Hello all, as you may know, I have started blogging for the Daily Banter. My goal is to write at least one post a day and would LOVE to get your thoughts.
Please, please, please check it out and add comments (on that site).
Did I say please?
Hello all, as you may know, I have started blogging for the Daily Banter. My goal is to write at least one post a day and would LOVE to get your thoughts.
Please, please, please check it out and add comments (on that site).
Did I say please?
Seriously, it’s great. You can read all of my political thoughts and insights — including live blogging of the whole Inaugural festivities at the Daily Banter. Please, please, please check it out.
Did I say please?
This was published today on Pardon the Pundit. If you like the Onion, you will love this site. And yes, I am Alyson Durden.
11/28/2012 7:05 AM Alyson Durden – Congressman and former Vice Presidential candidate Paul Ryan has declared he has a mandate, not from the voters per se, but from moviegoers that made “Twilight” the top-grossing movie over the holiday weekend.
“The people of America have spoken. They may not have had their voice heard on election day when their desire to see Mitt (Romney) and I take back the White House and return the nation to Republican control was thwarted by Obama’s minions, who were lured to the Democratic side by free contraceptives and other gifts, but their will was made clear this past weekend when the story of my people, vampires, triumphed at the box office,” Ryan told reporters. “Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson may not be actual vampires, but their portrayal of them in all these films has been beyond moving. I could not be prouder of the vampire history than while watching these movies. People say I was selected to be the veep candidate because of my work on the budget, or because I could harness the forces of darkness for our side, but that’s not it. First of all, if you read my budget plans, they are terrible. Secondly, Karl Rove clearly has the corner on harnessing the forces of darkness, and he failed at that this time. No, it was a Mormon who wrote the definitive vampire love story. That’s what convinced Mitt I was the right man for the job. For too long I have kept my true identity hidden. With this success, I feel it is time to let the world know that when the nation elects me president in 2016, vampires all over the world will know they have a friend in the United States.”
Republicans all over the country were quick to denounce the comments and distance themselves from Ryan’s remarks. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal appeared at a joint press conference that was intended to be about the two states’ approaches to dealing with natural disasters, but were immediately asked about the vampire remarks. “Are you kidding me? I was a surrogate for the Romney/Ryan ticket and no one told me Paul is a vampire. Hey, Mitt and Paul, now is not the time for dumb remarks about how Obama stole the election by giving people food stamps or how much you like to drink people’s blood. Now is the time for a whole lot of ‘shut the hell up,'” said Christie. “My state is home to a lot of diversity in terms of religion and ideas about religion. Voodoo is pretty big with a number of our residents. That doesn’t mean I use it to win elections… well, there was that one time… but never since then. We are not the party of vampires. We are the party of level-headed solutions to our nation’s problems,” Jindal added.
Democrats were in no hurry to add anything or to comment. “Look, for the past four years we have been battling rumors that our president is a secret Muslim. If they want to talk about the joys of sucking people’s blood, well, we’re not about to stop them,” David Axelrod was overheard telling friends.
We will not go over the “fiscal cliff.” That’s my prediction anyway. I don’t make predictions often. As I often tell people, I am NOT clairvoyant. I cannot read minds or see the future. I do have pretty good political instincts, probably from working in or near politics for 90 percent of my life. I am no Chuck Todd but not too far away.
In any case, I do not believe we will go over the all too arbitrary and Congress created “fiscal cliff.” This is partly because President Obama was reelected. It was partly because the Democrats kept the Senate. With that in mind, our collective future rests in the hands of one man; Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-Oh). Yes, the man who refused to use the word “compromise” on national television last year will be the one who forces his caucus to do just that.
First I need to have my own “Sister Souljah moment” (she once had an office down the hall from mine at RCA Victor, true story). The Tea Party makes for a great target as to why Washington seems incapable of getting anything done but they are a response to that inaction, not the cause of it. Our Congressional districts are becoming more and more polarized, resulting in more and more extreme representatives — remember, Congress is very much a mirror. If you don’t like what you see in Washington, you probably don’t like what you see when you look around you. It’s become too easy to blame one group or another for our collective failure to pay attention and act on what happens.
So, here we are. On the brink of yet another economic crisis. Europe has already gone back into recession (And we think that same austerity will work here? Are we that stupid, Joe Scarborough?). The great menace that is China has an economy that is slowing down. I am no economist but running a government on nothing but stop-gap continuing resolutions is not a way to run a government, when exactly was a full round of appropriations bills passed? Yeah, if you have to scratch your head at that one it has been too damn long. See? I am still a bitter cynic.
Yet, because Boehner is the speaker of the House and not someone like, I dunno, Eric “Dr. No” Cantor or Paul “I ran the marathon in under a minute” Ryan. Take home message: he is reasonable. Now, I would like to have a second “moment.” I believe that everyone who gets into public life is a patriot. Maybe a power hungry, egomaniac but also a patriot. I do not think Cantor or Ryan want to see the country fail, I just don’t think they are seasoned enough to understand the value of compromise.
Who is this John Boehner? His upbringing is nothing like Mitt Romney‘s. He has 11 siblings. He grew up in a two bedroom house. Yes, that’s right 14 people lived in a house with two bedrooms and one bathroom. He started working in his father’s bar when he was eight. If anyone gets the hardship brought on by recession, it’s John Boehner. He currently rents a basement apartment on Capitol Hill (really, his favorite restaurant is my favorite Italian place on the Hill).
Now I am no fan. In 2007, I worked a communications director for a Democratic member of Congress. One night there was a vote at about 1:00 am (we were still in the office, eyes glued to C-Span. The Democrats still had the House then and the man in the Chair was a D. He called the vote wrong — some members had not voted when he thought they had. It was bad. Steny Hoyer called for the vote to be held a second time and it was but the Republicans stormed out. The bill they disliked passed. The next day Hoyer asked Boehner to hold off on going to the Ethics Committee until they had looked into it. Boehner agreed (this was on the floor) but had actually already submitted a complaint with that committee. For years, that just got my craw (is that a real phrase?). Seriously, I thought that was crazily underhanded. Now, I have forgiven him.
What else do you need to know about John Boehner? He tried to lead a “coup” against Newt Gingrich. He smokes enough that you can smell him from a block away. He is a really conservative guy, though religious conservatives complain he is motivated more by small government conservatism than the issues that matter to them. I am not sure how he could be more conservative on same sex marriage, abortion and other things but I am not a social, fiscal or any kind of conservative so I am not the one to judge that. The conservative Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote this about him. The Plain Dealer says Boehner can “disagree without being disagreeable.” We need more of that in the world but even that is not going to save us from fiscal armageddon.
We will avoid the “cliff” because John Boehner is reasonable. We will lose the Bush tax cuts for people making over $250,000 a year or more. We will lower corporate tax rates but raise the top two rates to what they were under President Bill Clinton (you remember those horrible recession years, oh right, we had a great economy then) to 36 and 39 percent. We will make a pledge to deal with entitlements, though the actual changes won’t happen right away (sorry young people, the retirement age will go up, if not this year, sometime before you retire. Seriously, it has to.).
Don’t worry family, I am still the bitter cynic you know and love. Don’t believe it? I still wear only black.
“If you want the voters to like you, you have to like them first,” Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal.
This has been an interesting time to be a Democrat watching the Republican Party. My experience has always been the adage, Democrats fall in love, Republicans fall in line was true. Watching the GOP respond to the results. In one corner, you have Mitt Romney blaming his loss on President Obama buying votes with gifts and in the other you have just about everyone else.
Let’s start there. Romney told supporters, “What the president’s campaign did was focus on certain members of his base coalition, give them extraordinary financial gifts from the government, and then work very aggressively to turn them out to vote, and that strategy worked…It’s a proven political strategy, which is give a bunch of money to a group and, guess what, they’ll vote for you. … Immigration we can solve, but the giving away free stuff is a hard thing to compete with.”
Now, I should admit that being the savvy operative that I am, I held out for a trip to Paris, you’re not going to get my vote with some free birth control! I need something real for my vote! And I live in DC! Any Democratic candidate will tell you that winning DC is a challenge!
Seriously, how delusional do you have to be to think that President Obama won reelection because he gave people stuff for their vote? How arrogant are you that you think it is impossible for people to have wanted someone else to win? How desperate are you to not be at fault for your own failure that you grasp like this? (And how ironic is it that someone who claims to be so pro “personal responsibility” is so incapable of taking any?)
Then you have the “let’s not be the stupid party” wing of the GOP.
For a long time now, I am sure this started before Lee Atwater but I feel like he elevated certain aspects of campaigning, the GOP has been all about “wedge” issues. This party used fear to elect its candidates. Now, this last campaign seems to have shown that pitting the country against each other may not be the way to win elections and I say “amen to that!” I also know that we are fickle and what works today may not tomorrow so it may be too soon to get all excited. But the response of many Republican leaders has given me a lot of hope.
FYI: As a Democrat, I want to see Democrats in office but I also would like to see our political debate be about substance. We will all benefit from a Republican Party that is more interested in appealing to everyone than one that thinks half of us are to be written off.