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Blue America ’12

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The Blue America PAC was founded in time for the 2006 midterm elections, in which a host of progressive candidates were elected, including candidates backed by Blue America, from John Hall (NY), Paul Hodes (NH), Joe Sestak (PA) and Bruce Braley (IA) to current senators Ben Cardin (MD), Amy Klobuchar (MN), Jon Tester (MT) and Kirsten Gillibrand (NY). Our top pick in 2006, Donna Edwards, was defeated but went on to win in 2008, and was reelected in 2010. Many of our candidates from 2006 and 2008 were defeated for reelection in the tsunami of 2010 when voters told Democrats to get their act together and differentiate themselves from Republicans by standing up for working families. The voters helped them along that path by defeating more than two dozen conservative Blue Dogs, over half of their aisle-crossing caucus. Unfortunately excellent Blue America-backed incumbents like Alan Grayson, Carol Shea-Porter, John Hall, Mark Schauer and Mary Jo Kilroy were swept up in the wave. In this cycle we'll be using what we've learned since 2006 to help more progressives to overcome the massive financial advantage corporately backed conservatives always have over candidates who fight for ordinary families instead of special interests. The beginning of the process is to help recruit solid progressives in a slew of races where Republicans narrowly managed to get into office in the midst of a national discontent that wasn't kind to Democratic incumbents. You'll be able to keep abreast of developments along these lines at the three blogs that work together to keep this PAC going, Crooks and Liars , Digby's Hullabaloo and DownWithTyranny . Blue America doesn't work in safe districts where our help isn't needed. We look for tough races where a little encouragement, some financial help and some advice could go a long way, especially with candidates unlikely to get much help from the DCCC or the DSCC. Blue America ’12 has raised $45683.98 from 1011 donors. Donate: $ (amount distributed equally among all candidates) Your Total Donation $0.00

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In light of a new raft of abysmal polling data for President Obama, Martin Bashir this afternoon brought on Democratic National Convention committee CEO Steve Kerrigan to rally rank-and-file Democrats at home watching MSNBC. At one point, Kerrigan insisted that “at the president's direction, we're the first and only convention in history to eliminate corporate money, lobbyists' money, PAC money, and special interest money from funding this convention.” “It's going to be funded by the grassroots of America and by the people,” Kerrigan added. While that's a cute talking point for the Democrats, it's not exactly accurate. As the Charlotte Observer reported today, there's a huge loophole to the ban on corporate and special interest money (emphasis mine): Charlotte fundraisers, unlike their Tampa counterparts, face the added hurdle of new restrictions for what the party touts as “the People's Convention.” None of the $37 million can come from corporations, registered lobbyists or personal donations over $100,000. Gone are gifts such as the $1.7 million that Cisco Systems gave Denver's 2008 convention. Of the $61 million collected for Denver, 72 percent came from donors giving $250,000 or more, according to the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute. A dozen donors gave $1 million or more. The new restrictions, however, don't apply to the host committee itself. Duke Energy CEO Jim Rogers , who co-chairs the committee, is quietly raising up to $15 million for the committee, in part from corporate contributions. That's on top of the $37 million in noncorporate contributions for the convention itself. Among other things, the money will go toward organizing and hosting events for the expected 35,000 visitors. “We don't have the same restrictions on the host committee that are on the (convention),” says [Dan] Murrey [host committee executive director]. Wells Fargo, for example, expects to donate an unspecified amount of money to both conventions, says spokeswoman Alexandra Ball. And Belk Stores is giving the Democratic convention $100,000. In other words, money from non-corporate sources may pay for the convention itself, but all the fun parties and dinners and soirees where Democratic politicians, delegates and superdelegates are wined and dined are able to be financed by corporate, labor union, and other special interest donors. What's more, as Kristen Lombardi of The Center for Public Integrity noted back in March, Duke Energy, whose CEO co-chair the Charlotte host committee, extended a $10 million line of credit to the Democratic Convention. Groused the liberal Lombardi: Duke is the nation's third largest coal-burning utility, thriving on the black rock to generate electricity in five states. It has vowed to shut down rather than clean up operations at some of its coal-fired plants. Nearly half the company's plants are coal, and it hasn't built a nuclear facility since 1985. Solar, wind, and other supposedly green “bio” technologies account for only 9 percent of Duke's power generation. Yet Democrats didn't hesitate to accept Duke's offer to secure a $10 million line of credit for their presidential nominating convention in Charlotte next year, despite a $100,000 limit on individual and corporate contributions. And Duke's CEO, James Rogers, is leading the effort to raise $36.6 million to underwrite the event. Bashir did a disservice to his viewers by failing to hit Kerrigan over the cynical hypocrisy of promising a special interest-money-free “people's convention” while making ample provision for that same money to pay for the very events where lobbyists have prime access to Democratic big wigs.

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Fox News’ Gretchen Carlson, Debbie Wasserman Schultz Argue About Jimmy Hoffa (VIDEO)

“Fox and Friends” anchor Gretchen Carlson and Democratic National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz had a heated clash on Tuesday morning over comments a union leader made at President Obama’s Labor Day rally. Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa got a lot of applause in Detroit when he said of the Tea Party, “let’s take these son-of-a-bitches out and give America back to America where we belong.” President Obama was not present for Hoffa’s comments, but conservatives quickly pounced, asking the White House to condemn Hoffa. The White House has so far refused to issue any statement on the controversy, and Wasserman Schultz followed the same playbook when she spoke to Carlson. Her appearance was ostensibly about Obama’s upcoming jobs announcement, but Carlson steered the conversation towards Hoffa. “Some people are saying that that’s violent language, Congresswoman,” she said. Wasserman Schultz declined to comment. “We need to make sure that we focus on the middle class and working families,” she said. “But wait a minute,” Carlson said. “[Hoffa said] ‘let’s take these sons of bitches out’…and that’s your response?” “My response is that we should be working together,” Wasserman Schultz said, beginning to talk about jobs. Carlson cut her off. “I’m talking about what Jimmy Hoffa said yesterday,” she said. “I know you’d like to focus on language–” Wasserman-Schultz replied. “it was very serious language!” Carlson said. Wasserman Schultz actually laughed at this. “Are you kidding me?” she said. “You take a walk with me through Tea Party rallies.” After more crosstalk, Wasserman Schultz turned her aim on Carlson. “How many times have you called out coarse language at Tea Party rallies on this network. Almost never,” she said. “Plenty,” Carlson shot back. “I sit in the middle of the couch. I’m fair and balanced, Debbie. What is your response?” WATCH: Watch the latest video at video.foxnews.com

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Fox News Concerned About ‘Hate Speech’ from Obama Supporters

Click here to view this media Fox News contributor, Brad Blakeman Monday rebuked Teamster president Jimmy Hoffa Jr. for using “hate speech” at a Labor Day rally in Detroit prior to remarks from President Barack Obama. After presenting what appeared to be heavily edited video of Hoffa referring to Republicans by saying, “let’s take these sons of bitches out,” Fox News host Megyn Kelly gave Blakeman a chance to respond. “I think it’s thuggery at it’s best,” Blakeman replied. “It’s what unions are good at. It’s what we’ve seen in Wisconsin and other places, intimidation… This is the touchy feely act before President Obama arrives? I mean, these are the kind of remarks you’d expect out of Tony Soprano, not a union president. Well, I take that back. Hoffa presidency is the type of person you’d hear this type of rhetoric.” “When a union president says, ‘let’s take these sons of bitches out,’ it usually means somebody’s legs are going to get broken, somebody is going to disappear. Tea party people don’t use that kind of rhetoric.” UPDATE: From TPM — Teamsters President: ‘No Regrets’ After Fiery Speech Draws Right-Wing Criticism : Teamsters union president James Hoffa would say it all again if he could, he told TPM Monday. Hoffa riled up Fox News and the right wing Monday with a Labor Day speech in Detroit in which he called Republican members of Congress ” sons of bitches ” and said union workers are ready to “go to war” with the tea party next year and “take out” Republicans at the ballot box. Hoffa said he’d say the exact same words all over again. “I would because I believe it,” he said. “They’ve declared war on us. We didn’t declare war on them, they declared war on us. We’re fighting back. The question is, who started the war?” Read on… And as they noted in the TPM article, from Media Matters — Fox Doctors Hoffa Speech To Fabricate Call For Violence : Right-wing bloggers misled by dishonest Fox News video editing are attacking Teamsters President James Hoffa, Jr. for supposedly urging violence against Tea Party activists during a Labor Day speech. Conservatives are also attacking President Obama, who appeared at the event, for “sanctioning violence against fellow Americans” by failing to denounce Hoffa. But fuller context included in other Fox segments makes clear that Hoffa wasn’t calling for violence but was actually urging the crowd to vote out Republican members of Congress. During the segment that the bloggers have latched onto, Fox edited out the bolded portion of Hoffa’s comments: HOFFA: Everybody here’s got to vote. If we go back and keep the eye on the prize, let’s take these son of a bitches out and give America back to America where we belong! Thank you very much! In an initial report on Hoffa’s speech at 1 p.m. on Fox News, Ed Henry reported that Hoffa said that “we’ll remember in November who’s with the working people” and “said of the Tea Party and of Republicans, ‘let’s take these sons of bitches out.’” Read on…

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Why are We Not Investing More in Education? Asks Maxine Waters

Click here to view this media (h/t Heather at VideoCafe ) It is a truism rarely acknowledged in this country: the single most important infrastructure investment we can make for the future is in education. I’m not talking about retrofitting the buildings or constructing more classrooms. No, we provide for the future by educating our young people, preparing them to become productive members of society. Study after study shows that the higher one’s education level is, the higher the median income and the less likely one is to suffer unemployment . But we’re not doing that. No, in these austerity times, politicians clamor to cut services and jobs. Teachers are demonized . Vouchers are touted as the answer, when it’s simply a way to privatize profits away from public schools . Hell, some GOP would be happy if we eliminate the Department of Education altogether . A rare and welcome progressive appearance on the Sunday shows, Rep. Maxine Waters bemoans the disconnect between what politicians say we need to focus on and what they’re really doing about it: To tell you the truth, the plight of education in this country is shameful. Just a few days ago I learned that more cities, more states are reducing the number of education days down to four instead of five. And I could not help but stop and think, “Is this America? Is this the country that said and continues to say that education is a top priority?” Why are we not investing more in education? Why do we have dropouts? Why do we have educational systems that are failing? Why is it that we have a situation where many of our young people will not be able to compete in this high technological society because they’re not properly educated? And so, no, we do pay lip service to education. We don’t really invest in it, and that’s got to change. But let me just say this, Americans want to work. This joblessness is not only hitting the middle class, but it is hitting all classes. It is absolutely unconscionable what is happening in the minority communities. When we look at this no jobs haven’t been created in August and we find in the African-American community it has increased from 16 percent, 15.9, 16 percent, up now 16.7 percent, and now we’re going to talk about cutting government by $1.5 trillion, this new 12 committee membership that we have after the raising the debt ceiling debate? And that means that we’re going to lose more jobs, that means more people are going to be unemployed. The African-American rate will probably go up to about 20 percent. I don’t know how our country can sustain that kind of… Of course, David Gregory interrupts her at this point, because Lord know, the plight of the African American community doesn’t concern him. But then again, he has the gall to say that we only play lip service to the importance of education. You know, the same guy who only pays lip service to journalism and who spent the better part of the last two years telling his viewers that Americans cared about the deficit when poll after poll proved him a lying hack with a corporate agenda.

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Barack Obama says Republicans must approve jobs program

DETROIT: President Barack Obama used a boisterous Labor Day rally on Monday to put congressional Republicans on the spot, challenging them to place the country’s interests above all else and vote to create jobs and put the economy back on a path toward growth. “Show us what you’ve got,” he said. In a partial preview of the jobs speech he’s delivering to Congress Thursday night, Obama said roads and bridges nationwide need rebuilding and more than 1 million unemployed construction workers are itching to “get dirty” making the repairs. He portrayed Congress as an obstacle to getting that work done. I’m going to propose ways to put America back to work that both parties can agree to, because I…

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It’s fun to laugh at Michele Bachmann. Just as it was fun to laugh at Sarah Palin’s idiocy in the 2008 election. During the past election many political pundits knew a McCain Presidency would never come to be and many institutional Republicans blame Palin for the loss. Several weeks ago I had a conversation with a Republican campaign consultant who smirked at the possibility of Bachmann as the GOP nominee. “She won’t be the one,” the consultant said. Yet, August’s Gallup poll showed her among the top three candidates. The top three usually are the ones pundits and reporters believe are the only viable candidates in the race. That’s why the things she has said are fair game. Many people, particularly in Iowa, consider Bachmann to be the brilliant leader GOP voters have been looking for, and there’s a third chance, if you take the Gallup poll seriously, that Bachmann will be the nominee. Here are the top five things Bachmann has said and why they should be concerning for our country. 1. ” Not all cultures are equal . . .” When she was first running for office in 2005, Bachmann said this line during a candidate debate in efforts to convey she believed Muslims had an inferior culture to the western world. We live in an increasingly globalized world. Thomas Friedman called it a flat world because we’re so interconnected. Insensitivity might be a fun talking point for Fox News to poke at, but the reality is that an isolated nation is an endangered nation. We have more at stake than hand shakes and photo-ops. Trade, security, not to mention arms dealing are all things that our country should have a secure handle on at all times. If we have a leader that doesn’t care about the cultures of other nations we run the risk of alienating those nations and isolating the U.S. at our own peril. 2. “If we took away the minimum wage – if conceivably it was gone – we could potentially virtually wipe out unemployment completely because we would be able to offer jobs at whatever level.” Bachmann 2005 . Let’s go beyond the fact that this is a classist statement that throws the poor under the bus. Instead, I would like to look at the lack of understanding today’s tea party Republicans seem to have about basic economics. Corporations are not your best friend who believes that you and your family should be taken care of. Instead the minimum wage is so-called because it is the basic minimum that an employer is allowed to pay his employee. If they could get away with paying you a quarter, they would because it means larger profits for them. In these tough economic markets there would probably be a worker willing to work for 25 cents an hour. If the competition of the corporation are getting away with paying people only 20 cents the pay could drop lower to allow for even greater profits. This results in a race to the bottom. While many believe the minimum wage was created just to help eradicate poverty (which it does help with), the reality is it’s about fairness and how we value work in a modern society. If we decide as a country that we don’t value work above a quarter then suddenly people can make more money scavenging through a stadium after a game than they would serving you food at Denny’s. In the massive economic recession we’re experiencing it’s not only important, it’s critical to have a President who understands the fundamentals of pocketbook issues. Families are hurting and unemployment is high; now more than ever we need a President who will put people first over the needs of corporations. 3. “Carbon dioxide is portrayed as harmful but there isn’t even one study that can be produced that shows that carbon dioxide is a harmful gas.” Bachmann said on the floor of Congress in 2009 . After the President selling us out on pollution caps I think we can all agree we’re screwed on reducing CO2. Municipalities and insurance companies are already preparing for what they believe will be the impacts of global climate change. But, let’s forget that this is a critical issue for a minute and focus on the fact that Bachmann doesn’t know what CO2 is. Not even that she doesn’t know, but that a professional Congressional staff allowed their member to go onto the floor of the House of Congress and say this. It’s more concerning that someone who is believed to be qualified to serve as a President of the United States and doesn’t know that you don’t sit in a garage with the engine running. 4. “Gay marriage is probably the biggest issue that will impact our state and our nation in the last, at least, thirty years. I’m not understating that.” See the video above. We all know that Bachmann has a difficult time with the LGBT community. In efforts not to understate it, let’s just say Bachmann doesn’t like the gays. But it’s more concerning that she thinks this is the issue that will impact us over the course of 30 years. This is on the Sally Kern level of belief that the LGBT community is more dangerous than terrorism. We have serious problems when it comes to protecting our nation and stabilizing our economy. People who believe that social issues are more important are terrifying not just to American voters but also to people trying to do business in our country or with our country. Similarly, there’s a problem with a potential President who believes that Gay Rights are more historic than 9/11. I don’t mean to belittle our equality movement, but we’re talking about a defining moment in our country that is belittled by people like Bachmann and Kern. As Wanda Sykes suggested about Sally Kern’s comments about gays being more dangerous than terrorists, perhaps someone like Bachamann will pull our troops from the bases across the world and parachute them into West Hollywood. This might not be the best strategic operation for strengthening a nation’s security. 5. “I don’t know how much God has to do to get the attention of the politicians. We’ve had an earthquake; we’ve had a hurricane. He said, ‘Are you going to start listening to me here?’ Listen to the American people because the American people are roaring right now. They know government is on a morbid obesity diet and we’ve got to rein in the spending.” –Rep. Michele Bachmann, suggesting at a presidential campaign event in Florida that the 2011 East Coast earthquake and hurricane was a message from God (Aug. 2011) Bachmann later said about this quote that she was joking then tried to say that it was a metaphor . If it was a joke or a metaphor it’s in bad taste to be so insensitive to so many people who lost lives and property in a natural disaster. That’s not acceptable from a President. Beyond that, someone who thinks that God is enacting retribution on Congress when they’re not even in session is to careless even for a joke. Finally, if a deity of any kind were trying to send a message to put America on a spending diet why would that deity send a costly natural disaster? Wouldn’t “God” send a stabilization of the economy in efforts to encourage us to cut spending? With so much insensitivity and disconnection toward American families it’s hard to imagine Bachmann being a viable anything.

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Hoffa Before Obama at Detroit Labor Day Rally: ‘Let’s Take These Son of a B*tches Out!’

That civility thing which Democrats and the Left thought to be all-important earlier this year is sooooo January. Unless it changes its stripes overnight, the incivility and hostility on display today in Detroit, which hasn't been seen much in establishment press reports to this point, won't appear on the Big 3 Networks' morning shows tomorrow. The American people really need to see what has become of the labor movement, and the type of behavior its head cheerleader in the White House condones. Before President Obama spoke in the parking lot of a General/Government Motors plant in Detroit this afternoon, Teamsters President James Hoffa Jr. warmed up the crowd, as transcribed below (video at Right Scoop ; HT Temple of Mut via Instapundit ): Hoffa: We've got to keep an eye on the battle that we face, a war on workers. And you see it everywhere. It is the Tea Party. And y'know there's only one way to beat and win that war. The one thing about working people is, we like a good fight. And you know what? They got a war, they got a war with us, and there's only gonna be one winner, it's going to be the workers of uh Michigan and America! We're gonna win that war! — (snip) — President Obama, this is your army. We are ready to march. Let's take these son of a bitches out and give America back to America where we belong. Thank you very much. Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! As of 6:30 p.m., mentions in the establishment press of Hoffa's hostility are light. Associated Press coverage by Darlene Superville ( AP headline , “Obama says GOP must back US first, create jobs”; as carried at the New York Times , “Obama Challenges Congress in Labor Day Speech”) doesn't mention Obama's warm-up acts. A search on Hoffa's last name at the AP's main site returns an early-a.m. story with this Sunday quote from Hoffa: “I think the president should challenge the patriotism of these American corporations that are sitting on the sidelines,” Hoffa said Sunday on CNN's “State of the Union.” He added, “We've got to turn this around and say, 'Hey, we are an American company. We owe an obligation to America. Let's put America back to work.'” The Times has no separate story of its own The Washington Post's David Nakamura quoted Hoffa, but “somehow” missed the declaration of war: Obama will need a strong turnout from labor supporters to help him win reelection in 2012, and Teamsters President James P. Hoffa urged the crowd to turn out at the polls in force. “There is a war on workers and you see it everywhere,” Hoffa said. “You see it in unemployment, you see it in the tea party, in people who fight what we believe in. President Obama, this is your army. We are ready to march and, President Obama, we want one thing: jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs.” UPI.com's coverage of the event doesn't mention Hoffa. In Detroit, a search on Hoffa's last name at Freep.com (the Detroit Free Press) returns nothing relating to the event. A review of the paper's story on Obama's speech has no mention of what Hoffa said. At the Detroit News, Hoffa's name is not in its event story , and a search on Hoffa's last name for event-relevant info returns only a couple of Readers' Forum posts. There was mention of Hoffa's statement in a CNN wire story (the network cut ties with AP in June 2010 ). But the story made Hoffa's remarks about Republicans and not the Tea Party: Before Obama spoke, James Hoffa, president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, blasted congressional Republicans and urged the crowd to mobilize and help defeat the GOP at the polls in 2012. “Everybody here has a vote,” Hoffa said. “Keep the eye on the prize. Let's take these sons of bitches out and give America back to an America where we belong.” Generalizing Hoffa's remarks to the GOP alone as CNN did may be erroneous, depending on whether he kept his criticism to the Tea Party or moved on to Republicans in between the segments of the video transcribed above. A 2010 poll showed that “The national breakdown of the Tea Party composition is 57 percent Republican, 28 percent Independent and 13 percent Democratic.” That's a 40%-plus non-Republican plurality. At the Los Angeles Times , Christi Parsons did flag Hoffa's comment, but made sure readers knew that Obama couldn't pooooooossibly know what was said: The assembly also cheered wildly when Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa Jr., during a pre-Obama warm-up act, urged activists to oppose Obama’s critics by taking “these sons of bitches out.” Obama was not present for that comment. More generally, a Google News search on “Hoffa bitches” (not in quotes) returns 16 items (it appears to be 38, but it's really 16 ). Only items at an ABC News blog and a CNN blog can be considered American-based “mainstream media” outlets. In an overseas item at the UK Daily Mail , Toby Harnden headlines a particularly pertinent question: “Will Barack Obama condemn Joe Biden and Jimmy Hoffa for calling Republicans 'barbarians' and 'son of a bitches'?” I'd suggest not staying by the computer waiting for it, because first, someone in the press has to be willing to ask. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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“Labor Day” is a misnomer, and we’re the ones who have made it so, writes EJ Dionne for the Washington Post . Today, and every day in America, we no longer celebrate workers “as the real creators of wealth.” We reserve the highest praise for “capital,” he explains. “In scores of…

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Honor Work and Workers by Joining America Wants to Work Campaign

Each Labor Day, the nation takes the time to honor the value of work and all who do it. But in this Labor Day video message, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says we also should remember the millions of jobless workers by joining the fight to put America back to work. It’s time to think about the millions of men and women who have lost their jobs and have spent weeks, months—even years—struggling… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : AFL-CIO Weblog Discovery Date : 05/09/2011 19:00 Number of articles : 2

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