Archive for the ‘politicaln.wordpress.com’ category

DNC Topped RNC in Oct. Fund-Raising

November 20, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Kleinreports:

The Democratic National Committee is set to announce that it raised $11.5 million last month, according to a party official, topping the $8.79 million that the Republican National Committee heraldedas a new one-month record for an off-cycle year.

The official said the DNC's month marks a party record in the post-2003 period, with the McCain-Feingold law's ban on soft money contributions in effect.

The strong pre-election month left the DNC with $12.3 million in cash on hand as of the beginning of November, compared to the RNC's $11.2 million. The Democratic Party is also carrying a $4.4 million debt; the RNC is currently debt-free.

So far this year, the RNC has raised $69.2 million, to the DNC's $66.3 million.

The Note’s Must-Reads for Thursday, November 19, 2009

November 20, 2009

The Note’s Must-Reads are a round-up of today’s political headlines and stories from ABC News and the top U.S. newspapers. Posted Monday through Friday right here at http://www.abcnews.com

Compiled by ABC News Desk Assistants PETER MARTINEZ, JAYCE HENDERSON, KRISTEN RED-HORSE, CARRIE HALPERIN and CLAUDIA MORALES

BOOKMARKS:

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The Must-Reads Online: LINK

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The Political Punch (Jake Tapper): LINK

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HEALTH CARE:

ABC News’ Z. Byron Wolf and Huma Khan: “Senate Democrats’ Health Care Bill Will Cost $849 Billion” LINK

ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos: “Ben Nelson Ready to Let Health Debate Begin” LINK

Politico’s Manu Raju: “Lieberman slams public option; taunts critics” LINK

The Hill’s Jeffrey Young: “Senate Dems take $849B step toward healthcare reform” LINK

The Hill’s Mike Soraghan: “Jesse Jackson: ‘You can’t vote against healthcare and call yourself a black man'” LINK

The New York Daily News’ Kenneth R. Bazinet: “NEJM: Health Industry Throwing Cash at DC Pols” LINK

The New York Times’ Robert Pear and David Herszenhorn: “Senate Health Plan Seeks to Add Coverage to $31 Million” LINK

The Washington Post’s Shailagh Murray and Lori Montgomery: “Senate unveils health-care bill” LINK

The Wall Street Journal’s Greg Hitt and Janet Adamy: “Showdown Set for Health Bill” LINK

Bloomberg’s Laura Litvan and Kristin Jensen: “Reid $849 Billion Measure Widens Health Coverage, Cuts Deficit” LINK

Boston Globe’s Lisa Wangsness and Susan Milligan: “Senate health bill woos moderates” LINK

The Associated Press’ Erica Werner: “Senate girds for historic debate on health bill” LINK

PRESIDENT OBAMA & FOREIGN AFFAIRS:

ABC News’ Jake Tapper and Yunji de Nies: “White House: We’re Not in the ‘Immediate Gratification Business'” LINK

ABC News’ Jake Tapper: “President Obama Announces Date of Special Envoy Visit to North Korea” LINK

Politico’s Jeanne Cummings: “Obama rewards big donors with plum jobs overseas” LINK

The Los Angeles Times’ Laura King: “Karzai sworn in as Afghanistan president” LINK

The Washington Post’s Anne Kornblut: “Obama’s story infused Asia tour” LINK

The Wall Street Journal’s Jonathan Weisman and Evan Ramstad: “Obama Vows to Push For Korea Trade Pact” LINK

Bloomberg’s Edwin Chen and Julianna Goldman: “Obama Pledges to Allay Concerns of Auto Lobby Over Korea Trade” LINK

The Wall Street Journal’s Ben Lando: “Iraqi Veto Threatens Parliamentary Vote” LINK

The Wall Street Journal’s Chip Cummins and Jay Solomon: “Iran Imperils Western Nuclear Deal” LINK

USA Today’s The Oval: “Obama: From South Korea to health care” LINK

The Associated Press’ Jennifer Loven: “Obama says talks under way on Iran sanctions” LINK

PRESIDENT OBAMA:

The Wall Street Journal’s Neil King Jr. and John Hechinger: “D.C. Schools Chief Targets Tenure” LINK

The Associated Press’ Mark Sherman: “Obama, revisiting Nixon, says 9/11 suspect guilty” LINK

AFGHANISTAN:

The New York Times’ Peter Baker and Mark Landler: “Obama Demands Results From Afghan Reforms” LINK

The Washington Post’s Joshua Partlow: “Clinton visits Afghanistan with message on corruption” LINK

The Wall Street Journal’s Peter Spiegel and Yochi J. Dreazen: “Debate Shifts to Afghan Exit Plan” LINK

Bloomberg’s Indira A.R. Lakshmanan: “Karzai Vows Progress on Afghan Security, Corruption in New Term” LINK

The Associated Press: “Clinton: Afghan election needs to yield ‘results'” LINK

SENATOR JOHN McCAIN:

USA Today’s Ken Dilanian and Tom Vanden Brook: ” McCain wants review on defense work by retired brass” LINK

U.S. TREASURY SECRETARY TIMOTHY GEITHNER:

The Hill’s Jordan Fabian: “House Dem: ‘Growing’ liberal consensus to dump Geithner” LINK

The Hill’s Alexander Bolton: “Reid rolling out big guns to push healthcare bill to 60 needed votes” LINK

The Hill’s Kim Hart: “GOP leads media charge ” LINK

FORT HOOD:

The Washington Post’s Paul Kane: “Senators press Obama on Fort Hood probes” LINK

ECONOMY / JOBS / REGULATIONS / FORECLOSURES / STIMULUS:

ABC News’ Jonathan Karl and Matthew Jaffe: “GAO Says More Than 50,000 Jobs Claimed From Stimulus Projects That Have Spent No Money” LINK

The Los Angeles Times’ Don Lee and David Pierson: “U.S. in standoff with Beijing over Chinese currency” LINK

The New York Times’ Erik Eckholm: “Jobless Benefits Will Expire Unless Congress Acts” LINK

The Washington Post’s Brady Dennis: “Ambitious bills could remake financial regulatory landscape” LINK

USA Today’s Christine Dugas: “More members of middle class file for bankruptcy” LINK

USA Today’s Laura Petrecca: “Those with, without work to compete for seasonal jobs” LINK

USA Today’s Stephanie Armour: “Another wave of foreclosures looms” LINK

USA Today’s Jenn Abelson: “For stimulus funds, unlikely destinations” LINK

SARAH PALIN:

ABC News’ Steve Holland: “McCain Defends Campaign Team Against Palin” LINK

Politico’s Ben Smith: “Sarah Palin hits (book) trail” LINK

Politico’s Andy Barr: “Sarah Palin trashes ‘lamestream media’” LINK

ARMED FORCES:

The Hill’s Roxana Tiron: “Pentagon budget drop anticipated” LINK

CLIMATE/ENVIRONMENT:

The Hill’s Ben Geman: “Browner: U.S. in ‘good standing’ heading into Copenhagen talks” LINK

The Washington Post’s Juliet Eilperin: “U.S. and China reach accord on data collection” LINK

GITMO:

The Hill’s Molly K. Hooper: “GOP turns up the heat over bringing Gitmo prisoners to U.S. soil” LINK

The Washington Post’s Anne Kornblut: “Obama admits Guantanamo won’t close by Jan. deadline” LINK

CONGRESS:

Politico’s Eamon Javers: “Senate vetters dig deep” LINK

The Hill’s Silla Brush: “House Financial Services Committee OKs powers to break up large firms” LINK

The Washington Post’s Carrie Johnson: “Holder answers to 9/11 relatives about trials in U.S.” LINK

Newsweek’s Sarah Kliff: “Senate Bill restores Abstinence-Only Funding” LINK

USA Today’s Andrew M. Seaman: ” Sen. Byrd becomes longest-serving member of Congress” LINK

OTHER MUST-READS:

The Los Angeles Times’ Richard Fausset: “Army Corps of Engineers blamed for Hurricane Katrina levee breaches” LINK

The New York Times’ Michael Moss: “Senate Bill Would Require E.Coli Testing” LINK

The New York Times’ Sam Roberts: “High Tech Tries to Lift Veil on 18 1/2 Tantalizing Minutes in Watergate” LINK

The Washington Post’s Ben Pershing: “Sen. Byrd breaks congressional longevity record” LINK

The Wall Street Journal’s Shirley S. Wang: “Breast Exam Guidelines Raise Furor” LINK

USA Today’s Liz Szabo: “Mammogram coverage won’t change, companies say” LINK

Time Magazine’s Karen Tumulty: “A Word About My Breasts” LINK

Time Magazine’s Kate Pickert: “Are Mammograms the New Political Football?” LINK

ABC NEWS VIDEOS:

“Palin Fever Sweeps the Heartland” LINK

“AG on Terror Trails: ‘We Need Not Cower’” LINK

“Senate Celebrates Byrd, Longest-Serving Member” LINK

“Congress Grills Health Officials Over H1N1” LINK

The Magically Appearing Stimulus Jobs

November 18, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports: We’ve long been wondering what taxpayers would get for their $18 million Website redesign at Recovery.gov.

ABC’s Jonathan Karl is reporting on one thing we never guessed might have been purchased: Jobs created in congressional districts that do not exist.

There’s Arizona’s 15th Congressional District, where 30 jobs have been saved or created with just $761,420 in federal stimulus spending, according to Recovery.gov.

Arizona only has eight House seats. So the $34 million that Recovery.gov tells us was spent in the state’s 86th district is equally incredible.

Another gem: More than $36 million in stimulus funds spent between the 69th and 99th districts of the Northern Mariana Islands — a self-governing US territory that gets only one (non-voting) representative in the House. (Did Jack Abramoff do a better lobbying job than anyone could have imagined?)

These figures seem more likely to be data-entry errors than evidence of fraud or corruption.

But for an administration that’s prided itself on scrupulous accounting surrounding everything connected to the stimulus, mistakes like these contribute to suspicions that counting jobs “saved or created” is more art than science.

And there’s more in that vein today: ABC’s Matthew Jaffe reports that the administration has been forced to slice 60,000 jobs from its most recent report on stimulus spending because of what officials deemed to be “unrealistic data” flowing in from stimulus recipients.

Key House Dem Wants Answers on Recovery.gov Errors

November 18, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports:

Errors in data tracking job creation under the stimulus are prompting bipartisan blowback on Capitol Hill.

Hours after ABC's Jonathan Karl reported on government data showing hundreds of created jobs and millions of dollars spent in congressional districts that don't exist, House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., late Monday issued a blistering statement demanding an immediate fix to “ludicrous mistakes” on the Recovery.gov Website.

“The inaccuracies on recovery.gov that have come to light are outrageous and the Administration owes itself, the Congress, and every American a commitment to work night and day to correct the ludicrous mistakes,” Obey said. “Credibility counts in government and stupid mistakes like this undermine it. We've got too many serious problems in this country to let that happen.”

“Whether the numbers are good news or bad news, I want the honest numbers and I want them now,” Obey continued.

The revelation about the jobs in phantom districts comes in advance of a Thursday hearing in front of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, where Earl Devaney, chairman of the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board, can expect sharp questions from Republicans who have been critical of the administration's job-creation statistics.

Another hiccup in advance of that hearing: The administration was forced to slice 60,000 jobs from its most recent report on stimulus spending because of what officials deemed to be “unrealistic data” flowing in from stimulus recipients, according to ABC's Matt Jaffe.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the oversight committee's ranking member, is calling on the board to add a disclaimer to the Web site, if board members say they can't certify the accuracy of the figures.

Palin to Oprah: Levi Johnston Pursuing ‘Porn’ Career; ‘I Pray for Levi’

November 16, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports:

We wrote last week that, based on the initial clip distributed by Oprah Winfrey's shop, Sarah Palin seemed to be seeking a ceasefire with the father of her grandson.

Now that the full Oprah interview is out — not so much.

Asked by Oprah about Levi Johnston, Palin, R-Alaska, responded: “I don't think a national television show is the place to discuss some of things he'd been doing and saying.”

She continued: “By the way, I don't know if we call him Levi — I hear he goes by the name Ricky Hollywood now, so, if that's the case, we don't want to mess up this gig he's got going…. Kind of this aspiring, aspiring porn — the things that he's doing. It's kind of heartbreaking.”

Oprah clarified that Palin was referencing Johnston's decision to pose for “Playgirl.”

Said Palin: “I call that porn, yes. So it's a bit heartbreaking to see the road that he's on right now.”

Asked about Johnston's relationship with his son, Tripp, Palin said:

“He hasn't seen the baby for a while, but we will let that be the discussion between Bristol and Levi, as they work out their relationship. Because Levi will forever be the father of this beautiful little baby, and I continue to hope for the best, and pray for Levi.”

McCain to Aides on Palin Book: This Will Pass

November 16, 2009

ABC News' Kate Snow reports:

So what does John McCain really think of Palin's book?

Sources tell ABC that there was a conference call on Friday between McCain and many of his top former aides.

On the call, McCain essentially told them that he would prefer that they stay out of the Palin book coverage and not engage in a public debate with Palin. But he told also them he understood if they needed to refute factual errors or protect their own reputations.

Says one aide in the know: “He apologized to everyone on the call for people having to go through this. Said something like ‘You are all my dear friends. This will pass. It’ll pass faster if everyone will just stay out of it.’”

He talked about being proud of the campaign they ran and said he’s moved on, they’ve moved on and he was sorry that the aides were having to go through this.

McCain himself received a signed copy of Palin’s book on Friday. Aides say the Senator hasn’t actually spoken with Palin in months.

The Din: Afghanistan Looms for Obama, but Palin Dominates Another News Cycle

November 15, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports:

Think President Obama misses being on American soil?

Democrats, in November, are looking for new ideas to pay for health care… and Republicans are now warring over abortion, too… there’s rumblings inside the top levels of the administration… a major Gitmo announcement is coming Friday… we’re about to get in deeper in Afghanistan, but only if it brings us closer to the way out… George W. Bush wants smaller government…

But this is Sarah Palin’s world — and that’s really all we can see from our porches right now.

There may be no better example of the power and perils associated with the former governor of Alaska than what we’ll see over the next week.

There is precisely one superstar in the Republican Party — and she happens, by choice, not to hold elected office, or feel as if she owes much of anything to anyone in the party establishment. (And you thought tea parties might be dangerous?)

On this Friday the 13th, the Palin craze is starting a few days earlier than anticipated — with Oprah and an early copy of the book coming before the Barbara Walters interviews next week.

According to the AP, which got hold of a copy of “Going Rogue” a few days early, Palin writes she was “bottled up” by the McCain campaign, and decries the “jaded aura” of political operatives.

This breaks some china — and is specific enough for dispute: “She says that most of her legal bills were generated defending what she called frivolous ethics complaints, but she reveals that about $50,000 was a bill she received to pay for the McCain campaign vetting her for the VP nod,” the AP’s Richard T. Pienciak writes. “She said when she asked the McCain campaign if it would help her financially, she was told McCain’s camp would have paid all the bills if he’d won; since he lost, the vetting legal bills were her responsibility.”

And, cue: “To my knowledge, the campaign did not receive any bill from Gov. Palin for legal expenses connected to her vetting, nor did the campaign ask her to pay any vetting-related expenses,” Trevor Potter, a lawyer for the McCain presidential campaign, told USA Today’s Kathy Kiely.

Drudge has an excerpt from the section on Nicolle Wallace pushing for the Katie Couric interview: “She just has such low self-esteem,” Wallace is quoted as saying of Couric. “Katie [wants] people to like her… She wants you to like her.”

Writes Palin: “Hearing all that, I almost started to feel sorry for her. Katie had tried to make a bold move from lively morning gal to serious anchor, but the new assignment wasn’t going very well.”

ABC’s Kate Snow, on “Good Morning America” Friday: “Last year, she had a campaign bus; this year, the bus will be wrapped with the front cover of her new book. . . . It’s payback time.”

ABC’s George Stephanopoulos: “There’s no question that this book tour can put her in a position to run.”

Get set: “The rollout for former Alaska governor Sarah Palin’s highly anticipated and score-settling memoir began Thursday with all the orchestrated stagecraft, wild accusations, inconvenient leaks and media fascination that characterized her campaign as Sen. John McCain’s running mate during the 2008 presidential race,” Jason Horowitz and Michael D. Shear write in The Washington Post.

The responses from former McCain aides are mostly anonymous — so far: “John McCain offered her the opportunity of a lifetime, and during the campaign it seems that, for all of her mistakes, she is searching for people to blame,” said one former senior official in the McCain campaign. “We don’t need to go through this again.”

Another broadside, in Palin’s interview with Oprah, on the fallout from the Couric interview: “The campaign said, ‘Right on. Good. You’re showing your independence. This is what America needs to see and it was a good interview,’ ” Palin said. “And of course I’m thinking, if you thought that was a good interview, I don’t know what a bad interview is, because I knew it wasn’t a good interview.”

(She goes easy on Levi Johnston, and Levi thinks he knows why: “She knows what I got on her. It’s a smart move on her part,” Johnston said Thursday, at the Fleshbot awards. Yes, it is what you think it is. You absolutely, positively, cannot make this stuff up.)

The president is in Japan Friday, and held a news conference with Prime Minister Hatoyama Friday morning.

On Afghanistan: “I don’t think this is a matter of some datum of information I’m waiting on,” the president said. “It is a matter of making certain that when I send the young men and women into war, and I devote billions of dollars of US taxpayer money, that it’s making us safer.”

And on the Gitmo announcement: “I’m absolutely convinced that Khalid Sheikh Mohammad will be subject to the most exacting demands of justice. The American people insist on it. My administration will insist on it.”

More on that front, per the AP: “An Obama administration official says accused Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other Guantanamo Bay detainees will be sent to New York to face trial in a civilian federal court. The official tells The Associated Press that Attorney General Eric Holder is scheduled to announce the decision later Friday morning.”

On the president’s agenda Friday, per ABC’s Sunlen Miller: “The White House says that it is likely the President and Prime Minister will discuss the controversial Futenma base issue, but did not anticipate an agreement coming out of their meetings today.”

Looming over everything is Afghanistan.

Getting out, as we get deeper in: “President Barack Obama is seeking an approach to eventually ending U.S. involvement in Afghanistan even as he weighs a possible expansion of the American military role in the conflict,” Bloomberg’s Edwin Chen and Viola Gienger write.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates: “How do we signal resolve and at the same time signal to the Afghans as well as to the American people that this isn’t an open-ended commitment?”

AP dispatch from Friday morning: “President Obama aimed Friday to shore up relations with a new Japanese government vowing to be more assertive with its U.S. ally, even as he grapples with sending more U.S. troops to Afghanistan.”

“The key sticking points appear to be timelines and mounting questions about the credibility of the Afghan government,” an administration official tells ABC’s Jake Tapper. “After years of substantial investments by the American people, governance in Afghanistan must improve in a reasonable period of time to ensure a successful transition to our Afghan partner.”

Anyone shocked that he’s after middle ground? “President Barack Obama wants to blend together elements of the different troop-increase options presented to him Wednesday to formulate a new strategy for the Afghan war, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Thursday,” The Wall Street Journal’s Peter Spiegel writes.

What else Gates is saying, on all the leaks: “Everybody out there ought to just shut up,” he said, per ABC’s Kirit Radia.

What the president is saying: “We’ll give you the strategy and clear mission you deserve,” Obama said at his stop-off in Anchorage, per ABC’s Rachel Martin.

Casualties of the war over the war: “The Obama administration’s internal debate over Afghan policy has escalated into a battle of media leaks that’s straining relations between officials who’re seeking a major troop increase and those who want a more limited approach and a greater focus on domestic priorities,” McClatchy’s Jonathan S. Landay, Dion Nissenbaum and John Walcott report.

“The feud also has poisoned ties between the top U.S. military commander in Afghanistan and the U.S. ambassador in Kabul, and left the administration struggling for leverage to press Afghan President Hamid Karzai to appoint untainted officials to his new government, attack corruption and share power with the parliament and provincial officials.”

RNC scrambling, then action: “The chairman of the Republican National Committee announced late Thursday that he is unilaterally ending coverage of elective abortion under the RNC’s Cigna health-care plan,” per ABC’s Teddy Davis.

“Money from our loyal donors should not be used for this purpose,” said RNC Chair Michael Steele in a written statement. “I don’t know why this policy existed in the past, but it will not exist under my administration. Consider this issue settled.”

Per Politico’s Jonathan Allen and Meredith Shiner, who broke the story Thursday: “Federal Election Commission Records show the RNC purchases its insurance from Cigna, and two sales agents for the company said that the RNC’s policy covers elective abortion. As of Thursday, the RNC’s plan covers elective abortion — a procedure the party’s own platform calls ‘a fundamental assault on innocent human life.’ ”

On health care — liberal groups targeting Democrats, again: Health Care for America Now has new TV ads launching, in Nebraska and Arkansas. From the release going out Friday: “The ads customized for each state and titled ‘Debate’ will run for one week starting today in Fort Smith, Jonesboro, and Little Rock, Arkansas and in Lincoln and Omaha, Nebraska. The total advertising buy is approximately $310,000. The spot explains that while the nation has been discussing health care reform for months, it’s now time for the full Senate to begin its official debate.”

As first reported by the AP’s David Espo: “[Senate Majority Leader Harry] Reid is apparently considering an increase in the Medicare payroll tax rate for workers with incomes of more than $250,000 a year, Senate aides said. One idea is to increase the tax rate by one-half of 1 percentage point, to 1.95 percent for high-income people, with an expectation that the government could raise $40 billion to $50 billion over 10 years,” Robert Pear reports in The New York Times.

W. speaks: “I went against my free-market instincts and approved a temporary government intervention to unfreeze the credit markets so that we could avoid a major global depression,” former President George W. Bush said at the unveiling of the George W. Bush Presidential Center at Southern Methodist University, per ABC’s Devin Dwyer and Evan Harris.

They write: “And without mentioning President Obama by name the former President did have some rather pointed comments for the current Administration claiming that generally ‘history shows that the greater threat to prosperity is not too little government involvement, but too much.’ “

“As the world recovers, we will face a temptation to replace the risk-and-reward model of the private sector with the blunt instruments of government spending and control,” Bush said, per Joseph Curl of the Washington Times.

More adieus: “The White House counsel, Gregory B. Craig, has told associates that he intends to step down from his post on Friday, putting to rest long-running speculation about whether he would remain as President Obama’s top lawyer,” Jeff Zeleny writes in The New York Times. “Mr. Craig had been at the center of controversial decisions over whether to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as well as revising administration policies on the interrogation and detention of prisoners. For months, questions have circulated inside the White House about his status, but an official said early Friday that Mr. Craig had made the decision to resign.”

ABC’s Jake Tapper: “Craig will be replaced by attorney Bob Bauer, who has served as President Obama’s private attorney. Bauer will start work in December, so as to help create a seamless transition.”

In Massachusetts, with few distinctions, some endorsements: “Mayor Michael Bloomberg of New York, a Medford native, is endorsing City Year cofounder Alan Khazei,” per The Boston Globe’s Matt Viser. “House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is set to endorse US Representative Michael E. Capuano, a coup for any challenger to [Martha] Coakley, who is seeking to become the first female US senator from Massachusetts.”

Boosting a 2012er — David Brooks really likes Sen. John Thune, R-S.D.: “If you wanted a Republican with the same general body type and athletic grace as Barack Obama, you’d pick Thune,” Brooks writes in his column. “Republicans are still going to have to do root-and-branch renovation if they hope to provide compelling answers to issues like middle-class economic anxiety. But in the meantime, people like Thune offer Republicans a way to connect fiscal discipline with traditional small-town values, a way to tap into rising populism in a manner that is optimistic, uplifting and nice.”

The Kicker:

“Are you tough enough to come here to Massachusetts … So Stephen, are you willing to come?” — Senate candidate Alan Khazei, D-Mass., in a challenge to Stephen Colbert — and looking for a way to get another debate.

“I wouldn’t say they’re making up numbers, but there are no standards or consistency.” — Nevada Controller Kim Wallin, a Democrat, to the Las Vegas Sun, on how the stimulus is being tracked.

For up-to-the-minute political updates check out The Note’s blog . . . all day every day:
http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/

Intern for the ABC News Political Unit:

The ABC News Political Unit is now seeking full-time spring 2010 interns in Washington, D.C.

The paid internship begins Monday, Jan. 4, 2010, and runs through Friday, June 4, 2010.

Political Unit interns attend political events and contribute to stories for the politics page of ABCNews.com. They also help ABC News by conducting research, maintaining our calendar of upcoming political events, and posting stories to ABCNews.com.

In order to apply, you MUST be either a graduate student or an undergraduate student who has completed his or her first year of college. The internship is NOT open to recent graduates.

You also must be able to work eight hours per day, Monday through Friday. Interns will be paid $8.50/hour.

If you write well, follow politics closely, and have some familiarity with web publishing, send a cover letter and resume to Teddy Davis, ABC News’ Deputy Political Director, at teddy.davis@abc.com, by Sunday, Nov. 22, 2009, with the subject line: “INTERN” in all caps.

Please indicate in both your cover letter and the body of your email your student status and the specific dates and hours of your availability.

RNC Planning Immediate Review of Its Abortion Coverage

November 15, 2009

ABC News’ Teddy Davis reports:

Ken McKay, the chief of staff of the Republican National Committee, has prepared a memo toall 168 members of the RNCinforming them thatparty chairmanMichael Steele has called for the party's 27-member executive committee to conductan immediate review of the elective abortion coverage contained in the RNC’s health insurance policy.

“I can assure you that the Chairman takes this issue very seriously,” writes McKay.

Cigna offers its customers the opportunity to opt out of abortion coverage but the RNC chose not to opt out in 1991. The RNC’s current leadership says that it was not previously aware of the abortion coverage under its Cigna plan until a Politico reporter contacted the press office on Wednesday.

Even though the decision to include an abortion service was made 18 years before Steele took the party reins, the abortion issue is a politically sensitive one for him because although he describes himself as pro-life, he parts with some fellow Republicans by believing that the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision upholding a federal right to abortion should be left in place under the principle of stare decisis.

No date has yet been set for the abortion review but McKay’s memo calls for it to take place in “the immediate future” as part of a broader review of the RNC’s health insurance policy.

McKay’s memo gets in a jab at Cigna, saying that “much of the information” on the RNC’s policy was provided by the insurance company.

The executive committee is the body responsible for deciding the content of the RNC’s health insurance policy.

Read more coverage from ABC News HERE.

See below for the memo from RNC chief of staff Ken McKay to the RNC’s executive committee:

###

Members of the Republican National Committee:

On Wednesday morning, the RNC’s Press Office received a phone call from a reporter asking questions about the health care policy the RNC offers employees through Cigna, and specifically whether or not our plan covers elective abortion procedures for our employees. Upon learning of this story, at the Chairman’s direction, we immediately contacted the Executive Committee. The story was published this afternoon with much of the information on our policy being provided by Cigna. We will be scheduling a call with the Executive Committee in the immediate future to discuss this matter more fully.

Our current insurance plan was put in place in 1991. Chairman Steele had already called for an official review of our health insurance policy along with a number of other operational items. The review of our health insurance policy has been underway for some time and that review continues. I can assure you that the Chairman takes this issue very seriously. The Chairman began travelling to state party events on Wednesday evening this week and will be out of the office attending party building events until Saturday evening. He has been engaged by phone on this issue. In accordance with Chairman Steele’s instructions we will update you and discuss the steps we are taking to address this issue.

Sincerely,

Ken McKay

###

Dick Armey: Obama Agenda ‘Very Tyrannical’; Republicans Who Support Him Should Beware

November 15, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports:

We asked former House majority leader Dick Armey, whose FreedomWorks organization has helped stir up some of the more vocal “tea party” protests of the past few months, whether some of the rhetoric has gotten out of hand.

Specifically, did House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, cross a line when he called the health care bill “the greatest threat to freedom that I've seen in the 19 years I've been in Washington”?

No way, Armey told us on ABCNews.com's “Top Line” today: “I was there before John Boehner. It's the greatest threat to individual liberty I've seen in my time,” said Armey, R-Texas.

“If you find your personal liberty precious, if you understand the best decisions in commerce and production and distribution and product is decisions made in the private sector, then you find it very tyrannical to have a government dictate to you: 'You must buy this product, as I specify, this product, at the price I set for this product. If you don't do so you will be subject to even criminal sanctions and jail sentences, severe fines and penalties,'” he said.

“The Pointer Sisters had a great point about the song 'Mr. Big Shot, Who Do You Think You Are?' I mean, where the government gets off telling me what I must buy, where I must buy it, what its dimensions or specifications must be, and what price to pay — who do they think they are?”

Asked if there's room in the party for moderate Republicans — such as Senate candidates Charlie Crist, R-Fla., Carly Fiorina, R-Calif., and Mark Kirk, R-Ill., all of whom are mistrusted by conservatives — Armey said:

“People who seek high office, who think the stimulus package was a good thing, endorse such trespasses against past privacy rights as card-check and so forth, are people that we think will be counterproductive to our prosperity to our safety and security and rights as citizens — irrespective of party.”

Obama Appointee: ‘Making Progress’ on LGBT Issues; ‘Question of Sequencing Things’

November 15, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports:

When President Obama named Fred Hochberg to head the Export-Import Bank, the selection was cheered by LGBT activists, given Hochberg's prominence in the gay-rights community.

Now he sometimes finds himself in the position of counseling patience.

At this week's Bloomberg Washington Summit, I asked Hochberg about what he tells his friends and allies about the pace of progress on gay-rights issues under the Obama administration.

“People — of course they're going to be skeptical,” Hochberg said. “I think that President Obama's making progress. He would like to make greater progress. I think that, and in almost every area we look at, from LGBT issues to health care and so forth, things sometimes move at a slower pace than we'd like.”

“He's made a very clear personal commitment; he's made a very public commitment. He's made it clear to those of us who are serving the administration that this is important to him. And it's also a question of sequencing things,” Hochberg said.

Watch our discussion HERE.

The conversation also included a discussion of the Ex-Im Bank's attempts to work more seamlessly with small businesses — a Hochberg specialty — the president's trade agenda, and new ideas for job creation.

Hochberg's comments on LGBT issues come amid signs of movement on key priorities for gay-rights leaders. This week, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., said Democratic leaders have settled on a strategy to repeal the military's ban on having gays and lesbians serve in the military next year.

Plus, as ABC's Teddy Davis reports, Melody Barnes, the head of the president's Domestic Policy Council, told students at Boston College Law School this week that she disagrees with the president on the subject of same-sex marriage.