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ABCNews.com Laments Planned Parenthood Defunding Motion Passed Despite Speech by Pro-Choice Congresswoman

Earlier this afternoon, the House of Representatives voted for an amendment to a spending bill that would strip Planned Parenthood of federal funding. Much of the debate on the measure happened last night, including a speech in opposition of the move by a Democratic congresswoman, Jackie Speier (D-Calif.),

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Networks that Railed Against Rhetoric of Tea Parties Offer No Anger for Hitler, Dictator Signs at WI Protests

The same networks that assailed the allegedly extreme invective from the Tea Party have, thus far, not found anything interesting about signs implying that Scott Walker, Wisconsin's Republican governor, is a Nazi or a dictator in the style of Hosni Mubarak. On Thursday's newscasts and Friday's Today, Good Morning America and the Early Show, the extreme rhetoric of some of the signs went unremarked. Some of the images, which included pictures of Walker as Adolf Hitler and signs that read “Scott Mubarak: Get Out,” were seen briefly during crowd shots. But, none of the programs raised any objections to the hateful rhetoric surrounding Wisconsin's plan to reform collective bargaining and force federal workers to pay for part of their retirement. On CBS's Early Show, Cynthia Bowers defended, “And tens of thousands of people are expected to once again descend upon this capitol building today to protest what they say are anti-union legislation rules….more than 10,000 protesters rallied against a proposed budget bill they called drastic and extreme.” Over on ABC's Good Morning America, Chris Bury sounded a similar theme: “Last night, more public workers, including these firemen, poured into the capitol. Some families camping out overnight, in a last-ditch effort to protest budget cuts they fear would cripple their union rights.” Today correspondent John Yang explained, “They are angry over proposed budget cuts, which include a plan to end collective bargaining rights for many state workers.” None of the networks discussed signs deriding, “Scott Walker = Adolf Hitler.” They didn't focus on a poster with a target over Walker's head, demanding, “Reload: Repeal Walker.” More of these signs can be found here . To see how the networks trumpeted alleged incidents of violence and racism by the Tea Party, go here . — Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter .

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Welcome to Cairo, Wisconsin!

Click here to view this media The video is actually a compilation of Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) making the analogy of the recent unrest in Egypt with what is going on in Wisconsin. The links and quotes are from Heather’s earlier post on Ryan. Via TPM : Speaking on Morning Joe Thursday morning, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) compared the current situation in Wisconsin, where Gov. Scott Walker (R) has inspired days of protests by proposing a budget that would remove key bargaining powers for public employee unions, to the recent unrest in Egypt that toppled the 30-year authoritarian rule of Hosni Mubarak, saying it’s ” like Cairo has moved to Madison these days .” ..and another from NBC evening news where a protester in Madison makes the same comparison, albeit from the protesters point of view. Ryan seems to be equating Republicans austerity measures with the oppression of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt. And pointed out by many, including Andrew Leonard at Salon.com : On Thursday morning Ryan topped that headscratcher with a real doozy: He compared the protests currently raging in Wisconsin over Gov. Scott Walker’s plans to crush public sector unions to the upheaval that brought down President Mubarak in Egypt. But when a Republican legislator voluntarily places his own party in the position of Mubarak, you have to wonder what’s in the tea these people are drinking. Yes, yes, I know conservatives are worried that democracy in Egypt could lead to the Muslim Brotherhood taking power. But to the vast majority of people on this planet who paid attention to what happened in Egypt, the protesters were the good guys and Mubarak was the bad guy. The sight of people gathering peacefully in Tahrir Square was incredibly inspiring. Ryan sees riots and Cairo-style destabilization in the masses who have risen up in Wisconsin. But that’s not what Democrats and union members and Americans who don’t share the Tea Party ethos are seeing. They’re seeing the dramatic, exciting beginning of a pushback against Republican over-reach. If Paul Ryan thinks it looks like Cairo, well then, maybe he’s right. Harold Meyerson at the Washington Post quipped that Walker was the ” cheesehead pharaoh of Wisconsin .” Protesters have seized on the idea as well. enlarge enlarge enlarge

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House Votes to De-Fund Planned Parenthood, 240-185

Click here to view this media After one of the most despicable and disgusting debates I’ve ever seen on the floor of the United States House of Representatives, they passed an amendment denying all Federal funding to Planned Parenthood. Authored by Mike Pence, it is draconian in its scope and nature. The video clip above is the very end of last night’s very late debate. Rep. John Culberson (R-TX) experiences a flash of rare intellectual honesty and exposes the Pence amendment as the extortion that it is, flatly stating that there will be no funds for Planned Parenthood until they stop performing abortions. As simple as that. The nonsense that follows from Paul Broun is more of the “excuse me while we screw women a different way while wringing our hands and claiming it’s all about those poor babies” crap they’re so good at spewing. It’s a real study in how cynical and ugly Republicans really are. There were Democrats who fought valiantly, but they were simply outnumbered. And as Republicans go on their merry way with every wedge issue they’ve ever invented, we all ask ” Where are the Jobs? ” Now that House Republicans have saved the babies, they are debating stripping funds from the Affordable Care Act. Because fetuses are sacred. American citizens? Not so much. You can watch the House debate on de-funding health care live on C-SPAN . Update: So far, 3 out of 4 amendments to strip all funding from the Affordable Care Act have passed. They’re voting on the last one, stripping IRS of any funds to carry out duties under the ACA. It’ll pass too. I can only hope members who cast these votes suffer the consequences of their decisions, personally and painfully. Update 2: As Republicans succeeded in serving their corporate and ideological taskmasters today, they all applauded and patted each other on the back. When Democrats applauded last year, it was because they had given something to people. When Republicans applaud, it’s because they’ve taken something away.

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As the crowds of protesters grow to more than 30,000, President Obama gets out in front of the Wisconsin union movement and actually takes a side – the side of workers: President Obama thrust himself and his political operation this week into Wisconsin’s broiling budget battle, mobilizing opposition Thursday to a Republican bill that would curb public-worker benefits while planning similar action in other state capitals. Obama accused Scott Walker, the state’s new Republican governor, of unleashing an “assault” on unions in pushing emergency legislation that would nullify collective-bargaining agreements that affect most public employees, including teachers. The president’s political machine worked in close coordination Thursday with state and national union officials to mobilize thousands of protesters to gather in Madison and to plan similar demonstrations in other state capitals. Their efforts began to spread, as thousands of labor supporters turned out for a hearing in Columbus, Ohio, to protest a measure from Gov. John Kasich (R) that would cut collective-bargaining rights. By the end of the day, Democratic Party officials were working to organize additional demonstrations in Ohio and Indiana, where an effort is underway to trim benefits for public workers. Some union activists predicted similar protests in Missouri, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Under Walker’s plan, most public workers – excluding police, firefighters and state troopers – would have to pay half of their pension costs and at least 12 percent of their health-care costs. They would lose bargaining rights for anything other than pay. Walker, who took office last month, says the emergency measure is needed to save $300 million over the next two years to help close a $3.6 billion budget gap. “Some of what I’ve heard coming out of Wisconsin, where they’re just making it harder for public employees to collectively bargain generally, seems like more of an assault on unions ,” Obama told a Milwaukee television reporter, taking the unusual step of inviting a local station into the White House for a sit-down interview. “I think everybody’s got to make some adjustments, but I think it’s also important to recognize that public employees make enormous contributions to our states and our citizens.” The White House political operation, Organizing for America, got involved Monday, after Democratic National Committee Chairman Timothy M. Kaine spoke to union leaders in Madison, a party official said. The group made phone calls, distributed messages via Twitter and Facebook, and sent e-mails to its state and national lists to try to build crowds for rallies Wednesday and Thursday, a party official said.

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Funeral chants call for Bahraini revolution

The funeral procession for Ali Ahmed Al-Muamin included strong calls for more than mere political reform. The leader repeated: “Bahraini revolution until we get freedom.”

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Mary Landrieu said a few days back that dealing with the deficit is the “issue of the decade.” And this is from a Democrat. The inside-the-Beltway mentality creates its own Bizarro World, brain-dead obsessions that are so distorted compared to the real world, that it completely takes one’s breath away. The fact that both parties are focused on the same obsessions is a tribute to the power of the framing machine the Wall Street-backed conservative media has created. I write this even though I do actually think getting a handle on the long-term structural deficit is very important both economically and politically. Being the Midwestern Methodist I am, the kind of debt we are running up makes me very unsettled, and paying hundreds of billions of dollars in interest does the economy no good. I also think that, politically, Democrats and progressives always will have trouble making the case for doing the kinds of things we want government to do unless we make progress on bring the federal deficit under control. I think progressives should do what Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky and organizations like Demos (a client), the Campaign for America’s Future and others have done, and put out their own plans for reducing the deficit. But having said all that, to mindlessly parrot Republican panic inducing talking points about the deficit being the issue of the decade is as wrong as can be. I believe this for two very simple reasons. The first is that I was a member of an administration that, not all that long ago, figured out how to turn a yawning, long-term, “structural” deficit into a strong surplus situation in a few short years. It really wasn’t that hard to figure out, and it didn’t take slashing Social Security or Medicare benefits, or decimating every program for low- and middle-income families. All we had to do was raise taxes on the wealthy, produce a bunch of new jobs (quite a few of which had some decent wages attached to them), and make some modest cuts here and there to duplicative programs. It took some political courage, but the policies added up. After all the reckless Bush tax cuts, two interminable wars, and the deepest, most damaging recession since the Great Depression, our deficit hole is quite a bit deeper today, but the formula still isn’t particularly complicated. Raising taxes on the folks who have been rewarding themselves and hoarding all the money is a big part of the answer. Breaking the back of health care inflation by negotiating drug prices with the pharmaceutical companies and giving us a public option to drive down the cost of health insurance would help out quite a bit as well. Reforming government contracting would squeeze a $100 billion-plus out of federal spending every year. Taking a much harder look at the waste in the military budget — which no one has done for a long time because of the power of the Pentagon and defense contractors — would easily save another $100 billion a year on top of the tiny savings (less than $10 billion dollars a year) Gates agreed to in Obama’s budget for the next 10 years. But by far, the most important way to end our deficit problem is the real issue of the decade: turn this economy around by creating tens of millions of new jobs that pay a decent wage. We will never solve the deficit issue without a growing economy that is at, or damn close to, full employment, and if wages and middle-class family incomes stay as flat as they have been over the last decade, that will make it very tough as well. The 22 million new jobs and rising pay during the Clinton years, which was easily the best period of economic growth since the 1960s, was the biggest reason by far we turned the big deficits into big surpluses. The issue of the decade is how to create more jobs, and how to help middle-class families have real income growth in the next 10 years so their spending can produce a strong, sustainable economy. According to independent estimates, the House Republicans’ budget cuts will cost more than a million jobs without creating any new ones, while the Obama budget will create more than 15 million new jobs in infrastructure, energy, research, and education, so we at least know which budget is going in the right direction. But we need to do far more to increase jobs and middle-class incomes: unions need to be strengthened, not weakened, so that wages will start moving upward again; we need to help emerging industries like clean energy to flourish; Wall Street banks need to be stripped of their ability to hoard so much money and distort the financial markets toward speculation and away from investment in the Main Street economy, and their incentives need to be altered so they make productive investments rather than engage in destructive market manipulation; we need to promote basic manufacturing in this country again, rather than incentivizing outsourcing with our tax-and-trade and currency policies. Rebuilding, expanding, and strengthening the hard-pressed American middle class is the issue of the decade by far. Democratic politicians should understand that and focus on it above all other things instead of blindly accepting the Right Wing’s deficit framing.

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GOP comes up short on FP | Alex Slater

The Egyptian crisis and Middle East protests have exposed the Republican party as lacking a clear foreign policy message As protests for democracy spread throughout the Middle East , one thing is clear: the White House is walking a tightrope. President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have been put in the uncomfortable position of addressing dictatorial regimes that are longtime American allies while urging peaceful and orderly protest and, potentially, democratic transition. But from the panoply of prospective Republican presidential candidates, many of whom have engaged in “fact-finding missions” in the Middle East before the Egyptian crisis (a transparent, if time-honoured, ploy to bolster foreign policy credentials), the silence is deafening. Rather than speaking out, they seem content to cede the upper ground to the White House, however difficult the task may be. Even Sarah Palin, who never misses an opportunity to criticise Obama, remained uncharacteristically silent for a period on the subject of Egypt and completely mute on the knockon effects in countries like Bahrain. This is ironic given the publication of her ghostwritten book, which attempts to burnish her weak ( “You can see Russia from here in Alaska” ) foreign policy credentials. Republican party leaders have unconvincingly ascribed the silence of Republican candidates to a need for America to speak as one on matters of foreign policy – an approach that is both novel and disingenuous. Rather, the calm in the midst of this storm underscores the inability of Republican candidates to draw meaningful lines between themselves and Obama on foreign policy (think Iraq in the last election). Some, like Mitt Romney and Haley Barbour, have offered mild rebukes to the president for not distancing himself from Mubarak earlier in the Egyptian revolution. Easy to say when a vital US strategic ally was in the middle of a very unstable situation. But compare this feeble political contrast being drawn to the red-meat attacks on the president over domestic policies, such as government spending or healthcare, which solicit almost daily Republicans beatings. A notable exception is Ambassador John Huntsman , who built real expertise as US envoy to China. His foreign policy credentials could hardly be more polished, and his recent hiring of influential strategists like Tim Miller, who specialise in the very type of social media outreach spurring the revolutions, underscores his savvy in this realm . Part of the overall silence may be the Tea Party effect. Calculating that Tea Party supporters and evangelical voters may be the deciding factor in next year’s Republican primaries, the presidential candidates have decided to “sit this one out”, in deference to the more pressing concerns of that voting bloc (spending, spending, spending). The absence of meaningful Republican debate on the crises unfolding in the Middle East – reinforced by anaemic coverage by traditional rightwing media outlets – underscores the failure of Republicans to build a “deep bench” when it comes to foreign policy. But if foreign policy concerns continue to occupy a high profile in the landscape of issues, such expertise – or even a willingness to engage – could prove critical in the general election. And the result on the left? For what it’s worth, it leaves President Obama as the sole proprietor of the foreign policy limelight . When he said in a press conference this week that, on Egypt, the administration had got it “about right” , who was to gainsay him? Any accusations of presidential mismanagement have been so muted that he has been able to seize the limelight and look authoritative and statesmanlike In fact, together with Hilary Clinton, the White House team – whatever you think of their specific take – has appeared calm and professional by comparison. In these testing and evolving times, that’s a contrast to revel in. US foreign policy Hillary Clinton Barack Obama Obama administration Republicans Mitt Romney Sarah Palin US politics United States Egypt Middle East US elections 2012 Alex Slater guardian.co.uk

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Shia chants about deceased Bahraini

Funeral procession in the Sitra area of Manama for Ali Ahmed Al-Muamin on February 18. The crowd repeats: “Oh mother, remember me.”

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ABC’s One-Sided Take on Wisconsin Protests Includes an Interview With Top Secret, Hidden Democrat

Good Morning America on Friday spun the protests in Wisconsin from the perspective of the unions and Democratic lawmakers who oppose Republican efforts to reform collective bargaining. Co-host George Stephanopoulos even interviewed a Democratic lawmaker from a top secret location outside the state. Correspondent Chris Bury's piece on the protest featured five clips of those protesting the efforts by Republican Governor Scott Walker to make government employees contribute to their retirement plans. He allowed just one in support. The reporter narrated, ” Last night, more public workers, including these firemen, poured into the capitol. Some families camping out overnight, in a last-ditch effort to protest budget cuts they fear would cripple their union rights .” Bury only included Walker as the voice speaking out for the reforms. In contrast, he highlighted one woman fretting, “I want to do everything in my power to raise awareness that this can't happen!” Another protester complained, “This is about stripping away our rights to have a union.” After weighting the first report heavily against Walker and the Republicans, Stephanopoulos then interviewed yet another Democrat. Talking to State Senate Minority Leader Mark Miller, a hidden Democrat who fled the state, the co-anchor explained, “He joins us from a location we cannot disclose. We know where you are, obviously, senator.” Stephanopoulos did actually ask some adversarial questions, wondering, “So, do you have an alternative? Do you have a way to close the deficit if you don't like the governor's plan?” But, wouldn't it have been more balanced to feature the Republican perspective of this story? A transcript of the Bury segment, which aired at 7:02am EST on February 18, follows: 7am tease ABC Graphic: Rage in America GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: And this morning, high-stakes battle the heartland. Thousands converge on Wisconsin's capital, camp-out overnight, to protest the governor's budget cuts. Teachers call in sick. And Democrats escape the state to prevent a vote. Is your state next? 7:02 ROBIN ROBERTS: And, George, let's begin by talking about the massive gatherings that we've seen in Wisconsin. A really dramatic political confrontation going down there, where tens of thousands of teachers, students, prison guards, descending on the state capitol, to protest a budget package that would strip most public workers of collective bargaining rights and cut benefits. And as George said, Democratic legislators even went into hiding to delay a vote. Chris Bury is there and has all the details for us this morning. Good morning, Chris. [Signs that can BRIEFLY be seen on camera: "Scott Mubarak: Get Out!", "King Walker, Union Buster" Hitler signs.] CHRIS BURY: Good morning, Robin. It's been a wild week here at the state capital. Some protesters are still camped out inside the building and a dramatic political showdown is under way. Last night, more public workers, including these firemen, poured into the capitol. Some families camping out overnight, in a last-ditch effort to protest budget cuts they fear would cripple their union rights. UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: I want to do everything in my power to raise awareness that this can't happen! BURY: On Thursday, Republicans were sent to pass a budget requiring state workers to pay more for pensions and health care. But what really has them steamed is a dramatic move by the Republican governor to eliminate union bargaining on everything from wages to work rules. DEBORAH CALDWELL: He wants to dictate what we'll do, when we'll do it, how it will be done. UNIDENTIFIED MAN: This is about stripping away our rights to have a union. BURY: So, Senate Democrats, more than a dozen, fled the state, to prevent a vote and keep Wisconsin police from rounding them up. STATE SENATOR JON ERPENBACH (D-WI, 27th District): The state police jurisdiction stops at the Wisconsin border. So, that's why we had to leave the state. It's not like we wanted to do this. ST. SENATOR JIM HOLPERIN (D-WI, 12th district): We feel that by delaying the vote for a while, the people of the state will have more opportunity to talk about this issue. WISCONSIN GOVERNOR SCOTT WALKER: I think it's time for them to come home and do their job. BURY: Wisconsin's new governor, Scott Walker, faced with a $3.6 billion deficit, denies he's trying to bust the unions. WALKER: The bottom line is we're broke. We can't negotiate for something we don't have the ability to give on. BURY: Meanwhile, the historic standoff continues, until at least one Democrat returns to the state senate. Once the Democrats do come back here, they are very likely to lose. And other governors facing similar budget crises are watching Wisconsin very carefully. George? — Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter .

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