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This is the third story I’ve seen this week about criminal activity by major pharmaceutical companies. (See here and here .) Aren’t you glad that our new healthcare bill will permit them to stay profitable? The world’s biggest pharmaceutical company hired investigators to unearth evidence of corruption against the Nigerian attorney general in order to persuade him to drop legal action over a controversial drug trial involving children with meningitis, according to a leaked US embassy cable. Pfizer was sued by the Nigerian state and federal authorities, who claimed that children were harmed by a new antibiotic, Trovan, during the trial, which took place in the middle of a meningitis epidemic of unprecedented scale in Kano in the north of Nigeria in 1996. Last year, the company came to a tentative settlement with the Kano state government which was to cost it $75m. But the cable suggests that the US drug giant did not want to pay out to settle the two cases – one civil and one criminal – brought by the Nigerian federal government. The cable reports a meeting between Pfizer’s country manager, Enrico Liggeri, and US officials at the Abuja embassy on 9 April 2009. It states: “According to Liggeri, Pfizer had hired investigators to uncover corruption links to federal attorney general Michael Aondoakaa to expose him and put pressure on him to drop the federal cases. He said Pfizer’s investigators were passing this information to local media.” The cable, classified confidential by economic counsellor Robert Tansey, continues: “A series of damaging articles detailing Aondoakaa’s ‘alleged’ corruption ties were published in February and March. Liggeri contended that Pfizer had much more damaging information on Aondoakaa and that Aondoakaa’s cronies were pressuring him to drop the suit for fear of further negative articles.”

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Pakistan Papers Publish Faux WikiLeaks

An already fraught relationship between India and Pakistan got a bit more taut after a lapse of journalistic responsibility led several leading Pakistani papers to publish fabricated WikiLeaks cables that more resembled anti-Indian propaganda than diplomatic correspondence. The papers that published the fake cables have since acknowledged that they were hoaxed. —JCL Al-Jazeera English: Several leading Pakistani newspapers have acknowledged that they were hoaxed, after publishing reports based on fake WikiLeaks cables that contained crude anti-India propaganda. The reports, which featured prominently in several papers on Thursday, cited alleged US diplomatic cables as confirming many right-wing Pakistani views and conspiracy theories about the country’s arch enemy India and the disputed Kashmir region. Much of Pakistan’s media toes a pro-military, anti-Indian line, which was reflected by the papers’ extensive coverage of the fake memos. Read more Related Entries December 8, 2010 Leaks Disclose Complicated U.S. Strategy December 5, 2010 U.S. Orders Diplomats to Stop Telling Truth

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AC360: ‘Prince of Pork’ Wins Top Seat on House Appropriations Committee

Click here to view this media Looks like this one has got the conservatives up in arms. Seems the Republicans are not looking very serious about their pledge to end earmarks with this appointment. Conservatives upset that ‘Prince of Pork’ will rule spending panel : High-profile conservatives are questioning the decision by House Republicans to place Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), a veteran lawmaker with a history of earmarking, in charge of a key spending committee. Richard Viguerie, a longtime conservative activist, said Rogers’s election as the next Appropriations Committee chairman (along with Michigan GOP Rep. Fred Upton’s selection as chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee ) “should cause all conservatives and Tea Partiers to doubt how serious the Republican leadership is about cleaning up the culture of waste, seniority and corruption in Congress.””Grassroots conservatives are unhappy with the status quo in Washington, and Speaker-designate Boehner needs to balance this slap in the face with something to show conservatives that he is truly committed to reversing the size of government,” Viguerie wrote in a blog post Thursday . ‘Prince of pork’ wins top seat on House Appropriations Cmte. : U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers — known for his ability to secure funding for projects in his Eastern Kentucky district — was selected Tuesday as the new chairman of House Appropriations, the most powerful committee in Congress. The 5th District Republican was chosen by the GOP steering committee in a secret vote late Tuesday afternoon. The decision is expected to be ratified Wednesday by the rest of the House Republicans. In the lead-up to the selection, some conservatives argued that neither Rogers nor Lewis was qualified to be the chairman because of their past history as vigorous users of earmarks, special requests for spending on state and local projects. Critics dubbed Rogers “the Prince of Pork” and called his earmark-benefitted district, where everything from highway construction to homeland security contracts had the Kentuckian’s help over the years, “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.” Rogers secured 137 earmarks worth $251.9 million between 2008 and 2010, according to LegisStorm, a nonpartisan congressional watchdog group. That ranked him 99th among Senate and House members with earmarks. Transcript below the fold. COOPER: “Keeping Them Honest” tonight: a politician who says we should all grab a shovel and start digging the government out of debt, who says he’s committed to ensuring, in his words, that taxpayer money is being used appropriately. Sounds good. He’s Congressman Hal Rogers of Kentucky. He will be the new chairman of the congressional committee that decides how your tax dollars are actually spent. And he’s been called one of the biggest money-wasters in Congress. Of course, that comes from folks who don’t actually live in his district, which is the beneficiary of an awful lot of that money. Now, I want to show you something he posted on his Web site, a column he wrote for “Roll Call” magazine. “It’s time,” he writes, “to grab a big shovel with a sharp blade to start digging ourselves out of this $14 trillion mess.” The congressman goes on to write, “We have got to go line by line and take an axe to programs that we simply can’t afford.” Well, it sounds tough. And, as new chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, he’s going to be in a position to do just that. But, “Keeping Them Honest” tonight, Congressman Rogers only seems to talk the talk, not exactly walk the walk. Take a look at this. These are the earmarks, the pet projects for 2010 that Congressman Rogers got his rural district. There’s 52 of them totaling $98.9 million, according to the nonpartisan group the Center for Responsive Politics, putting him in the top 20 percent of all congressional earmarkers. Now, some earmarks are totally — of course totally legit. And you can judge for yourself if some of his are. For instance, he got a quarter-billion dollars in the last two years, including $52 million for a national center for hometown security. It’s located right there in Somerset, Kentucky, which is Congressman Rogers’ hometown, population — wait for it — 11,000. Well, the local airports have also gotten earmarks over the years, $17 million, even though the last commercial airline, well, they pulled out in February due to a lack of passengers. It’s right down the road, by the way, from the Hal Rogers Parkway. In August, Citizens Against Government Waste named him their “Porker of the Month.” And according to “The Lexington Herald- Journal,” the congressman this summer pushed through a $5 million measure for conservation groups that work with cheetahs — cheetahs in the wild. Now, I was surprised when I heard that, because I — I didn’t realize there were cheetahs in the wild in Kentucky. It turns out there’s not. Cheetos, yes. Cheetahs, no. There is at least one cheetah- lover, however, in the state. Her name is Allison Rogers, and she’s the congressman’s daughter, who just so happens to work for a group called the Cheetah Conservation Fund. Now, the congressman denies any conflict of interests, because he says he’s always been a champion of wildlife. And that may be. But conflict or not, it — it kind of goes against the grain of his own statements about cutting spending and comments from his fellow Republicans on the campaign trail and after. Take a look. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) SEN. JOHN MCCAIN (R), ARIZONA: I have been to the floor for 20 years saying that earmarking was a corrupt practice. REP. MIKE PENCE (R), INDIANA: Federal spending’s out of control. SEN. JIM DEMINT (R), SOUTH CAROLINA: It just tells you how irrational this spending culture has become that’s driven by earmarks. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It’s been a power that’s been abused by the Congress. REP. PAUL RYAN (R), WISCONSIN: We need to change the culture of spending. REP. MICHELE BACHMANN (R), MINNESOTA: All this pork is bad. The old pork was bad. The new pork is bad. RAND PAUL (R), KENTUCKY SENATOR-ELECT: Earmarks is part of the problem, and we must stop it. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: This country worked really well for 200 years without earmarks. REP. TOM COLE (R), OKLAHOMA: And I’m all for saying let’s just not have any earmarks. REP. JEB HENSARLING (R), TEXAS: Earmark after earmark after earmark. (END VIDEO CLIP) COOPER: All right, so that’s how a lot of them ran on it. As you might imagine, some of those who have been railing against government pork are angry that Congressman Rogers is going to be in charge of spending in the new House, especially Tea Partiers. Erick Erickson today blogging, asking, did you vote Republican for nothing? But it wasn’t bloggers or Tea Partiers who secured this so-called Prince of Pork his chairmanship. It was the House leadership, Eric Cantor and John Boehner. And what have they been saying about earmarks? Well, take a look. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) REP. JOHN BOEHNER (R-OH), HOUSE MINORITY LEADER: The earmark process here in Congress is a symbol of a broken Washington and a symbol of out-of-control spending. REP. ERIC CANTOR (R-VA), HOUSE MINORITY WHIP: Most Americans know that the earmark issue is emblematic of a greater problem in Washington, that Washington’s spending too much, it’s incurring too much debt, bringing on the need for higher taxes. (END VIDEO CLIP) COOPER: That was Congressman Cantor and Congressman Boehner back in April. The previous month, they had pledged a one-year moratorium on earmarks. And according to the nonpartisan Taxpayers for Common Sense, earmarked money is down about 40 percent so far in 2011 budgeting, largely due to that pledge. Let’s give them credit for that. But it’s only a one-year pledge. And when it expires, the big- spending congressman will, in all likelihood, still be running his committee. We invited Congressman Rogers on the program. He declined.

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Berlusconi Allegedly Bought Votes

Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi’s political rap sheet is already quite appalling, from alleged under-age sexcapades to anti-Semitic jokes. But new allegations by state prosecutors have added another blotch on the billionaire’s bill: He’s accused of buying votes to stay in power. —JCL The Guardian: The state prosecution service in Rome today opened an investigation into claims that Silvio Berlusconi was buying up MPs before a series of votes in parliament next Tuesday to decide on the future of his government. The move followed a sharp about-turn late last night when a leading member of Berlusconi’s party, the rightwing People of Freedom party (PdL), announced that the government, which has been without a clear majority for the past five months, could be sure of winning by at least one vote. Just hours before, a senior party source told the Guardian that the billionaire prime minister’s chances of survival were no better than 50/50. News also emerged of the latest of up to eight defections by MPs previously considered to be either in opposition or non-aligned. Read more Related Entries December 3, 2010 Leaked Cables Show Drug War Concerns December 2, 2010 Cheney May Face Nigerian Bribery Charges

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Liu’s Peace Prize Goes to an Empty Chair

Liu Xiaobo’s empty chair spoke volumes at Friday’s Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo. The Chinese dissident is serving out an 11-year prison term in his homeland, and no family members were permitted to travel to accept his award—the first peace laureate not formally represented in 75 years. —JCL Reuters: The focus of attention at Friday’s Nobel ceremony was not a proud laureate, overwhelmed at receiving what many people regard as the world’s most prestigious prize. It was his empty chair. The Nobel Peace laureate, dissident Liu Xiaobo who has called for democracy and human rights in China, is serving an 11-year jail term in his home country. With his wife Liu Xia and other relatives unable to travel abroad, the Nobel peace laureate was not formally represented at the ceremony for the first time in 75 years. Read more Related Entries December 3, 2010 Leaked Cables Show Drug War Concerns December 2, 2010 Cheney May Face Nigerian Bribery Charges

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Ignore the disinformation: DREAM Act remains on track for Senate vote Monday

Click here to view this media There was a lot of disinformation floating about yesterday regarding the DREAM Act’s progress in the Senate, including Megyn Kelly and Shannon Bream on Fox, repeating long disproven canards about the legislation — embodied, perhaps, by the chryon running with the report calling the act “sweeping immigration reform” (in reality, this law is very limited in its reach and scope, and falls far short of anything even remotely like comprehensive reform). Both of them characterized it (second-hand, of course) as “amnesty” — which is how they describe any path to citizenship for brown people. Then there was CNN, which filed the following bulletin: — Senate Democrats cancel vote on DREAM Act, meaning the immigration measure is likely dead for the year. Ah, not quite. In reality, as Carl Hulse reported in the NYT : Senate Democrats on Thursday pulled a measure that would allow illegal immigrant students to earn legal status through education or military service after Republicans refused to allow a vote on a version of the legislation that had cleared the House on Wednesday. Rather than try to break a Republican filibuster against the Senate’s so-called Dream Act, Senator Harry Reid, the majority leader, instead forced a vote to call off the attempt, presumably so he could try again later. Democrats prevailed on the motion to table the legislation, 59-40. Ishita at Restore Fairness explains: Since the Republicans in the Senate have vowed to block all bills until the issue of tax cuts was resolved, Sen. Reid made a motion to table the cloture vote on the DREAM Act that was otherwise scheduled to take place at 11:00 AM this morning. By tabling it, the Senate Democrats will be able to bring the version of the bill that has already been passed in the House, up for a vote in the coming week, once the other issues have been resolved. Immigrant rights advocates now have additional time to build on the momentum created by the House victory yesterday, and work on getting more Senate support for the DREAM Act, so that when it does finally come up for a vote, it can have the same success that it had in the House of Representatives. Here’s Jackie Mahendra at America’s Voice , reporting yesterday: After the historic victory yesterday in the House of Representatives, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid made a bold move today to shelve a vote on the Senate’s original version of the DREAM Act , scheduled to be voted on today. In doing so, he paved the way for the Senate to take up the House-passed version of the bill in the next few weeks. Essentially, Senate leadership just breathed new life into the DREAM Act. Faced with lock-step Republican opposition to deal with anything before tax cuts, today’s scheduled cloture vote on the motion to proceed was widely predicted to fail, which would have doomed the DREAM Act this year. Here’s a reaction from the national United We Dream Network, who have been lobbying all week in Washington: The DREAM Act must now gather critical support from a number of Senators still sitting on the fence, both Democrats and Republicans. Having more time between votes gives us time to shift our focus from the House to the Senate and make sure our voices are heard. Some republicans have blurred the debate by painting a negative portrayal of undocumented students. Senator Sessions took to the Senate to claim that DREAM-eligible people would buy fake diplomas online. Our lives are real and our diplomas are real. We need Senators to rise above the fakeness and get real, the time for DREAM is now. We urge everybody who has ever supported the DREAM Act to take time to make some phone calls and urge senators to vote YES on DREAM. As Representative John Lewis shared last night, “The time is always right to do what is right”. The DREAM Act has traditionally been a bipartisan measure that has attracted real Republican backing. In 2007, eleven Republican Senators voted for the DREAM Act, and seven of them are still in office: Lugar, Bennett, Brownback, Hutchison, Snowe, Collins, and Hatch. In 2003, Republican Senators Kyl, Grassley, and Cornyn voted for the measure in the Senate Judiciary Committee. Last night, eight Republican representatives voted for the bill. What’s needed in the Senate is for Republicans to shift from posturing on process to negotiating a bill that can pass next week. We’ll also be keeping up the pressure on a handful of shaky Democrats who still refuse to invest in America’s future. … Maegan “la Mamita Mala” Ortiz sums it up nicely: All in all this gives DREAM a better chance in passing, especially when considering that there are Senators on the fence who do not want to be targeted and be in the spotlight twice. And obviously this gives advocates, activists, and you more time to call and ask that DREAM be supported. (via VivirLatino) You heard her – keep up the phone calls! Dial 866-996-5161 or click here . Now, we keep up the fight!

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Bernie Sanders Filibusters Tax Cuts NOW

Click here to view this media At 7:30 AM PST, Bernie Sanders began a filibuster of the tax compromise. The longer he goes, the better he gets. You can watch the stream on CSPAN2. Here’s a clip of him talking about child poverty in the US as compared to other industrialized nations. I’ll post more as I’m able and add them to this post.

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Attention Harry Reid:  Make Them Actually Filibuster!

Click here to view this media Mr Smith Goes To Washington (1939) There was a time when filibusters were symbolic of a principled stand…a David standing up to the Goliath. I think Strom Thurmond’s filibuster against the Civil Rights Act of 1957 took the sheen of nobility off the filibuster, but what constitutes a filibuster these days is not at all recognizable from the Mr. Smith or the Sen. Thurmond version. And it’s clear, looking at this graph enlarge that the Republicans have upended the intent of the filibuster rule to basically break down the Senate and launch the virtual rule of the minority. The Brennan Center for Justice at the NYU School of Law released a report on the abuse of the filibuster (.pdf) Authors Mimi Marziani and Susan Liss highlighted how the relentless obstruction weakens not only the Senate but of the governing of the country and set up the constitutional arguments for rules reform by a simple majority vote. Over the last decade, Senate procedures have increasingly been used to prevent decision-making rather than to promote deliberation and debate. The threat of a filibuster – coupled with a 60-vote requirement to force any substantive vote – has affected nearly every action in the Senate during the last several years, under both Republican and Democratic majorities. As a result, the Senate has effectively ceased operating as the majoritarian institution our founders intended for it to be. They note the contrast between public support for a bill and the Senate’s inability to pass it: The current situation is simply unsupportable. There can be no doubt that the anger and frustration expressed by so many Americans about the inability of government to make their lives better can be directly attributed to the Senate’s repeated failure to act. To cite just one example, the DISCLOSE Act garnered strong public support, won the vote of 59 senators, but could not become law. No wonder that recent polls show that just 21% of Americans approve of how Congress is doing its job.[1] But lest they be accused of taking some partisan interest in fixing things for the Democrats, Marziani and Liss are advocating for rule changes NOW to simply for the Senate to get the work of the People done, irrespective of which party will be in the majority in the future: The Brennan Center has not previously studied the filibuster or Senate procedure, and took no part in earlier debates about its use and abuse. We write at a time when control of the body by one party is diminished, and when no one knows who will have the majority two years from now. Now, when the partisan implica¬tion of filibuster reform is unclear, is the ideal time to modernize Senate rules. For whichever party wields the gavel, our democracy is ill served by a Senate that is tangled in obsolete and easily-abused rules of its own making. The filibuster is an important–and necessary–tool for the Senate to maintain. However, the current system where a senator need only anonymously register his intent and then do nothing, necessitating the Senate to then get 60 votes for cloture to then begin debate is unworkable. Do you realize that the public option would have passed the Senate if we just had the 60 votes for cloture? Think of DADT, DREAM, START and others, all with more than 50 votes supporting it, all struggling for life under the filibuster abuse of the Republicans. Jeff Merkley has a common-sense plan on how to reform the filibuster rules and keep it within the original framers’ intent. It’s time we fix the broken Senate. Please contact your Senators and Majority Leader Harry Reid to voice your support for filibuster rules change. You can help by signing Sen. Merkley’s petition for filibuster reform. We’ve written about the Merkley proposal quite a bit. Now, with the continuing difficulties to pass DADT and the DREAM Act in the Senate, the need for reform in the face of easy filibusters — which essentially take a body, the Senate, designed to operate by majority rule and transform it into a body that can only function with a supermajority — Republicans have given us all the reason we need to make the change.

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I’ve written that the use of a payroll tax holiday plays perfectly into the hands of the Grover Norquist/Tea Party plans to destroy the viability of of Social Security. Jennifer Rubin reminds us that it was their proposal in 2009 and was rejected. You may recall that a payroll tax break or “holiday” was a Republican proposal back in 2009. Conservatives liked the idea then in lieu of a tax credit. The Weekly Standard’s Matt Continetti explained the reasoning… Today, President Summers also held a conference call and admitted that Republicans introduced the payroll tax holiday into President Obama’s Tax Cut deal: Digby writes: Dear God. Some of these people must be either criminally inept or crudely malevolent. There is no other choice : Q So the only reason that the payroll tax holiday will provide more stimulus is because it’s twice as large. Making Work Pay was capped. Why didn’t you preserve Making Work Pay? Is it because, as the President said some months ago, it’s just a kind of invisible tax cut and didn’t provide any political benefit for the White House? MR. SUMMERS: No, it came out of the process of compromise with the Republicans who were more attracted to the payroll tax holiday concept, and that was a proposal that, as had been coming out of here, we had been giving considerable thought to in the context of the President’s budget. I find it hard to believe that such smart people didn’t know that this was a landmine. If stupid hippie bloggers understand that it’s going to be nearly impossible to reinstate that tax , then surely world class intellectuals and political professionals do. They had to know that this was going to weaken Social Security and one can only assume at this point that they did it in service of their stated goal of “saving it” by cutting it — and being rewarded as big heroes by the people (and Wall Street.) Somehow, I don’t think their clever plan is going to go the way they think it will. Republicans will do anything to attack the revenue stream of Social Security so they can slowly chip away at it until they can ultimately privitize it. Once there is a “holiday,” then Republicans will say that you must keep extending the cuts or Democrats will be raising your taxes. it’s a simple plan, but one that it seems only DFH bloggers understand. The Huffington Post has the details of their plan: Democrats have never allowed the rate to be cut, even temporarily, in the history of the program, because payroll taxes feed the Social Security trust fund and create the political base of support for the program, said Nancy Altman, author of “The Battle For Social Security” , a history of the program, and head of the advocacy group Social Security Works. Republicans have won a long-sought victory, even as President Obama hails it as a win for his party. Republicans acknowledged that the expiration of the tax holiday will be treated as a tax increase. “Once something like this goes into place, a year from now, when it expires, it’ll be portrayed as a tax increase,” said Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.). So in a body like Congress, precedents matter and this is setting a precedent. I think that certainly is going to create some problems down the road if it passes.” Given that Congress, under Democratic control, can’t gather itself to let tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans expire, members of both parties are convinced that letting the payroll tax rate revert back to its current spot will be near impossible. “Once you bring a rate down, if it goes back up, people will feel that. They’ll feel their paycheck being less and that argument” — that letting it expire amounts to a tax hike — “eventually is bound to be made,” said Sen. Mike Johanns (R-Neb.). “There’s always a tendency to continue those things… Once something comes in, it’s very difficult to change it,” said Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio.) He then volunteered, without prompting, that “It would be detrimental to the Social Security system, especially when it’s in bad shape.” And that’s the gist of it. The President told us at the Blogger Meeting at the White House that he wanted to raise the cap higher on the payroll tax so that more revenue will come into Social Security, which is the proper way to indeed raise more revenues, but by getting into bed with Republicans on a payroll tax holiday, that would almost certainly end any chance of that happening for a very long time.

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Bernie Sanders: Republicans are trying to take us back to the 1920s

Click here to view this media Tonight Harry Reid brought up the tax compromise for a cloture vote on Monday afternoon. Just afterward, Bernie Sanders stepped up and let anyone who was possibly listening hear what he thought about Republicans, tax cuts, the payroll tax holiday, and conservatives’ plan to destroy Social Security and Medicare. It’s a bit long, but worth it. He points out Republican hypocrisy and what’s at stake when he predicts the inevitable hue and cry of next year’s Republicans in the House and Senate claiming the deficit is all that matters right after they boosted the deficit by billions to continue those tax cuts. Part I (above) is Sanders’ opening. Part II is Sanders and Sherrod Brown. Click here to view this media Part III is Sanders’ closing argument. Click here to view this media I’ll add a transcript if I can get hold of one from C-SPAN that’s decent.

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