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Elton Gallegly’s Hypocrisy

enlarge Don’t get me wrong. I’m a big believer in infrastructure, and I like it even more when infrastructure spending comes to my neck of the woods. This is especially true when the spending involves trains, and train crossings, and ways to make them safer for everyone. I’m not complaining. But still, I think it’s worth pointing out just how hypocritical these Republicans are. Elton Gallegly is crowing all over the press about his most recent “get”. VC Star : Metrolink spokesperson Sherita Coffelt said the railroad crossing at Spring Road near High Street will be upgraded to enhance safety for rail, vehicles, pedestrians and commercial property patrons. The improvements will include relocating a warning signal, installing a new one, and installing two vehicle exit gates, she said.”There will also be advanced reactions, which means that when a train is approaching, the warning lights will be coordinated with the traffic lights so that the traffic lights will never accidentally cause a car to get trapped on the tracks,” she said. Requested by Gallegly, the funding comes from the 2010 transportation/HUD appropriations bill as part of the Federal Railroad Administration’s High Speed Rail Corridor Improvements program , said Tom Pfeifer, spokesman for Gallegly’s Washington office. Yeah. That would be the high speed rail spending program Gallegly voted to kill , alongside his fellow suicide bombers in the House so we could pay for disaster assistance. But of course, that doesn’t stop him from dancing all over the place about what a great guy he is: Gallegly, R-Simi Valley, said he welcomed the funding. “Every day, Metrolink, Amtrak and Union Pacific trains cross major intersections in Ventura County cities,” he said in a statement. “This first-in-the-nation program that identifies and implements improvements to railroad crossings will reduce accidents and save lives.” Assistant City Manager Hugh Riley also welcomed the funding. “In this day and age, with things the way they are, if he (Gallegly) got some money for railroad crossing improvements out here, that’s terrific,” Riley said. “So this is great news.” I realize that this is just the hundred-zillionth example of Republican hypocrisy, but this one hits pretty close to home. About ten miles away. We’re an area that could really benefit from high-speed rail, too. So while Gallegly brings home the pork — er, earmarks — while claiming he’s a hard-core fiscal conservative, all I can do is laugh. Or cry. Or something. I just can’t wait until his seat is redistricted off the map. R-Simi Valley, indeed. The guy represents more than Simi Valley. Then again, he really doesn’t. We’re just unfortunate enough to be in his district anyway.

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US debt crisis: Tea Party intransigence takes America to the brink

America has raised its debt ceiling 140 times since the war without controversy. Now compromise has become a dirty word Barack Obama has not slept in the last week, worried about the impending debt crisis deadline, according to a White House aide. He will not be getting much sleep over the next 48 hours either, as the standoff between the Republicans and Democrats – the biggest ideological collision between the parties for decades – enters its final phase. With only two days left to the deadline that could result in the US defaulting on its borrowing for the first time, there is still no sign of a deal. The Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed a stopgap bill by 218-210 on Friday evening. Two hours later, the Democratic-controlled Senate voted to kill it by 59-41. The Senate, keen to have a deal in place before the markets open on Monday, with the potential for huge falls in share prices, is proposing a bill of its own scheduled to go to a vote on Sunday. The Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, speaking late on Friday about his new bill, said: “This is likely our last chance to save this nation from

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Dems, GOP Still at Odds As Clock Ticks

Republican House members came to the Capitol on Saturday to even the score with the Senate, preparing to reject Democratic legislation to avert an unprecedented US financial default. (July 30)

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That’s the 4 trillion-dollar question. Because if there are, then this whole debt ceiling debate will play out much differently than it has so far. But if there aren’t — if they’ve all gone over to the dark side — then we’re in for some bumpy roads. Kevin Drum is now saying what I said back in mid-July. The only way to get anything done will be for Republicans to divide, peel off the Tea Party, and join with Democrats. If Boehner can’t get the tea partiers in the House to support his proposal, and if Harry Reid can’t find 60 votes in the Senate for his, then pretty shortly they’ll figure out that there’s only one way to pass something: forge a compromise that can get substantial support from both Democrats and non-tea-party Republicans. Such a compromise is almost certainly available, and all it takes to get there is for Boehner to be willing to admit the obvious: the tea partiers just aren’t willing to deal, period. They want to burn the house down so they can build something better from the ashes. They’re insane. So walk away from the tea partiers. Instead, strike a deal that a hundred non-insane House Republicans and 20 or 30 non-insane Senate Republicans can support. Add that to a majority of the Democratic caucus and you’re done. You’ve saved the country. Steve Benen: I strongly agree with all of this. By most estimates, there’s a group of House Republicans — I call it the “Suicide Squad” — that just don’t want to raise the debt ceiling and would gladly pursue default. They’ll vote for right-wing measures such as CC&B, or something close to it, but anything else is simply out of the question. Exactly how big is this contingent? That’s unclear. There are 240 House Republicans, though, and it’ll take 217 votes to prevent a total disaster. Does the Suicide Squad include more than 23 members? Almost certainly, yes. This, again, makes it necessary for Boehner to embrace a plan that can garner some Democratic support. For me, the most pressing question, which I don’t know the answer to, is, how big is the Republicans’ sane contingent? Kevin envisions 100 or so non-insane House Republicans joining a similar number of House Democrats to save the country. Sounds good. But are there 100 sane House Republicans? I honestly have no idea. Is there a reliable count of such things? I would even ask it a little differently. The real question is: how many patriotic Republicans are there? How many are there in that Congress, who if asked to look in the mirror, could manage to do that after they screwed the entire country and forced us into slow economic death? And along those lines, this question: When do we start holding these Republicans to their oath to uphold the Constitution? That 14th amendment solution works two ways, as I see it. As sworn elected officials, their duty is first and foremost to uphold and protect the Constitution, which clearly states that the validity of public debt shall not be questioned. Shall not be questioned. Shall not. Since this is debt already authorized by Congressional appropriations, there would seem to be a Constitutional duty for these Republicans to honor their obligations as delineated in the 14th amendment. I am not a lawyer, nor do I claim to be any kind of Constitutional expert. But as an observer, it seems to me the 14th amendment cuts both ways and carries consequences to those who fail to honor it and who are primarily responsible for the debt; that is, the United States Congress. So that leaves us with not one, but two questions. First, are there any sane Republicans? And second, what consequences are there for those who are members of the “Suicide Squad?” In my opinion, those under the deepest obligation to honor the 14th amendment are members of Congress first, not the President, and I would like to see a loud, public discussion of what happens to un-American, Constitution-violating members of Congress if they continue down the path they’re on.

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CNN Still Pretending the ‘Tea Party’ is Not Just the Extreme Right Wing of the Republican Party

Click here to view this media While I do not disagree with any of the points that CNN’s Fareed Zakaria made to Anderson Cooper after seeing the turn that this debt ceiling hostage taking has taken with the extreme level of obstruction by these so-called “tea party” freshmen in the House of Representatives and as Zakaria pointed out, their refusal to do any negotiating at all during this debacle. But what both of them failed to point out here is that there is no “tea party.” It’s the extreme right wing of the Republican base. It’s a drummed up astroturf movement sponsored by corporate America that is not only one of Fox’s making, but CNN’s as well . I don’t believe for one minute that any of these right wing Republicans actually believe that it’s not necessary to raise the debt ceiling. I also don’t believe that any of them are too naive to realize what kind of dangerous game they’re playing with our economy. I don’t believe they’re acting out of ideological purity. I think they’re willing to play bad cop to push the Overton window even further to the right so that the rest of them can jam through right wing policies that would otherwise be completely unacceptable to the electorate in the name of a fake, drummed up emergency. It’s shock doctrine and the “tea party” is playing their part as the useful idiots. And our media continues to pretend that they’re some grass roots movement that is just beholden to some ideological purity and not just the extreme right of the Republican Party who is helping them to achieve their goal of destroying our social safety nets, which Republicans have hated ever since they’ve been enacted. And they’re doing corporate America’s bidding with helping to turn us into a third world country where we have no middle class left. That’s their goal. They’re not crazy. They’re bought and sold. CNN helped to create this monster. Now we’ve got Zakaria and Cooper bemoaning how undemocratic they’re behaving with Zakaria saying the president should invoke the 14th Amendment and end this nonsense. I don’t disagree with him there either, but maybe if CNN was not playing cheer leader for these posers we would not be in the mess we are now with these right wing extremists dominating our House of Representatives and with having the power to threaten the United States’ and the rest of the world’s economy with their hostage taking during this kabuki theater. Here’s the transcript from CNN . Every time they say the words “tea party”, substitute far right wing Republicans and maybe we’d have a halfway honest discussion going on here with where we are now, but one that still ignores CNN’s willingness to prop these wingnuts and their “movement” up in the first place. One that they’re still being dishonest about here. COOPER: We’ll talk about this with our panelists coming up later on the program. As we said, the Boehner bill passed by narrow margin, 218-210 and only after the speaker spent the day rounding support from Tea Party conservatives. Fareed Zakaria, host of “GPS” and editorial at large at “TIME” magazine joins us now on the telephone. Fareed, you say the Tea Party is anti-democratic at this point. And you talked about the polarization that is occurring. How can you that — how do you mean that they’re anti-democratic? FAREED ZAKARIA, HOST, “FAREED ZAKARIA GPS” (via telephone): Well, Anderson, if you think about what’s going on, the Tea Party is trying to pass a particular agenda, which is basically a balanced budget or, you know, this all cuts budget. It cannot get it through the Congress of the United States. It cannot get it through the political democratic process that we have which is that Congress passes something and the president must sign it. That’s the normal workings of democracy. So, instead of accepting some compromise that can get through the democratic process, what they’re saying is we’ll blow up the country if you don’t listen to us. We’ll hold hostage the credit of the United States, the good standing of the United States, and we’ll blow it up. Now, that is why even Charles Krauthammer, columnist for “The Washington Post,” fire-breathing conservative urged today in his column in “The Washington Post” not to go down this path because he called it counter constitutional. In other words, they are not acting in the way that constitutional democracy expects you to act. You are meant to respect the Democratic process. You try your best to convince to get a majority in the House, a majority in the Senate and the president to sign it. But if you control just one of those three branches of government, you can’t hijack the entire system and say I’m going to blow the country up unless you listen to me. COOPER: Well, Fareed, they’re saying though that — ZAKARIA: They have only won one election to one house once. COOPER: They’re saying they’re not holding anybody hostage. They’re saying, look, this is what we said we would do to get elected. We’ve been elected. This is what people elected us to do. ZAKARIA: Well, unfortunately, as I say I think they don’t understand the workings of democracy. They have not been elected as dictators of the United States. They have been elected to one house in one branch of the American government. The only way you can translate your wishes into public policy in America is if you can convince your branch and the other one, the Senate and the White House, to go along with it. If you can’t, you’ve got to figure out amongst yourself what you can agree on. This is why it is fundamentally anti-democratic, counter constitutional in the words of Charles Krauthammer to be trying to do this. You know, it’s just an extraordinary act of hostage taking on the part of the Tea Party. It is holding the country hostage. And it has already damaged the good standing of the United States. Our debts — it’s very important to understand that Tea Party talks a lot about morality. In a capitalist framework, the obligation you owe in terms of repaying your debts is a moral obligation. When the Visa bill comes you can decide that stuff you bought is stuff that you don’t want. You pay the bill. Then you can have an interesting conversation about how to reform your spending. But you can’t renege on your debts. COOPER: What do you think is going to happen now? ZAKARIA: It seems very difficult to see how the kind of people you were talking to, Anderson, are going to accept some kind of compromise. You know, it seems to me you have to accept that 300 million people in this country, not all of them agree with you. And so you make your best case, you take as much as you can. They had a deal. John Boehner provided a deal with $3 trillion of spending cuts for $1 trillion in revenue enhancements — all of it through closing tax loopholes, none of it through raising rates. Now, if that’s not acceptable, I really don’t know where you go. And my sense is, I hope that President Obama is seriously exploring the possibility of invoking the 14th Amendment. COOPER: Really? You think that’s a valid option? (CROSSTALK) ZAKARIA: — will not be questioned, and saying that he has the legal authority to simply raise the debt ceiling himself. I think that President Bill Clinton thinks that it is a viable argument. I’m not a constitutional lawyer. But I think we have reached a level of dysfunction here that this is the kind of national emergency almost like a war. And if the president were to invoke that and if it were to go to the Supreme Court, I have a feeling the court would as it does with War Powers issues say this is a political issue. We’re not going to get involved. And the president’s writ would stand. COOPER: And, Fareed, to the Republicans who say, well, look this August 2nd is not really going to be the ca cataclysm that people talk about? ZAKARIA: Look, it may not be August 2nd. It may be August 4th. Nobody doubts that we’re running out of money. Nobody doubts that we have to borrow more money, whether it’s August 2nd or 5th, or whether you can go some (INAUDIBLE). Is this how the greatest economy in the world should be run that we should be saying, well, we can first pay the — we’ll take the first 20 cents out of every dollar and pay the debt, but we won’t pay the veterans and we won’t — and if you listen to what the congressman said to you, Anderson, he said I don’t want any tax increases. No closing of loopholes. I want to pay the interest on the debt. I want to look after our seniors. That’s Medicare, Social Security. And then I want to look after the army. Well, you know, I’ve got news for you, Congressman. There ain’t much money left. If you aren’t willing to cut any of those things and not willing to raise tax revenues then you’re going to have to rely on magic to somehow balance the budget. That’s all the big money. That’s where it is. It’s not in some mythical waste fraud abuse. The bulk of the money is in Social Security, Medicare, the military, interest on the debt. You can abolish the space shuttle program and the Department of Education and that’s going to get you four days’ worth of money. COOPER: Fareed Zakaria — Fareed, appreciate it. Thanks very much. ZAKARIA: Thanks.

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US debt crisis: Senate Democrats block Republican cuts bill

Frenzied efforts to avoid ‘economic disaster’ as parties wrangle over formula to raise debt ceiling and cut spending The frenzied legislative manoeuvring to avert a crippling US debt default is continuing as Tuesday’s deadline to raise the country’s debt ceiling looms and Congress remains split down party lines. Late on Friday night the Republican-controlled House finally approved a bill to raise the debt ceiling in return for billions of dollars in spending cuts, but the Democratic Senate quickly rejected it. The back-to-back votes broke weeks of political inertia in efforts to lift the $14.3tn (£8.7tn) US debt limit by Tuesday, after which the world’s largest economy will be unable to pay all of its bills. The Democratic Senate leader, Harry Reid, ceded some ground when he revised his own deficit-reduction proposal to incorporate parts of a “back-up plan” first proposed by the Senate’s top Republican, Mitch McConnell. Reid is seeking a vote on the new proposal on Saturday. “Unless there is a compromise or [Republicans] accept my bill we’re headed for economic disaster,” Reid said. The new version would essentially give Barack Obama the authority – and the blame – for raising the debt ceiling in three stages to cover US borrowing needs through the 2012 elections when he is running for a second term. Obama and the Democrats had hoped to avoid multiple votes before the election. Speaking after dismal figures for US growth increased the pressure on politicians to prevent a fresh meltdown in global markets, Obama said: “I am confident we can solve this problem. I am confident we will solve this problem. “For all the intrigue and all the drama that’s taking place on Capitol Hill right now I’m confident that common sense and cooler heads will prevail.” But Congress remained in disarray for much of Friday with the Republican leader in the House, John Boehner, in a dangerous mood after failing to quell a humiliating revolt by the Tea Party wing. Boehner scheduled a vote on Thursday on a Republican bill to raise the debt ceiling and cut spending, but hardcore conservatives refused to back it and the vote had to be temporarily abandoned. The bill was substantially rewritten to meet conservative rebels’ demands. The febrile mood in Washington was matched on Wall Street and in the City of London, where news that the US grew at an annual rate of just 1.3% in the three months to June prompted renewed concern that the world’s biggest economy could lapse back into recession if ratings agencies downgrade its debt. Speculation that the Federal Reserve might need to embark on a third round of quantitative easing – the creation of electronic money – intensified after revisions to past figures for US gross domestic product showed the recession was deeper than originally believed and the subsequent recovery weaker. America’s peak-to-trough drop in output between 2007 and 2009 is now put at 5.1% rather than the 4.1% originally estimated. With the International Monetary Fund warning the US that a continued impasse risks reigniting Europe’s debt crisis, bond yields in Italy and Spain rose. The interest rate on 10-year Italian bonds rose to 5.89%, while that for Spain – where the government called a general election – climbed to 6.09%. Shares in London closed 1% lower, a drop of 58.02 at 5815.19, while the Dow Jones industrial average closed down 96.87 points at 12,143.24, completing a week of daily falls. Sources close to George Osborne, the British chancellor, said the new figures from the US showed that the American and British experience during and after the global downturn had been similar, weakening the argument for the coalition to revisit its tough austerity plans. If the US does not raise its debt ceiling by 2 August it risks being unable to continue borrowing and pay its bills. Obama has said that default is not an option so the US treasury will prioritise keeping up interest payments, which could mean cuts elsewhere. The president reiterated that the victims could be people expecting federal cheques for welfare, and military veterans and government contractors awaiting payments. “This is not a situation where the two parties are miles apart,” Obama said. “There are a lot of crises in the world that we can’t always predict or avoid: hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, terrorist attacks. This isn’t one of those crises. The power to solve this is in our hands.” US politics US economy Economics United States Democrats Republicans Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Vikings Pick Up McNabb From Redskins

The Vikings found a veteran quarterback Friday, aquiring Donovan McNabb from the Redskins. McNabb comes off a mediocre season after going to one Super Bowl and five NFC championship games with the Eagles. (July 29)

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House OKs, Senate Nixes 11th-hour Debt Plan

Shrugging off warnings from President Barack Obama that it won’t resolve the crisis, House Republicans muscled through a new plan to raise the debt limit, but the Senate promptly scuttled it. (July 29)

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The House and Senate pushed ahead today with separate measures to avert a default next week, but neither offered immediate hope for ending the standoff. John Boehner reworked his proposal to appease conservatives and planned a vote this evening. The measure, expected to tie in a balanced-budget amendment, stands almost…

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House Approves Debt Bill; Senate Rejects It

In an unforgiving display of partisanship, the House approved emergency legislation Friday night to avoid an unprecedented government default, but the Senate scuttled it less than two hours later. (July 29)

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