clinton ended up being the nominee in 1992. But before everyone jumps on the Klobuchar bandwagon and believes she’s the next Clinton, there is an important point to remember. Clinton charmed his way to the nomination. All he needed was the national attention garnered from getting on the map in New Hampshire to get people looking at him. What they saw, they liked. Klobuchar is very different from Clinton. She’s a candidate who, upon closer examination, is not charming. She’s clever at times. She definitely has a sharp wit and is an excellent campaigner. She even fits the “moderate” mold that many Democrats are seeking in order to prevent a radical progressive like Sanders from getting the nomination. But she’s not likable. In fact, she’s arguably the least likable candidate still in the running. Even when the field was large, she was close to being as unlikable as Kamala Harris and Eric Swalwell, which is saying a lot. Her history of berating her staff is well documented, and she has nary denied the accusations. She attributes it to her passion and demands of excellence, but that does not endear her to voters the way Clinton’s charm and slick talking did. As it turned out, Clinton was technically much worse to acquaintances, having allegedly raped some of them. But those concerns weren’t known to the general public when the Democratic primaries were roaring. As much as we’d love to see Klobuchar going head-to-head against President Trump, the more likely scenario is the more America gets to know her, the less they’ll like her. She’s less like Bill Clinton and more like his unlikable wife.
American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Donald Trump Jr. trolls Kamala Harris over Jussie Smollett
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 07:00 AM PST When news broke that actor Jussie Smollett was indicted again for lying to Chicago Police about an alleged attack by Caucasian assailants, the memes wrote themselves. Insults started flying. Fans of justice were ecstatic. Then, the trolling of historical Smollett supporters emerged. The most epic came from Donald Trump Jr. as he went after Senator Kamala Harris.
Harris took some flack for calling the incident a “modern day lynching” even before it was known that it was all a hoax. She even went so far as to push anti-lynching legislation even though it is, of course, already illegal. Her attempts to virtue-signal the masses while in the midst of her campaign launch was bad enough, but the revelation that he alleged hired actors to pretend to beat him up made her situation much worse. There are more reported hate hoaxes from Trump supporters than there are actual hate crimes committed by them. This is indicative of a false narrative attempting to become a self-fulfilled prophecy, but people like Jussie Smollett just aren’t that clever. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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The question of abortion, sometimes reduced to yet another political issue, is personal for Michael Burgess
Posted: 12 Feb 2020 03:50 AM PST As Prepared for Delivery Thank you, Madam Chair. Today’s hearing is an unfortunate indication of where the Democratic party is headed. While the policy concerns surrounding abortion and a right to life are not new, a bill such as H.R. 2975, with over 200 members of the Democratic party in support, is unprecedented. This bill transcends pro-life and pro-choice. The question of abortion, sometimes reduced to yet another political issue to debate, is personal for me. My belief in the right to life has influenced my professional career for much longer than my time in Congress. In fact, it’s been a lifetime. Before being elected to represent the 26th District of Texas, I spent almost three decades practicing as an OB/GYN in North Texas. My medical career was rooted in my pro-life practice and the belief that all life has meaningful potential. In the span of my obstetrics career, I delivered more than 3,000 babies. Not only did I have the joy of seeing these babies when they were delivered, but throughout my career I witnessed great advances in the technology that allowed doctors and parents to see these children developing in the womb. For those of us who have watched a baby squirm and kick during a sonogram, there is no question about the sanctity of life. While my work has changed through the years – I now spend late nights delivering policy rather than babies – my dedication to pro-life medicine remains steadfast. Ironically, this bill is called the Women’s Health Protection Act of 2019, even though, if this bill became law, it would put women’s health and safety at risk. The heavy-handed language used in this bill puts women at risk. By codifying that there may be no restrictions or prohibitions on particular abortion procedure prior to viability, women may be placed at risk of a number of potential harms associated with certain abortion procedures such as infection, bleeding, or uterine perforation, without the ability to be regulated for safety purposes. Not only does this bill raise questions about the Democrats’ concern for women’s health and safety, it also raises questions about the regard for the U.S. Constitution. The Supreme Court established the viability test in Roe v. Wade in 1971. This standard says that once a baby reaches the point of ‘viability,’ a state may regulate or prohibit abortions. In Roe v. Wade, Justice Blackmuns’ opinion states that viability is usually placed at about seven months – or 28 weeks – but may occur earlier, even at 24 weeks. In 1973, a viable baby being born at 24 weeks was something to hope for in the future. The youngest baby I delivered was at 23 weeks. Last week, at the State of the Union, President Trump recognized a young girl and her mother in the crowd. This young girl, Ellie Schneider, was born severely premature at 21 weeks. Ellie is one of the youngest babies to survive in the US and she is now a happy and healthy two-year-old. As an OB/GYN it is incredible to see the medical advances saving the lives of mothers and babies. As the viability of a baby occurs earlier with the help of medical innovation, the Roe v. Wade standard inherently extends the rights of states to regulate earlier in a pregnancy term. A bill like this seeks to override and dismiss the viability standard set by the Supreme Court in the wake of medical advances that are saving babies lives. This bill would codify into law that access to an abortion is essential to women’s health. This is contrary to the US Constitution, which is very clear when it guarantees a right to life. The federal government should work to overcome the factors that lead to abortions and should support well-crafted legislative proposals that directly address these factors. That is not this bill. I am a physician, but most Members of Congress are not. For me, this bill crosses a line into dictating the practice of medicine, which is uncomfortable and threatening to health care practitioners and hospitals across the country. I yield back. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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