Friday, 19 June 2015

President Obama, Candidate Hillary Clinton to Visit LA for Fundraisers

President Barack Obama is scheduled to arrive at Los Angeles International Airport Thursday afternoon aboard Air Force One, then headline two Democratic National Committee fundraisers.

Obama’s first stop will be the Pacific Palisades home of television producer Chuck Lorre for a $16,700-per-person event benefiting the DNC’s 2016 White House Victory Fund, the entertainment trade publication Variety reported Board Roles Could Complicate Presidency for Jeb Bush

The invitation describes the event as an “intimate, living room style event” with only 30 people, but a chance to have “an open dialogue and discussion with the president,” according to Variety. The event will be closed to reporters.

Obama will then head to the Beverly Hills home of filmmaker Tyler Perry for the second fundraiser.

Tickets are priced from $2,500 to attend a reception to $33,400, the maximum allowable donation to a national party committee, which includes admission to a reception, where Obama will speak, and dinner and a photo with the president. Tickets for the dinner are priced at $20,000 per couple. The price to attend the reception and have a photo taken with Obama is $10,000, according to an invitation obtained by City News Service.

The comic Marc Maron announced on his Thursday podcast that he will interview Obama in the garage of his Highland Park home for his podcast, “WTF with Marc Maron.” The interview is scheduled for Friday, Maron said.

“What am I doing in terms of planning? That’s a good question,” Maron said on the podcast. “I’m thinking about it. I’m spinning. I haven’t done political talk radio in years, no desire to.

“He’s an incredibly brilliant and interesting man with a life that I’m going to talk to him about.”

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Defying conventions, Bernie Sanders emerges as Clinton’s top challenger in Democratic race

INDIANOLA, Iowa – 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders doesn’t take the stage to a blaring soundtrack. He doesn’t have a teleprompter or a phalanx of Secret Service agents surrounding him. But when his New York accent booms out at a campaign stop in rural Iowa, heads nod along in approval.

Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, is drawing sizable crowds in the early voting states. He’s also gaining against high-profile candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton in very early polls, particularly in New Hampshire, a factor that impresses the political class even though opinion surveys at this point are limited in predicting who will win.

“You’re living in a country today which has more wealth and income inequality than any major industrialized nation on earth,” Sanders said recently at a picnic south of Des Moines.

Clinton remains the race’s overwhelming favourite, but there’s no question the 73-year-old with the disheveled white hair isn’t just a novelty.

“This is a unique individual,” said Iowa Democratic state Rep. Scott Ourth, who introduced Sanders last weekend at the picnic in Indianola. “This guy has only one standard. If it’s right for people, he’s going to fight for it. If it’s bad for people, he’s going to take a stand against it.”

Drawing unexpectedly large crowds, the campaign has moved a town meeting planned in Las Vegas on Friday into a more spacious venue. About 5,000 people are expected at a rally Saturday at the University of Denver.

Sanders is running with a relentless focus on policy. He rarely talks about his family, other than mentioning his four children and 7 grandchildren when explaining the importance of confronting climate change. In Minneapolis he was joined on stage by his wife, Jane, and noted they had just celebrated their 27th wedding anniversary.

He’s promoting a massive government-led jobs program to fix roads and bridges. He wants a $15-an-hour minimum wage, and higher taxes on the wealthy and Wall Street. He advocates for a single-payer health care system, an expansion of Social Security benefits and debt-free college.

Sanders often points to some European and Scandinavian countries that provide subsidized or free education, universal health care and generous family leave policies as models for the U.S. He rarely mentions that tax rates in such countries are far higher than in the U.S. It’s a style that couldn’t be more different than Clinton’s.

Hours before the first major rally of her campaign, Clinton released a Spotify playlist of songs, featuring music by Katy Perry, Kelly Clarkson and Sara Bareilles. One of her campaign Twitter feeds showed a green silhouette of her head wearing trendy headphones.

Clinton has been travelling with Secret Service agents since her husband’s presidency in the 1990s.

Sanders shows up at rallies and events with a small contingent of aides. In Indianola, he carried a folded piece of paper scrawled with notes while he spoke.

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Obama guidance, press schedule June 19, 2015 San Francisco for mayors, Democratic fundraisers

In the morning, the President will depart Los Angeles, California en route San Francisco, California. The departure from Los Angeles International Airport and the arrival at San Francisco International Airport are open to pre-credentialed media.

In the afternoon, the President will deliver remarks at the Annual Meeting of the U.S. Conference of Mayors. The President’s remarks at the Hilton San Francisco Union Square are open to pre-credentialed media.

In the afternoon, the President will participate in a DNC roundtable. This event at a private residence is closed press.

Afterward, the President will attend a DCCC event. There will be print pool coverage of the President’s remarks at a private residence.

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Thursday, 18 June 2015

Why Bernie Sanders Is The Perfect Candidate For This Moment in American Politics

The day before President Barack Obama gave his 2014 State of the Union address, in which he made economic inequality the centerpiece, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) made an appearance on CNN’s “Situation Room.” About halfway through the segment, he started to lose his cool.

Sanders and Michele Bachmann, the former Republican representative from Minnesota, had been trading verbal jabs for several minutes and stepping all over each other’s lines, when they landed on the subject of Social Security.

“Do you believe in the chained CPI?” Sanders asked Bachmann, referring to an idea then being considered that would have decreased payments for cost-of-living adjustments in Social Security benefits. He wanted Bachmann to concede that the GOP aimed to cut Social Security. She alternately dodged the question and scolded him for lying.

“I asked you a question, and you wouldn’t give me an answer,” Sanders thundered after repeating the question five times.

“Well, calm down.”

“Do you support a chained CPI?”

“Calm down.”

Bachmann then expressed sympathy for an unemployed woman who had been featured in an earlier segment of the show: “The reality is, we want Ann’s life to be better.” Sanders responded with an eye roll.

The exchange was typical of Vermont’s junior senator, who entered the race for the Democratic presidential nomination in late April. He ventured deep into the policy weeds—at the risk of confusing viewers who had no idea what he meant by a chained CPI—and he was impatient, confrontational and determined to get his point across.

That passion and focus can carry Sanders—who famously identifies as a democratic socialist and represents Vermont as an independent—right up to the edge of seeming like a crank. And if he had run against Bill Clinton in the Democratic primary 20-odd years ago, he no doubt would have been dismissed as just that, and easily ignored.

But this is not 1992. Bernie Sanders cannot be ignored—his message speaks too powerfully to the current political moment. And he certainly will not calm down—not when, as he says at every opportunity, 99 percent of all new income is going to the top 1% of Americans, the “real” unemployment rate is 12.7 percent and the United States has the highest rate of child poverty in the developed world.

Sanders’ passion and single-mindedness seem to be grounded, in large part, in his childhood in Brooklyn, growing up in a small apartment. His father, who immigrated to the United States from Poland as a teenager, was a paint salesman. It was his mother’s dream, never realized, for the family to own a home. “What I learned as a kid,” Sanders told an audience at the Brookings Institution in early February, “is what the lack of money does to a family … the kind of stresses and pressures.”

He didn’t elaborate, but he believes that a growing number of Americans know precisely what he means.

“When you take on the billionaire class, it ain’t easy,” he said at Brookings. He was still deciding whether to run for president. To mount a campaign, he said, “We would have to put together the strongest grassroots movement in the modern history of this country, where millions of people are saying, ‘You know what? Enough is enough.’ ”

He entered the race two months later, apparently persuaded that he can organize a grassroots campaign around the idea that enough is, in fact, enough.

Ahead of the game

The endless election season is a boon for long-shot presidential candidates, giving them a platform, a spotlight and more than a year to make their case. In 1996, Steve Forbes centered his bid for the Republican presidential nomination around a call for a flat tax. There were relatively few proponents at the time. It has since become a favorite idea within the GOP.

Forbes’ flat tax would have cut his own income tax bill by an estimated $240 million. The 1990s were fertile ground for such anti-progressive economic ideas, as poverty fell off the political radar amid the tech bubble. Then, in the early 2000s, the global “war on terror” became all-consuming.

Bernie Sanders spent much of that time in the House, serving as Vermont’s only representative beginning in 1991. He ran for the Senate in 2006, winning with 65 percent of the vote, and was reelected in 2012 with 71 percent.

Through all those years, while economic inequality was mostly off the nation’s political agenda, it was Sanders’ abiding passion. In Outsider in the House, a book he wrote in 1997 about his congressional race the previous year, Sanders wrote, “In America we have the most inequitable distribution of wealth in the entire industrialized world. The middle class is shrinking, the working class is scraping by, and the poor are ever more deeply mired in poverty.”

Sanders was either way behind the times or way ahead of them. Fifty years ago, the movements for civil rights and economic justice, steadily building for years, culminated in the last great wave of social-reform legislation: the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the programs of Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society agenda, including Medicare, Medicaid, Head Start and food stamps.

Now, 50 years after the Great Society, we are—perhaps—in the midst of another moment of building momentum to address racial and economic inequalities. The Occupy movement’s rise in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis was the first sign of the changing times.

In late 2011, GOP spin guru Frank Luntz told Republicans at a conference that he was “frightened to death” of “this anti-Wall Street effort” because “they’re having an impact on what the American people think about capitalism.” And though Occupy as a formal movement has largely faded, its message continues to find new champions and new channels of expression.

For example, Thomas Piketty’s massive book about rising inequality, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, became a surprise bestseller in 2013; Pope Francis has reasserted Catholicism’s his torical emphasis on economic justice, recently describing inequality as “the root of social evil”; cities are taking the initiative in raising the minimum wage absent leadership from Congress; and pundits and activists are pushing back, in response to the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, against the inequalities and influence-buying built into our politics.

Last year, meanwhile, in a widely read and discussed piece, The Atlantic’s Ta-Nehisi Coates laid bare the deep structural racism that helps perpetuate economic inequalities. The protests and media coverage provoked by police violence against African Americans have helped make the same point. “Plunder,” as Coates told an audience at Johns Hopkins University soon after the protests in Baltimore began in April, “is the key to understanding the relationship between African Americans and the U.S.”

This is a moment, in other words, when Sanders’ laser-like focus on inequality harmonizes with the nation’s political climate. A Gallup poll released in May found that 52 percent of Americans favored redistribution of wealth through heavy taxes on the rich—up from 35 percent in the late 1930s and 45 percent in 1998.

The changing political climate is noticeable enough that even pro-business publications and Republican presidential hopefuls acknowledge inequality as a problem. “It’s worse than you think,” as Fortune put it last year. The piece quoted two scholars who found that wealth inequality “has followed a spectacular Ushape evolution over the past 100 years. From the Great Depression in the 1930s through the late 1970s, there was a substantial democratization of wealth. The trend then inverted, with the share of total household wealth owned by the top 0.1 percent increasing to 22 percent, from 7 percent in the late 1970s.”

Responding to Obama’s State of the Union address in January, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who has since thrown his hat in the ring for the GOP presidential nomination, said that the economic elites have become “fat and happy” and that “the top 1% earn a higher share of our national income than any year since 1928.”

In this context, Sanders is more than just another candidate with low name recognition and no chance of actually winning. He is the perfect candidate for this moment. What that means, exactly, remains to be seen.

The Sanders effect

“People should not underestimate me,” Sanders told the Associated Press on April 30. “I’ve run outside of the two-party system, defeating Democrats and Republicans, taking on big-money candidates, and … the message that has resonated in Vermont is a message that can resonate all over this country.”

Sanders has an advantage in that the first Democratic primary will be in New Hampshire, where his long political career in neighboring Vermont has made him well known. An upset there would give him early momentum. And in Iowa his campaign events have drawn overflowing crowds. But barring a meltdown by the Hillary Clinton campaign, her name recognition and campaign war chest are daunting—perhaps impossible—obstacles to overcome. In May, a CNN poll showed that just 10 percent of Democratic voters favored Sanders. Fifteen percent favored Joe Biden and 60 percent favored Clinton.

Seeking to explain his long-shot bid, pundits usually note that Sanders will push Clinton to the left. And there is little doubt that he will, at least during the campaign. When he isn’t talking about economic inequality, Sanders is usually talking about climate change. Clinton, who has not distinguished herself on either issue, will be forced to respond. Strong opposition from Sanders and Elizabeth Warren to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal, for example, seems to have forced Clinton to keep her position vague, though she has a history of supporting free-trade initiatives. Sanders, Warren and other progressive Democrats argue that it will hurt American workers and further erode the middle class.

But the potential significance of Sanders’ campaign for the Democratic nomination goes far beyond the 2016 race. And it goes far beyond whatever effects his campaign will have on Clinton.

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Neil Young: Sorry, Donald, But I Support Bernie Sanders

Neil Young on Tuesday continued a storied American tradition of recording artists asking Republican candidates to stop playing their music after Donald Trump used Young’s 1989 song, Rockin’ in the Free World, three times during his presidential campaign announcement.

“Donald Trump was not authorized to use Rockin’ in the Free World in his presidential candidacy announcement,” a representative of Young’s Lookout Management said in a statement, according to Rolling Stone. “Neil Young, a Canadian citizen, is a supporter of Bernie Sanders for president of the United States of America.”

Trump entered and exited to the song during his announcement, and it played briefly in the middle of his speech.  A Trump campaign representative said the campaign had paid for the right to use the song through a license agreement.

Young is only the latest artist to take issue with what they see as conservative appropriation of their patriotic-sounding anthems. Here are some other examples:

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Councilman Neilson selected for 174th House District election

Ed Neilson, a member of City Council for 10 months, appears ready to resign this week so he can run in his third special election in four years.

Democratic ward leaders in Northeast Philadelphia unanimously voted Tuesday night for Neilson to be their party’s candidate in an Aug. 11 special election to fill the vacant 174th District state House seat, according to Neilson spokesman Frank Keel.

Neilson, who lost his bid for a full four-year term in the May 17 primary election, may resign from his at-large seat Friday, Keel said. Council’s summer break starts that day.

The Aug. 11 special election ballot also includes vacant House seats in the 191st District in Southwest Philadelphia and Delaware County, and the 195th District, which stretches from North Philadelphia to 30th Street Station.

Frank Oliver, Democratic leader of the 29th Ward, who was a state representative in the 195th from 1973 to 2010, said he and his fellow ward leaders on Wednesday nominated Donna Bullock as their candidate in the 195th. Bullock, a lawyer, works as special assistant to Council President Darrell L. Clarke.

State Sen. Anthony H. Williams, who leads the Third Ward in West Philadelphia, said ward leaders Wednesday night selected Joanna McClinton as the Democratic candidate in the 191st. She is a lawyer who works on Williams’ Senate staff.

The Democratic City Committee will meet Friday to approve the candidates, who must be certified by the Pennsylvania Department of State by 5 p.m. Monday.

Neilson is a former political director for Electricians Local 98 and worked in Gov. Ed Rendell’s administration. He won a 2012 special election for the 169th District seat. That seat was then moved in redistricting to York County.

Last year, Neilson won a special election for the at-large seat that opened up when Bill Green resigned to head the School Reform Commission.

The 174th District seat is vacant because John Sabatina Jr. won a May 17 special election to fill the state Senate seat vacated in January by Lt. Gov. Mike Stack III.

Tim Dailey and Ross Feinberg are seeking the Republican nomination in the 174th. Republican ward leaders will vote Thursday evening for a candidate.

Dailey, a history teacher at Father Judge High School, lost the May 17 election to Sabatina. Feinberg is the Republican nominee for register of wills in the Nov. 3 general election.

Seats in the 191st and 195th came open when the representatives who held them, Democrats Ronald Waters and Michelle Brownlee, resigned this month after pleading guilty to corruption charges.
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Wednesday, 17 June 2015

From Hillary Clinton’s Promises to Policies

Hillary Rodham Clinton made many promises in her campaign speech last weekend, including a vow to “make the economy work for everyday Americans, not just those at the top.” Unlike many politicians who cast the income-and-wealth gap as a result of impersonal forces, Mrs. Clinton rightly noted that growing inequality also comes from “choices we’ve made as a nation, leaders and citizens.”

Mrs. Clinton did not flesh out the choices she would make, saying she would do so in coming weeks. While voters wait, here are some of the promises Mrs. Clinton made and policies that would back them up:

“I will rewrite the tax code so it rewards hard work and investments here at home, not quick trades or stashing profits overseas.”

With countless financial transactions occurring daily, some lasting a nanosecond, even a minuscule per-trade tax would restrain speculation. Closing the tax loophole that lets multinational corporations indefinitely defer taxes on foreign-held profits would deter the most common form of corporate tax avoidance and encourage timely investment of available funds.

“We will unleash a new generation of entrepreneurs and small business owners by providing tax relief, cutting red tape and making it easier to get a small-business loan.”

Tax cuts, regulatory relief and better loan terms are perennial issues for small businesses, championed by all candidates and all administrations. To truly give small businesses a shot at success, however, big business needs reforming. In recent decades, changes in antitrust and contract law have allowed ever bigger corporations to dominate major industries, making it harder for new entrants to compete. It also makes smaller suppliers of goods and services more reliant on a handful of big customers who are increasingly able to dictate prices. A president who champions small business must support a regulatory approach that strongly values competition and poses reasonably high hurdles to mergers.

“We will restore America to the cutting edge of innovation, science and research by increasing both public and private investments.”

Scientific research that leads to commercial breakthroughs is vital to the long-term wealth of the nation. But more public spending on science should include ways to ensure that the public shares in profits that result from federally financed research. Mrs. Clinton could either support corporate tax increases in tandem with greater research spending or promote nontax ways to give the public a fair share. One possibility would be to require recipients of federal grants to pay a portion of subsequent profits to the government. Another would be to establish a federally backed innovation fund that gives the government an equity stake in companies that use the fund.

“I will give new incentives to companies that give their employees a fair share of the profits their hard work earns.”

As a way to raise workers’ pay, profit-sharing is too narrow. As part of her pledge to strengthen families, Mrs. Clinton also called for a higher minimum wage, paid sick days, paid family leave and fair scheduling, which would boost pay and increase job security. She needs to specify how high the new minimum should be, presumably higher than the proposal in Congress for $12 an hour by 2020 that has been eclipsed by higher local increases. Her plan will not be complete without explicit support for union organizing. Research indicates that the demise in collective bargaining is the largest factor suppressing wage growth for middle-wage workers in recent decades, because union pay scales used to set the standard for union as well as nonunion employees. Mrs. Clinton’s plan should include support for new laws and procedures to make it easier to organize and increased penalties for corporations that violate laws intended to protect organizing efforts.

Mrs. Clinton also promised to create new jobs by developing clean energy and financing projects to improve the nation’s roads, railways, bridges, airports, ports and broadband system, although they would require a Congress willing to help. If Mrs. Clinton’s policy statements, when they come, are as powerful as her promises, they would amount to a meaningful economic agenda.

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Hillary Clinton is crushing Jeb Bush on Facebook

Bill O’Reilly: Hillary Clinton For President

BILL O’REILLY: On Saturday, Secretary Clinton announced she would like you to vote for her for president.

She gave a 40-minute speech — probably 20 minutes too long — in front of a few thousand supporters here in New York City.

Now a few things about Mrs. Clinton.

She’s a smart woman and a political creature.

Republicans would be foolish to underestimate her.

The strategy she is currently employing is to convince Americans the economic system is rigged against the working man and woman.

She is hoping to put together a coalition of people who want government to distribute money.

That is exactly the same thing President Obama wants.

Also, Hillary Clinton well understands that most Americans now loathe the media, and by dodging us she does not harm herself.

Talking Points expects Mrs. Clinton will continue the economic justice and the “I don’t need the press” strategy even though she took a few questions today in New Hampshire.

But if you are a fair-minded voter, someone who is looking for the best possible president, you must embrace the obvious.

That is President Obama’s economic policies have largely failed, yet Secretary Clinton is endorsing them.

Salaries for working men and women are lower now than when Mr. Obama took office.

The fundamental reason is that business is not expanding, therefore good jobs are not being created.

In fact, in the first quarter of this year, the economy actually contracted.

Nevertheless, Hillary Clinton is running on the promise that she can manage the private sector.

Saturday in New York City

HILLARY CLINTON: “You see corporations making record profits, with CEOs making record pay, but your paychecks have barely budged. While many of you are working multiple jobs to make ends meet, you see the top 25 hedge fund managers making more than all of America’s kindergarten teachers combined. ((EDIT)) Democracy can’t be just for billionaires and corporations. Prosperity and democracy are part of your basic bargain, too.”

As Talking Points has stated before, the federal government cannot — cannot– regulate the private sector.

It would be unconstitutional for any president to try to tell private corporations what they can pay their executives or what kind of salary structure they must have for employees.

What the feds can do is mandate a minimum wage, and Congress can pass certain work rules like 40-hour work weeks at standard pay.

But as Hillary Clinton well knows, no president can regulate capitalism and that is why communist and fascist governments have done away with it.

As the Wall Street Journal points out today, Mrs. Clinton’s promise of regulating the private sector goes against her husband’s policies.

In 1997 President Bill Clinton cut taxes on capital gains in order to stimulate the economy.

And it worked, as did the Reagan tax cuts in the 1980s.

The Journal calls Hillary Clinton’s speech a “false narrative,” but it’s more than that.

Mrs. Clinton is perpetuating a ruse that the federal government can dictate who earns what in America.

It can’t.

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Tuesday, 16 June 2015

Hillary Clinton’s Vows to ‘Fight’ Evoke a Populist Appeal and a Contrast With Obama

In a roughly 45-minute speech on Saturday, Hillary Rodham Clinton made 14 references to herself as a fighter.

She said she would “fight” back against Republicans, “fight” climate change, “fight” to “strengthen America’s families” and “fight” to “harness all of America’s power.” She used the verb in many of the same ways at her first major rally in Des Moines on Sunday, adding that she would “fight” for Midwestern values.

The presidential campaign’s effort to define Mrs. Clinton as a fighter is, on the surface, a way to persuade middle-class voters that she is on their side. But it is also helping to convey a more subtle message: When it comes to political combat and perseverance, Mrs. Clinton is not President Obama.

The theme is emerging just as Mr. Obama has suffered a major setback on trade, one that many in Congress say reflects his weaknesses, namely his standoffishness and his inability to forge coalitions for an agenda.

During her campaign swing in Iowa on Sunday, Mrs. Clinton said no one would be a “tougher negotiator” on trade than she would. She offered her most explicit remarks yet on the president’s handling of the issue, challenging him to work with Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the minority leader, and other congressional Democrats to improve the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal.

My view is the White House should call Nancy and a few other of the Democrats to say, ‘What would it take to get an agreement that would be better and not worse for American workers?’” Mrs. Clinton said.

She added: “What I want to see is a concerted effort to see how far we can push the agreement.”

In the early months of her campaign, Mrs. Clinton has worked to highlight her connection to, and respect for, the president she served for four years as secretary of state. She has appealed to Mr. Obama’s coalition of young and African-American voters with sweeping speeches on voting rights and civil rights. And even as liberal Democrats urged her to speak out against Mr. Obama’s troubled trade deal, Mrs. Clinton had for the most part remained mum.

But now that Democrats in Congress have rebuffed Mr. Obama in a public and embarrassing way, Mrs. Clinton faces heightened pressure to present herself to voters as a different kind of leader, in style if not in substance.

At the same time, Clinton aides believe that if they can make the “tenacious fighter” image stick with voters, “ultimately she will win this election,” the campaign manager, Robby Mook, said Friday at a question-and-answer session hosted by Politico.

A new biographical video from the campaign, titled “Fighter,” opens with a silhouette of Mrs. Clinton as a voice says: “What is a fighter? To me, a fighter is someone who won’t give up.”

Persistence is another emphasis. In the video and on the stump, Mrs. Clinton talks about her unsuccessful attempt to overhaul the health care system as first lady and how she continued to work and eventually got the Children’s Health Insurance Program passed.

The inevitable contrast with Mr. Obama’s leadership style that such language draws is not lost on Democrats in early

nominating states.

“Her years in Arkansas, as first lady, as a losing candidate in 2008 and as secretary of state — all of that taught her to be tough and to keep on going,” said Marti Anderson, an Iowa state representative who has a 2008 Obama campaign sticker on the front door of her Des Moines home.

“Obama’s quiet, a studious person, a wonk, a constitutional lawyer. Hillary is more of an activist,” Mrs. Anderson said. “And you need an activist when you have, for instance, a Congress that puts obstacles in your way. An activist doesn’t stop trying.”

Mrs. Clinton’s efforts to draw a contrast must be subtle, lest she alienate the Democratic base of voters who supported Mr. Obama. When asked whether the positioning of Mrs. Clinton is a strategy to distance her from Mr. Obama, a campaign spokesman reiterated that she is a “tenacious, dogged fighter” and that the description would be “front and center” in the campaign.

It helps that she has also earned a public image of not giving up, said Kiki McLean, a former aide to Mrs. Clinton.

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Meet the people coming to see Bernie Sanders in Iowa

DES MOINES, Iowa — As the Democratic presidential field descended on Iowa this weekend, Hillary Rodham Clinton’s visit generated more headlines — but Democratic rival Bernie Sanders drew more people.

The independent senator from Vermont, who rails against greedy corporate interests ruining the country’s democracy, drew overflow audiences nearly everywhere he went here over the weekend.

That included Des Moines, where close to 800 people streamed to a university auditorium on Friday night, and Waterloo, where more than 500 people gathered in a theater on Sunday afternoon.

The Vermont senator had the support of 16 percent of likely Democratic caucusgoers in a Des Moines Register/Bloomberg News Iowa poll earlier this month, to Clinton’s 57 percent.

So who’s coming to hear him speak?

This weekend, there were those fully sold on the self-described democratic socialist — they were the ones wearing “Bernie for president” t-shirts and holding the “Feel the Bern” signs. There were some others shopping for an alternative to Clinton, the formidable front-runner. Still others were merely curious about the fuss surrounding the frumpy politician who’s seen his poll numbers surge.

Terry Pensel, a Web developer who traveled more than 90 minutes from Guttenberg to see Sanders in Waterloo, was among those in the fully-sold category.

“I don’t want to bash Hillary Clinton or any of the other Democrats, but I don’t see them having a plan to deal with the concentrated wealth,” said Pensel, 47, as he left the auditorium with several yard signs and bumper stickers tucked under his arm. “They’re giving lip service to a lot of the issues Bernie has been talking about for a long, long time.”

Those issues, as Sanders described them, include the the “grotesque level of wealth and income inequality” in the country, the corrosive effects of big money on politics and the “disastrous” trade deals the country has entered into.

While Pensel was clearly pumped up about Sanders’s prospects, he also complained that the media — the corporate-controlled media, as he described it — has given Clinton so much more attention than Sanders.

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A victim of GOP? Vote Democratic

  • The South kept blacks from voting until the Voting Rights Act in 1965. Many Southern states were so egregious in denying blacks’ voting rights that an amendment was passed to forbid those states from changing their voting rules without federal permission. The Republican Supreme Court, in a strikingly biased decision, rescued those states and other Republican states from those cumbersome rules and made it seem like a rerun of 1964 all over again.
  • There are no voting issues for blacks, poor people, legal immigrants, the elderly and students in blue states — only in Republican states. Demographic results for all of those groups say they overwhelmingly vote Democratic.

    The new red-state voting issues include purging voting rolls, shortening early voting days and hours to 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday (one would have to take time off work with no pay to vote early), removing registration and polling places from university campuses, reducing the number of polling sites in certain districts and moving polling places to remote areas. It’s not a voter-ID issue; that’s Republican imaginary propaganda of voter fraud. It’s an issue of suppressing a select group of voters.

    Several red states, including Indiana and Arkansas recently, wanted to pass laws making discrimination legal. The public protest was immediate and well-deserved. Abortions in red states are almost impossible although abortions are legal (Roe vs. Wade). Same-sex marriages are difficult to get in red states. Preventative treatments are covered at no cost in the Affordable Care Act, but contraceptives (a preventative treatment) for women are difficult to get in red states. Expanded Medicaid to provide some basic level of health care for the poor was turned down by many red states’ governors even though it cost the state nothing. The Republican Party is trying to privatize Social Security and Medicare to further burden seniors and to pay some hedge funds megabucks to administer the programs.

    I trust all the people discriminated against by the Republican Party — including blacks, college students, LGBT folks, the poor, legal immigrants, women, union workers, government workers and seniors — will remember to vote for anyone but a Republican in 2016.

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Monday, 15 June 2015

Hillary Clinton’s rivals dig in day after campaign kickoff

A day after Hillary Clinton formally kicked off her 2016 presidential campaign with a speech at a rally on New York’s Roosevelt Island, current and would-be rivals on both sides of the political aisle took aim at the former secretary of state on Sunday morning talk shows.

“First off, I thought that Elizabeth Warren wasn’t running for president,” New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said on ABC’s “This Week” Sunday. “But when I listened to Hillary yesterday, it sounds like liberal political consultants put together that speech.”

Christie also criticized Clinton for not taking questions from the press.

“I’ve done 146 town hall meetings in the last five years in New Jersey and around the country,” Christie said. “Mrs. Clinton doesn’t hear from anybody. She doesn’t talk to anybody. She doesn’t take questions from anybody. How would she know what real Americans are really concerned about?

“Is it, you know, when she’s out giving paid speeches?” the Republican governor continued. “I don’t understand when she would know what she was saying yesterday about real Americans.”

On CBS’ “Face the Nation,” Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders slammed Clinton for refusing to take a stand on the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) that President Barack Obama is trying to fast-track through Congress.

“I would hope very much that Secretary Clinton will side with every union in the country, virtually every environmental group and many religious groups and say that this TPP policy is a disaster, that it must be defeated and that we need to regroup and come up with a trade policy which demands that corporate America starts investing in this country rather than in countries all over the world,” Sanders said.Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders says Clinton has been quiet on the Keystone pipeline. Sanders also touts his votes on Iraq and the Patriot Act.

“There is no question that what our trade policy has been for many years is to allow corporate America to shut down plants in this country, move abroad, hire people at pennies an hour and then bring their products back to the United States,“ the independent senator and Democratic presidential candidate continued. “It is a failed trade policy, and I would hope that the secretary joins Elizabeth Warren, Sherrod Brown and the vast majority of Democrats in the Congress in saying, ‘No. We’ve got to defeat this piece of legislation.’”

On “Fox News Sunday,” Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee and TPP proponent, called Clinton’s silence on the trade deal “mystifying.”

“It’s about global leadership,” Ryan, the 2012 GOP vice presidential nominee, said. “Surely, a person who was secretary of state understands a little bit about leadership.“

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Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders coming to Vegas for Latino

Over the past couple of weeks, Senator Sanders has attracted sold-out crowds in Vermont when he announced and in New Hampshire, and in Iowa, and in Minnesota, and with all of the positive press, those sold-out crowds are earning Senator Sanders, Hillary Clinton’s campaign is now showcasing its own enthusiastic crowds…And yes, she’s running basically all alone in the national polls.

Sanders appeared Thursday at a reporters breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor. “I won’t make that mistake”.

“Senator Warren and I have been working since she’s been in the Senate together on a number of issues…”. Gov. Bush is getting a new campaign manager.

“This is not an educational campaign”, he said. “Nobody cares!” At this point, Sanders’ desire to court lower-level contributors online is as much a financial necessity as a political play – each donation arriving as a dash of fuel on his slow-growing populist fire. The WFP, through their campaign apparatus, could help Mr. Sanders overcome that hurdle.

“Are the scientists right that climate change is one of the great planetary crises that we face and that we’ve got to move aggressively on it?”

Bernie Sanders’ April 30 announcement may have been met with a collective wink from the national media, which insisted he cannot win, but the self-described democratic socialist instantly tapped into grassroots support even he may not have been aware of.

And considering that those of United States who belong to older generations are leaving our young people with mountains of federal debt, nothing would be more just and fair than financing a free college education by asking older generations who trade on Wall Street to follow President Kennedy’s dictum and ask what they can do for our country. Sanders said workers would pay for the cost of the program “at a price of about one cup of coffee a week”. “But the underlying issue”, he continued, “in terms of Freddie Gray’s community, as I understand it – do you know what the unemployment rate there is?” Private insurance. You wouldn’t be paying private insurance. While the country in fact does need an upgrade in infrastructure (ideally through block grants to the states), Bernie’s infrastructure plan – coupled with his grand vision for the nanny state – would require a giant surge in taxes that would drown the capitalistic engine that drives our economy. He said it would “end loopholes that allow corporations to stash profits in the Cayman Islands”, and include a progressive individual income tax.

As for ex- Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, I once saw her in Washington and said hello, literally that’s all I said.

And he promises not to come out with any negative ads. Among likely Iowa caucus goers, 54 percent support Clinton while just 12 percent support Sanders and 20 percent saythey don’t now.

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Hillary Clinton Launches Campaign With Help From Spotify, Echosmith

Hillary Clinton kicked her 2016 presidential campaign into gear on Saturday with a grand formal launch on New York City’s Roosevelt Island. Hours before the event, her campaign released the Democratic candidate’s official playlist on Spotify, showcasing a range of uplifting anthems, including a handful by female artists like Kelly Clarkson, Katy Perry, Sara Bareilles and Jennifer Lopez.

Illustrated with a silhouette of the candidate wearing Beats-style headphones emblazoned with her H logo, the playlist kicks off with two home-state selections, the rousing “Believer” by Brooklyn four-piece American Authors (featured twice on the list), and “The Fighter” by Geneva, New York’s Gym Class Heroes. It then moves into more ubiquitous hits including Katy Perry’s “Roar,” Kelly Clarkson’s “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You),” and Pharrell’s “Happy,” before closing on a triumphant Latin beat with Marc Antony’s “Vivir Mi Vida.”

Although they didn’t make the playlist, Los Angeles rockers Echosmith were on hand to support Clinton during Saturday’s rally, as NY1 reports. Performing before Clinton’s speech, the band played “Cool Kids,” off their 2013 debut album Talking Kids.

After taking the stage to the sound of Sara Bareilles’ “Brave” (which was featured on the playlist), Clinton threw in a Beatles’ reference during a jab at the Republicans. “Now there may be some new voices in the presidential Republican choir,” she said. “But they’re all singing the same song. It’s called ‘Yesterday.’ You know the one—’All our troubles look as though they’re here to stay and they need a place to hide away. They believe in yesterday and you’re lucky I didn’t try singing that too, I’ll tell you.”

Clinton then turned to an appeal for unity: “We are at our best when we pick each other up, when we have each other’s back. Like any family, our American family is strongest when we cherish what we have in common and fight back against those who would drive us apart,” Clinton said. According to ABC, she also emphasized her policy priorities including voting rights, equal pay for women, climate change, LGBT equality and affordable higher education.

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Friday, 12 June 2015

Hillary Clinton To Address Economic Issues In Campaign Speech

On Saturday, Hillary Clinton holds her first big campaign rally on Roosevelt Island in New York City with a unusually personal speech about how her upbringing forged her commitment to helping others.

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US presidential candidate Bernie Sanders eyes top tax rate of 50 per cent plus

New York: Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders says he supports raising the top marginal tax rate to “over 50 per cent” and increasing the corporate tax rate.

In an interview on PBS’ Charlie Rose program on Thursday, the Vermont senator, who is campaigning on a platform of “redistribution of wealth” from the nation’s highest earners to the “disappearing” middle class, revealed that he appears to be gaining traction with his ideas: Sanders said he’d raised more than $6 million in small donations for his campaign so far and expected to cross the $10 million mark by June 30.

Sanders said he was “working right now on a comprehensive tax package, which I suspect will, for the top marginal rates, go over 50 per cent,” though he wouldn’t endorse a specific rate. He often points out that the top marginal rate exceeded 90 per cent under Republican President Dwight Eisenhower.

Although the White House and many Republicans want to lower the corporate tax rate, Sanders said he wanted to raise it, as well as eliminate loopholes that allow corporate and wealthy taxpayers to reduce their tax bill.

“If you look at the collective percentage of revenue coming in from corporations today, it is significantly lower than it was back in the 1950s,” he said. “I think it’s about 10 per cent today.”

The self-described democratic socialist defended his plans to transfer wealth toward a middle class that has seen wages stagnate for more than a decade.

“In the past 30 years … we’re talking about many trillions of dollars being redistributed from the middle class to the top one-tenth of 1 per cent,” he said. “It is time to redistribute money back to the working families of this country from the top one-tenth of of 1 per cent. And tax policy is one of the ways we do that.”

While Although Sanders said he would be “conservative” about committing US troops abroad, he said he was uncertain whether President Barack Obama made the right decision in announcing this week he would send 450 US advisers to help that Iraq stop the incursion of the Islamic State. “I want to think about it. I haven’t reached a conclusion yet,” said Sanders, noting that Obama was trying to “thread a needle here.

“He does not want combat troops in the region; nor do I,” Sanders said. “On the other hand, he wants to play a supportive role. Where the line is drawn, I’m not clear.”

Sanders praised Pope Francis for his grasp of “the vulgarity of money” and his support for efforts to reduce global warming. And although he said he would not attack Hillary Clinton personally, he repeated his criticism of the Democratic front-runner for refusing to declare a position on the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal and noted that her campaigns have “received a great deal of money from Wall Street.” Sanders stopped short, however, of linking her to the banking deregulation signed into law by President Bill Clinton.

“I’m not blaming her for her husband,” he said.

Sanders has, notably, drawn large and enthusiastic crowds in his recent visits to early primary states such asIowa and New Hampshire. He remains a long-shot for the Democratic nomination, acknowledging that Hillary Clinton is “far and away the leader in the polls” in the polls. “But I think we have the momentum,” he said, adding: “We’re in this race to win.”

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Newest Democratic presidential candidate Lincoln Chafee recalls time in Bozeman

In October 1975, a 23-year-old man from Potowomut, Rhode Island, drove to Bozeman to attend the winter session of the Horseshoeing School at Montana State University.

He had just graduated from Brown University, but he respected craftsmen and wanted to work with his hands. The life of a blacksmith appealed to him.

That man, Lincoln Chafee, 62, announced last week that he is now seeking the Democratic Party’s nomination for president of the United States

“I’d always grown up with a horse, and saw the shoer do his work,” Chafee told the Chronicle on Thursday.

Chafee is the fourth major politician to enter the 2016 Democratic nomination race, joining former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley.

It’s a unique past for a presidential candidate.

“To my knowledge, there never has been a farrier to occupy the White House,” said Jeff Cota, associate editor of the American Farriers Journal. “However, it wouldn’t surprise me if a president who lived an agrarian lifestyle in the 18th or 19th centuries shod his own horses.”

When he showed up in Bozeman, Chafee slept in his car, then at a hostel. He poured concrete for cash until the 11-week school began in January. On occasion, he dined at the Western Cafe with his instructor Scott Simpson, who founded the MSU Horseshoeing School in 1971.

He remembers the Haufbrau bar and having a season pass at Bridger Bowl, the ski area north of Bozeman. “We used to hike up to the ridge,” he recalled. “Quite a hike, straight up, but boy you got super snow if you traversed the ridge.”

After graduating the horseshoeing course, Chafee found work at the Red Mile horse track in Kentucky, then shoed harness-racing horses in Canada. He stayed their for seven years before going home.

His horse shoeing days were over, and his career began to look more like his father’s. John Chafee, Lincoln’s father, was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1976 after serving as Secretary of the Navy for President Richard Nixon.

He was a moderate Republican known for his work on environmental protection laws and support for a universal health care system. When he died in 1999, Lincoln was appointed as his replacement.

Chafee, who had by then been elected mayor of Warwick, Rhode Island, continued his father’s tradition of center-right stances on policy issues and was the only Republican in the Senate to vote against the 2003 war in Iraq. His vote is an important point of contrast with the Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton who voted yes and supported the “neocon” Republicans who planned the invasion of a sovereign nation on false pretenses, Chafee said.

“It was a test of judgement…. She was there and looking at the same evidence that I saw,” Chafee said.

Carroll College political science professor Jeremy Johnson knows Lincoln Chafee. While studying at Brown University in 2012, Johnson regularly saw Chafee at Blue State Coffee, talked to him often and interviewed him for his doctoral studies.

Chafee left the Republican Party in 2007 after losing his 2006 reelection to a Democrat. Becoming an independent, Chafee was elected governor of Rhode Island in 2010 but decided against a reelection after one term.

Johnson said he was surprised at Chafee’s candidacy for president.

“He’s not that well-known nationally,” he said. “He doesn’t have a natural constituency in the Democratic Party. He was a Republican senator who only recently became a Democrat.”

Johnson said that he thinks Chafee’s motivation to run, and disapproval of Hillary Clinton, goes beyond the Iraq War vote to a 20-year-old health care debate.

In 1993, as head of the national health care reform task force, Clinton failed to pass a health care reform bill backed by a coalition of moderate Republicans. Sen. John Chafee led a group of 23 Republicans and was the sponsor of a bill to achieve universal coverage through an individual health insurance mandate.

Chafee told the Chronicle Thursday that it was a personal sore point.

“The First Lady, Hillary Clinton, just did not work with those Republicans. It was once again, my way or the highway,” Chaffee said Thursday. “That arrogant approach that Mrs. Clinton is known for doomed a chance to do something good. (My dad) was crushed after all that work. That it fell apart. He was crushed.”

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Thursday, 11 June 2015

It’s official: Hillary Clinton’s logo is actually perfect

Favors to foundation donors stretch back to Hillary Clinton’s Senate days

Hillary Rodham Clinton’s efforts to provide favors to major donors to her husband’s global charity or her own political career stretch back far earlier than her tenure as America’s top diplomat, dating to the time she served as a U.S. senator and had the power to earmark federal funds and influence legislation, records show.

For instance, Mrs. Clinton introduced a bill when she was New York’s junior senator that allowed a donor to the Clinton Foundation to use tax-exempt bonds to build a shopping center in Syracuse, New York, public records show.

She also went to bat for Freddie Mac, working to defeat legislation that would have subjected the mortgage giant to tougher regulations before the housing bubble burst and led to a major recession. That same year, Freddie Mac donated $50,000 to $100,000 to her husband’s charity, originally called the William J. Clinton Foundation records show.

Mrs. Clinton also used her leverage as a senator to help persuade the Chinese government to reduce tariffs on Corning Inc.’s fiber optic products. The central New York company’s employees and executives contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to her campaigns and political action committee.

Analysts on political money have said the pattern of Mrs. Clinton’s intervention on behalf of donors to her husband’s charity raise troubling ethical questions.

“It seems like the Clinton Foundation operates as a slush fund for the Clintons,” Bill Allison, a senior fellow at the Sunlight Foundation, a government watchdog group, told the New York Post in April after conflict-of-interest reports started surfacing between the Clinton Foundation and Mrs. Clinton’s political work. Mr. Allison declined to be interviewed for this article.

A Fox News poll released last week suggests that Americans agree with Mr. Allison’s viewpoint. Sixty-one percent of voters said it was somewhat likely that the Clintons were “selling influence to foreign contributors” who made donations to the Clinton Foundation while Mrs. Clinton served as secretary of state.

In a CNN/ORC poll conducted this month, 57 percent of Americans said Mrs. Clinton was not honest and trustworthy, up from 49 percent in March.

Mrs. Clinton’s tenure as New York’s senator only adds to the storyline of political favors for wealthy contributors.

In 2004, Robert J. Congel, an upstate New York builder, contributed $100,000 to the Clinton Foundation — one month after Mrs. Clinton, as senator, helped enact legislation that allowed Mr. Congel’s firm to use tax-free bonds to build a mega-shopping center dubbed Destiny USA in Syracuse.

About year later, Mrs. Clinton put an additional earmark in a highway bill for $5 million for Mr. Congel’s development project, which passed nine months after Mr. Congel donated to the Clinton Foundation.

Overall, Destiny USA, now the sixth-largest shopping mall in the U.S., received 15 government tax subsidies valued at more than $703.6 million, making the Syracuse property one of the biggest recipients of economic development dollars in the nation, according to a report released by Good Jobs First, a research center in Washington. Not all the money was paid out during Mrs. Clinton’s term as senator.

Mr. Congel declined to be interviewed for this article, as did a spokesman for Mrs. Clinton’s presidential campaign. But back in 2009, Mrs. Clinton’s spokesman Philippe Reines told The New York Times that there was no connection between Mr. Congel’s donation and her legislative work on his project.

Mrs. Clinton supported expansion of the mall “purely as part of her unwavering commitment to improving upstate New York’s struggling economy, and nothing more,” Mr. Reines told the New York paper. He added that Mrs. Clinton didn’t solicit the money from Mr. Congel or discuss it with him or anyone on his behalf and was unaware of its timing and size until some years later.

Mrs. Clinton’s team was quick to note that she was just one of a number of New York politicians, both Democratic and Republican, who helped enact the bill that gave the tax breaks to Destiny USA.

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Democratic diversity: Why it’s a good thing O’Malley’s in the presidential race

Regardless of how you feel about former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, his announcement last week that he’s running for president is good. His participation widens the discussion of issues and provides voters with additional opportunities to compare and contrast ideals embraced by other candidates in the field.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been the front-runner on the Democratic side for more than a year, and she just announced formally last month that she is running. Other Democrats considering a run, including Vice President Joe Biden, former Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee and former U.S. Sen. Jim Webb of Virginia, haven’t gotten much publicity. Neither has Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has announced his candidacy. O’Malley will face similar difficulties in what many consider a long-shot campaign.

But O’Malley is already trying to position himself as the Clinton alternative. In announcing his candidacy, O’Malley said, “The presidency is not a crown to be passed back and forth by you between royal families,” a jab at both Clinton and Republican contender Jeb Bush.

Bush faces considerable competition on the Republican side. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and others have either already announced they are running or are expected to announce soon that they are.

And while there are complaints from the Republicans’ side that candidates all sound alike in what they say they stand for or oppose as they vie for support from various special interests, having that many people in the field guarantees some degree of disagreement on the major issues and how we should handle them.

A look back at the Republican debates before the 2012 presidential election demonstrates how the candidates can rise and fall based on what they say or don’t say, and how they handle themselves when faced with tough questions.

That same type of discussion is needed among the Democratic Party candidates.

Clinton holds the top position among potential Democratic voters in all polls by a wide margin, but O’Malley is right when he says she should not win the nomination by default. Clinton was a top candidate in 2008 too, until she was upstaged by a freshman senator from Illinois who went on to win the nomination, and the presidency.

O’Malley may not be as well-known nationally as Clinton, and he may not be as well-liked as he would hope, even in his home state. Remember, voters rejected Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown in the gubernatorial race and gave the win to Republican Larry Hogan. But O’Malley’s entry into the race does provide added perspective and viewpoints that Clinton or any other candidate will have to address at some point in the campaign.

More conversations, deeper discussions and additional perspectives are always a good thing when you are looking for the best solutions. For that reason, whether he wins or not, having O’Malley in the race is a positive thing.

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Wednesday, 10 June 2015

Gecker wins Democratic primary

Dan Gecker has won the Democratic primary for Virginia’s 10th Senate District, an open seat encompassing all of Powhatan County and parts of Chesterfield County and Richmond City.

Unofficial results of the primary election held on Tuesday, June 9 have Gecker, a Chesterfield Board of Supervisors member and developer, winning with 46.5 percent of the vote with 100 percent of the ballots counted, according to results posted on the Virginia Department of Elections’ website.

Gecker beat out Emily Francis, who had 34.26 percent of the vote, and Alex McMurtrie Jr., who had 19.24 percent.

In Powhatan County, 287 people (41.59 percent) voted for Gecker over 230 votes (33.33 percent) for McMurtrie and 173 votes (25.07 percent) for Francis.

Shortly after his victory was announced, Gecker released a statement saying he was humbled by the support he has received in the past few weeks and considered hearing from so many District 10 constituents “one of the greatest gifts of this campaign so far.”

“And from Richmond to Chesterfield to Powhatan our regions’ priorities are clear: We need to continue to ensure every child has the same access and opportunity to education, we need to grow our local businesses and our local economy by ensuring the rules of the road are stable, fair and that we are matching skills to jobs,” Gecker said. “And we must put aside ideological differences in order to make government work for people.

“In eight years on the board of supervisors, I have gone to great lengths to work across the aisle to improve the quality of life for our residents, and I am looking forward to doing the same for Virginia’s 10th Senate District. Our community and our region deserve nothing less,” he said.

Senate District 10 is currently held by Sen. John Watkins, R-10, who announced in late 2014 that he was retiring at the end of his term. At the end of his career, Watkins will have represented Powhatan at the state level for 34 years. He was first elected in the House of Delegates in 1982 and served there until 1998. He has served in the 10th senatorial district since 1998.

Democrats need to pick up only one seat in order to regain control of the 40-member chamber, in which Democratic Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam casts tie-breaking votes.

Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe endorsed Gecker and the party is hoping Gecker can defeat Republican Glen Sturtevant in the fall and swing the Senate into Democratic control.

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Bernie leads in national democratic primary poll

Thom discusses the proof that Reaganomics doesn’t work with radio host RJ Eskow and today’s Shell protest in Seattle with Greenpeace USA’s John Deans. Tonight’s Politics Panel debates the next Supreme Court Obamacare ruling, how Bernie is leading in a national democratic primary straw poll, and how only one person showed up for a Rick Santorum event in Iowa. In tonight’s Daily Take Thom discusses how Donald Rumsfeld is trying to become Robert McNamara.

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Bernie Sanders: On pushing Hillary Clinton to take a stand

WASHINGTON — No one was more surprised than Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders by his strong showing in a Wisconsin Democratic straw poll over the weekend: 41%, just 8 percentage points behind front-runner Hillary Clinton.

The non-binding Wisconsin results and the overflow crowds Sanders has been drawing in Iowa and New Hampshire are signs that there is “a real hunger” for a substantive discussion about Americans’ economic anxieties, he says — and pressure on Clinton to declare where she stands.

To be sure, the former secretary of State remains the prohibitive favorite for the Democratic presidential nomination. But Sanders, a self-described Democratic socialist and the longest-serving independent in congressional history, is the competitor gaining the most traction against her, at least for now.

In an interview Tuesday with Capital Download, he sought to use that standing to press a populist agenda and push for changes in the primary debates. The Democratic National Committee has announced six sanctioned debates with rules that bar a candidate who participates in any non-sanctioned ones.

“That position took place without consulting my campaign at all,” Sanders said in a worn Capitol Hill townhouse, wedged between a Mexican restaurant and a nail salon, that his campaign recently rented to use in Washington. (The campaign headquarters is in Burlington, Vt.) “I think what we should do is get all of the candidates together and sit down and say, ‘OK, what is a rational and fair approach?’ ”

He proposes more debates — including in Republican states — that would be open for Democratic and Republican candidates to participate in together.

Clinton seems unlikely to agree to that idea, but Sanders may have more success in pushing her to back issues that have animated his supporters and fueled activism by the so-called Elizabeth Warren wing of the Democrat Party. Sanders has inherited some of the supporters who unsuccessfully urged the Massachusetts senator to run for president.

“I have been … leading the opposition to TPP,” the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal being negotiated, he said. “Hillary Clinton has had nothing to say. She hasn’t given us an opinion. And it’s hard for me to understand how Secretary Clinton or any candidate can avoid speaking out on what is a huge economic issue. You can be for it; you can be against it, but you’ve got to have an opinion.”

He went on: “I led the effort against the Keystone Pipeline. I don’t know that Secretary Clinton has spoken out on this issue. … I led the effort when I was in the House against the deregulation of Wall Street. … Where is Secretary Clinton on the issue of breaking up the large financial institutions?”

He declined to give Clinton any advice as she prepares formally to announce her campaign at a New York rally Saturday. “Let me tell you a top secret here: I am not on Hillary Clinton’s payroll,” he said, adding, “I respect Hillary Clinton. I’ve known her for 25 years. I shouldn’t say this: I like Hillary Clinton.”

Sanders, a 73-year-old with a halo of white hair and thick Brooklyn accent, seems to be as amazed as anyone by the reception his unlikely campaign is getting. He indicated he didn’t realize Wisconsin Democrats were holding a straw poll until there were news reports about how well he had done in it.

He insists it is possible for him to win the nomination: first, by raising $40 million to $50 million, enough to do well in the opening Iowa caucuses and win the New Hampshire primary. (He notes, “We’re just the Connecticut River apart, in Vermont.”)

“Then the hope is, if we do well in those two states, and then, you know, become de facto a credible candidate, that a lot more money comes in,” he says. “The nature of the beast is that you’ve got to do well in Iowa or New Hampshire; that’s just the truth.”

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Tuesday, 9 June 2015

For Hillary Clinton, a defining moment

(CNN)On Saturday, June 13, Hillary Clinton will deliver an important address at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedom Parks in New York to officially launch her campaign, a follow-up to her video announcing her candidacy. The speech, according to campaign officials, “will lay out her view of the challenges facing this country and her vision and ideas for moving the country.”

There is a lot for Clinton supporters to be excited about. Notwithstanding all the ups and downs of the first few weeks of her rollout, Clinton still looks like a strong candidate.

Though there have been three primary challengers to emerge, Lincoln Chafee, Martin O’Malley and Bernie Sanders, she is still largely considered to be a lock for the nomination. Her fund raising strength and her electoral support, as well as the overall package that she offers as a candidate for the Democratic Party in 2016, are formidable. Clinton still polls ahead of all the Republican candidates including Jeb Bush.

Yet there is clearly unease among many Democrats. There have been stories about the fact that Sen. Sanders, who most people doubt has a chance of even winning a caucus or primary, is drawing big crowds during his speeches and is electrifying audiences. The ongoing stories in the mainstream press, stimulated by Peter Schweitzer’s provocative book about the Clinton Foundation, have produced a flurry of articles questioning the Clintons’ ties to corporate money.

Upsetting to her supporters are a number of recent polls that have shown her favorability rating to be at or well below 50%. When asked in one survey whether voters trusted her, a whopping57% responded that at this time they did not.

Some of the underlying challenges that Hillary Clinton will have to address before the general election in the fall of 2016 are becoming very clear. Talk about any kind of crisis for her campaign is overblown, but the opportunity for correction and improvement is very real.

She needs to work on the ‘T’ word

While winning the nomination should still be relatively straightforward, Clinton should use these valuable months to effectively work through some of the negative perceptions that exist within the electorate and to fortify her position by answering, rather than evading, these concerns.

Most important of all is trust. This is an issue that has dogged Hillary Clinton since she was the first lady. Will voters trust her to do what she says? For decades, the Clintons have come under attack for the veracity of their words. Much of this, unfairly, is about her husband and not her.

Hillary Clinton will deliver an important address at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedom Parks in New York on June 13.

Bill Clinton was well known over the decades for being willing to cut a deal that undercut his allies and friends. Many Democrats felt that way in the 1990s when he agreed to eliminate the federal welfare program, AFDC, or responded to the Republican takeover of Congress in 1994 by later saying that “The Era of Big Government Is Over.” Democrats felt betrayed when they learned that he lied to the public about his relationship with Monica Lewinsky, given the high risks he knew this posed for the party.

The perception also stems from the intense fervor for investigation that her conservative opponents have had since the early part of Clinton’s time as first lady. They have mounted an aggressive push to undermine her credibility with charges of lying and scandal.

As a political candidate, Hillary Clinton herself has continually struggled to overcome this image. The debate in the 2008 primaries about her record on Iraq grew out of these concerns as much as it did over concerns that she was too hawkish on Iraq. Democrats, for example, pounced on questions about trust after her long-winded answer in a debate explaining her position on granting driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants. Now she will face this challenge again.

What does she really stand for?

Regardless of what is fair and what is partisan slander, Clinton has to outline what positions she stands for and make a strong case to the public about for the priorities she would pursue as president. She has to distance herself from the neoliberal economic record of her husband, and to demonstrate to voters that she comes from a very different Democratic tradition, one more closely tied to labor-based, middle-class economics attuned to the need for government to help mitigate social inequality and economic downturns.

There needs to be more New Deal, and less DLC (the centrist organization her husband helped create). Given that recent polls show Americans are greatly concerned about inequality of wealth and income, considering it to be a major issue, the political value of taking this stand should also be clear.

Hillary Clinton will also have to sort out where she stands on money and politics. Many of the stories that have been damaging to her early campaign have touched on something essential to the Clintons since the 1990s — their close relations to the world of Wall Street and campaign donors. Though there really haven’t been any smoking guns showing that Hillary Clinton ever did anything wrong, the stories revealed that the couple lives in an insular world of wealthy campaign contributors.

These relationships touch on a toxic element of our current political system. This is not new. The Clintons have always been very skilled and connected in this world. This has been one of their strengths as partisans. But at a moment when polls show enormous concern about the role of money and politics this can be a vulnerability, and opponents can use it to portray her as a candidate disconnected from the world of average citizens.

And Clinton will have to figure out how to position herself in relationship to the incumbent president. This is always an enormous challenge for a candidate, ordinarily a vice president, of the same party as a second term president.

Obama’s record is politically complicated. For many Democrats, there is not much of a problem. The president has a robust record, they say. On domestic policy, he was able to secure passage of important domestic legislation like the Affordable Care Act that Clinton needs to defend.

The worst possible strategy, they feel, is to play into the Republican criticism and accept that Obama’s programs were flawed. On foreign policy, Obama’s supporters feel that she should stand by the administration’s record that has made diplomacy and international alliances central to conducting foreign affairs, all the while keeping much of the post-9/11 counterterrorism programs in place.

But Clinton, like everyone else in the political world, realizes that President Obama’s record has much baggage. Many Americans are not satisfied with his domestic record and view the domestic programs as flawed. Even a large number of progressives feel that Obama sold out his coalition and agreed to corporate-based solutions to public policy that have been flawed from the start.

For conservatives, and many independents, everything about the administration has been a disaster. In their view, Obama’s foreign policy has been a decision to stand still as terrorist networks expand and his domestic policies have been one flawed program after another.

Hillary Clinton has not yet clearly explained how she will handle this challenge. The speech should be a start. She needs to figure out a way to differentiate herself from the failures and problems, without making the mistake that Vice President Al Gore did in 2000 of separating himself from the very assets that the incumbent president brings to the table.

The next few months will thus be critical for Clinton, not in terms of winning or losing the nomination, but in effectively dealing with some of the underlying vulnerabilities which have become clear. This is the time when she can do this by clarifying positions, showing voters her character more clearly and knocking down some of the questions that have emerged.

If she does not, these vulnerabilities will come back to bite her in the general election as Republicans will seek to spread doubts about Clinton to win their way back into the White House.

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