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Posts archive for: September, 2007
  • Democrats Build Plan to Override Health Bill Veto - New York Times

    WASHINGTON, Sept. 28 — Democrats and their allies mapped out a strategy on Friday that they hoped would enable them to override President Bush’s expected veto of a bipartisan bill providing health insurance for 10 million children, most of them in low-income families.

    Democratic leaders said they would highlight the contrast between the president’s request for large sums of money for the Iraq war and his opposition to smaller sums for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, known as Schip.

    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Democrat of California, said, “It’s ironic that in the very same week that the president says he’s going to veto the bill because we can’t afford it, he is asking, what, for $45 billion more over and above his initial request for the war in Iraq, money that we know is being spent without accountability, without a plan for how we can leave Iraq.”

    Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, said, “This is all a matter of priorities: the cost of Iraq, $333 million a day; the cost of Schip, $19 million a day.”

    The campaign for the legislation will also include grass-roots advocacy and political advertisements, and will initially focus on about 15 House Republicans who voted against the bill. Supporters of the legislation hope to persuade them to switch.

    But House Republican leaders said they felt sure they could sustain the veto, and two lawmakers on the Democrats’ list said that they would support Mr. Bush.

    The bill passed this week by the House and the Senate would provide $60 billion for the program over the next five years, up $35 billion from the current level of spending. On Wednesday, the administration said it would seek $42 billion more for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, bringing its total request to nearly $190 billion for the 2008 fiscal year, which begins Monday.

    In an interview on Friday, the House Republican whip, Roy Blunt of Missouri, said there was “a 100 percent probability” that the House would sustain the president’s veto.

    But, Mr. Blunt said, the coincidental timing of the vote on the child health bill and the request for money in Iraq “was not helpful.”

    The White House, on the defensive, is trying to bolster Republicans who fear they might be penalized by voters if they side with the president.

    Dana Perino, the White House press secretary, said Friday, “It is preposterous for people to suggest that the president of the United States doesn’t care about children, that he wants children to suffer.”

    Ms. Perino said the president had a policy difference with Democrats in Congress because he did not want “additional government-run health care, socialized-type medicine.”

    Senator Charles E. Grassley, an Iowa Republican who helped write the bill, said he would reach out to House Republicans and urge them to override the veto.

    “This bill is not socialized medicine,” Mr. Grassley said. “Screaming ‘socialized medicine’ is like shouting ‘fire’ in a crowded theater. It is intended to cause hysteria that diverts people from reading the bill, looking at the facts.”

    The battle will be fought in the House, where the child health bill was approved on Tuesday by a vote of 265 to 159 — well short of the two-thirds majority that would be needed to override a veto.

    Ms. Pelosi called Mr. Bush on Friday and said she was praying he would sign the bill.

    But Mr. Blunt said: “I bet she’s praying for him not to sign it. The bill is all about politics. It’s pretty good politics for the Democrats.”

    Still, Democrats face an uphill fight to persuade Republicans to change their votes. Supporters would need 289 yes votes to enact the bill over the president’s objections if all the members were voting.

    The House now has 433 members and two vacant seats.

    One of the Republicans singled out for special attention by Democrats was Representative Judy Biggert, from a suburban Chicago district. She was one of 16 Republicans who signed a letter to the speaker last week, urging her to take up the Senate version of the child health bill.

    The compromise closely followed the Senate version, but Mrs. Biggert voted against it, saying, “It would push Americans one step closer to socialized medicine.”

    In an interview on Friday, Mrs. Biggert said she would vote to sustain the veto.

    Democrats said they would also focus their efforts on Republicans like Representatives Timothy V. Johnson of Illinois, John R. Kuhl Jr. of New York, Thaddeus McCotter of Michigan and H. James Saxton of New Jersey.

    Mr. McCotter said he was a big supporter of the child health program, but would vote to uphold the president’s veto, even if critics ran television advertisements against him.

    Under the bill, the federal excise tax on cigarettes would be increased to $1 a pack, from the current 39 cents.

    “I vowed never to raise taxes on anybody, no matter how disliked they might be,” Mr. McCotter said in an interview. He said he would rather be voted out of office than go back on his promises to constituents.

    Republican senators who worked on the compromise bill, like Mr. Grassley and Orrin G. Hatch of Utah, said they had tried in vain to persuade White House officials to join the negotiations.

    Ms. Perino, the White House spokeswoman, said that after vetoing the bill, Mr. Bush would like to “sit down and come to a compromise” with Congress.

    The Senate Democratic leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, said the president should not hold his breath waiting for such a deal. Democrats, he said, have already made many concessions to keep the support of Senate Republicans.

    Source :


  • Hillary Leads, Thompson Gains in Florida

    (Angus Reid Global Monitor) - Hillary Rodham Clinton is the most popular United States presidential contender for Democratic Party supporters in the Sunshine State, according to a poll by Rasmussen Reports. 47 per cent of likely Democratic primary voters in Florida would vote for the New York senator in next year’s primary.

    Illinois senator Barack Obama is second with 22 per cent, followed by former North Carolina senator John Edwards with 11 per cent. Four per cent of respondents would vote for other candidates, and 15 per cent are undecided.

    In the sample of Republican Party supporters, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani is first with 29 per cent, followed by actor and former Tennessee senator Fred Thompson with 23 per cent—up six points since August. Arizona senator John McCain is third with 12 per cent, followed by Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney with 11 per cent, and former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee with three per cent.

    Earlier this year, a law passed in Florida mandates for the state’s presidential primaries to be held either on the first Tuesday of February, or seven days after the New Hampshire contest. The Republican and Democratic primaries in Florida are tentatively scheduled for Jan. 29, 2008.

    In 2004, Massachusetts senator John Kerry won the Democratic Florida primary with 77 per cent of the vote. The Republican contest was cancelled, after incumbent George W. Bush was nominated by the state’s party.

    Bush is ineligible for a third term in office. The next U.S. presidential election is scheduled for November 2008.

    Original Releases from Rasmussen Reports: Republican Primary and Democratic Primary

    Polling Data

    Election 2008: Florida Democratic Presidential Primary

     

    Sept. 2007

    Aug. 2007

    Jul. 2007

    Hillary Rodham Clinton

    47%

    43%

    46%

    Barack Obama

    22%

    24%

    15%

    John Edwards

    11%

    11%

    13%

    Some other candidate

    4%

    6%

    4%

    Not sure

    15%

    16%

    21%

    Election 2008: Florida Republican Primary

     

    Sept. 2007

    Aug. 2007

    Jul. 2007

    Rudy Giuliani

    29%

    30%

    22%

    Fred Thompson

    23%

    17%

    21%

    John McCain

    12%

    7%

    13%

    Mitt Romney

    11%

    15%

    13%

    Mike Huckabee

    3%

    5%

    n.a.

    Some other candidate

    2%

    5%

    4%

    Source: Rasmussen Reports

  • Senators Seek Strong Vote for Program

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Senators supporting a large spending increase for a popular children's health insurance program hope that a wide margin of bipartisan approval will persuade President Bush to change his mind about vetoing the measure.

    The Senate, which overwhelming approved similar legislation two months ago, was scheduled to vote Thursday on the bill funding the State Children's Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP. The program would receive $60 billion over the next five years under the Senate proposal.

    The House approved similar legislation Tuesday, but not by a veto-proof margin. With both houses of Congress required to override a presidential veto by two-thirds majorities, the measure is thought to be doomed even with substantial GOP backing.

    "This compromise bill maintains the focus on low-income uninsured children and adds coverage for more than 3 million low-income children," Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said Wednesday on the Senate floor.

    Bush has recommended spending $30 billion on the program, which subsidizes health coverage for children in families who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid but not enough to afford private insurance.

    The president and many GOP lawmakers who oppose the bill say it would extend government-sponsored health coverage to middle-income families. It could potentially let the state of New York amend its program to cover children up to four times the federal poverty level, or nearly $83,000 for a family of four, opponents argue.

    White House officials acknowledge that the current administration or future ones would have to grant New York's application to expand SCHIP coverage to that income level. But Bush spokesman Tony Fratto said it would be "next to impossible" to reject such an application because of the bill.

    Grassley has said he doesn't buy that argument. He said the SCHIP legislation does nothing to change the authority that Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt has when it comes to eligibility limits in the states.

    "The authority to approve what states do with the CHIP program rests with him and no one else," Grassley said.

    The children's health program expires on Sept. 30. A bill that would temporarily fund the program at current levels, as well as the budgets of 15 Cabinet departments and dozens of agencies, passed the House on Wednesday.

  • Election 2008 – Skinny Dippers Out of Left Field

    As we inch closer to the 2008 presidential election, the issues continue to pile up on both sides of the ideological aisle. Let’s take a look at some of the more recent developments.

    Who Will Serve as Picard’s Number One?

    It may be a bit early – even presumptuous – to hook up a candidate with a possible running mate, but in this election cycle there’s no reason why an educated guess – or even wild speculation – should be ignored.

    First, let’s look at whom the Democrats may choose. According to polls, it seems that the majority of Democrat voters have already decided their candidate will be Hillary Clinton. I have always believed Hillary will be the nominee, and as the campaign moves on, I feel that it is almost a sure thing. For one thing, she has succeeded in “softening up her image.” While I think it’s only a temporary front, she seems to be convincing the voters. In a recent AP-IPSOS poll of 1000 people, she was ahead of Barack Obama by 34% to 20%, and that spread holds very close in looking at other polls as well.

    If she were to get the nomination, whom would she pick as her running mate? As I’ve said previously, I think she will look outside the group of candidates. Perhaps she’ll pick Mark Warner from Virginia, or Ret. General Wesley Clark. In the press and on the Net, I continue to see Chris Dodd, Bill Richardson, Al Gore (he says no way) and even Barack Obama attached to Hillary as possible running mates. I suppose some of them could have a fair shot, especially Dodd or Richardson, but I consider Obama a far reach. Right now, he has nothing special to offer Hillary’s campaign but that could easily change. Alternatively, Dodd could be an asset to her campaign due to his experience in D.C., and Richardson could help pull in the Hispanic vote.

    It’s harder to pin down the Republican leader, but there are three candidates favored as the possible front-runner in the polls: Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson. I will skip Thompson for this round as he only officially declared his candidacy several weeks ago. I also don’t feel there is enough known about his beliefs, ideas, preferences or proposed policies to hazard even an educated guess whom he would choose as running mate.

    That leaves us with Giuliani and Romney, and at this juncture, I believe Duncan Hunter could be the best choice for either of them. His name has been mentioned in the press, but only on a list that includes second tier candidate Mike Huckabee, potential candidates George Pataki (I don’t see this happening) and Condi Rice (she says no way), and Tim Pawlenty. But frankly, until there is a more solid leader for the Republican nomination, I think it’s foolish to try to link a suitable running mate with a candidate. The Republican race is almost wide open at this date.

    From Toe Dipping to Skinny Dipping

    Getting back to Fred Thompson, he finally declared his candidacy for President after months of putting together an organization, raising money, and keeping the rest of the Republican hopefuls guessing. That big toe he dipped into the pond has given way to the whole enchilada. The entry of Thompson in the race has had a marked effect in the standings of the other candidates. Recent polls show Romney back down to 9% and in an American Research Group poll from September 16th, Giuliani was at 24% with Thompson virtually tied at 23%. It appears that Thompson may be picking up voters lost by Romney. It remains to be seen if the support shown in Iowa and New Hampshire for Romney will be able to carry him through, and also if the initial support shown Thompson will be lasting or just a blip. Thompson does have a good support base in the Southern states, however.

    Thompson does have a big question mark next to his name, however, because he is the first presidential candidate who is a former lobbyist – and many voters have a dubious opinion of lobbyists. Political consultant and columnist Dick Morris points out that Thompson has promised to “shake up Washington,” but how can he do that if his campaign is full of corporate insiders? Developments in this campaign will be intriguing.

    Hillary Clinton Holds Her Own

    Back on the Democrat front, Hillary Clinton maintains a strong position over Barack Obama in the national polls. For example, American Research Group has Clinton at 39% and Obama at 20% and Rasmussen Reports show Clinton at 40% and Obama at 20%. However, the Winthrop University/ETV Poll, taken at a predominantly black University in South Carolina, has some interesting results. Among 700 blacks polled, Obama has 35.4%; Clinton, 30.7%; and John Edwards limping in at 3%. No other candidate rises above the 1% mark. However, 28.7% of those surveyed were undecided, a huge potential for votes that Democrat candidates can be expected to target. Unsurprisingly, there was virtually no surprise for Republicans in this particular poll.

    Out of Left Field

    A surprise of sorts came to light last week when another black candidate, conservative Alan Keyes, joined the race (presumably on the Republican side, as there is no mention of party affiliation on his web site). Keyes ran for president in 1996 and 2000. His last attempt at gaining public office was in 2004 when he ran against Barack Obama in the Illinois senatorial race. Keyes is a somewhat colorful character who served as a diplomat under Ronald Reagan and has had his own radio show. He has a reputation for being rather outspoken and one thing he will be remembered for was back in the 2004 campaign when, on a cable TV news show, he called Obama a “socialist and a liar” and said that “Christ would never vote for Obama because of his position on abortion.” It’s doubtful he poses any threat to any of the announced candidates thus far, but his hat in the ring should provide some zest to the proceedings.

    Everything Old is New Again…and More Expensive

    Last week, Hillary Clinton announced her “new” healthcare plan, which she claims differs from her old (1993) healthcare plan. John Edwards and Barack Obama have also introduced theirs. Could this election turn into a “Democrat healthcare battle” and nothing get resolved? The particulars are all being studied, sorted out and changed accordingly, making it impossible to determine which may be the best plan. Only one thing is certain: if any of these Democrats win, his/her plan will cost the taxpayer more dollars.

    It’s important to note that the report on Iraq to the President and Congress by General Petraeus was received with decidedly mixed feelings. The President said he would follow the report’s suggestions and, predictably, Democrat leaders in Congress claimed the report was written for Bush to further “his” war effort. Their complaining may have backfired, however, as the controversy engendered by the report may have given the Republicans a positive boost in the upcoming election. The far Left organization MoveOn.org placed the now-infamous ad in the New York Times, calling General Petraeus a liar who has betrayed his country. This further miscalculation by the Left has elicited criticism from Republicans and some Democrats who quickly realized that attacking a four-star general does not sit well with the American public.

    Check It Out

    In closing, I would like to tell you about a great website I came across, which is a joint venture of the Congressional Quarterly and the St. Petersburg Times. It’s called Politifact, and its combined staff of reporters and news researchers sort through commentary, claims, and spin to bring you closer to the truth about what is being served on the political table for your consumption. Be sure to bookmark the site for your future use in the 14 months remaining to Election 2008, as it should provide a wealth of useful information.

  • Florida Democrats Holding Early Primary

    Florida’s state Democratic Party made the announcement on Sunday that they will go against the request of the national Democratic party and hold their presidential primary early, on January 29th.

    This means that no Florida delegate will be seated at the next Democratic convention set for next summer. Apparently the state party does not care the slightest bit though.

    Florida Democratic Party Chairwoman Karen Thurman stated “We will be voting on January 29th with our candidates on the ballot. At the end of the day, we came down on the side of having a fair and open election.”

    This came one month after the national party decided to strip Florida of its 210 delegates unless they changed the date. Party rules state only a few state primaries can be held before February 5th.

    Michigan is also challenging the party as well with a January 15th primary scheduled.

    Florida argues that this schedule allows for less populous states to have a disproportionate influence on who they select and nominate.

    source :

    www.ielection08.com

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