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Lindsey Graham Still Not Ready to Back Debt Ceiling Deal Even After it Appears GOP is Getting Everything They Wanted

Click here to view this media Par for the course, if it’s Sunday, we’re going to be treated to another interview by either John McCain or his BFF here, Lindsey Graham. Heaven forbid any actual progressive Democrats are allowed on the air to voice their opinions on this debt ceiling debacle. Apparently Sen. Lindsey Graham isn’t ready to get behind these compromises being offered during the debt ceiling negotiations because they didn’t get Democrats to just dismantle all of our social safety nets immediately. Heaven forbid it appears these guys already got concessions on just about everything they wanted and that still isn’t good enough for them. They should have raised the debt ceiling before this new House of Representatives got into office so they weren’t put in the position of negotiating with these hostage takers in the first place because it looks like Lindsey Graham and the Republicans’ idea of “winning” is the complete destruction of our middle class in America, which has been obvious to a lot of us for a long time now. Transcript via This Week : AMANPOUR: Every Republican congressman from your own state voted against Speaker Boehner’s plan… GRAHAM: They did. AMANPOUR: … even though it did contain the balanced budget amendment. GRAHAM: Yeah. AMANPOUR: Do you think they’ll get behind this current framework that we’ve been describing? GRAHAM: You know, I don’t see many conservatives getting behind this, quite frankly, because you don’t overall. I’ve learned in politics the hard way, don’t oversell, and don’t tell people they should feel good when they have a reason not to feel that great. AMANPOUR: Will it pass? Will enough get behind it? GRAHAM: I think half the conference in the Republican House must vote for this. To President Obama, to David… STEPHANOPOULOS: Only half? GRAHAM: I think that’s the minimum, because I like John Boehner. Maybe he can get more, but it’s a $3 trillion package that will allow $7 trillion to be added to the debt over the next decade. (CROSSTALK) STEPHANOPOULOS: But you know the politics as well as I do… GRAHAM: So how much celebrating can you do about that? STEPHANOPOULOS: In order to get something like this through that does not include — it looks like this will not include revenue increases… GRAHAM: No revenue. That’s a win. STEPHANOPOULOS: I know where you stand on that. GRAHAM: That’s a win. STEPHANOPOULOS: That is a win. It would only get half? GRAHAM: My belief is, what do I tell people at home who say, what did you do about getting us out of debt? I slowed down how much debt you add. Instead of adding $10 trillion, we’re going to add $7 trillion. I slowed down the growth of government, but it still grows every year. For those who came out to vote in 2010 to say, get the size and scope of Washington changed in the new direction… (CROSSTALK) STEPHANOPOULOS: If you only get half, this could go… (CROSSTALK) GRAHAM: It doesn’t go in the new direction. STEPHANOPOULOS: With only half the Republican conference, this could go down. GRAHAM: Well, I’ll tell you, our Democratic friends provided no votes to John. There’s no plan by the president. Harry Reid’s plan is going nowhere. AMANPOUR: But you say there’s no plan, sir, but he’s moved so far, in fact, entirely to your side. GRAHAM: His — his — his rhetoric has moved. The reason everybody’s moved in town… AMANPOUR: But this is all spending cuts. GRAHAM: Well, let me tell you. There’s people in my party moved. There are people in my party who really are not that excited about cutting government… STEPHANOPOULOS: You’re not ready to vote for this, are you? GRAHAM: I can’t — from — from a big picture, I’m not ready to vote for this. And let me tell you why — excuse me, George — the bottom line here is, the people who got elected are not excited about being Republicans or Democrats, particularly on the Republican side. They’re excited about results. And it is fair to say, we’ve achieved a significant change in the way Washington works by paying for the debt ceiling increase and not passing it onto the credit card. We have not achieved entitlement change. We have not reduced the size and scope of government. We’re going in the wrong direction at a slower pace, and for a lot of people, that is not winning.

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For those of you who came in during the third act, a guide to reading between the lines as Obama political adviser David Plouffe makes the rounds of the Sunday shows: First, despite what he says during this appearance on Meet the Press, there is no such thing as “a balanced deficit reduction package that doesn’t harm the economy ” during a prolonged recession. Nope, not gonna happen. (Just ask Paul Krugman, Joe Stiglitz, Dean Baker or Jared Bernstein.) Second, there’s nothing “balanced” about a scenario where the public deals with the brunt of extensive cuts with no additional revenue and three, Social Security and Medicare are in the gun sights. Notice how he works that in there: “Our view is things like Social Security and Medicaid, you know, they can’t be part of the solution here unless you’ve got a balanced package that includes tax reform.” Whee! David, please tell your boss: We don’t see Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid as “part of the solution” to a manufactured debt crisis. They already are a solution, one that’s worked very well for us, and we want no part of your plan: MR. GREGORY: I’m joined now by senior adviser to the president David Plouffe. Welcome back to MEET THE PRESS. MR. DAVID PLOUFFE: Good morning, David. MR. GREGORY: So from your vantage point, you’re inside the room. Is that overly rosy, or are you that close? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, we don’t have a deal. Everyone is cognizant, as, as Chuck Todd just reported on, both the legislative clock and, more importantly, the default clock. So the hours are ticking here. I think what’s clear is that there’s general agreement that we’re going to have deficit reduction in two stages. The first is going to be something the parties largely agree on, about $1 trillion in deficit reduction. The second stage is going to be the trickier, elements of entitlement reform and tax reform, which this supercommittee’s going to be charged with. And I think it’s going to be incumbent on the leaders in Congress to appoint people to those committees who are going to drive to yes, to try and compromise, get out of their party’s comfort zone. MR. GREGORY: Let… MR. PLOUFFE: Yeah. MR. GREGORY: Let me be clear, though. What will the president accept as a deal? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, first of all, we–it’s clear our economy is obviously not as strong as any of us would like it to be. This debt ceiling cloud has harmed our economy . Why on earth would we want to go through this again a few short months from now? MR. GREGORY: So it has to be through 2012. MR. PLOUFFE: So–for the economy, number one. Number two, we want to make sure that if there is an enforcement mechanism–and again, the committee is not going to be charged with just doing spending cuts only. The committee’s going to be charged with looking at our entire deficit reduction problem and look at things like tax reform and revenue. You need–you want something to compel this committee to act. That was part of the president’s approach that he laid out to the country a few months ago, that there would be a debt cap that would enforce action. So you want to have something that compels both parties to act. Because I do think there’s going to be a lot of pressure, rightly, on this committee to produce something that Congress can vote on. Yes. MR. GREGORY: But, but a lot of people watching this have got to be wondering, what’s actually going on today? What is the fighting about? So first stage, you, you cut government spending over a 10-year period to raise the debt ceiling. Part of that is a second stage, another committee in Washington that looks at really making the hard decisions. And then if they don’t make the hard decision, something forces Congress’ hand. So again, what will the president accept as a consequence to force the, the Congress’ hand? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, again, it might be more enjoyable to negotiate this with you this morning. I, I can’t get into a great amount of detail. But I think that, one, we have to make sure that you can agree on the initial set of spending cuts. The process for the committee, it’s essential, we think, that the debt ceiling get extended off into the future so it doesn’t hurt the economy. Then we want to make sure whatever enforcement mechanism is something, one, that if it were triggered, you know, you think the country could live with; but secondly, strong enough to compel folks to act. And I think that you, you see, this has been a healthy debate. I think the country’s learned a lot about our debt and deficit problems. I think there’s been some education here in Washington. And I think what’s clear is, you know, where the president stands is where the American people stand, that if we’re going to do another set of deficit reduction, over $1 trillion, they’re going to insist it be balanced. Because if you’re a middle-class family, if you’re a senior citizen… MR. GREGORY: But it’s not going to be balanced. There’s no tax increases in this. MR. PLOUFFE: But… MR. GREGORY: You–the president said it had to have tax increases, it must–had to be balanced. MR. PLOUFFE: The committee–yeah. MR. GREGORY: That’s not what’s in this deal. MR. PLOUFFE: Well, listen, this committee’s going to be charged with coming up with additional deficit reduction. There’s no way to do it without smart entitlement reform and tax reform. MR. GREGORY: So you only get to do potential tax increases as part of a second stage of spending cuts that a committee has to agree to? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, the first stage–it’s clear in this first stage what we’re going to get is an extension of the debt ceiling… MR. GREGORY: Right. MR. PLOUFFE: …you’re going to get that first set of spending cuts over $1 trillion, and then you’re going to get this committee that’s going to be charged with reporting out, hopefully, a balanced deficit reduction plan. MR. GREGORY: Well, what is healthy about this debate? I mean, you talk about another supercommittee. Seventeen months ago the president convened a debt commission, the proposals, recommendations from which were not acted on by the president or Congress. Now you’re talking about another committee. Nobody’s yet making the hard choices about two-thirds of the budget, which is entitlement spending . So what’s healthy about this debate? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, it’s certainly not been a healthy debate in, in the short-term. I think the American people are sitting back and saying, you know, “I’m going through tough things in my life, and these folks are sitting there arguing with each other, unwilling to compromise, do tough things.” Particularly the House Republicans this week. But I would say this. The president laid out several months ago a $4 trillion deficit reduction plan. What we were striving to do with the speaker of the House was a, a big deficit reduction package that wouldn’t have a supercommittee , we would have done it right now. That wasn’t possible. The speaker of the House, pulled by the right wing of his party, walked away from that. But the president’s going to be committed over these next few months, as I–and I think members of Congress needs to be as well, that we need to finish the job here. And the way they’re going to finish that job is to have a balanced deficit reduction package that doesn’t harm the economy. MR. GREGORY: Let me ask you some other pressing matters. I’ve spoken to top figures on Wall Street who say this is a code red day, all hands on deck preparing for a market shock as early as tomorrow. What is your message? What is the president’s message to investors around the globe at this moment? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, I think it is that we have to get this solved. Today is obviously a critical day. We have to give confidence that there is a pathway to make sure that we both reduce the debt ceiling–and let’s not underestimate the debt reduction is an important part of this . So I think that… MR. GREGORY: But that doesn’t sound like a very certain message to investors. I mean, should they be assuaged by that? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, listen, the best way we’re going to assuage investors, the rest of the world, most importantly, the American people, is to solve this problem. And I think in the coming hours–and we’re literally talking about in the coming hours–I think it’s incumbent on congressional leaders to compromise that last bit so we can have a deal that, again, the House Republicans mysteriously, because I don’t know anyone who watches this who would think this is a good idea, wanted us to go through this whole three-ring circus again in four or five months. MR. GREGORY: Well… MR. PLOUFFE: We’re not going to do that because it’s bad for the economy. MR. GREGORY: If we have a default, who gets paid first? How does Treasury make that decision? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, listen. At the appropriate point, the Treasury Department is obviously going to lay out for the American people how this would operate. MR. GREGORY: When… MR. PLOUFFE: Our focus right now is solving this problem. If we’re not able to reach a deal, then Treasury’s going to have to report to the American people exactly how this is going to happen. MR. GREGORY: Chairman Mullen… MR. PLOUFFE: Yes. MR. GREGORY: …is in Afghanistan. He told our troops fighting there he didn’t know the answer to when and whether they would get paid. Will the president insist that if there’s a default, that troops get paid? MR. PLOUFFE: Again, the Treasury Department will–and by the way, what Admiral Mullen talked about, you know, it’s outrageous that here we are, 60 hours away from the United States of America potentially defaulting for the first time, and the reason we’re here is that, particularly Republicans in the House, but, but Republicans generally have been unwilling to compromise. So at the appropriate point, if we get to that point, the Treasury Department will lay out very clearly for the American people, most importantly for investors, folks around the world, exactly what would happen if we default. MR. GREGORY: I want to be clear on what the president would accept. In terms of cuts, in the first state or the second stage, in other words, that–what’s called in Washington a trigger, which means that whatever forces Congress’ hands if they don’t continue to cut government spending, something would happen. We know the president is open to tax increases automatically. Would he also accept a deal that would cut Social Security benefits or Medicare benefits if Congress doesn’t act? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, first of all, when you say open to tax increases, let’s remember what the president’s for: closing tax loopholes; making sure that millionaires and billionaires, large corporations, through tax reform contribute. What you see the Republican Party largely wanting to do is ask senior citizens, college students, the middle class to pay all the freight here. And people are outraged by that. Everyone’s going to have to do their part here. So, in deficit reduction–and again, this next stage, the first stage is going to be some domestic spending cuts in Defense and non-Defense, that both parties largely can come to agreement on. Not easy, but a first stage. Second stage is going to be a discussion in Congress about things like tax reform and entitlement reform. Our view is things like Social Security and Medicaid, you know, they can’t be part of the solution here unless you’ve got a balanced package that includes tax reform. MR. GREGORY: So we’re still at a stalemate when it comes to that, in terms of that second stage. Another option that’s been talked about and there’s been pressure from Democrats is invoking the 14th Amendment. This is the key piece of the 14th Amendment. “The validity of the public debt of the United States authorized by law shall not be questioned.” The president could unilaterally raise the debt ceiling. Will he do that if it comes to that? MR. PLOUFFE: Listen, we’ve been, we’ve been asked them question a lot. And I think particularly when you come to the closing hours of this crisis, a lot of people are suggesting off-ramps. There is no off-ramp here. You know, we… MR. GREGORY: So the 14th Amendment is not an option. MR. PLOUFFE: No. We, we’ve looked at that. The only way out of this is for Congress to act, for the Republicans in Congress to be willing to compromise a little bit. You know, the debt ceiling’s been raised dozens of times historically. It shouldn’t take, you know, a constitutional crisis for us to pay the bills on our credit card that Congress has already racked up. MR. GREGORY: The backdrop for this, as you know, is an economy in trouble. The Wall Street Journal described it this way in terms of economic recovery. This was yesterday. “The government on Friday reported that the economy grew at a rate of just 1.3% in the second quarter, failing to bounce back from knocks earlier in the year. Estimates of first-quarter growth were also revised down to 0.4%. As a result, the pace of economic recovery has been one of the worst since World War II. … That’s particularly bad news as the economy confronts the threat of a default on the nation’s debt.” Is the Obama recovery much more like a bust? MR. PLOUFFE: No. What, what also was reported this week is you went back three years and the depth of the recession the president inherited was even more severe than anyone realized. I mean, the worst since F.D.R. inherited the Depression. So we had a long, you know, we had growth in negative six, negative seven, just terrible. So what we have to do is–now, from those terrible depths we’ve made progress. We continue to see some positive job growth, but not nearly as rapid enough. First of all, this debt ceiling problem, it’s not just harmed investors, it’s clear it’s harmed consumer confidence, business confidence, small and large. We have to remove this cloud. Secondly, Congress can do some things right now. We can pass trade deals that can help us compete. We can pass patent reform so that our innovators have an easier time getting their ideas to market. We can work together to build roads and bridges and put construction workers back to work. We can–we have a payroll tax looming, by the way, that would expire next year, which would be about $1,000 tax increase on every American if we don’t pass it. So we’ve got to get through this debt ceiling for a lot of reasons, but the focus here in Washington has to centrally go back to how we’re going to create jobs, how we’re going to grow this economy. MR. GREGORY: Before you go… MR. PLOUFFE: Yeah. MR. GREGORY: …you are the president’s top political adviser. As you look at what Washington has done, essentially a failure to govern, do you now think a third party is a viable alternative in the 2012 race? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, that’ll be up to the American people. Here’s what I would say… MR. GREGORY: Yeah, but you’re, you’re the expert inside the White House. MR. PLOUFFE: Well, I can speak to this. I think that most Americans believe that the president has tried to tackle tough problems. I think they’re clear that here is a president who was willing to do some tough things that obviously we took some criticism from our own party on. So he’s walked the walk in terms of how we solve the deficit, someone who’s clearly been willing to compromise. And what’s interesting is the president, last Monday night in his speech to the nation and again Friday, asked the American people to reach out to Congress through tweets, through e-mails and calls and say, “Demand a compromise.” And the reaction was overwhelming. I think people are very frustrated and they want their leaders, obviously, to have strong principles. But at the end of the day, as they’re going through the struggles in everyday life, what they can’t afford is their leaders to be engaged in a three-ring circus. MR. GREGORY: Does… MR. PLOUFFE: So… MR. GREGORY: Does it open up a third party or not? MR. PLOUFFE: Well, listen, you know, that’ll be up to the American people. What I’m confident in is that the president’s leadership is something that was rewarded in 2008. I think people think he’s the one person here who’s focused every day on solving problems, not trying to score political points. And that’s going to be one of the reasons he’s going to be re-elected in 2012. MR. GREGORY: All right. We’re going to leave it there. David Plouffe, we’ll be watching. Thank you very much.

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US debt crisis: deal ‘very close’ but key deadline could still be missed

Despite cautious optimism from both sides the US could still default on its debts, risking economic chaos around the world A last-gasp compromise began to take shape in Congress on Sunday night aimed at ending the US debt deadlock that has threatened to throw the US and world economy into chaos. But, with time fast running out, Congress may have left it too late to meet the Tuesday deadline set by the Treasury for raising the debt ceiling above its current $14.3tn limit. The US Treasury had said that if the ceiling was not lifted by Tuesday, America would no longer have the cash needed to pay all its bills and faced the prospect of defaulting for the first time in its history. The White House hinted on Sunday that the deadline could be extended for a few days to allow Congress to get legislation through. The Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, said he was “cautiously optimistic” of a deal, a view echoed by his Republican counterpart, Mitch McConnell. McConnell, interviewed on Sunday morning, said: “We are very close. We had a good day yesterday. Both the president and vice-president called me … and they understand we have to come together.” The White House and Congressional leaders were anxious to get a compromise deal under way, fearful that uncertainty could lead to huge market falls on Monday . Market experts warned that even if a deal was struck, the world’s largest economy was likely to be stripped of its triple A debt rating by Standard & Poor’s. The head of the world’s largest bond investor – Mohamed El-Erian of Pimco – told US broadcaster ABC: “Things that need to happen are not happening fast enough. If S&P sticks to what it said, it will downgrade.” Economists agreed. Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics, said: “It looks like they will get a deal done to lift the debt ceiling but it looks like none of the numbers are going to reassure the debt rating agencies. I’m pretty sure America will lose its triple A rating.” Such a move is likely to prompt a big jump in the cost of borrowing for the US. In the first of a series of votes on Sunday, the Senate voted on a mainly technical issue to try to end debate on the subject, but the Republicans blocked it. Republicans in the Senate then went into a session of their own to discuss the details of the deal before voting on the package. The deal will raise the country’s $14.3tn debt ceiling by about $3tn. Raising the debt ceiling is normally a routine issue but the Republican members of Congress, especially a hard core allied to the Tea Party movement, have used it over the last month to hold the White House hostage. The Republicans received their reward on Sunday when they won concessions that could see the increase in the debt ceiling matched by an equivalent $3tn of cuts in the federal budget over the next decade. The Senate vote marks the start the end of a saga that has left Washington paralysed for weeks. But the Senate bill still has to go to the Republican-controlled House, which will be more problematic. The bill is likely to pass the House with the support of a combination of mainstream Republicans and Democrats. But there is a hard core of Republicans in the House, about 20-50, allied to the Tea Party movement, some of whom vowed on Sunday night to vote against it, and some Democrats who feel Obama has conceded too much. David Plouffe, a White House adviser, told ABC it was not clear if there would be enough House Republicans to get a deal through. The deal is mainly a victory for Republicans whose mission has been to cut America’s huge federal spending budget and undermine Barack Obama in his bid for re-election next year. Leftwingers in the Democratic party will be dismayed over the spending cuts and that Obama has failed to force the Republicans to agree to tax rises. The crisis has already hurt Obama, with a poll carried last week showing his approval ratings drop from 45% to 40%. But the Republicans may be hurt too by their association with the Tea Party movement. America’s financial reputation has suffered as well, particularly over the last week, and even though a debt ceiling rise is now on the cards, the country could still see its credit rating being downgraded. The deal emerged late on Saturday after fractious public exchanges earlier in the day between Republicans and Democrats that highlighted the gap between the two sides. The Democratic leader in the House, Nancy Pelosi, in a feisty speech on Saturday accused Republican Speaker John Boehner of having gone over to the “dark side” in courting hardcore Republicans allied to the Tea Party movement. But late on Saturday night, after a series of negotiations involving Obama, vice-president Joe Biden, Reid, McConnell, Boehner and Pelosi, they reached an agreement on the broad principles of a deal. The Senate deal could see the debt limit rise by $1tn this week and a further $1.8tn next year, though the White House refused to confirm the figures. US politics United States Republicans Democrats Tea Party movement US economy Economics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Fretting Obama’s Moved Too Far to Right, Tea Party Like Reckless Teenagers, Journalists ‘Scared of Being Labeled Liberal’

Three noteworthy spins, charges and/or claims made on the Sunday morning interview shows. > ABC’s This Week , with “ALL CUTS, NO TAXES?” on screen : George Stephanopoulos hit White House senior adviser David Plouffe from the left on how “this enforcement mechanism would not include revenue increases, would be just across the board spending cuts.” He fretted the deal “all but guarantee that the final product is all spending cuts and not the balanced approach the President wants.” Christiane Amanpour despaired President Obama “has moved all of the way to the language and the ideals that the Republicans espouse.” > CBS’s Face the Nation : Bob Schieffer insisted “some people say that the Republican Party has been held hostage by the Tea Party” and he saw “some truth” in an allegation he saw on Facebook that allowing House freshmen “‘to control this debate’” is “‘like letting the teenager in the family run the family budget.’” > CNN’s Reliable Sources : Host Howard Kurtz wondered why the media have failed to portray “this as a crisis largely created by one party” – the Republicans — and “instead has developed this narrative that the two sides are just, you know, a bunch of clowns?” Chrystia Freeland, digital editor for Thomson Reuters, blamed/credited conservatives. Despite much evidence to the contrary, she maintained “mainstream journalism is averse to making judgments,” then asserted: Mainstream journalists are particularly scared of being labeled as liberal. We all want to be sort of seen as objective. And I think sometimes there's a little bit of bending over backwards to be seen as objective by the right because that’s where a lot of the criticism comes from. Kurtz agreed: “I think you’ve hit on an excellent point.” More about these three items: From ABC’s This Week , George Stephanopoulos, returning to the show Amanpour took over a year ago, lectured Pouffle: Let m me press you on the details here because the details of this enforcement mechanism are all important. This is what the whole negotiation is coming down to, right now. The President has said time and time again, he wants a balanced approach that includes tax reform, revenue increases. Everyone I’ve talked to on Capitol Hill says this enforcement mechanism would not include revenue increases, would be just across the board spending cuts: Domestic spending, Medicare, perhaps and defense and would not include revenues. So if the enforcement mechanism doesn't include revenues, what incentive would Republicans have to consider revenue increases and wouldn't it all but guarantee that the final product is all spending cuts and not the balanced approach the President wants? Stephanopoulos followed up: Let me press this. Can the President accept an enforcement mechanism that is spending cuts only, automatic spending cuts only, that does not include revenues? Amanpour soon joined in to relay far-left upset with Obama: Frustrated members of your own party, they are saying, look, why doesn't the President who has his principles stand up for them, rather than spending so much time wanting to be bi-partisan, a conciliator. I mean, they’re saying the Republicans are driving a harder bargain. And as George has just described, the President has moved all of the way to the language and the ideals that the Republicans espouse. Yes, because he wanted a clean bill, then a bill with cuts on spending and now as George is talking about, it's all cuts for the moment. Bob Schieffer, on Face the Nation , to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell: Some people say that the Republican Party has been held hostage by the Tea Party. One of our Facebook followers sent in an interesting analogy and said, “why are Republicans allowing freshmen Congressmen to control this debate?” and this person said, “it's like letting the teenager in the family run the family budget.” I mean, there's some truth in that. From the July 31 Reliable Sources: HOWARD KURTZ: But if you buy the Paul Krugman analysis, do you also agree with his point that this whole mess — I can't think of a better word — this whole mess has been portrayed as a bunch of immature, squabbling, narrow-minded politicians who just can't get in the room and agree when the alternative analysis, and certainly one that Krugman embraces, is that it's the Republicans and particularly the Tea Party faction that has been intransigent, that has said no to trillions in spending cuts and the Democrats and Obama have moved quite a ways toward the GOP position? CHRYSTIA FREELAND, THOMSON REUTERS: I think that that conclusion, that actually the terms of the debate have been shifted far to the right is objectively the case. And what's interesting to me is, and you referred to this earlier – we already saw that on the front page of the New York Times today, and this was alluded to in your panel, people are now saying, well okay, in the post mortem phase, we're going to talk about how Obama shifted pretty far to the right. That's a little bit too late. The decisions will already have been taken. KURTZ: But just briefly, why has mainstream journalism not portrayed this as a crisis largely created by one party, and instead has developed this narrative that the two sides are just, you know, a bunch of clowns? FREELAND: Because I think mainstream journalism is averse to making judgments. And I also think that mainstream journalists are particularly scared of being labeled as liberal. We all want to be sort of seen as objective. And I think sometimes there's a little bit of bending over backwards to be seen as objective by the right because that’s where a lot of the criticism comes from. KURTZ: I think you’ve hit on an excellent point , which is why we have you on.

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Jon Stewart Breaks Down GOP’s Bizarre ‘The Town’ Analogy (VIDEO)

With the deadline to raise the debt ceiling fast approaching, things are getting a little ridiculous in Congress. Jon Stewart closed out this week of “Daily Show” Thursday night with a look at one of the GOP’s most bizarre choices as of late: showing freshman senators a clip from Ben Affleck’s “The Town” as a motivation tool. Yes, “The Town.” The one about the bank robbers. When Republican House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy showed the scene at a Tuesday meeting, the idea was to urge freshmen and Tea Partiers to drop their opposition to House Speaker Boehner’s debt ceiling plan. The scene chosen from the film shows Affleck unenthusiastically inviting another bank robber to commit a crime, who promptly agrees by asking, “Who’s car are we going to take?.” At least one member of Congress, Rep. Allen West, said he liked it and was moved to side with the Republican plan, adding “I’ll drive the car.” Stewart was amazed: “Quick Robin! To the Batshit mobile!” Watch the clip below to hear how Stewart breaks down the scene to try and come up with any good reason why the GOP would want to make such an analogy. Why compare themselves to violent sociopathic criminals? As a bonus, Stewart also presents what could be one of the funniest ideas for a cable news show we’ve ever heard, “Chuck Schumer’s Meshugena Movie Breakdown Show.” WATCH: International users click here to watch

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The Republican Debt Orgy in Pictures

enlarge Credit: New York Times ( Click here for larger image .) “In Washington more spending and more debt is business as usual,” House Speaker John Boehner declared on Monday before warning, “I’ve got news for Washington – those days are over.” The days, Boehner should have explained, before Barack Obama took the oath of office. As Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) rightly pointed on the Senate floor last year, “We would have none of this if it hadn’t been for the Republican debt orgy that they went through.” Which is exactly right. As a few handy charts show, Republican presidents and the current GOP leadership in Congress presided over that debt debauchery. And now they demand Democrats clean up their mess. In case Americans had forgotten that Ronald Reagan tripled the national debt and George W. Bush doubled it , the New York Times presented the helpful reminder above. For their part, Republicans want to pretend history began on January 20, 2009. While Texas Rep. Jeb Hensarling claimed Friday that for Republicans raising the debt ceiling is “contrary to our DNA,” House Minority Leader Eric Cantor protested two weeks ago, “I don’t think the White House understands is how difficult it is for fiscal conservatives to say they’re going to vote for a debt ceiling increase.” As McClatchy showed, Republicans are as bad at genetics and history as they are at economics: Leave aside for the moment that small government icon Ronald Reagan signed 17 debt ceiling increases into law. (That might explain why the Gipper repeatedly demanded Congress boost his borrowing authority and called the oceans of red ink he bequeathed to America his greatest regret .) As it turns out, Republican majorities voted seven times to raise the debt ceiling under President Bush and the current GOP leadership team voted a combined 19 times to bump the debt limit $4 trillion during his tenure. (That vote tally included a “clean” debt ceiling increase in 2004, backed by 98 current House Republicans and 31 sitting GOP Senators.) Of course, they had to. After all, the two unfunded wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the budget-busting Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 (the first war-time tax cut in modern U.S. history) and the Medicare prescription drug program drained the U.S. Treasury. Mitch McConnell, John Boehner and Eric Cantor voted for all of it . Again, in words and pictures, the New York Times tells the tale: As the Washington Post summed up the CBO’s conclusions regarding the causes of the nation’s mounting debt earlier this year, “The biggest culprit, by far, has been an erosion of tax revenue triggered largely by two recessions and multiple rounds of tax cuts.” The analysis by the Times echoed that finding: With President Obama and Republican leaders calling for cutting the budget by trillions over the next 10 years, it is worth asking how we got here — from healthy surpluses at the end of the Clinton era, and the promise of future surpluses, to nine straight years of deficits, including the $1.3 trillion shortfall in 2010. The answer is largely the Bush-era tax cuts, war spending in Iraq and Afghanistan, and recessions. But as Ezra Klein explained in the Washington Post, the revealing Times chart doesn’t tell the full story of the impact of Bush-era policies on future debt facing Barack Obama: What’s also important, but not evident, on this chart is that Obama’s major expenses were temporary — the stimulus is over now — while Bush’s were, effectively, recurring. The Bush tax cuts didn’t just lower revenue for 10 years. It’s clear now that they lowered it indefinitely, which means this chart is understating their true cost. Similarly, the Medicare drug benefit is costing money on perpetuity, not just for two or three years. And Boehner, Ryan and others voted for these laws and, in some cases, helped to craft and pass them. These two graphs from the Washington Post and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities make that point crystal clear. Analyses by CBPP showed that the Bush tax cuts accounted for half of the deficits during his tenure, and if made permanent , over the next decade would cost the U.S. Treasury more than Iraq, Afghanistan, the recession, TARP and the stimulus – combined . Utah Senator Orrin Hatch was telling the truth when he described Republican fiscal mismanagement during the Bush years by acknowledging, “It was standard practice not to pay for things.” As Paul Krugman documented, the jump in federal spending as a percentage of GDP under President Obama is almost completely explained by the contraction of the economy and the stimulus programs now ending. (Republicans always take great to care to avoid mentioning that the total federal tax burden as a percentage of the U.S. economy is at its lowest level in 60 years even as income inequality is at its highest in 80.) As Krugman summed it up: Now, pointing out the Obama spending binge is a myth generally produces rage: people know that it happened, because Rush Limbaugh and the Wall Street Journal say so. But that doesn’t make it true. Put another way, when it comes to the American balance sheet, Republicans broke it. Now, they claim, Democrats own it. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives. )

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CBO Score Shows Boehner Plan Cuts the Deficit More than Reid’s Plan

The Hill reports that the Congressional Budget Office has scored the Boehner debt ceiling plan as reducing the deficit more than Harry Reid’s plan — and that’s without resorting to gimmickry regarding assumptions about war spending: The debt-ceiling plan authored by House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) cuts the deficit by more than the plan by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) if an assumption… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Weekly Standard Blog Discovery Date : 29/07/2011 21:45 Number of articles : 2

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Speaker Boehner Given Standing Ovation After Passionate Speech on House Floor (Video)

Speaker John Boehner was given a standing ovation after delivering a powerful speech before the vote today. House Speaker John Boehner’s remarks to the House of Representatives before a vote on the latest debt limit / ceiling bill. His anger … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Gateway Pundit Discovery Date : 30/07/2011 01:01 Number of articles : 2

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Kat Von D’s Facebook Note: ‘I Suck’

Reacting to public news of her breakup from fiance Jesse James, Kat von D wrote a heartfelt message on her Facebook page Wednesday night. The 881-word note, entitled “What can I say? I suck” ranges from self-deprecating to wistful. Contrary to reports of infidelity on James’ part, the tattoo artist and television personality suggests that she is to blame for the split. Among others, Kat points to a hectic schedule and bad luck as contributing factors to the demise of her relationship with Sandra Bullock’s former husband. There was my new relationship with Jesse, which regardless of how happy it made me, sprung a lot of negativity from the outside world. Then the 2 month book tour, not to mention my house burning down half way through the tour… Taking on another season of filming the show during all of this, plus a million other things to add to the list… Kat — who has since insisted she would keep the tattoo of James’ face on her torso — also says public criticism both alienated and brought the couple closer together, stating that “it felt like it was just the two of us against the world” and that she “lost a lot of friends.” Over 2,000 people have commented on her note while the number of people who like the confessional continues to grow from more than 4,000 “likes” on Facebook. She adds: “Never planned on walking away from this relationship” before signing off with “Con todo mi corazon, Kat Von D.”

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It’s Harry Reid’s turn to hit legislative turbulence. The House today is poised to reject the Senate leader’s plan to raise the debt ceiling. The vote, seen as largely symbolic, should take place this afternoon. The real fight, however, is taking place in the Senate, where GOP Minority Leader Mitch…

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