Posted tagged ‘This’

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.

September 8, 2009

ABC News' Kristina Wong reports: This Sunday, White House advisers and lawmakers previewed a big week ahead for President Obama, who will attempt to take the lead on health care reform, and regain momentum after a summer marked by heated, partisan and confusing debate.

White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs and senior White House adviser David Axelrod sounded confident ahead of Obama?s big speech to Congress this Wednesday evening, to be televised live to the nation. In the speech, they said, Americans would hear exactly Obama stands on health care reform.

?They'll leave that speech knowing exactly where the president stands, exactly what he thinks we have to do to get health care reform done this year,? Gibbs said on ABC News? ?This Week.?

The president has an opportunity on Wednesday to speak to the nation and the Congress on this,? said Axelrod on NBC?s ?Meet the Press.? ?We've been through a long debate now.All the ideas are on the table.It's time to bring the strands together and get the job done for the American people here.?

Liberals, Conservatives Unwilling to Back Down Over Public Option

So far, consensus has been difficult to achieve, with lawmakers divided on multiple party and intraparty fault lines over the best way to lower private insurance costs, and how to pay for health care reform in light of an economic recession and a skyrocketing budget deficit.

The president is stuck in the middle, between Senate Republicans that could block much of what the President wants, and liberal supporters who want it all. Republicans reject the president?s idea to create a the public option ? a government-run insurance exchange intended to compete with and lower the costs of private insurance. House democrats overwhelmingly favor the idea. Progressive democrats say they will not pass a bill without it.

?We support what the president has said all along he'd like to see, and that is a robust public option. He campaigned on it. He continues to talk about his support for it. And we're going to stand behind him. Nancy Pelosi has said that nothing is going to pass that floor without a public option,? said Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., on ABC.

Howard Dean,former Democratic National Party chair said compromise on the public option is unacceptable.

?If, for whatever reason, he chooses to go in a different direction [than the public option], then I'd scale back the bill. I wouldn't spend 5 cents on it,? Dean said on Fox. ?I'm very hopeful that he will stick to his guns and that we'll have the reform we were promised in the campaign.?

Despite the White House toning down insistence on the public option in recent weeks, Gibbs said the president would continue to support a public option in his speech Wednesday.

?He will talk about the public option and why he believes and continues to believe that it is a valuable component of providing choice and competition, it helps individuals and small businesses, at the same time provides a check on insurance companies so they don't dominate the market,? Gibbs said.

Critics Says Public Option Alternatives Won?t Work

Lawmakers have floated compromise alternatives to the public-option, such as an insurance co-op ? a group of private insurers that would be set up by the government, but controlled by its members. But Gov. Tim Pawlenty, republican governor from Minnesota and oft-speculated 2012 presidential candidate, said a co-op was not a viable solution.

?To say that that is the solution, I think, defies what we know about the experience with co-ops already.It hasn't substantially altered the trajectory of health care costs,? Pawlenty said on CNN?s ?State of the Union.?

Another alternative to the public option, recommended by a bipartisan group of former lawmakers including former republican Sen. Bob Dole, is the idea of a public-option trigger that would give private insurers time to reform the industry and lower costs, but trigger the public-option if they failed to do so by a deadline.

Sen. Ben Nelson, R-Neb., said he supported the idea.

?If there's going to be a public option, it has to be subject to a trigger, Nelson said on CNN. ?In other words, if somehow the private market doesn't respond the way that it's supposed to, then it would trigger a public option or a government-run option, but only as a fail-safe backstop to the process.?

However, Dean rejected the notion of postponing the public-option.

?The problem is it won't work. It doesn't add anything. If you're going to do that, just do the insurance reform,” Dean said on FOX. “Don't pretend you're doing reform.?

And Pawlenty rejected the idea of any type of public-option, now or in the future.

?The trigger option simply kicks the can down the road,? Pawlenty said. ?All it does is delays the inevitable, and for a lot of reasons, it's a bad idea. I think, if the Democrats embrace the public option, even in the form of the trigger, they're going to shoot themselves in the foot.”

Republicans Warn Against Using the Reconciliation Process

Despite these battles awaiting Congress when it returns from recess Monday, the president is determined toachieve health care reform this year,fueling speculation that with a large Democratic majority in the House, and a Democratic majority in the Senate, democrat lawmakers would resort to the budget reconciliation process, by which a bill could pass the House and Senate on an up-or-down vote, avoid a Senate filibuster, and require only a simple majority of 51 senators in order to pass.

Former democratic senate majority leader Tom Daschle said Congress should not rule out invoking the reconciliation process.

?If we can't do it any other way, we shouldn't be bound by this process. I think both parties have used it. We used it to pass a single most important health bill ever in the last 20 years, the Children's Health Insurance Plan. We used reconciliation to do that,? Daschle said on ABC.

?The Republicans tried to use it to pass the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge,? Daschle continued. ?And they've used it for every tax cut so far. There's no question both Republicans and Democrats have used it in the past.?

But Sen. Alexander warned democrats of the consequences.

?One, it would create a bad health care bill because under the provisions in the rules, the parliamentarian would write the bill, so all the senators would be voting on are tax increases or Medicare cuts, and you wouldn't get to put in the bill things like pre-existing conditions or buying insurance across party lines.So it would be a bad bill,? said Alexander.

?Second, it would be thumbing your nose at the American people who have been trying to say to Washington for the last several months, ?Slow down.I mean, too many Washington takeovers, too much debt. You're meddling with my health care,?? Alexander sad. ?So thumbing their nose at the American people by ramming through a partisan bill would be the same thing as going to war without asking Congress' permission.You might technically be able to do it, but you'd pay a terrible price in the next election.”

Failed Health Care Reform Could Hurt Democrats

Some analysts are predicting democrats could lose up to 25 seats in the House if health care reform fails.

?Democrats are on a dangerous slide. And when we see this kind of sea change in public option take place, it should be a flashing warning sign,? David Wasserman, House editor of the Cook Political Report, said in an interview with ABC.

Indeed, since the beginning of the president?s push for health care reform, his popularity has dipped according to the daily Gallup polls, from a high of 68 percent early this year, to 50 percent last week.

Stuart Rothenberg, editor of the Rothenberg Political report, said health care reform was now critical for the president?s credibility.

?If he is perceived to fail on health care, it is going to raise significant questions about leadership, his leadership and really when you get down to it, that?s what the presidency is about,? Rothenberg said in an interview with ABC.

Still, democrats remain hopeful the president can recapture a largely-runaway debate over health care reform, and improve his standings by taking a strong lead over health care reform.

?I think he's got to stand up and lead and be strong,? said Dean. ?What people value more in a president than anything else is strength, and that's what we've got to see on this week.?

ABC News? David Kerley contributed to this report.

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August 15, 2009

By TEDDY DAVIS

Don?t blow this chance.

That?s the message that Bill Clinton delivered Thursday night to Netroots Nation, a conference of liberal bloggers and activists meeting in Pittsburgh.

Clinton, who lost control of Congress after health-care reform died in 1994, said it is ?politically imperative for the Democrats to pass a health care bill now.?

?One thing we know and that I?ve lived through — if you get out there and you don?t prevail — the victors get to rewrite history,? said Clinton.

The former president said he favors the creation of a government insurance option.

He cautioned his audience, however, not to lose sight of the opportunity they have now with a Democratic Congress and urged them not to let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

Clinton offered his advice as health-care reform was causing the House web site to strain from public overload and as President Obama was preparing to head west to sell his health-care plan.

The president is holding a town-hall meeting today in Montana and has another one planned for Saturday in Colorado.

As reported yesterday, a coalition of groups led by the pharmaceutical industry has launched a pro-Obama $12 million TV ad campaign, pushing health insurance reform in states where Democratic members of Congress are under pressure on the issue.

While the $12 million ad buy from Americans for Stable Quality Care will provide significant air cover for Democrats, the second-day coverage of the ad notes that the pharmaceutical industry?s participation in the coalition comes with a political downside.

?The groups in the coalition were brought together by the White House in its continuing effort to broker deals,? writes Kit Seelye of the New York Times. ?Some of those deals, especially with the drug companies, have angered the political left, where critics say that for the sake of harmony, the administration has compromised too much and reneged on a campaign promise to rein in drug prices.?

Per the Washington Post?s Anne Kornblut: ?The pharmaceutical industry has pledged to provide $80 billion over the next decade to help cover the costs of the overhaul, reportedly in return for an administration promise that Medicare would not be allowed to negotiate drug prices with the industry.?

In his Friday column, the New York Times? Paul Krugman pats himself on the back for foreseeing the troubles that Obama would have in creating a ?different kind of politics.?

?The question now,? writes Krugman, ?is how Mr. Obama will deal with the death of his post-partisan dream.?

Netroots Nation:

The premiere 2010 Senate Democratic primary will be on display at 11:00 am on Friday when Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter (D) and Rep. Joe Sestak (D) ?debate key issues? at the Netroots Nation conference in Pittsburgh.

Other Netroots Nation highlights include: former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean holding a 9:00 am ET health-care town-hall meeting with bloggers on Friday and White House senior advisor Valerie Jarrett holding a 9:00 am ET conversation with bloggers on Saturday.

Gone Fishin?

Adam Nagourney of the New York Times reports that Obama?s trip out West is going to include a few hours of trout fishing in Montana. Jim Messina, the president?s deputy chief of staff, who grew up in Montana and Idaho and is a wildlife enthusiast, will be taking him.

Messina disclosed the president?s plan while talking at the Project New West conference in Denver. ?I?m going to take the leader of the free world fishing. And I plan to talk a little bit about public access,? said Messina.

While recently discussing his ?take-no-prisoners? reputation with National Journal magazine for his ?Decision Makers? profile, Messina said, ?I didn?t get this job because I?m cute.?

New Job for Hagel?

Fmr. Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel (R) is ?in line? to co-chair the President?s Intelligence Advisory Board (formerly known as the President?s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board), reports the Washington Post?s Al Kamen.

Eunice Kennedy Shriver

Vice President Biden will attend funeral services today for Eunice Kennedy Shriver. The funeral mass is being held at St. Francis Xavier Church in Hyannis, Mass.

McKinnon: ?Santorum Is Dangerous?

Mark McKinnon, a former top adviser to President Bush and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., has penned a column for the Daily Beast in which he excoriates Rick Santorum as the former Pennsylvania senator begins exploring a 2012 presidential run.

?Santorum represents, in my view, much of what is wrong the in the Republican Party,? writes McKinnon.
McKinnon, a former Democrat who did not want to work against Obama in last year?s general election, focuses his critique on Santorum?s eagerness to win at all costs. With Santorum slated to travel to Iowa on Oct. 1, it?s a clip ?n save.

Sunday Preview: This Week

Be sure to tune into ABC?s ?This Week? on Sunday morning for a full discussion of health-care reform. The guests will be HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter (D), and Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch (R). The roundtable will include former RNC chairman Ed Gillespie, Democratic strategist Donna Brazile, Atlantic Media political director Ron Brownstein, and Anne Kornblut of the Washington Post.

This Week will be anchored by ABC Senior White House Correspondent Jake Tapper. (ABC?s George Stephanopoulos is off this week).

The Kicker:

?One good day in New Hampshire does not a campaign make.? –Fmr. President Bill Clinton in a Thursday night speech to Netroots Nation.

?In terms of the liberals backing off, I don?t think they?re backing off a bit. I think they?re getting more and more aggressive. There are many progressives who believe that without a public option, it?s not health-care reform at all. There are many Democrats who believe that with a public option it is going to be very difficult to get health-care reform passed. At some point, the Obama administration ? the President himself ? is going to have to weigh in on that question because he?s ?the decider,? if you will. I mean, I hate-? –Democratic strategist Steve McMahon while appearing Thursday on ABC?s ?Top Line?

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

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The Note, 4/13/09: Of Pups & Pirates — Obama as action hero (this time), as two sides of presidency emerge

April 14, 2009

The Note, 4/13/09: Of Pups & Pirates -- Obama as action hero (this time), as two sides of presidency emerge

By RICK KLEIN

Not a bad weekend, all in all. President Obama rescued hostages from pirates while finding time to deliver a puppy to his daughters — and go to church for Easter. (What have you been doing with your congressional break?)

Now that we know Bo, and now that even Bo knows that these “pirates” are really terrorists who like the water, consider how much of the Obama presidency is being directed by puppies and pirates.

The puppy side of the presidency represents what the Obama White House can control — and, nearly three months in, the fascination with President Obama and his family remains as strong a force as ever.

John McCain was right: There is a celebrity aspect to this president that President Obama can smile at right through the moment where his press shop offers the puppy as an exclusive to The Washington Post, to save a scoop on the new vegetable garden for The New York Times.

(And fresh off his victory overseas, there’s the White House Easter Egg Roll at 10 am ET Monday, with the new First Dog set to make his debut Tuesday. Could you write a better postscript scene for the movie?)

The pirate side of the presidency represents what the president can’t control — the great number of crises, foreign and domestic, large and small, that jump onto his radar screen daily.

Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden were right, too: 3 am phone calls happen, and the world is testing this new young president — who looks like an action hero today, but maybe won’t tomorrow. (And by the end of the week, the testing will involve Cuba and Venezuela, too.)

Yes, the standoff with the Somali pirates was a blip on the national-security radar — the kind of thing that wouldn’t draw more than a few sentences in the papers if it happened to American contractors on land in, say, Iraq.

But then the White House had to get involved. And imagine if it didn’t work out . . .

“[Bill] Clinton’s efforts to land a small contingent of troops in Haiti were rebuffed, for the world to see, by a few hundred gun-toting Haitians. As the USS Harlan County retreated, so did the president’s reputation,” Michael D. Shear writes in The Washington Post.

“For President Obama, last week’s confrontation with Somali pirates posed similar political risks to a young commander in chief who had yet to prove himself to his generals or his public,” Shear writes. “But the result — a dramatic and successful rescue operation by U.S. Special Operations forces — left Obama with an early victory that could help build confidence in his ability to direct military actions abroad.”

“For Obama, the benefits were instantly clear: an American life saved and a major victory notched against an increasingly worrisome scourge of the seas off the Horn of Africa,” per the AP’s Jennifer Loven. “Obama’s handling of the crisis showed a president who was comfortable in relying on the U.S. military, much as his predecessor, George W. Bush, did. But it also showed a new commander in chief who was willing to use all the tools at his disposal, bringing in federal law enforcement officials to handle the judicial elements of the crisis.”

He wasn’t just talking about housing last week, after all: “In fact, aides said yesterday, Obama had been briefed 17 times since he returned from his trip abroad, including several times from the White House Situation Room. And without giving too many details, senior White House officials made it clear that Obama had provided the authority for the rescue.”

ABC’s Jake Tapper, Luis Martinez, and Kirit Radia: “From the moment Obama was first alerted about the hijacking of the Maersk Alabama, until the daring rescue of Capt. Richard Phillips on Sunday afternoon, White House officials say Obama was carefully monitoring the situation and twice gave the Pentagon the authority to use the special forces who eventually saved Phillips and killed three of the four pirates.”

It’s “going to make a great movie,” a senior U.S. official tells ABC’s George Stephanopoulos.

“It was a drama that could have been written in Hollywood,” USA Today writes of what headline writers call the “Easter Surprise.”

“The president’s deep involvement in the hostage situation is a recognition that seemingly small events can grow into massive crises in a matter of days, catastrophes that can do significant political damage to even the most popular of presidents,” Washingtonpost.com’s Chris Cillizza writes. “It’s a public relations disaster dodged — one of many Obama will have to avoid as he seeks to retain political momentum and keep his agenda on track.”

What it means: “While the outcome was a triumph for America, officials in many countries plagued by pirates said it was not likely to discourage them. Pirates are holding a dozen ships with more than 200 crew members, according to the Malaysia-based International Maritime Bureau,” Robert D. McFadden and Scott Shane write in The New York Times.

“Somali pirates are vowing to retaliate for the deaths of three fellow pirates at the hands of U.S. Navy snipers,” per ABC’s Kirit Radia and Michael S. James. “One of the pirates told the Associated Press that, ‘In the future, America will be the one mourning and crying.’ ”

“The U.S. military’s moves to crack down on high seas piracy have done little to deter the epidemic of ship ransoms that preceded Sunday’s Indian Ocean rescue, a top Navy official said Sunday,” the AP’s Lara Jakes writes. “Instead, pirates have merely headed elsewhere to avoid a growing armada of U.S. and international warships, said Vice Adm. Bill Gortney, commander of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command.”

“Mr. Obama said the U.S. is ‘resolved to halt the rise of piracy.’ But [Vice Adm. William E. Gortney] also said that the rescue ending in the pirates’ deaths could ramp up hostilities in the growing wave of pirate attacks off the coast of Somalia, in which crews and pirates have seldom been harmed. ‘This could escalate violence in this part of the world, no question about it,’ he said,” per The Wall Street Journal’s Sarah Childress and Peter Spiegel.

But consider: “Until Sunday’s rescue, the Obama administration was facing two seemingly unattractive options for its first national-security crisis: either negotiate with hostage-takers or open fire on them,” Childress and Spiegel write.

What does he do for an encore? It’s a stimulus/transportation day (and week) for the administration.

The president and vice president visit the Transportation Department Monday. “President Barack Obama says two rare phrases describe how his administration is spending billions in stimulus money on roads: ‘ahead of schedule’ and ‘under budget,’ ” per the AP’s Philip Elliott. “Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood planned Monday to highlight the administration’s 2,000th project funded through the $48.1 billion allocated for transportation infrastructure in the stimulus package. Administration aides note the six-weeks-old law is already producing jobs nationwide, including the day’s highlighted project in hard-hit Kalamazoo County, Mich.”

From Biden’s prepared remarks: “The Recovery Act is being implemented with speed, transparency and accountability.”

Some concerns for the near term: “On Arizona highways, federal stimulus money isn’t expected to restore even one construction job in 10 lost in a brutal downturn that has hit the state’s construction workers harder than those in any other state,” Sean Holstege writes in the Arizona Republic.

“The key is new jobs vs. sustained jobs,” said David Martin, president of the Arizona chapter of the Associated General Contractors. “When you are talking about new construction, contracts like the I-10 widening, they employ more people than pavement-preservation jobs.”

Some concerns for down the road: “Two prominent governors, California’s Arnold Schwarzenegger and Pennsylvania’s Edward G. Rendell, sent a memo to President Obama saying he needed to assert more political leadership instead of leaving it to Congress to draft a plan for improving the nation’s aging highways, bridges and ports,” the Los Angeles Times’ Peter Nicholas writes.

“In particular, Rendell said he was concerned that Congress — left to its own devices — would load up a future infrastructure plan with ‘earmarks’ and other narrowly focused spending priorities that undermined its credibility and effectiveness,” Nicholas continues. “Rendell cautioned in an interview that if the bill was larded with earmarks, it could jeopardize the political consensus needed to modernize the nation’s network of roads.”

The man in the middle: “When President Obama needs to reach out to the political opposition, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood often gets the call to be the go-between,” Tribune Co.’s Mike Dorning writes. “Although the administration has not had much success recruiting Republican support for the president’s signature initiatives — not a single House Republican voted for the stimulus package — efforts at bipartisan outreach are still promoted heavily. And LaHood is a key player in the White House strategy.”

“He’s our ambassador beyond his portfolio,” said White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.

Then there’s Rahm himself (kinder, gentler?): “Emanuel’s theatrical style, ballet training and ‘Rahmbo’ nickname, along with the well-worn story about a dead fish he sent to a rival, are duly noted on his Wikipedia page. But in his new job, Emanuel is overhauling his image, becoming more valet than hit man, and his formula for moving Obama’s agenda through Congress is beginning to resonate,” Shailagh Murray writes in The Washington Post. “Even Republicans concede that given Obama’s early victories, thornier tasks such as landmark health-care, energy and education bills may not be out of reach.”

Said Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y.: “There’s a consensus among Republicans who can be objective that the president did a good thing in picking Rahm.” (Makes it a little harder for the next Republican to attack Rahm, no?)

Checking in with Gov. Sarah Palin, R-Alaska, on the home front: “With just one week left before the Alaska Legislature adjourns for the year, the conflict between Gov. Sarah Palin and lawmakers over taking federal economic stimulus money is the dominant issue left,” Sean Cockerham writes in the Anchorage Daily News. “Palin herself will be leaving Alaska this week to attend the Vanderburgh County Right to Life dinner in Evansville, Ind. on Thursday, as well as an event for special-needs children. Fairbanks Republican Rep. Jay Ramras questioned her leaving town right at the end of the session, when critical decisions are being made.”

Said Ramras: “There are some concerns [in the Capitol] about the focus of our chief executive because she’s taken a speaking engagement in Indiana for a 36-hour period with only 72 hours left in the legislative session.”

For your 2012 files: “In a move almost certain to fuel fresh speculation about his national ambitions, Gov. Bobby Jindal said Friday that he has agreed to write a book for a conservative publishing house about his life and policy ideas,” Jan Moller reports in the New Orleans Times-Picayune.

Catching George Stephanopoulos’ eye this morning . . .

Watching Cuba developments: “President Barack Obama plans to tell Latin American leaders later this week that the U.S. is willing to discuss how to improve relations with Havana, but wants Cuba to take steps toward democracy before it is reintegrated into the Western hemisphere’s economic and political institutions,” report The Wall Street Journal’s Bob Davis and José De Córdoba. “Cuba is likely to be at the forefront of discussions at the Summit of the Americas, a gathering of 34 heads of government that has always excluded Cuba, starting April 17 in Trinidad. Cuba’s main ally, Venezuela, as well as other countries, have said they want to use the summit to press for closer relations between Washington and Havana.”

Democrats, relax: Paul Krugman aims his fire at Republicans, and Wednesday’s coming “tea parties.” (With a preamble: “Republicans have become embarrassing to watch. And it doesn’t feel right to make fun of crazy people. Better, perhaps, to focus on the real policy debates, which are all among Democrats.”)

Krugman: “These parties — antitaxation demonstrations that are supposed to evoke the memory of the Boston Tea Party and the American Revolution — have been the subject of considerable mockery, and rightly so. But everything that critics mock about these parties has long been standard practice within the Republican Party.”

Bloomberg’s Al Hunt takes on the former geniuses of finance: “Used-car salesmen, lawyers and journalists can relax; they’ve been replaced as America’s favorite villains by corporate executives, or at least investment bankers. Hailed only a short while ago as masters of the universe and princes of perpetual profits, they now are reviled,” Hunt writes.

“Much of the damage to the financial industry’s reputation is self-inflicted. Characterized by greed, risk-free rewards with abject failures being obscenely enriched, the culture of Wall Street is neither capitalistic nor admirable. To laid-off auto workers or struggling nurses it seems criminal.”

It’s a week for gun-violence anniversaries. Monday, in Arlington, Va.: “New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg will join Omar Samaha and other family members of victims of the Virginia Tech massacre in a news conference Monday to launch a new television ad. The ad calls for the Commonwealth of Virginia to close a loophole which allows so-called ‘occasional sellers’ at gun shows to sell weapons without conducting a background check of the purchaser. The ad coincides with the second anniversary of the Virginia Tech massacre, which claimed thirty two lives on April 16, 2007, and the tenth anniversary of the Columbine massacre in Colorado. The ad will air statewide next week.”

But wait — who are we fooling? Will anything break through this week that isn’t related to a 6-month-old Portuguese water dog with that soft fur and so-cute lei?

It’s now the top story on the White House’s official blog: “In case anybody is wondering, Bo is a boy.”

“Bo will probably be more liked by staff then the last first hound, Barney, the Bush White House dog, who famously took a bite out of a reporter,” ABC’s John Berman writes.

“When the Obama girls met Bo a few weeks ago, Malia had no allergic reaction,” per ABC’s Jake Tapper. “Because the dog is a pure-bred, and not from a pound, the Obama parents will also be making a donation to the DC Humane Society.”

Who blew the lid off the story? The pictures at firstdogcharlie.com look like the real thing.

Manuel Roig-Franzia, in The Washington Post: “The mystery of the Web site’s provenance has displaced the quest for the identity of the First Puppy as a Washington obsession. Late yesterday, the site’s operator responded to an email from The Post. ‘Who am I?’ the e-mail reads. ‘I am simply a friend of Charlie’s. I think we all kind of are.’ The Web site operator said he still has ‘more work to do here before I drop the curtain. This isn’t about fame, fortune or notoriety (maybe just a little notoriety.)’ ”

This might have been a bigger story . . . “The Obamas’ church visit to St. John’s, just two blocks from the White House, caused less of a stir. Parishioners had to pass through metal detectors before entering the sanctuary, but there was only one mention of Mr. Obama during the service, when the congregation prayed for the president, Congress and the Supreme Court. All four Obamas took communion,” Helene Cooper writes in The New York Times.

And there will be more: “A source with knowledge of the White House’s thinking believes that President Obama will visit several other congregations before making a final decision on where to attend Church. No church names were given but a White House source does tell me that being an imposition on Churches is a concern,” David Brody reports for the Christian Broadcasting Network.

The Kicker :

“I’m a fairly charitable person . . . but I have to tell you — I hate the Yankees.” — Rev. Luis Leon, at St. John’s Church, with the First Family in the pews for Easter.

“By the way, it would be over my dead body that a kid would live with my teenage daughter.” — Gov. Sarah Palin, asked about Levi Johnston’s claim that he moved into the governor’s house a few weeks before Bristol Palin gave birth to their child.

Don’t miss “Top Line,” ABCNews.com’s new daily political Webcast, hosted by Rick Klein and David Chalian, at noon ET. Monday’s guests: ABC’s Ann Compton, and political comedian Baratunde Thurston.

Follow The Note on Twitter: http://twitter.com/thenote

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

Jerry Brown to SF Mayor: Twitter This

March 5, 2009

ABC News’ Teddy Davis reports: When the California Supreme Court hears oral arguments Thursday in the Proposition 8 same-sex marriage case, Attorney Gen. Jerry Brown is promising to offer his two-cents to potential supporters via Twitter.

“If you check Jerry’s Facebook Page or Twitter feed during the session, he’ll be providing periodic comments,” the Attorney General’s wife, Anne Gust Brown, writes in a Wednesday evening e-mail to her husband’s political backers.

Brown’s decision to Twitter while oral arguments are taking place in the Prop. 8 case is his latest effort not to cede a technological edge to San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, a top Democratic rival in the 2010 California governor’s race who is 29 years younger and has been highlighting the age disparity by telling reporters that he sat on Brown’s lap as a tyke.

Thursday’s Twittering is not Brown’s first move to combat Newsom. Previously, he joined a Facebook fad and posted “25 random things about me.” Brown’s list included this gem: “The first time I became Governor, I followed an Actor (Ronald Reagan),” a statement which conjured not only Brown’s 1974 election but also his hope of making the 2010 race to replace Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) the second time that Brown follows an actor into the governor’s office.

In his wife’s Wednesday e-mail to supporters announcing his Twitter plans, Brown does not disclose where he will be during oral argument. While California’s Supreme Court will hear from Senior Assistant Attorney General Chris Krueger, Brown spokesman Scott Gerber expects that the Attorney General himself will be watching oral arguments on television from his San Francisco office.

Newsom’s staff knows that the 70-year old Brown, a former two-term governor and three-time presidential candidate, is better known statewide. They are hoping, however, that the 41-year old Newsom can take a page from the playbook of President Obama’s 2008 cmapaign and use technology to topple his more seasoned rival.

The Brown-Newsom technological competition got started when Newsom launched a successful campaign to attract 30,000 Facebook friends in 30 days. Newsom also drew attention to his “tweets” when he announced via Twitter that his wife, actress Jennifer Siebel Newsom, is expectig a baby in September.

“We’re going to be talking a lot about the future,” Newsom told ABC News when he was in Washington for Obama’s inauguration. “Those who think they have this locked up are underestimating the capacity of the voters to have a real choice.”

The California Supreme Court is slated to hear oral arguments in the Prop. 8 case at 12:00 pm ET on Thursday. They can be viewed online at http://www.calchannel.com

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White House: Burris Should Ponder His Future This Weekend

February 22, 2009

White House: Burris Should Ponder His Future This Weekend

ABC News’ David Chalian Reports: A few hours after Gov. Pat Quinn, D-Ill., publicly called on Sen. Roland Burris to resign his seat, the White House weighed in a bit further on Sen. Burris’ fate.

“It might be important for Sen. Burris to take some time this weekend to either correct what has been said and, certainly, think of what lays in his future,” said White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs. He went on to challenge Burris to use the upcoming weekend to “take a look at what has been said and for him to come up with an explanation that satisfies” all of the questions swirling around his evolving story about contacts with people in former Gov. Blagojevich’s sphere as he was seeking the US Senate seat from Illinois.

Earlier this week, Mr. Gibbs indicated that he had not talked to President Obama specifically about the controversy surrounding Sen. Burris and on Friday was still unable to provide the president’s reaction to what has taken place in his home state.

From the White House podium at his press briefing on Friday, Gibbs repeated his statement that President Obama believes the people of Illinois deserve to have this matter thoroughly investigated.

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