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NewsHillary is scary by TimChapmanThis new poll sounds about right: When a Fox News/Opinion Dynamics Poll asked which of four potential candidates for President "frightens you the most," 36% said the New York senator. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Is this what happens when you get elected? by TimChapmanAndy Roth points out that the newly elected Brian Bilbray is voting differently than he talked during the campaign regarding the earmarking issue.
Categories: News, TownHall.com
Dems cry foul on Iraq war resolution by TimChapmanThe House of Representatives is debating a resolution that declares, among other things, that "the United States will prevail in the Global War on Terror, the struggle to protect freedom from the terrorist adversary." To nobody's great surprise, Democrats have a problem with the resolution. Some held a press conference yesterday complaining that their hands were tied because they were unable to amend it. The Influence Peddler asks: Now what is so unfair about this resolution? Either you agree with it or you don't. The Democrats complain that this resolution politicizes the debate. Are you kidding me? This complaint comes from the same folks who went to Baghdad before the war and said they believed Saddam over President Bush. The same folks that complained that the press can't film coffins arriving from Iraq. The same people who ran to the cameras breathlessly to excoriate the President over Abu Gharib and Haditha, and who say that regardless of what the facts may ultimately show about such events, senior military officials should be punished, and Rumsfeld forced to resign. The same folks who are trying to rewrite history on the questions of WMD in Iraq. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Poll: Santorum within single digits by TimChapmanThe latest PA poll shows Rick Santorum much closer to Bob Casey, Jr. than the last poll had him.
Categories: News, TownHall.com
The politics of the Pence immigration bill by TimChapmanThat is the subject of my column today:
Indiana Congressman Mike Pence has proposed what he calls a “middle ground” in the debate over immigration reform. For his efforts Pence is now the subject of harsh criticism from both sides of the debate. But it is the criticism from the anti-immigration hard-liners on the right that threatens Pence’s standing as a hero to conservatives. Pence has done well to line up the support of many influential policy makers. But will it be enough to temper the relentless criticism from the hard liners? Categories: News, TownHall.com
Senate legislation aims to stop overspending by TimChapmanNew Hampshire Senator Judd Gregg flanked by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and other Republican Senators today introduced "Stop Over Spending" Legislation. The SOS package is a series of budget reform measures designed to slow the growth of federal spending and cut entitlements. Perhaps the most high profile provision in the SOS Act is a Presidential line item veto that would give the President the power to pare back irresponsible spending and shine a spotlight on egregious pork projects. Of course, this only works if the President actually uses the power...but let's assume he will. The SOS bill also seeks to address the growing problem of lawmakers designating non emergency funding as "emergencies" in order to expedite their projects. Railroad to Nowhere anyone?... Another highlight of the SOS Act is a provision for biennial budgeting -- this provision would allow greater oversight of the expenditure of American taxpayer dollars. On his blog, Bill Frist sounds optimistic: We have a $9 trillion federal debt in America today, a debt fueled by out of control spending, a debt which places a mortgage on the future of our children. If Washington is to live within its means – just as every American family must live within its means – bold, innovative and structural reforms are necessary... As Majority Leader, it is my goal to see that we enact all or any part of the Stop Over-Spending Act this year – because we can no longer turn a blind eye to excessive spending and a broken budget process. Indeed. Is this another sign that the GOP is beginning to see the light on the spending issue? Expect Democrats to vigorously oppose these measures as they would directly impact their ability to promise the world to their constituents. In the extended section is a list of Republican cosponsors of the bill as well as a press release from GOP leadership today. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Journalists reading conservative blogs... by TimChapman...and then reporting. Perfect: The mini-controversy likely shows that in addition to facing a federal investigation into his relationship with a powerful lobbying firm, Lewis must also fend off a movement in the Republican Party's conservative wing, many of whom vehemently oppose the earmarking system. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Judicial nominations: running the numbers by TimChapmanRepublicans in the Senate are circulating a document that tallies the numbers in regards to judicial nominations. Below are some of the numbers from that document: • 46 — The number of current vacancies on Article III courts — 17 in the courts of appeals, and 29 in the district courts. • 22 — The number of judicial nominations pending in the Senate, including 10 court of appeals nominees and 12 district court nominees. (Three of these nominations are to fill “future vacancies” anticipated in the future, but the judgeships are not currently vacant.) • 27 — The number of vacancies for which the President has not submitted a nomination, including 9 vacancies on the courts of appeals and 18 vacancies on the district courts. • 21 — The number of judicial emergencies in the federal court system. • 43 — The number of judicial nominations confirmed during the 109th Congress, including 2 Supreme Court Justices, 10 court of appeals judges, 30 district court judges, and 1 Court of International Trade judge. • 204 — The number of Article III judges who were confirmed in the 107th and 108th Congresses, including 35 court of appeals judges and 169 district court judges. • 5.4% — Overall vacancy rate in the federal courts. (46/853) The vacancy rate for the courts of appeals is 9.5 percent (17/179), and, for the district courts, 4.3 percent (29/674). UPDATE: Meanwhile, Senator Lindsey Graham has written a letter to conservative groups explaining his opposition to fourth circuit nominee Jim Haynes.Categories: News, TownHall.com
Fighting earmarks is "crazy" by TimChapmanOr so says Congressman Henry Bonilla. Today, Rep. Jeff Flake challenged multiple earmarks on the House floor and was not received too well by his colleagues. According to Andy Roth, who was covering the debate, Bonilla "told Flake to 'wise up' and that his amendments are the definition of 'insanity'."
Categories: News, TownHall.com
Is anyone surprised by this? by TimChapman WASHINGTON (AP) - Houston divorce lawyer Mark Lipkin says he can't recall anyone paying for his services with a FEMA debit card, but congressional investigators say one of his clients did just that.
The $1,000 payment was just one example cited in an audit that concluded that up to $1.4 billion - perhaps as much as 16 percent of the billions of dollars in assistance expended after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita - was spent for bogus reasons. The Federal Emergency Management Agency also was hoodwinked to pay for season football tickets, a tropical vacation and a sex change operation, the audit found. Prison inmates, a supposed victim who used a New Orleans cemetery for a home address and a person who spent 70 days at a Hawaiian hotel all were able to get taxpayer help, according to evidence that gives a new black eye to the nation's disaster relief agency. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Inouye: Native Hawaiian bill dead for year by TimChapmanAt least one Hawaiian Senator is waving the white flag in the effort to institute a race-based Hawaiian government -- for this year at least: Inouye also said he believed it "would be unwise" to battle for a new vote this year on the Native Hawaiian federal recognition bill after the Senate rejected an effort last week to bring the bill to the floor for a debate and vote. Instead, supporters are expected to offer a new version of the Native Hawaiian bill after the next Congress convenes in January. Categories: News, TownHall.com
GOP on an uptick? by TimChapmanRoll Call today runs an article noting a string of victories for the GOP: Last week’s assassination of Iraqi terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the solidification of the Iraqi government, the GOP’s open-seat victory in California’s 50th district and Tuesday’s news that White House adviser Karl Rove will likely not be indicted in the CIA leak probe have combined to fuel a sense of cautious optimism among Republican Members and aides. Don't forget the defeat of race-based governing in Hawaii last week.Categories: News, TownHall.com
Bridge to Nowhere still lurks by TimChapmanCongress Daily PM notes that conservatives in the House have some work to do before funding for Alaska's Bridge to Nowhere is officially denied. Basically, if conservative efforts are not successfull the bridge funding could be reinstated by the end of the week. Rep. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., is trying today to make sure that parliamentary procedures are not used to knock out his prohibition against spending money for two Alaskan bridges, including $223 million for the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere." Kirk added language to the FY07 Transportation-Treasury spending bill at a June 6 Appropriations Committee markup that prohibits spending on the bridges, which foes have highlighted as examples of wasteful earmarks. The bill is on the House floor today. Kirk said "there's a dispute in the parliamentarian's office" on whether his language legislates on an appropriations bill and could be challenged on a budget point of order. If so, he would need to come up with an amendment to circumvent the ruling. "I have been going round and round with the parliamentarian's office," Kirk said, declining to specify how he would try to prohibit funding for the two bridges if his language is struck. The "Bridge to Nowhere" would connect the Alaskan city of Ketchikan with the island of Gravina and its roughly 50 residents. The other bridge, which last year's bill named "Don Young's Way" after the sitting House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee chairman, was authorized at $231.4 million and would join Anchorage with the community of Knik, population 22. The uproar over the two bridges was quelled last year when Alaska lawmakers agreed to not earmark money for the Ketchikan bridge, though the money was still directed to Alaska to spend however it wants.Categories: News, TownHall.com
The Pence immigration reform plan by TimChapmanToday Pat Buchanan skewers Republican Study Committee Chairman Mike Pence with a column that is critical of the conservative leader's immigration reform plan. Buchanan calls Pence's plan "stealth amnesty" and calls instead for among other things border security: Nowhere in his column does Buchanan acknowledge that the Pence plan is a border security first proposal. Indeed, a key provision of the Pence plan puts a two year wait on implementing a guest worker program while the border is being securied, fence and all. After that waiting period, the Department of Homeland Security is required to certify the security of the border. Essentially, this provision is identical to the Isakson amendment that failed in the Senate. That amendment was lauded by conservatives of all stripes and its defeat signaled the end of any conservative support for the Senate McKennedy bill. Buchanan gets nastier, sinking so low as to call Mike Pence a traitor to the conservative cause: In "The Godfather," Don Corleone warns his son Michael that, after he dies, someone inside the family will come to Michael with an offer of peace from the Barzinis, who murdered Michael's brother. Whoever brings you the offer, Don Corleone warns his son, will have betrayed you. Tessio, lifetime friend and high-ranking captain of the Corleones, comes to Michael with Barzini's offer. A mistake. Rep. Mike Pence appears to have accepted the Tessio role in the great immigration battle of 2006. Buchanan says that the adoption of the Pence plan will mark "the end of Mike Pence as a rising star of the GOP." Speaking of Godfathers, who made Pat Buchanan the Godfather of the conservative movement? Since when did he get to decide who was a rising star and who was not? Perhaps somebody should inform Dick Armey and Newt Gingrich that they are no longer welcome in the conservative tent. After that, someone should tell Quin Hillyer over at the American Spectator that his service in the cause of the conservative movement is no longer needed as well. After all, how could a guy who thinks the Pence plan is "ingenious" be a real conservative? Hillyer writes: "There are plenty of other details to the Pence plan, but suffice it to say that as conservatives study the plan, they continue to find that just about every question is answered and every base covered, and all according to principles conservatives hold dear. Read it for yourself to see... "In short, the plan is ingenious. Not only should conservatives rally behind it, but so should the White House. It provides the president with a near-perfect escape from the rock-and-hard-place dilemma of trying to please, all at once, Hispanics, big business, and the mainstream Americans who insist that the first requirement of a guest is that the guest abide by our society's laws. "Such insistence is absolutely the right thing. But it doesn't, by any means, require that Americans fail to exhibit our usual humaneness, nor does it require that we keep necessary jobs unfilled. "In sum, the Pence bill offers security and prosperity in equal measure. You can't beat that." Conservatives should be weary of the Buchananites who are methodically preparing to call any immigration reform agreement a betrayal. It seems to me that those who would cast overboard one of the conservative movements brightest hopes for the future over a disagreement about immigration policy care more about their own opinions and the forceful projection thereof than they do about conservatism. It is not yet clear how Congress will settle this issue. As it looks right now, there is a chance that nothing at all will happen. Or perhaps an eventual compromise will emerge. And yes, maybe it will resemble the Pence plan. If it does, I can think of few other current members of Congress who have earned the consideration of conservatives. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Jerry Lewis's million dollar swimming pool by TimChapmanThe House of Representatives is debating the Transportation, Treasury and Housing and Urban Development Appropriations bill. Contained in this bill is an appropriation that Hill sources tell me was secured by Rep. Jerry Lewis, the Minority Maker, for a swimming pool in the city of Banning California. The appropriation is for FY 2007 and it is half a million dollars. That's a lot for a swimming pool...especially considering Lewis secured money for the same pool in the FY 2006 and 2005 versions of the bill. In both of those previous years Lewis secured $250,000 for the pool. When this bill passes Lewis will have secured a grand total of $1 million for one pool. This thing could be gold plated! Footnote: In FY 2004 TTHUD bill Lewis secured $325,000 for a pool in Salinas, CA. UPDATE: Red State is hot on the trail as well: For Banning, California, $1 million of your hard earned money, for a swimming pool. All thanks to Jerry Lewis. But hey, it's not just Banning. Los Angeles is going to get $300,000.00 for the Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center to build a multipurpose center. Your tax dollars at work.UPDATE: Andy Roth notes that Jeff Flake is gearing up for another battle against pork like the above mentioned gold-plated swimming pool. UPDATE: Meanwhile, as if you needed a reminder of the Appropriators' mentality, there is this nugget from the Hill: Appropriations members have already vowed to fight any move to strip spending from the bill. “I’m not going to take their crap,” Rep. Ray LaHood (R-Ill.) said last week. The Illinois appropriator said he included several projects for his district and would fight to keep them all. “They think they’ve gotten a little steam building, and we’re going to have to shoot them down,” LaHood said. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Will Daily Kos be a victim of its own success? by TimChapmanByron York points out some issues that may lay on the horizon for the Daily Kos crowd. After the Yearly Kos convention the phenomenon has received more press than ever. This, says York, will have drawbacks: Categories: News, TownHall.com
More on the Kossacks by TimChapmanFollowing up on the post below regarding House and Senate Democrats pandering to the most liberal and extremist wing of their party is this column by Michael Barone. Barone characterizes the nature of the extreme left: Successes are discounted, setbacks are trumpeted, the level of American casualties is treated as if it were comparable to those in Vietnam or World War II. Allegations of American misdeeds are repeated over and over; the work of reconstruction and aid of American military personnel and civilians is ignored. Hugh Hewitt comments on the Dems dilemma: The great news is that the tone of the left side of the blogosphere is set in stone, and to receive the left's attention and approval, MSM and Dem candidates have to play to that tone, which --as Barone notes-- is widely viewed as repulsive among mainstream voters.UPDATE: Thanks to Jack Kingston's blog for uploading this video of Barbara Boxer fielding a question about impeachment. UPDATE: Danny Glover rounds up blogospheric reactions to the Yearly Kos convention. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Congressmen who don't get it by TimChapmanExhibit A, Virginia Democrat Jim Moran: Moran, D-8th, told those attending the Arlington County Democratic Committee's annual Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner on June 9 that while he in theory might oppose the fiscal irresponsibility of “earmarks” - funneling money to projects in a member of Congress's district - he understands the value they have to constituents. “When I become chairman [of a House appropriations subcommittee], I'm going to earmark the shit out of it,” Moran buoyantly told a crowd of 450 attending the event. Growls, an Arlington County blog, makes the following observation:According to his bio, Jim Moran (D), who represents Virginia’s 8th district – includes Arlington, Alexandria, Falls Church, and parts of eastern and northern Fairfax County – was a founding member of the New Democrat Coalition, “a group of moderate House Democrats who focus on strengthening fiscal responsibility, education and economic competitiveness.” He is serving his 16th year in the U.S. House of Representatives. Categories: News, TownHall.com
Kossacks love Harry by TimChapmanThe leftist of the leftists, the Daily Kos acolytes attending Yearly Kos in Las Vegas this weekend, showered praise on liberal congressmen attending the convention. Harry Reid seems to have gone over pretty well: There's just one problem for the two-fisted frontman of Democrat politics: Outside the convention hall, the Nevadans who sent Mr. Reid to Washington aren't quite so thrilled with the job he's doing. The second sentence says it all. The Yearly Kos convention is a cheerleading rally exclusively for the uber liberals. It is completely divorced from reality. While Harry Reid is showered with praise in downtown Las Vegas the average Harry Reid voter in the rest of the state is losing respect for him. The contrast highlights a real problem for the Democrats: they must pander to the luny left because they are better at making noise than the average Dem voter. But as they pander to the crazies they disaffect their more moderate supporters. Meanwhile, it is reported that for what seems like the hundredth time this year Dems plan to roll out a new agenda: Par for the course...but here's the kicker: It is a measure of the Democratic Party's yearning for the majority in Congress that the age-old argument over whether its agenda should appeal to liberals or moderates has taken a backseat to strategic disputes over staging and timing. So they still will pander, but that may have to wait until they learn how to better play politics with the results of their pandering. Categories: News, TownHall.com
With support of CBC, Jefferson weakens Dem "party of corruption" charge by TimChapmanRep. William Jefferson, bolstered by the Congressional Black Caucus, is sticking his finger in Nancy Pelosi's eye. It's fun to watch. John Fund reports in the Opinion Journal Political DIary email ($): Emboldened by support from his fellow Black Caucus members, Rep. William Jefferson has decided to force the hand of Democratic leaders who want him to resign from the powerful Ways and Means tax-writing committee in the wake of allegations that he stored $90,000 in bribe money in his home freezer. Mr. Jefferson, a New Orleans Democrat, told the 50-member Democratic Steering Committee on Wednesday night that he would fight to keep his seat because he has not been charged with any crime. He thus represents a big political headache for Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, who has made no secret of the fact that she wants to make Mr. Jefferson an example of how Democrats don't act as if they are part of a "culture of corruption" that tolerates ethical missteps by their members. Categories: News, TownHall.com
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