Archive for December, 2007

Former Midnight Oil singer learns political ropes with Australian Cabinet post

Posted in Uncategorized, Music by Administrator on December 29th, 2007

Who’s gonna save Aussie environment? Garrett says he will

ACTIVISM | Former Midnight Oil singer learns political ropes with Cabinet post

December 29, 2007
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

http://www.suntimes.com/news/world/718315,CST-FTR-oil29.article

SYDNEY, Australia — The music of Peter Garrett has always been politically charged. Now the towering, bald-headed former singer of Midnight Oil is charged with practicing politics — as Australia’s new environment minister.

Garrett founded the band when he was a law student in 1973. The semipunk group achieved global fame with its 1987 track ‘’Beds Are Burning,'’ a protest song about Aboriginal land rights. With his wild dancing and strident voice, Garrett became one of Australia’s most recognizable singers until the band broke up in 2002.

Garrett made his first foray into politics with an unsuccessful bid for the Senate as a member of the Nuclear Disarmament Party in 1984.

Alongside his singing career, Garrett headed the Australian Conservation Foundation and sat on the inter- national board of the environmental group Greenpeace.

The 6-foot-6-inch singer was elected to Parliament in 2004 and enjoyed a meteoric rise through the Labor Party ranks. Last December, Garrett was promoted to lead Labor’s attack on then-Prime Minister John Howard’s environment policies. But his high profile came with its own baggage.

Many former colleagues in the conservation movement accused him of selling out on issues such as uranium mining and old-growth logging. Garrett has said that being a member of a major party is the best way to affect change.

Late last month, Prime Minister-elect Kevin Rudd appointed Garrett to be the environment minister in his new cabinet, but appointed a second minister, Sen. Penny Wong, to take responsibility for climate change.

The move is widely considered a demotion for Garrett, who had been the opposition spokesman for both the environment and climate change.

Many analysts see the decision as a rebuke to Garrett, who made a series of gaffes during the campaign, including reportedly telling a radio talk show host off the record that Labor would renege on campaign promises once elected.

Great information source on Medicare For All (H.R. 676)

Posted in Uncategorized, Maryland Political News, Labor union news & views, Healthcare by Administrator on December 28th, 2007

Great information Source on Medicare For All (H.R. 676)

December 28th, 2007
ILLINOIS TEACHERS UNIONS ENDORSE HR 676

Chicago, Illinois. Rejecting a “band-aid approach” to healthcare, the
University Professionals of Illinois, AFT Local 4100, endorsed HR 676,
single payer healthcare legislation introduced by Congressman John Conyers
(D-Mich).

“Beyond the fact that 46 or 47 million uninsured Americans are forced to
play Texas Hold ‘Em with their health care, nearly a third of our health
care dollars supports private insurance bureaucracy and paperwork. That’s
not health care. That’s waste,” said Sue Kaufman, UPI Local 4100
president.

AFT local 4100 represents faculty and staff in 12 chapters at seven public
universities in Illinois. It is affiliated with the Illinois Federation
of Teachers, the American Federation of Teachers, and the AFL-CIO. The
Executive Board of the 3,000 member local unanimously approved the
endorsement on December 1.

Another AFT affiliated group, the Illinois Federation of Teachers
Universities Council, also endorsed HR 676.
30#

HR 676 would institute a single payer health care system in the U.S. by
expanding a greatly improved Medicare system to every resident.

HR 676 would cover every person in the U. S. for all necessary medical
care including prescription drugs, hospital, surgical, outpatient
services, primary and preventive care, emergency services, dental, mental
health, home health, physical therapy, rehabilitation (including for
substance abuse), vision care, chiropractic and long term care. HR 676
ends deductibles and co-payments. HR 676 would save billions annually by
eliminating the high overhead and profits of the private health insurance
industry and HMOs.

HR 676 currently has 87 co-sponsors in addition to Conyers. Co-sponsors
and bill text are here:

http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:h.r.00676:

HR 676 has been endorsed by 345 union organizations in 48 states including
94 Central Labor Councils and Area Labor Federations and 29 state AFL-CIOs
(KY, PA, CT, OH, DE, ND, WA, SC, WY, VT, FL, WI, WV, SD, NC, MO, MN, ME,
AR, MD-DC, TX, IA, AZ, TN, OR, GA, OK, KS & CO).

For further information, a list of union endorsers, or a sample
endorsement resolution, contact:

Kay Tillow
All Unions Committee For Single Payer Health Care–HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551
Email: nursenpo@aol.com

Medicare For All via H.R. 676

Posted in Uncategorized, Maryland Political News, Labor union news & views, Healthcare by Administrator on December 27th, 2007

Medicare For All via H.R. 676

It is obvious that none of the major Presidential candidates of either the Democratic or Republican Parties are supporting the right approach to providing universal healthcare. Frankly, all the Republican candidates are going to be major obstacles to achieving this national goal. While the top Democratic candidates (Clinton, Edwards and Obama) do support the concept, they are all offering Band-Aid approaches for a life-threatening economic and health crisis in America.

A bill has already been introduced in The House by Congressman John Conyers that effectively addresses the issue. H.R. 676 expands Medicare to cover all citizens.

The scope of the healthcare crisis in America is huge. It has very serious economic and moral implications. It is crippling our nation in terms of protecting American manufacturing, competing in the global economy and undermines our national security. It reflects badly on us as a just and moral society. It is literally killing Americans in huge numbers.

The number of Americans without health insurance is currently 47 million and growing rapidly. The number of underinsured Americans is much larger than the number of uninsured Americans. In America, over half of all personal bankruptcies are the direct result of medical crises. Over half of those bankruptcies are from individuals who had health insurance when their medical crises started.

Industry friendly studies of the number of Americans who died because they had no health insurance place the number at around 50 per week. The number is absurdly low and illogical.

Doing without healthcare at any point in life for a significant period of time will likely create health issues and physical damage. This damage accumulates over a lifetime and shortens your lifespan. You die younger than you would have if you had always had adequate healthcare. You might die at 70 instead of 85. In addition, the last years might have much lower levels of quality. Since most people die after reaching the age where Medicare coverage is already in effect, those deaths are not counted as resulting from a lack of healthcare insurance although they can be directly traced to an earlier lack of coverage. Most of the deaths resulting from a lack of healthcare insurance are thus concealed.

Even using the fraudulent 50 per week figure, killing Americans to preserve the profits of HMO’s and insurance companies is completely immoral. Bankrupting Americans because of illness is a national disgrace. It does not happen in other industrialized nations. Out of the top 75 most industrialized nations in the world, only in the United States are citizens not provided by their government with universal healthcare.

In the United States, we saddle our businesses and corporations with the cost of providing for the healthcare needs of their employees. Our international competitors do not. This is one of the major reasons why good paying manufacturing and service sector jobs are leaving our nation. It is economic suicide.

None of the Band-Aid approaches advocated by the top Democratic Presidential candidates deal effectively with the trade implications of healthcare policy. I am personally supporting Edwards because he is more inclined to advance fair and balanced trade agreements than Clinton and Obama. For example, Clinton and Obama supported the most recent “so-called free trade” agreement with Peru while Edwards did not. However, even Edwards has not yet addressed the clear connection between international trade and healthcare.

The best solution for providing universal healthcare is expanding Medicare to cover all American citizens. Medicare is a proven program. It is popular and cost-effective. Our current private system has much higher levels of overhead costs than does Medicare. The only inefficient aspects of Medicare are the “privatized” programs added by the Bush White House and their Republican allies in the Senate. Medicare has been hugely successful despite ongoing Republican and corporate attempts to undermine it.

We can count on Republican politicians to label any move toward universal healthcare as “socialized medicine.” They attempted mightily to destroy Medicare in the past using such tactics and failed completely. Politically, providing universal healthcare by expanding Medicare will be much easier than any other approach.

The private, profit-drive healthcare system is terribly unfair and inefficient. We spend 17 percent of our total economy on healthcare while our international competitors spend only 8 percent. They cover everyone and we do not. The numbers speak for themselves!

Expanding Medicare to cover everyone will not prevent citizens from buying supplemental healthcare if they can afford it. It will greatly help doctors who are General Practitioners by making medical need become effective demand. It will help hospitals by removing the burden of providing healthcare to those who cannot pay for it. It will make our workers healthier and more productive.

There must be a grassroots movement built behind “Medicare For All.” Local activists, union leaders, businesses and politicians must all exert their efforts in a common movement. Most national union organizations and state AFL-CIO organizations are supporting H.R. 676. They are joined by many members of Congress. The legislation has 89 co-sponsors with more being added frequently. Many candidates are backing it!

Local leaders are already getting organized all over the nation. People like Amos B. McCluney, Jr. in Delaware and Alena Bandy in Maryland are actively organizing Medicare For All state chapters. Both leaders are grassroots Democratic activists with roots in the United Auto Workers. Both are reaching out into the community recruiting civil rights leaders, churches, community organizations and local politicians behind H.R. 676. They are not alone. I personally have talked with local activists from Tennessee, Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania and several other states who are working on building support for this legislation.

Pressure must be placed on all opinion leaders to support Medicare For All. Presidential, Senatorial and Congressional candidates should be pressured to support H.R. 676. All candidates should be placed on record that they would not veto Medicare For All nor place legislative obstacles in the way of passing H.R. 676, even if they do not actively support passage. Candidates failing to make such public pledges should not be supported by any American citizen.

Average Americans must reframe the debate over healthcare. Instead of calling for universal healthcare or single-payer healthcare, we should simplify the debate. We should be calling for “Medicare For All” and supporting H.R. 676.

Written by Stephen Crockett (co-host of Democratic Talk Radio http://www.DemocraticTalkRadio.com and Editor of Mid-Atlantic Labor.com http://www.midatlanticlabor.com ). Mail: P.O. Box 283, Earleville, Maryland 21919. Email: midsouthcm@aol.com . Phone: 443-907-2367.

Feel free to publish without prior approval.

State of the Unions

Posted in Uncategorized, Labor union news & views by Administrator on December 25th, 2007

By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: December 24, 2007

New York Times link

Once upon a time, back when America had a strong middle class, it also had a strong union movement. These two facts were connected. Unions negotiated good wages and benefits for their workers, gains that often ended up being matched even by nonunion employers. They also provided an important counterbalance to the political influence of corporations and the economic elite.

Today, however, the American union movement is a shadow of its former self, except among government workers. In 1973, almost a quarter of private-sector employees were union members, but last year the figure was down to a mere 7.4 percent.

Yet unions still matter politically. And right now they’re at the heart of a nasty political scuffle among Democrats. Before I get to that, however, let’s talk about what happened to American labor over the last 35 years.

It’s often assumed that the U.S. labor movement died a natural death, that it was made obsolete by globalization and technological change. But what really happened is that beginning in the 1970s, corporate America, which had previously had a largely cooperative relationship with unions, in effect declared war on organized labor.

Don’t take my word for it; read Business Week, which published an article in 2002 titled “How Wal-Mart Keeps Unions at Bay.” The article explained that “over the past two decades, Corporate America has perfected its ability to fend off labor groups.” It then described the tactics — some legal, some illegal, all involving a healthy dose of intimidation — that Wal-Mart and other giant firms use to block organizing drives.

These hardball tactics have been enabled by a political environment that has been deeply hostile to organized labor, both because politicians favored employers’ interests and because conservatives sought to weaken the Democratic Party. “We’re going to crush labor as a political entity,” Grover Norquist, the anti-tax activist, once declared.

But the times may be changing. A newly energized progressive movement seems to be on the ascendant, and unions are a key part of that movement. Most notably, the Service Employees International Union has played a key role in pushing for health care reform. And unions will be an important force in the Democrats’ favor in next year’s election.

Or maybe not — which brings us to the latest from Iowa.

Whoever receives the Democratic presidential nomination will receive labor’s support in the general election. Meanwhile, however, unions are supporting favored candidates. Hillary Clinton — who for a time seemed the clear front-runner — has received the most union support. John Edwards, whose populist message resonates with labor, has also received considerable labor support.

But Barack Obama, though he has a solid pro-labor voting record, has not — in part, perhaps, because his message of “a new kind of politics” that will transcend bitter partisanship doesn’t make much sense to union leaders who know, from the experience of confronting corporations and their political allies head on, that partisanship isn’t going away anytime soon.

O.K., that’s politics. But now Mr. Obama has lashed out at Mr. Edwards because two 527s — independent groups that are allowed to support candidates, but are legally forbidden from coordinating directly with their campaigns — are running ads on his rival’s behalf. They are, Mr. Obama says, representative of the kind of “special interests” that “have too much influence in Washington.”

The thing, though, is that both of these 527s represent union groups — in the case of the larger group, local branches of the S.E.I.U. who consider Mr. Edwards the strongest candidate on health reform. So Mr. Obama’s attack raises a couple of questions.

First, does it make sense, in the current political and economic environment, for Democrats to lump unions in with corporate groups as examples of the special interests we need to stand up to?

Second, is Mr. Obama saying that if nominated, he’d be willing to run without support from labor 527s, which might be crucial to the Democrats? If not, how does he avoid having his own current words used against him by the Republican nominee?

Part of what happened here, I think, is that Mr. Obama, looking for a stick with which to beat an opponent who has lately acquired some momentum, either carelessly or cynically failed to think about how his rhetoric would affect the eventual ability of the Democratic nominee, whoever he or she is, to campaign effectively. In this sense, his latest gambit resembles his previous echoing of G.O.P. talking points on Social Security.

Beyond that, the episode illustrates what’s wrong with campaigning on generalities about political transformation and trying to avoid sounding partisan.

It may be partisan to say that a 527 run by labor unions supporting health care reform isn’t the same thing as a 527 run by insurance companies opposing it. But it’s also the simple truth.

Is A 2008 Consensus Emerging Against “Free Trade” Policies?

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on December 23rd, 2007

Is A 2008 Consensus Emerging Against “Free Trade” Policies?

http://www.laborradio.org/node/7548

By Doug Cunningham

Pollster and Democratic political strategist Doug Scheon says a consensus is emerging on changing course in U.S. trade policy because the reality of what our so-called free trade policies have done to hurt U.S. workers, businesses and consumers is becoming clear. Scheon says unions have been instrumental in helping create this shift, but they no longer alone in their positions on the issue.

: “I think labor unions have been and will remain influential. But I think today we’re looking at a new consensus on trade, involving labor, working people and also business people who recognize that you can’t compete fairly - you can’t have free trade - if other nations are playing by rules that are very, very much different from our own.”

Scheon believes trade will be very important in the 2008 presidential election.

: “Unless we pass legislation quickly to protect American working people and American consumers, we are making a profound mistake as a country. I think this election will be a watershed in terms of changing attitudes on trade and policy. And I believe that the net winners will be the American people if we develop a new consensus on trade.”

Edwards is FDR with a Southern Accent

Posted in Uncategorized, Labor union news & views by Administrator on December 23rd, 2007

Edwards is FDR with a Southern Accent

The Democratic Presidential candidate John Edwards is potentially the person most likely to realign the two major political parties for the next generation or two. Edwards is a Democratic political leader who is not only closely mirroring FDR as a historical figure but is doing so by following in the same political and economic traditions as FDR. The main differences are personal backgrounds and accents.

During the 1930’s, President Roosevelt essentially ended the dominance of the “Bourbon Democrats” in national Democratic politics and moved the Democratic Party solidly behind a political program of economic populism. As a result, the nation saw a couple generations of solid economic growth and mass prosperity. A vibrant middle class emerged from the policies promoted by FDR. The Democratic Party clearly replaced the Republicans as the stronger of the two major parties as a result.

Beginning with the election of Ronald Reagan, many Democrats in power drifted away from the core values of the Democratic Party and started running as “Republican-lite” candidates. They started trying to compete for corporate campaign money by permitting awful trade agreements that undermined the health of the American economy and weakened the American middle class while helping the economic elite become even more powerful.

Some Democrats playing footsie with Republicans and large corporations failed working Americans and the poor by letting the obscenely wealthy start paying much lower percentages of their incomes in federal taxes than the middle class majority. Many Democrats started turning their backs on some common sense elements of the Roosevelt tradition of having those able to pay higher taxes pay them. We call this progressive taxation. The rich pay should be paying higher tax rates since they have more influence on government policies and benefit more from them.

They completely abandoned our federal government commitment to preventing monopoly control by large corporations of many important aspects of everyday life. Price-gouging has become routine. Insider trading and excessive executive pay has become routine in the corporate world. Wealthy foreign corporations are often having more impact on government policies than the needs of average Americans. Media consolidation has blocked out almost all non-corporate voices in the discussion of public policy issues. Edwards wants less corporate control over everyday life and has specific programs in mind to move in that direction.

The wages of Americans have been suppressed. The ability to unionize in order to achieve higher standards of living has been attacked by federal legislation, right wing court rulings and harassment by oppressive federal government regulation by the Bush Administration. Edwards is the most labor-friendly Presidential candidate of the top-tier candidates. With Edwards, we have a candidate who both walks the walk and talks the talk. Edwards is strongly opposed to outsourcing American jobs and is committed to ending unfair international trade deals or tax policies that encourage corporations to move jobs out of the nation.

Poverty in America has largely been ignored by our political leadership since the 1980’s. We waste trillions of dollars fighting unnecessary wars but seem unwilling to seriously commit to eliminating institutionalize poverty. Edwards is the only candidate really talking about poverty in America. Poverty is a serious issue in many rural American communities and inner cities. Most candidates ignore the poor because they do not write big campaign donation checks. Edwards can give the poor hope and get them voting.

We remain the only nation out of the 75 most economically advanced nations not to have government guaranteed universal health insurance. We cripple our corporations in international competition by forcing them to provide for healthcare. As a nation we spend 17% of our economy on healthcare while our competitors spend 8%. Our competitors cover all citizens while we have 47 million uninsured citizens and even more underinsured. If we had not abandoned our FDR political traditions, this situation would have been corrected long ago. Edwards is committed to universal healthcare.

John Edwards is uniquely focused on returning Democrats to their FDR roots of economic populism. The Bush Republicans are committed to short-term “Greed Capitalism” that is as self-destructive as the Republican policies of the 1920’s. FDR saved American capitalism by reforming it with the New Deal. Edwards can do the same.

Edwards can restore the FDR coalition by running as an economic populist. He can win in places like North Carolina, Florida, Colorado, Virginia and Oklahoma. Edwards might even win in places like Texas. He can win without abandoning Democratic traditional values. Edwards can carry rural communities and small towns without going Republican-lite. Edwards will carry all the traditional Democratic areas and much more because he truly represents Main Street instead of Wall Street.

Although from a working class background instead of coming from great inherited wealth, Edwards is much like our greatest American President, Franklin D. Roosevelt. Edwards has similar views with a Southern accent.

Written by Stephen Crockett (co-host of Democratic Talk Radio http://www.DemocraticTalkRadio.com and Editor of Mid-Atlantic Labor.com http://www.midatlanticlabor.com ). Mail: P.O. Box 283, Earleville, Maryland 21919. Email: midsouthcm@aol.com . Phone: 443-907-2367.

Feel free to publish without prior approval.

Cecil Whig not covering Democratic Congressional candidates like Frank Kratovil

Posted in Whig Letters, Maryland Political News by Administrator on December 23rd, 2007

The Cecil Whig should be paying much more attention to covering the Democratic Congressional candidates. The race on the Democratic side is just as interesting as on the Republican side.

In my opinion, the 1st Congressional District is very likely to go Democratic next November. Partially, this because of the civil war raging in the Maryland Republican Party. However, the entire nation is largely rejecting Republican doctrine after 7 years of terrible policies, incompetence and corruption. Even without Republican division, the Democrats were likely to take the seat.

Personally, I am supporting Queen Anne’s County States Attorney Frank Kratovil, Jr. The choice was difficult. I have known his strongest challenger Chris Robinson for decades. He is a good man. If Kratovil was not in the race, I would be supporting Chris.

Kratovil is very strong on the issues. He really understands the problems facing working Americans. He is very bright. Frank Kratovil has a warm personality. Unlike the Republicans running, Kratovil knows how to represent all voters including Republicans, independents and Democrats. He wins big in his home county which tends to vote heavily Republican. He is a mainstream Democrats who connects with everyone.

I hope the Whig will cover the Democratic campaign and report on the Kratovil campaign.

Sincerely,

Stephen Crockett

P.O. Box 283
Earleville, Maryland 21919

443-907-2367

O’Malley, Gansler Join Kratovil on Campaign Trail

Posted in Maryland Political News by Administrator on December 20th, 2007

O’Malley, Gansler Join Kratovil on Campaign Trail

Frank Kratovil, two-term Queen Anne’s County State’s Attorney and Democratic primary candidate for Maryland’s First Congressional District, was joined on the campaign trail by Governor Martin O’Malley and Attorney General Douglas Gansler at fundraisers in Baltimore City and Montgomery County during the past week.

“I am gratified at the level of support these Maryland leaders have brought to my campaign,” Mr. Kratovil remarked. “We will more than exceed our original goals for these two events.” The campaign projects to raise $60,000.00 from the events.

Governor O’Malley hosted an event attended by approximately 100 supporters Monday, December 17 at the offices Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll in Baltimore.

“It has been many years since we had a Democrat of Frank Kratovil’s caliber running for Congress in Maryland’s First Congressional District,” Governor O’Malley remarked. “Frank ran for State’s Attorney on a ‘law and order’ platform that resonated with his neighbors, Democrats, Independents, and Republicans alike.”

“Frank’s record demonstrates that he is a leader who rises to the occasion to tackle tough problems, a leader who looks to the future of a better and stronger state and nation,” Governor O’Malley said.

Attorney General Gansler joined Kratovil supporters gathered at the Bethesda home of Colleen and Rich Gardella on Thursday, December 13.

“Frank is a dynamic leader who stands out as the candidate for change,” Attorney General Gansler told Kratovil supporters. “Frank has the energy and tenacity to represent the First District and to help bring change in Washington on our Iraq policy, improving health care in our country, and strengthening the federal commitment to restoring the Chesapeake Bay.”

Mr. Kratovil was first elected in 2002 by unseating a four-term incumbent. He was overwhelmingly re-elected without opposition in 2006. He is the only elected official among the Democratic field. Frank, 39, his wife Kimberly and their four sons reside in Stevensville on Kent Island where he is involved in his children’s sports teams and other community activities.

Mr. Kratovil has been endorsed by Governor Martin O’Malley, Lt. Governor Anthony Brown, Attorney General Douglas Gansler, Senate President Thomas V. “Mike” Miller, Comptroller Peter Franchot, former governors Harry Hughes and Parris Glendening, and former Attorney General Joseph Curran, as well as legislative and local leaders in the First Congressional District……

http://www.kratovil.net/headlines2A.html

    Upcoming events

Wedneday, January 9
Talbot County Candidates Forum
7:00 p.m. at the Academy of the Arts, 106 South Street, Easton.
For details call 410.822.6003 or 410.708.2663.

Wedneday, January 16
Dorchester County Candidates Forum
7:00 p.m. at the American Legion in Cambridge. For details call 410.754.8688.

For more information on future events or the events listed above please go to: http://www.kratovil.com/Events.html

RECORD BREAKING: SENATE CONSERVATIVES USE FILIBUSTER FOR 62ND TIME IN THIS SESSION OF CONGRESS

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on December 19th, 2007

Hi Stephen, This evening Senate conservatives used the filibuster for the 62nd time, breaking the modern-day record for filibuster use in a session of Congress. See below for a release and visit http://home.ourfuture.org/assets/block-and-blame.pdf for today’s new report by the Campaign for America’s Future detailing the GOP obstructionist stranglehold on the Senate.

Anne Thompson, Sr. Media Specialist
Campaign for America’s Future
202.587.1614

RECORD BREAKING: SENATE CONSERVATIVES USE FILIBUSTER FOR 62ND TIME IN THIS SESSION OF CONGRESS

New Report Shows How Conservative Minority Rules by Filibuster, Preventing Up or Down Vote on a Record Number of Bills

WASHINGTON – The Republican Senate minority today filibustered an omnibus budget bill, setting a modern-day record for blocking the most legislation during a congressional session. A new report released today by the Campaign for America’s Future details the 62 times conservatives have used the filibuster to block legislation (or force modification of bills) in the first session of the 110th Congress. In just the first year of this two-year Congress, their use of the filibuster in the Senate topped the previous record, reached during the entire 107th Congress.

The new report outlines every bill filibustered, vetoed or threatened to be vetoed by President Bush. Conservatives filibustered bills to end the occupation of Iraq, provide soldiers in Iraq rest time equal to their deployments, support renewable energy and grant residents of the District of Columbia representation in Congress. Today’s record-breaker involved a $516 billion budget package passed by the House to fund the federal government in 2008. The conservative minority demanded $20 billion additional funding for the war and opposed House language to bring troops home, and threatened a filibuster to prevent the bill from getting an up or down vote.

“In just one session, a minority in Congress has prevented a mind-blowing 62 pieces of legislation from going to the floor for an up or down vote,” said Campaign for America’s Future co-director Roger Hickey. “Our report shows how over and over again, the uncompromising minority has thwarted the will of majorities in Congress and of the American people, holding the Senate floor hostage to a radical right-wing agenda.”

Sixty votes are needed to invoke cloture and end a filibuster. The 62nd cloture vote of the session is more than any single session of Congress since at least 1973, the earliest year cloture votes are available online from the Senate. Republicans are on pace to force 134 cloture votes to cut off a filibuster, according to the Campaign for America’s Future analysis, more than double the historical average of the last 35 years.

Even pieces of legislation that have made it past the Senate filibuster blockade have been obstructed by President Bush. Last week the President vetoed for the second time a popular bill that would expand health coverage for 10 million American children. According to the Campaign for America’s Future report, Bush has threatened to veto 84 bills and has vetoed six as of December 17. In contrast, during the period when the Republicans were in the congressional majority, Bush went the longest time without vetoing a bill since President Arthur Garfield.
Eric Lotke, Campaign for America’s Future research director and lead author of the new report, calls the obstruction a “deliberate strategy.” He observes that the congressional Republicans block legislation, then blame the Democrats for getting nothing done. “It’s like mugging the postman and then complaining that the mail isn’t delivered on time.”
The story of this historic level of obstruction has recently been covered by The New York Times, but has yet to be fully told in the media. The new Campaign for America’s Future report shows how major media outlets describe the 60-vote threshold as an ordinary procedure, neglecting that this tactic is an unprecedented assertion of minority control.

# # #

**NOTE: To obtain an electronic copy of the Campaign for America’s Future’s report “Block and Blame: The Conservative Strategy of Obstruction in the 110th Congress,” please visit http://home.ourfuture.org/assets/block-and-blame.pdf

Lieberman’s “Nothing” Endorsement of John McCain

Posted in Uncategorized by Administrator on December 17th, 2007

Lieberman’s “Nothing” Endorsement of John McCain

The media filled the airwaves and wasted tons of paper reporting on the endorsement of independent Senator Joseph Lieberman of Republican Senator John McCain. While Lieberman does have a stronger base in the Republican Party than he has among independents or Democrats, he has very little support anywhere.

Lieberman is, like McCain, a fanatic hawk on Iraq. Both men are leaders in the eternal war movement. They are frankly dangerous extremists when it comes to foreign policy, military adventurism and establishing police state powers in our federal government. In my opinion, they are two of the biggest threats to the Bill of Rights that exist in the U.S. Senate.

I am delighted that Lieberman did not support one of the Democrats I really like in the Democratic Presidential primary. If Lieberman had endorsed John Edwards or Joe Biden, I would have been really worried. Luckily, all the Democratic Presidential candidates dodged a bullet by not getting a Lieberman endorsement.

If Connecticut had a mechanism to recall a member of the U.S. Senate, Lieberman would likely lose his seat in the Senate in 2008. Unfortunately, Connecticut voters will have to wait until 2012 to retire Lieberman. Lieberman has very high negatives in his home state.

Historically, Lieberman often received significant support from organized labor. Union activists will be very upset with Lieberman for supporting the militantly anti-union Senator McCain.

The Republicans in Connecticut, who basically elected Lieberman in 2006, are getting a bit of a payback for abandoning their Republican Senate nominee. Lieberman is now mucking around in their Presidential nominating process although he is not a Republican. He is just an opportunist. Connecticut Republicans, who support candidates other than McCain, must be livid.

Lieberman has no significant national following. His endorsement is a nothing endorsement. It is nothing but funny! Democrats are really enjoying all the media created fuss.

Written by Stephen Crockett (co-host of Democratic Talk Radio http://www.DemocraticTalkRadio.com and Editor of Mid-Atlantic Labor.com http://www.midatlanticlabor.com ). Mail: P.O. Box 283, Earleville, Maryland 21919. Email: midsouthcm@aol.com . Phone: 443-907-2367.

Feel free to publish without prior approval.


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