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AP: Pawlenty announces presidential run in Web video

Evans Liberal Politics
May 23, 2011

 

AP: Pawlenty announces presidential run in Web video

Pawlenty announces presidential run in Web video, Associated Press on Yahoo News, May 23, 2011, by Brian Bakst:

DES MOINES, Iowa – Republican Tim Pawlenty offered a sneak peek Sunday at his presidential kickoff, blasting out an Internet video in which he promises a campaign that “tells the American people the truth” and suggests that President Barack Obama doesn’t.

Pawlenty Announces
Presidential Run in Web Video

In the new video, the former Minnesota governor formally declares he’s running for president, something aides said he’d do in person Monday morning during a town hall forum in Iowa. Pawlenty bypassed a launch in his home state to make his inaugural appearance as a candidate in the state that holds the leadoff caucuses, which he acknowledges he must fare well in to preserve his hopes of the GOP nomination.

He says in the video that the country needs a president who will be frank with Americans about the severe challenges facing the country and how America can get back on track. He mentions the climbing federal debt and a slow recovery from the economic recession that’s left millions jobless.

“We’re going to have to do more than just give fancy speeches; we’ve had three years of that and it’s not working,” Pawlenty says. “Join me tomorrow and around the country in the days and weeks ahead. You won’t hear empty promises, you’ll hear solutions.”

The hard swipes at Obama are central to Pawlenty’s effort to prove to GOP primary voters that he’s tough enough to take on the Democrat. He’s combatting an impression that he’s too nice to be an aggressive challenger.

Pawlenty makes no mention of prospective GOP rivals he’ll have to outlast to get his shot at Obama. Among the Republicans who have taken formal steps toward a White House campaign are former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and Texas Rep. Ron Paul.

The GOP field saw more signs of settling Sunday when Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels took his name out of consideration. ….

Read the full article here.

See T-Paw’s Problem, The New Republic, May 23, 2011, by Walter Shapiro:

Pawlenty needs time and money. He’ll be hard-pressed to find enough of both.

With Mitch Daniels officially out of the presidential race, it seems like the entire GOP is emulating Ethelred the Unready. Well, not quite everyone. In a contrarian move at odds with the Reluctant Republican ethos of the party, former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty will actually make it official by declaring his candidacy today in Des Moines.

Along with the obligatory yawn-inducing “can you win Iowa?” question, Pawlenty almost certainly will be asked again about his ability to compete financially with Mitt Romney, the Daddy Warbucks of the truncated Republican field. Pawlenty recently answered that query with a nod to GM’s venerable product line: “Our goal is not to keep up with Mitt. Our goal is to raise enough money to have at least a Buick, if not a Cadillac-level, campaign.”

Watch No Go in 2012: Ind. GOP Gov. Daniels Not Running, AP video, May 22, 2011.

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Robert Reich: The Republican Plan with Lipstick

Evans Liberal Politics
April 30, 2011

 

Robert Reich: The Republican Plan with Lipstick

The Republican Plan with Lipstick, Robert Reich.org, April 29, 2011, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Republicans figure that if they can’t sell the pig, they’ll just put lipstick on it and find some suckers who will think it’s something else.

That’s the proposal emerging in the Senate from Republican Bob Corker of Tennessee and also Democrat Claire McCaskill of Missouri. It would get the deficit down not by raising taxes on the rich but by capping federal spending.

If Congress failed to stay under the cap, the budget would be automatically cut.

According to an analysis by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the McCaskill/Corker plan would require $800 billion of cuts in 2022 alone. That’s the equivalent of eliminating Medicare entirely, or the entire Department of Defense.

Obviously the Defense Department wouldn’t disappear, so what would go? Giant cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, education, and much of everything else Americans depend on.

It’s the Republican plan with lipstick. It would have the same exact result. But by disguising it with caps and procedures, Republicans can avoid saying what they’re intending to do.

The McCaskill/Corker spending cap would also make it impossible for government to boost the economy in recessions. Which would mean even higher unemployment, lasting longer.

Other Senate Dems are showing interest in the lipsticked pig, including West Virginia’s Joe Manchin. Not surpringly, Joe Lieberman is on board.

But don’t be fooled, and don’t let anyone else be. McCaskill/Corker is the same Republican pig.

Also see The Oil Company Gusher, Robert Reich.org, April 28, 2011, by Robert Reich.

Robert Reich was the nation’s 22nd Secretary of Labor under Bill Clinton and is Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations. In 2008, Time Magazine named him one of the Ten Most Successful Cabinet Members of the century. He has written eleven books, including “The Work of Nations,” which has been translated into 22 languages. His recent book is “Supercapitalism.” For Professor Reich’s book page for Supercaptialism at Amazon, go here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future has been released September 21, and is available for ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Watch the video Aftershock: The next economy and America’s future (about his new book). Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

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Video: GOP Budget Would End Medicare

Evans Liberal Politics
April 24, 2011

 

GOP Budget Would End Medicare

The media is failing to report
how radical the GOP budget is

World Video News Roundup for April 22, 2011

Evans Liberal Politics
April 22, 2011

 

World Video News Roundup for April 22, 2011

News & Analysis from Around the World

Japan announces huge
disaster relief fund

Battle rages for Misrata
as US deploys drones

Debt Ceiling Panic
By Democrats – Why?

Weighing Strikes on North Korea,
Iran, Pakistan

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GOP threatens to force America into default if Dems refuse major spending cuts

Evans Liberal Politics
April 13, 2011

 

GOP threatens to force America into default
if Dems refuse major spending cuts

GOP threatens to force America into default if Dems refuse major spending cuts, The Raw Story, April 11, 2011, by Sahil Kapur, quoted verbatim: Evans Liberal Politics partners with The Raw Story to bring you the latest news and politics.

WASHINGTON – The grueling 2011 budget debate that brought the federal government to the brink of a shutdown might end up looking mild in the face of the next fiscal battle: the debt ceiling. That’s because Republicans are openly threatening to use the calamitous possibility of a U.S. default as leverage to exact major spending cuts from Democrats.

unflattering photo of John Boehner in golf attire

“The president says, ‘I want you to send me a clean bill.’ Guess what, Mr. President. Not a chance you’re going to get a clean bill,” said House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), the most powerful Republican in D.C., at a fundraiser this weekend. “There will not be an increase in the debt limit without something really, really big attached to it.”

If it wasn’t clear what Boehner was referring to, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) said it plainly on Fox News Sunday: “[T]here is no way that we Republicans are going to support increasing the debt limit without guaranteed steps being put in place to ensure that the spending doesn’t get out of control again.”

Calling it a “leverage moment,” Cantor said Republicans will demand “spending caps, entitlement reform, budget process reforms — these are the kind of things that we’re going to have to have in order to go along with the debt limit increase.”

Other Republicans have likewise rebuffed White House requests for an up-or-down vote on the debt limit.

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner warned last Monday that the U.S. would likely reach its $14.3 trillion debt ceiling by May 16, and have “no headroom” to borrow by July 8 even under extraordinary measures if Congress fails to increase the limit.

Geithner said that failure to act in time could incite “a financial crisis potentially more severe than the crisis from which we are only starting to recover.”

Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY), who helms policy and messaging for Democrats, accused the speaker of playing a dangerous game for political ends.

“Speaker Boehner had to keep [the budget] negotiations going to the last minute to show the Tea Party people he was doing everything he could,” Schumer said of last week’s debate over the fiscal 2011 budget. “You cannot do that with the debt ceiling. That is playing with fire — because if the markets believe we are not going to pay our debt, it could be a formula for recession or worse.”

“[I]f we have learned anything from the budget negotiations, it’s that the American people didn’t like the GOP’s threats to shut down the government,” added Jon Summers, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), in an e-mail to Raw Story. “And they won’t take too kindly to threats of putting America into default — which would have a devastating effect on the global economy.”

A preview of what Republicans may push Democrats into supporting could be the proposal offered by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI), which aims to slash $6 trillion in federal spending over ten years, including significant reductions to Medicare and Medicaid benefits.

Yet the underlying GOP accusations that Democrats aren’t committed to addressing the deficit comes with the irony that the bulk of the nation’s debt was accumulated last decade under a Republican White House and Congress in the form of unfunded tax cuts, two wars and a Medicare prescription drug program.

“Democrats don’t need lessons in cutting deficits from Republicans who allowed the last president to turn a record budget surplus into record deficits,” Summers said. “We will continue to work with Republicans on responsible solutions that cut spending while protecting our fragile economic recovery.”

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Trump on top in new survey, but will any poll leaders actually run?

Evans Liberal Politics
April 12, 2011

 

Trump on top in new survey,
but will any poll leaders actually run?

Trump on top in new survey, but will any poll leaders actually run?, MSNBC First Read, April 12, 2011, by Carrie Dann, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Online and DVD Software Training

According to the CNN/Opinion Research Corp. survey, Trump and Huckabee are the first choice of 19 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents, with former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin coming in at third with 12 percent.

But the one trait those three top-runners – making up exactly 50% of the first choice candidates of those polled – have in common? They all seem much less likely than other GOP competitors to actually mount a run for president.

While Trump could certainly deploy his news-cycle monopolizing publicity if he decided to run, the requirement that candidates publish a lengthy financial disclosure statement could preclude the business magnate from participating in the race.  ….

Read the full story, here.

US Video News Roundup for April 8, 2011

Evans Liberal Politics
April 8, 2011

 

US Video News Roundup for April 8, 2011

News & Analysis from Around the United States

Shutdown Talks Yield
No Deal As Clock Ticks

White House Press Briefing
on Budget Negotiations

GOP Plan to Privatize Medicare,
Gut Medicaid

Joseph Stiglitz:
Pro-Rich Tax Cuts

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