Posted tagged ‘Politics’

The Toll: Tragedy freezes politics — and starts new debates

November 8, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports:

We're back to discussions of war and peace. And the toll of war comes into sharper focus.

The awful news out of Fort Hood, Texas, is a story that will consume all the political oxygen for a while.

It will replace it with — depending on the circumstances that develop — fresh discussions about the physical and mental costs of war, of race and religion in the armed services, and of the nature of the sacrifices the nation asks of its troops.

It comes as President Obama ponders some of the biggest foreign-policy challenges of his time in office. Troop levels have been and will continue to be a major part of that discussion.

And now the nation wants to know as much as it can learn about what that means for those on the receiving end of presidential orders.

Coming Friday, per ABC's Jake Tapper: “White House officials tell ABC News that President Obama will visit with wounded soldiers tomorrow at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. The trip was scheduled before the incident today at Fort Hood, officials said.”

Politico's Carol E. Lee: “It is Obama's first visit to Walter Reed as president. It comes as the president is weighing a decision on a new strategy in Afghanistan that could involve committing tens of thousands of more troops to the conflict.”

As for the suspected shooter: “He was mortified by the idea of having to deploy,” Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan's cousin, Nader Hasan tells The New York Times. “He had people telling him on a daily basis the horrors they saw over there.”

“Apparently he became very disgruntled with the mission in Iraq and Afghanistan, voiced that to one of his colleagues,” Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, told Brian Ross on ABC's “Good Morning America” Friday.

Said President Obama, late Thursday afternoon: “It's difficult enough when we lose these brave Americans in battles overseas. It is horrifying that they should come under fire at an army base on American soil.”

Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey and Army Secretary John McHugh will be at Fort Hood Friday.

As we learn more about what happened on the base: “Fort Hood, the Texas military base that was the scene of a mass shooting Thursday, has been hard hit by the growing strain on the Army from multiple combat deployments — with its personnel suffering the highest number of suicides among Army installations since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003,” Ann Scott Tyson reports in The Washington Post. “After many years of lengthy war zone rotations in Iraq and Afghanistan, Army personnel are experiencing record rates of suicide, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and other mental health problems, as well as worsening alcohol and drug abuse.”

Health care takes a back seat, for the day: The president's visit with the Democratic caucus has been pushed back from Friday to Saturday, the day of the House vote.

When it's health care time again, remember that the Democrats picked up two key allies: the AARP, and the American Medical Association. (Endorsements may not matter too much, but if either or both of these groups lined up on the others side, what would we be saying about the bill's prospects?)

Another endorsement coming, this one directly from the White House: “The White House will today issue a Statement of Administration Policy today endorsing the health care reform legislation from House Democrats,” ABC's Jake Tapper reports. “It will not be a signal that the president favors the House bill over the one from Senate Democrats, officials say.”

In getting the votes, the buttons they've got to push will be on the other side of lukewarm: “House Democratic leaders were struggling Thursday to contain uprisings on the hot-button issues of abortion and immigration that have left them little margin for error as they attempt to push through a massive health-care reform bill this weekend,” Shailagh Murray and Lori Montgomery write in The Washington Post.

The deciders? “The fate of the bill itself rests on the shoulders of a new generation of Democrats whose young careers will be defined, in part, by the votes they cast Saturday — votes sure to be used against many of them in 2010,” Politico's Patrick O'Connor reports.

“When asked if she had the 218-vote House majority needed to pass the bill, [House Speaker Nancy] Pelosi responded, ‘We will,' ” per the San Francisco Chronicle.

“Democratic vote counters, working as thousands of conservative protesters chanted ‘kill the bill' outside the Capitol and later swarmed through Congressional office buildings, said they did not yet have the necessary 218 confirmed supporters,” Carl Hulse and David M. Herszenhorn write in The New York Times. “Democratic leaders said they expected to face a series of unusually difficult procedural votes before the vote on the bill itself. Party leaders said they were trying to shape a preliminary vote to allay concerns of anti-abortion Democrats demanding that public money not be used to pay for abortions or go to insurance plans that cover abortions.”

What the endorsements mean: “The endorsement by the AARP was prized because the seniors lobby is an electoral powerhouse and it has been skeptical of the Democrats' proposals to reduce spending on Medicare. The AMA's support was a marked turnaround for a group that played a leading role in stymieing past efforts to change the health care system,” Janet Hook and Noam N. Levey report, in the Chicago Tribune.

What they don't mean: “The endorsements did nothing to ease the concerns of House Republicans or conservative protesters who descended on the Capitol grounds Thursday to denounce the nearly 2,000-page bill,” Jennifer Haberkorn writes for the Washington Times. “Thousands carried posters reading ‘Don't Tread on Me' amid accusations by some in the crowd that Democrats are promoting a health care system that would resemble that of Nazi Germany.”

“Dozens of buses, organized by the conservative group Americans for Prosperity carried grassroots activists and concerned citizens from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland and North Carolina. Organizers said activists became energized after Republican victories in Virginia and New Jersey Tuesday,” ABC's Devin Dwyer reports.

In the Senate, the power of 60 as the power of one: “As Democratic leaders enter the intensive phase of their drive to pass health legislation, they must satisfy 60 Mary Landrieus in the Senate — every Democrat and the two Democratic-friendly independents, each with individual priorities — as they try to hold together a fragile coalition with no room for error,” The Wall Street Journal's Naftali Bendavid writes. “And that has only become more complicated as Democrats from conservative states puzzle over what to make of Republican victories Tuesday in governor's races in Virginia and New Jersey.”

Adjusting to that power: “In the wake of Tuesday's vote Democrats have made hay of a GOP civil war, but all is not well on their side either. Move-On and Democracy of America are putting up $3.5 million to fund primary challenges against any Democratic Senator who blocks an up or down vote on the public option,” ABC's George Stephanopoulos reports. “Liberal democrats have been at war with centrist democrats throughout the health care debate.”

Consequences: “Republican victories in the New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial races may make some congressional Democrats more leery of backing key elements of President Barack Obama's agenda because of the political price they could pay,” Bloomberg's Jonathan Salant writes.

Kim Strassel, in her Wall Street Journal column: “A lot of Democrats are getting a sneaky suspicion Mrs. Pelosi is willing to sacrifice their seats on the altar of liberal government health care. Combined with the election results and Mr. Obama's falling poll numbers, this is no recipe for loyalty. Hello, tipping point. Hello, even crazier Washington.”

Peggy Noonan: “What happened Tuesday isn't a death knell, but it is a fire alarm: Something's wrong, fix it, change course. Show humility. Bow to the public.”

And if the alarm isn't heard? “If the president — opposed by a majority of Americans, with almost no support from the other party — imposes an ideologically divisive health reform, it will smack of radicalism, reinforce polarization, and may cede the ideological center to Republicans for years to come,” Michael Gerson writes in his Washington Post column.

Picking up Tuesday's pieces: “Faced with the choice of running as an unapologetic Democrat in a state trending toward his party or keeping his distance from Washington in the fashion of a generation of Southern Democrats, Creigh Deeds tried to do both,” Politico's Jonathan Martin reports. “The result: the worst drubbing a Virginia gubernatorial candidate has received since 1961. As Democrats try to glean lessons from Tuesday's election losses, Deeds's case offers a vivid example of the difficulties that their candidates from Republican-leaning or swing states will face heading into the midterm elections.”

Iowa time — already: “Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty will make his first Iowa trip as a potential presidential candidate tomorrow to deliver a speech, fueling speculation he is preparing to run,” per Bloomberg's John McCormick. “Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee is in the state that holds the nation's first presidential caucus a day later, while former New York Governor George Pataki is scheduled to stop there on Nov. 10. Sarah Palin, the former Alaska governor and 2008 vice presidential nominee, also is considering an Iowa visit.”

So we've got our split Democrats — what about the Republicans?

The big tent — shrinking. RNC Chairman Michael Steele, on Republicans who run in 2010 supporting the president on health care or stimulus spending: “Candidates who live in moderate to slightly liberal districts have got to walk a little bit carefully here, because you do not want to put yourself in a position where you're crossing that line on conservative principles, fiscal principles, because we'll come after you,” Steele said on ABCNews.com's “Top Line” Thursday.

He couldn't have been talking about … “Florida Gov. Charlie Crist's (R) embrace of President Obama's economic stimulus package is continuing to dog the moderate Republican's bid for the U.S. Senate,” per ABC's Teddy Davis. “[Wednesday], Crist told CNN that he never endorsed the stimulus and that he was simply trying to get the best deal for Florida given that the stimulus was headed for passage in Washington. Now the anti-tax Club for Growth is launching a television ad in Florida aiming to ‘set the record straight.' ”

A tough course correction: “Facing a primary challenge from the conservative wing of the Republican Party, Crist appears to be trying to rewrite history,” Aaron Sharockman reports in the St. Petersburg Times. “But there are mountains of evidence that he not only supported the stimulus, but sang its praises.”

“Ever since the Republican's support of the Democratic plan outraged conservatives, Crist has tried to steer a middle course over his stance on the federal spending bill — but now his explanations are becoming extremely nuanced as his Republican U.S. Senate opponent, Marco Rubio, has hammered him as being a President Obama lackey,” The Miami Herald's Marc Caputo writes.

On the air, in New York State: “The opening line of a new television ad by New York Gov. David Paterson (D) is ‘some say I shouldn't be running for governor,' ” per ABC's Teddy Davis. “Left unsaid is that the someone is President Obama.”

Coming up on “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” Sunday: RNC Chairman Michael Steele and DNC Chairman Tim Kaine join Stephanopoulos in studio at the Newseum. The roundtable: George Will, Sam Donaldson, Cokie Roberts, Donna Brazile, and Frank Luntz.

The Kicker:

“I see this package as a pragmatic, commonsense opportunity to move forward.” — Gov. Charlie Crist, R-Fla., on the stimulus package, in February.

“I didn't endorse it.” — Crist, on the stimulus package, in November.

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

August 31, 2009

ABC News? Rick Klein reports:

With Democrats seeking to use Sen. Ted Kennedy's passing to refocus efforts to pass health care reform, Republicans are signaling that their strong opposition to President Obama's plans haven't shifted.

Today on ABCNews.com's “Top Line,” Sen. John Barrasso, one of the Senate's two medical doctors, called Kennedy's death “a great loss,” but not something that has changed the political dynamics surrounding health care.

“It is a loss to the nation, but I will tell you, people are actually focused on what's in the health care bill — that's what's turning out at all of these town hall meetings,” said Barrasso, R-Wyo.

“What I'm hearing all across the country is 'kill the bill,' ” he said. “So when Nancy Pelosi and others may say that this is a contrived — these are contrived events, she may be saying that just to try to lessen the effect of them. These are hard working American people who are turning out, have great concerns about what the government is trying to do in terms of health care and taking over health care. There is opposition very loudly spoken all across the country to this. And if people don't realize that this is real, then I'd have to say Nancy Pelosi is absolutely out of touch with the rest of America.”

Barrasso has been traveling the country along with the Senate's other doctor, Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., livestreaming the “Senate Doctors Show” and hosting town hall meetings on health care.

“People are focused on the details of the bill,” Barrasso told us. “I held up the House bill at a town meeting in Wyoming, and somebody yelled, 'burn it' because they know what the details are, then held up the Senate bill, all of the loose leaf papers that are together in that and somebody else said, 'Start a bonfire.' “

Click HERE to see the interview with Sen. Barrasso.

We also checked in with ABC's George Stephanopoulos about the political fallout in the wake of Kennedy's passing. He agreed with Barrasso's take, that the warm remembrances of Kennedy haven't changed the politics of health care.

Stephanopoulos' show this Sunday will be heavy on Kennedy legacy, with Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, reflecting on their friend and long-time colleague.

Click HERE to see the interview with George Stephanopoulos.

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GOP Rep. Hoekstra Compares Iran’s Election to Congressional Politics, Feels Fury of Twitter-verse

June 22, 2009

Venkataraman ABC News’ Nitya Venkataraman Reports: For Congressman Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich., facing critics on health care and the auto industry might not seem so bad after a recent post to his Twitter account lit him on Internet fire.

“Iranian twitter activity similar to what we did in House last year when Republicans were shut down in the House,” Hoekstra tweeted on June 17.

HoekstraTwitter

And with those 20 short words comparing the use of Twitter in the e-rally following Iran’s elections to the GOP protest last summer calling on Speaker Pelosi to call the House out of recess for an energy vote, Hoekstra almost-instantly ignited a firestorm which has escalated from Tweet to meme to blog – Pete Hoekstra is a Meme – over the last 48 hours and spread the Internet wide in a string of succinctly worded jabs.

From HarrisW: “I just lot at a game of Jenga. Now I know what it was like to be there on 9/11. @petehoekstra”

From acoliver: “@petehoekstra I haven’t gotten a first class upgrade lately, now I know what apartheid was like!”

From tgkillfile: “@petehoekstra Stuck inside working from home today. Now I know how Anne Frank felt.”

From xIndieQueenx: “@petehoekstra Someone stole a bag of potting soil from my carport today. This must be how Native Americans felt when they lost their lands.”

All but lost in the noise, Hoekstra’s office has since tried to clarify the essence of his Wednesday post but, it’s worth noting, the congressman hasn’t tweeted since.

GOP Leader Says National Security Won’t Drive 2010 Politics

May 24, 2009

Chalian ABC News’ David Chalian Reports:

Despite the stark divide on display in the Cheney vs. Obama battle today, the Republican charged with winning back a GOP majority in the United State Senate doesn’t believe national security will prove to be much of an Achilles heel for President Obama and the Democrats in the midterm elections next year.

“I think 2010 is likely to be about spending and borrowing and the anxiety the public have there as well as the failure to deal with other looming fiscal challenges like entitlement reform that threaten to swamp us,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) who chairs the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Sen. Cornyn went so far as to say that he views much of President Obama’s national security policies in a positive light.

“I think the American people trust Republicans more than Democrats on national security, generally — that may fluctuate the polls,” said Cornyn. “People sort of view with some questions what the Democrats do on national security, but as long as the president is doing what he has been doing, which I view as — the preponderance of which I view as positive, then I think he’ll find the Republicans are with him and the American people will support him.”

The Texas Republican pointed to the Obama approaches in Iraq and Afghanistan and his decision to reverse course and refuse to release detainee abuse photos as encouraging signs, but continued to express concern about the president’s handling of the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay.

“His announcing the closure of GITMO without a plan to hold the detainees, I think got a pretty significant rebuke — bipartisan rebuke — in the vote we had in the Senate yesterday,” Cornyn said.

Later in the day, Sen. Cornyn ratcheted up his rhetoric in a statement critiquing President Obama’s speech today. “His attacks today on those with differing opinions on how to best keep our nation safe reeked of the very same fear mongering that he derided moments earlier. His persistent reminders that he ‘inherited’ these problems are unproductive and trite. Americans are looking for leadership, not finger pointing and excuses for the implementation of ill-advised policies,” said Cornyn.

As former Vice President Dick Cheney prepared to share the proverbial presidential stage today with his mano a mano national security showdown with Barack Obama, Sen. Cornyn said he doesn’t expect all of his candidates to embrace Mr. Cheney on the 2010 campaign trail.

“I think the vice president is controversial in some quarters, but there is nobody that knows better than he does about what the threats are that face our nation and why it was necessary to take extraordinary measures to protect our country,” said Cornyn.

At a reporters roundtable breakfast sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor, Sen. Cornyn was pressed on whether or not Mr. Cheney would prove to be an effective surrogate for the Republican candidates running for the US Senate this cycle.

“I think that depends on the race and where you are,” said Cornyn. “I’d be proud to appear with the vice president anywhere anytime. But I think it depends on the circumstance and the race,” he added.

Sen. Cornyn’s comments sparked Democrats around the country, who are eager to keep the politically unpopular Dick Cheney front and center, to ask Republican senate candidates in competitive states if they would be proud to appear with Vice President Cheney.

“Will you welcome Dick Cheney to Florida to campaign on your behalf?,” a Florida Democratic Party press release asks of Republican candidates Gov. Charlie Crist (R-FL) and Marco Rubio.
As for the substance of the Obama vs. Cheney national security debate, Sen. Cornyn doesn’t seem to believe the 2010 elections will be significantly impacted by President Obama’s national security policies, barring an outside 9/11 type of event.

Politics Live: Late Night Laughs?

March 21, 2009

President Obama became the first sitting president to hit the late-night comedy circuit on Thursday. While he was hoping to soften the mood during a week plagued by economic turmoil and congressional in-fighting, instead the president made headlines with a joke that went awry.

Democratic strategist Chris Kofinis and Republican strategist Alex Conant debate the impact of the president’s gaffe on Friday’s edition of Politics Live.

Politics Live: Omnibus as Football

March 8, 2009

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., was forced to delay a vote on the $410 billion spending bill late Thursday, in a surprise move that highlights how the “omnibus” has become a political football — much to the chagrin of the Obama White House.

“At a quarter to 8 tonight I had 59-and-a-half votes,” Reid said Thursday evening.

With the search under way for half a senator, ABC News’ Rick Klein and David Chalian talked about the delay and its political ramifications with Zach Wolf, who covers the Senate for ABC, on Friday’s edition of “Politics Live.”

(Watch to the end to get Chalian’s take on New York Times columnist David Brooks’ kinder words for the president.)

Politics Live: Obama Changes His Tone?

February 22, 2009

ABC News’ Lindsey Ellerson reports: With the $787 stimulus bill signed into law, President Barack Obama seems to be change his tune, expressing more optimism in his outlook for the economy. Does the way the president talks about a national problem change the facts ? Or at least the public attitude toward the facts?

Just weeks ago, when Congress had not yet acted on the president’s recovery package, Obama predicted doom and gloom for the economy.

“Failure to act and act now will turn crisis into a catastrophe and guarantee a longer recession,” Obama said during a White House event on February 4.

But, Friday from the White House’s East Room, Obama told more than 70 mayors, better days are around the corner.

“I’m absolutely confident that our people will benefit and people will look back and say that this was a turning point,” said Obama.

Which Obama is the most effective? The president who warns of danger or the one who says everything will turn out okay? Tune into Friday’s edition of Politics Live for more analysis from ABC News’ political team.

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Politics Live: Biting the Hand That Feeds You?

February 21, 2009

The California Assembly reached a budget deal in the 11th hour to address their gigantic $42 billion state deficit. Still, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, and many other governors, are looking for a share of the new stimulus bill set aside for grants to the states to help them bridge their deficits.

But, several GOP governors are saying they don’t like the idea, including Gov. Rick Perry, R-Tex., Bobby Jindal, R-La. and Gov. Sarah Palin, R-Alaska.

What is going on? Does this have anything to do with a potential 2012 run for the White House? For more detail, tune into Thursday’s edition of Politics Live with ABC News’ Sam Donaldson, David Chalian and Politico’s National Politics Editor Charles Mahtesian.

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Politics Live: Next Up, the Housing Market

February 20, 2009

President Barack Obama is back on the stump today, just one day after signing the most expensive economic recovery bill in history, Obama introduced his housing plan with a $75 billion dollar price tag.

“By making these investments in foreclosure-prevention today, we will save ourselves the costs of foreclosure tomorrow — costs borne not just by families with troubled loans, but by their neighbors and communities and by our economy as a whole,” Obama told a crowd in Mesa, Arizona. “Given the magnitude of these costs, it is a price well worth paying.”

For more details about the president’s three part economic plan, tune into Wednesday’s edition of Politics Live.

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Politics Live: Could Inconsistencies in Burris’ Statements Put Him in Trouble?

February 18, 2009

“I responded to all questions that were asked of me by the impeachment committee in the time allotted,” Sen. Roland Burris said at a news conference Monday, insisting that he has always been truthful. “At no time did I ever make any inconsistent statement.”

In an affidavit released over the weekend, the senator — who is filling the seat left vacant by President Obama — admitted that former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich’s brother asked Burris for campaign fundraising before the senator was appointed. Burris did not mention that in his testimony to the impeachment committee in January.

Could these inconsistencies make Burris the next Illinois politician to be accused of perjury? Tune into Monday’s edition of Politics Live for more details and how Burris is being viewed by his peers in Congress.

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