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GOP Gears Up to Take Down Health Care Reform

Emboldened by their big wins in last fall’s midterm elections, Republican members of Congress are sharpening their battle axes with the aim of hacking away at the health care reform legislation that President Obama and the Democrats took such great pains to pass while they commanded the majority in both houses. The GOP may not succeed in repealing the bill, but they can still hit it where it hurts the most: on the monetary level.

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Wrong Again, Sen. Graham

By Juan Cole Sen. Lindsey Graham has been wrong about almost everything in the Middle East for a decade and a half, so his hare-brained proposal to build permanent bases in Afghanistan is hardly surprising. Related Entries January 4, 2011 Gag Me With a Banker January 3, 2011 Emperor Has No Shame

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House Democrats are not going to be passive and silent while Republicans endeavor to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Now that the GOP has set January 12th as the day to bring back pre-existing conditions , Democrats are stepping up to force them to own the consequences of their effort. Greg Sargent has details on their strategy. In an interview with me just now, Dem Rep. Anthony Weiner, who is one of the best there is at framing liberal arguments in pugnacious terms, said Dems are leaning towards seeing this fight as an opportunity, and appear to be eschewing their typical “fetal position” on health reform. Separately, in another development, Dem Rep. Peter Welch — last seen leading the charge on behalf of House liberals against the Obama tax cut deal — is circulating a letter among Dems vowing to introduce amendments to the GOP’s repeal bill forcing votes directly on the Affordable Care Act’s most popular provisions. Weiner told me this afternoon that he’s urging fellow Democrats to see the GOP’s repeal push as a chance to do what they failed to do last year in the runup to the midterms: Aggressively make the case for the individual provisions in health reform that the public likes. “This gives us a chance to unmake the mistake that we made in 2010 — we shied away from the challenge of explaining exactly what’s in the bill,” Weiner said. “Polls show that parts of health reform are very popular. That argues for talking more about what’s actually in it.” I am looking forward to seeing Republicans argue for repealing the donut hole closure for seniors, and for allowing people to be excluded for pre-existing conditions. I’m especially looking forward to their arguments for repealing the tort reform provisions contained in the bill, too. Senate Democrats have already fired their shot across the bow in a letter to Speaker-elect Boehner signed by Harry Reid, Chuck Schumer, Debbie Stabenow, Dick Durbin and Patty Murray. If House Republicans move forward with a repeal of the health care law that threatens consumer benefits like the “donut hole” fix, we will block it in the Senate. This proposal deserves a chance to work. It is too important to be treated as collateral damage in a partisan mission to repeal health care. I’m looking forward to seeing them trip over themselves to explain to those seniors who were at the town hall meetings in the summer of 2009 why they’re taking away their drug benefit. Or explaining to the parents of college kids why they can’t be on their group policy any more. It should be lots of fun. (A full list of provisions taking effect in 2011 can be found here ) Lead on, Boehner, lead on. Late update: After 2 years of GOP whining about hearings and lack of bipartisanship, this repeal effort will be brought to the floor without even one hearing in any committee.

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CBS’s Plante: GOP ‘Ready to Pounce’ On Obama, ‘Slammed’ Him With ObamaCare Repeal Vote

On Tuesday's CBS Early Show, senior White House correspondent Bill Plante warned that as President Obama returns from vacation, ” the new Republican majority in the House is ready to pounce.” Plante went on to declare that the House GOP “slammed” Obama by scheduling a vote to repeal “his signature health care bill” on January 12. Plante parroted Democratic talking points denouncing the repeal effort: “Senate Democrats fired back in a letter, warning that to do so would be 'irresponsible and reckless at a time when it is becoming harder and harder for seniors to afford a healthy retirement.'” He then concluded: “Both sides know that the House vote is purely symbolic. With no chance that the Senate Democrats will agree to kill health care.” read more

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Via TPM, a good question : When we hear about states in financial crisis, how come the Republicans never mention Texas? But there’s one state, which is fairly high up on the list of troubled states that nobody is talking about, and there’s a reason for it. The state is Texas. This month the state’s part-time legislature goes back into session, and the state is starting at potentially a $25 billion deficit on a two-year budget of around $95 billion. That’s enormous. And there’s not much fat to cut. The whole budget is basically education and healthcare spending. Cutting everything else wouldn’t do the trick. And though raising this kind of money would be easy on an economy of $1.2 trillion, the new GOP mega-majority in Congress is firmly against raising any revenue. So the bi-ennial legislature, which convenes this month, faces some hard cuts. Some in the Texas GDP have advocated dropping Medicaid altogether to save money. So why haven’t we heard more about Texas, one of the most important economy’s in America? Well, it’s because it doesn’t fit the script. It’s a pro-business, lean-spending, no-union state. You can’t fit it into a nice storyline, so it’s ignored. But if you want to make comparisons between US states and ailing European countries, think of Texas as being like America’s Ireland. Ireland was once praised as a model for economic growth: conservatives loved it for its pro-business, anti-tax, low-spending strategy, and hailed it as the way forward for all of Europe. Then it blew up. This is the sleeper state budget crisis of 2011, and it will be praised for doing great, right up until the moment before it blows up .

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Today's starter topic: Is the gravy train for public employee unions finally grinding to a halt ? On Wednesday, for example, New York’s new Democratic governor, Andrew M. Cuomo, is expected to call for a one-year salary freeze for state workers, a move that would save $200 million to $400 million and challenge labor’s traditional clout in Albany.

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The New York Times reported on Jan. 2 that Chevron has been using outtakes from the film “Crude,” an anti-Chevron film in its legal battles. The Times called it “a cautionary tale for lawyers who invite in documentary filmmakers to tell the story of their legal fights.” The footage was allowed in court after a New York federal judge ruled in May 2010 that Joe Berlinger, the filmmaker, had to turn over more than 500 hours of outtakes, according to the Times. While this Times story was not as biased against Chevron as past articles about the $27 billion Ecuadorian lawsuit have been, but the paper was not upfront about its opposition to the use of the film footage. read more

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Right-wingers don’t seem to ‘get it’: Bashing Latinos makes Tea Parties happy — and is long-term political suicide

Click here to view this media This weekend, Fox News’ Julie Banderas featured a segment discussing the way Republicans are gearing up to get nasty and nativist on immigration this coming year — particularly in state legislatures where a batch of anti-14th Amendment “anchor baby” laws are about to come bubbling up . She invited on Bob Dane, spokesman for the nativist hate group FAIR, and Frank Sharry of America’s Voice, who pointed out that Republicans are slitting their own throats politically by taking this route. Banderas: Bob, what do you make of that? Frank just pointed out that the Republican, they have leaned right — very hard to the right, in fact, on the illegal immigration issue — is this going to drive Hispanics into the hands of the Democrats? Dane: No. You know, look, one of the things the Republicans are going to have to keep in mind, now that they’ve got the responsibility of the leadership mantle in the House, is they’ve got to demonstrate to the American public on the immigration issue that they ‘get it’. That Americans have had it with the cost and impact of illegal immigration. And Republicans are going to have to be careful that they do not revert to the soft-on-enforcement and teasing-around-with-amnesty policies of ’06 and ’08 that led to their own demise. Hmmmm. Maybe Dane has different sets of election results than I do. But the numbers don’t lie: In 2008, Latinos provided Barack Obama with the bulk of his electoral muscle. In 2010, they turned back the Tea Party tide in the Senate. And indeed, in the ensuing months since those elections, Republicans continue to do their damnedest to push Latinos into voting Democratic for the foreseeable future . But Dane made it clear — especially in declaring that “amnesty is off the table” — that the right-wing nativist faction now controlling the Republican is only interested in deporting 12 million undocumented immigrants. They have no interest in working out a system under which they can get right with the law. Which means that absolutely NOTHING will get done in terms of addressing immigration reform — including the ongoing reality that the American economy generates hundreds of thousands of unskilled-labor jobs every year and yet only provides 5,000 green cards to cover them . President Obama should take note too: Even though his administration has been objectively tougher about enforcing immigration laws than any preceding, the right-wing nativists will ALWAYS claim that he has been lax on enforcement. Maybe he should just give that particular malfunctioning strategy a break — and put his shoulder to the wheel in getting real reform done. It may never pass this House, but Democrats still control the Senate and can set the stage for an immigration debate there. Obama could and should become a real leader in that debate — because Americans really do want something done. And deportation isn’t it.

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C&L Opening Bell: Call the GOP’s bluff on the debt ceiling

enlarge Jon Cohn notes that the GOP’s game of chicken on whether to raise the debt ceiling is pretty goddamn insane : And the alternative—failing to increase the debt ceiling? What precise effects would that have? This isn’t my area of expertise, but my colleague Alex Hart knows a thing or two about it. Here’s what he wrote last week: Recent history provides a sense of just how scary this would be. “The reason the markets calmed down [during the financial crisis] is that we took [the banks’] toxic assets and handed the financial institutions Treasurys,” says Kevin Hassett, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. “If we’re in a default situation, the Treasurys themselves are the toxic assets, and it’s not clear what we can hand anybody to calm them down.” The sad thing is, Graham seems to grasp this: In the same interview, he notes that default could be catastrophic. But that’s not stopping him from making his demands. And that’s particularly disheartening, since he is supposed to be one of the more reasonable members of the Republican Senate caucus. And this is precisely why the Democrats should (but certainly won’t) call the GOP’s bluff on the debt ceiling. Look, the Masters of the Universe have parked a lot of cash in treasuries over the past few years since t-bills are traditionally one of the safest investments around during times of extreme uncertainty. If the GOP puts the United States into serious risk of defaulting, the Masters of the Universe stand to lose a lot of money as the treasuries they’ve purchased become as toxic as Greek or Irish debt. This is why the GOP’s Wall Street overlords will never, repeat never, tolerate them playing around seriously with raising the debt ceiling and it’s why the GOP will cave if Obama and the Democrats stick to their guns (which they won’t, incidentally, as many of them actually will welcome the GOP giving them political cover to slash Social Security and other key programs). But would the GOPers really risk losing countless sums of money for their masters if they created a sovereign debt crisis? Sorta doubt it. And it’s worth letting them try simply to watch them slink away in defeat. Onto more economic news! Felix Salmon depressingly notes how Larry Summers will likely be replaced by yet another rich person with strong ties to Wall Street: From today’s WaPo report it seems that the shortlist to replace Larry Summers at the NEC has been whittled down to three men — Gene Sperling, Roger Altman, and Richard Levin. [T]hey’re all multi-millionaires with close ties to Wall Street. None more than Altman, of course, who has his own bank. But Levin is on the board of American Express, which paid him $181,362 in 2009, and where he has shares and “share equivalent units” worth $539,000. Which might not be a huge sum compared to the $1.5 million or so that he’s earning at Yale, but is still more than enough to make him a denizen of Wall Street rather than Main Street. Finally there’s Sperling, who in some ways is the worst of the three when it comes to grubbing money from Wall Street. The other two have well-defined and easily-understood jobs; Sperling, by contrast, signed up with the Harry Walker Agency and started giving speeches to anybody with cash, including not only Citigroup but even Allen Stanford. He also wrote a monthly 900-word column for Bloomberg for $137,500 a year, which works out at about $13 per word. Then he started “advising” Goldman Sachs on its charitable giving, which advice came very expensively indeed: Goldman Sachs paid Sperling $887,727 for advice on its charitable giving. That made the bank his highest-paying employer. Even Geithner’s chief of staff Patterson, who was a full-time lobbyist at the firm, did not make as much as Sperling did on a part-time basis. Patterson reported earning $637,492 from Goldman Sachs [in 2008]. Well, peachy. If there’s one thing America needs, it’s a another person who used to be on Goldman’s payroll making key economic policy recommendations. Brad DeLong gives it the old college try and insists that Sperling is actually a liberal, but to me this isn’t even about standard left-right ideology anymore but about whether people have bought into the idea that the Great Wall Street Casino is a sustainable economic model. Sperling could be a perfectly nice guy who really wants to help people get affordable health care and good education, but as long as he thinks Wall Street’s Ponziconomy is the best way to generate wealth in this country, he should have no business influencing national economic policy. On a more positive note, there has been some legit good economic news over the last couple of weeks. Initial jobless claims dipped below 400,000 for the first time since 2008 last week and we got word yesterday that manufacturing is picking up steam : Manufacturing activity expanded for a 17th month in a row in December, rising to the highest level in seven months, a purchasing managers’ group said Monday. The Institute for Supply Management’s index for manufacturing activity ticked up to 57 in December. That’s the highest reading since May and up from 56.6 in November. The reading came in slightly lower than the 57.3 level expected by a Briefing.com consensus of economists. Any reading of more than 50 indicates expansion in the sector, and the index has remained above this mark for 17 consecutive months. For the first time in forever, you can see real-life green shoots for the economy. Of course, several things could quickly derail any recovery this year (see: refusing to raise the debt ceiling) so let’s keep our fingers crossed. And for what it’s worth, the fake economy is also doing well right now, with the Dow closing in on 11,700. This doesn’t mean anything to the millions of people who can’t find a job, but the media seem to think it’s the most important economic metric EV-ARRRR so there you go. What else is happening, peeps?

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David Shuster: ‘MSNBC Will Never Be As Liberal As Fox Is Conservative’

Via TV Newser and Mediaite , we've learned that when David Shuster subbed in as an overnight radio host on the national Jim Bohannon show, Shuster claimed “MSNBC will never be as liberal as Fox is conservative,” and insisted “MSNBC, CNN, dedicated to a much more sort of basic set of journalistic principles than most of Fox News.” He claimed he shouldn't talk about Fox, but then let them have it:

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