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Showing posts with label Democratic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democratic. Show all posts

Logo of the United States White House, especia...Image via Wikipedia
President Obama thought he had problems in 2009. But 2010 could be tougher.

One reason is that an issue that had seemed dormant—terrorism—suddenly erupted again when Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab allegedly tried to blow up an airplane over Detroit on Christmas Day. The attempt failed, but the incident showed that the terrorist threat remains real and that airline security can be shockingly weak. Obama, vacationing in Hawaii, told reporters that his administration had begun "a full investigation" and urged Americans to be both "confident" and "vigilant." He declared, "We will continue to use every element of our national power to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat the violent extremists who threaten us." Later, he conceded that the incident represented "systemic failure" and promised that his administration would do better.

All this represented an attempt by Obama to show that he was engaged and ready to protect the homeland. He knows that the image of being weak on defense has been a Democratic vulnerability and that the incident could raise new doubts.

More broadly, the attempted bombing placed still another urgent issue on Obama's already enormous agenda. First, he hopes to get healthcare legislation through Congress quickly, but the House and Senate must reconcile different approaches to the issue. And even if they do, as expected, Republicans plan to make it a campaign issue in November. GOP strategists plan to assault Democrats and Obama as advocates of higher taxes, too much government activism, and crippling deficits. Clearly, healthcare has deepened the partisan schism. The Senate bill passed 60 to 39 without a single Republican vote on Christmas Eve. Earlier, the House passed its version with only one GOP supporter. So far, the public sides with the GOP: A Quinnipiac University poll in late December found that 53 percent of voters disapproved of the Congress's direction on healthcare and only 36 percent supported it.

White House strategists say the healthcare overhaul bill will find favor with voters once the president and congressional Demo­crats explain it more clearly. Obama argues that his proposals will make healthcare more affordable, limit unpopular insurance company practices such as refusing coverage for those with pre-existing conditions, and cover millions who are now uninsured. "This is somebody who believed that for a long time we hadn't addressed the problems that our society was facing, and to do that we were going to have to make some tough decisions," says White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.

Adds another White House official: "The president has done a series of very difficult things" during his first year, including healthcare and "bringing the economy back from the brink" with the $787 billion stimulus bill and bailouts of the financial and auto industries. In foreign policy, he is phasing out U.S. participation in Iraq but also escalating the war in Afghanistan by sending in an additional 30,000 troops while announcing planned withdrawals there.

Obama also intends to ask Congress to revamp energy laws to limit climate change and promote a "green," more energy-efficient economy, and he will again face a wall of GOP opposition.

Probably the biggest challenge will be lowering the unemployment rate, now hovering at 10 percent nationally with higher rates in many cities and states. Aides say Obama will make job creation his first priority once healthcare is resolved, and he hopes to focus on joblessness as the principal theme of his State of the Union address. Among the ideas under consideration are more federal assistance to small businesses, additional billions of dollars for infrastructure, and more aid to homeowners to make their homes more energy efficient.

As political analyst Rhodes Cook points out, Obama's approval rating has dropped further than that of any other newly elected president, at least since Gallup began tracking such things in the late 1930s. It dropped 21 points, from 68 percent approval in January to 47 percent in early December. No other president's ratings have declined more than 10 points in his first year.

Republican pollster Ed Goeas says the new year may reflect " 'voter remorse' following the election of a president who made promises too big and had too little executive experience or the 'know-how' to make decisions to get the economy back on track." That remains to be seen. But certainly, 2010 could mark a rebuff of what Obama used to call "change you can believe in."
source-http://www.usnews.com
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The Top 10 risers of the decade

Posted by blog master Wednesday, December 23, 2009

BRISTOL, VA - JUNE 05:  (L-R) Former Virginia ...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

From NBC's Mark Murray and Domenico Montanaro
Yesterday, we listed our Top 10 political downfalls of the decade. Today, in the Christmas spirit, we look at the risers -- today's prominent politicians (many with bright futures), who we didn't know at the beginning of the decade. This was a harder list to come up with than our downfall one. Below are our thoughts. What are yours?

1. Barack Obama: Need we say more?

2. Sarah Palin: You could make an argument that she deserves to be on our downfall list instead -- given her resignation earlier this year -- but going from the mayor of Wasilla, to Alaska governor, then to the GOP's vice presidential nominee in 2008 is a quite a rise. Not to mention, she has quite the influence with activist conservatives, and did we mention she's now a millionaire? No matter if Palin never runs for the presidency, she is the nation's biggest political celebrity, other than Obama of course.

3. Bobby Jindal: Yes, he had a bad response to Obama’s State of the Union, but the Rhodes Scholar is just 38 years old. Chalk it up as a MINOR setback for his national ambitions. He has a reputation for being a good executive, has lots of money in the bank, and represents something that’s currently lacking in the Republican Party -- diversity.

4. Chuck Schumer: While he first got elected in the '90s (1998), there’s probably no Democrat with more skins on the wall. How many total Senate seats did he help Democrats pick up as head of the DSCC again? (The answer is 14.) There's no doubt about it: He’s the rising star of the Senate. And chew on this... If Harry Reid loses his re-election, and Dems hold their majority, Schumer vs. Durbin would be an interesting race for majority leader, no?

5. Marco Rubio: Some might say he's too high on this list -- and he still has a difficult primary to win -- but Rubio has instantly turned into a conservative star in his Senate fight against Charlie Crist. Conservatives see him as the GOP version of Barack Obama. But first, he's got to beat Crist, which won't be easy...

6. John Thune: He was a little-known South Dakota congressman at the beginning of the decade. He ran against Sen. Tim Johnson (D) and lost -- barely. Then he ran again and beat Democratic Senate leader Tom Daschle. And now he is one of the Republican Party's biggest (and most telegenic) stars. Will he run for president in 2012?

7. Eric Cantor: No current Republican congressman has risen so far, so fast. Elected just nine years ago, Cantor now serves as the No. 2 figure in the House leadership. He is just 46.

8. Tim Kaine: Kaine began the decade as a little-known mayor of Richmond and as then lieutenant governor. But his 2005 gubernatorial victory in Virginia ended up serving as a model for future Democratic campaigns in 2006 to 2008. And that win -- as well as his three-plus years as governor -- catapulted him as VP finalist last year. He's now the chairman of the Democratic National Committee. What's next?

9. Bob McDonnell: As was the case with Kaine's gubernatorial victory in Virginia in 2005, Republican Bob McDonnell -- who won this year's VA Gov contest -- has become an instant star in his party. And assuming he enjoys success as governor, McDonnell will be an automatic VP possibility (or higher?), given that Virginia is a must-win presidential battleground state for Republicans.

10. Brian Schweitzer: He started the decade narrowly losing a Senate race against GOP incumbent Conrad Burns. He then became governor of Montana in 2004. Will the bolo-tie-wearing governor run for president in 2016? He's 54.

Honorable Mentions: Paul Ryan, Jon Huntsman, Claire McCaskill, Mark Warner, Jim Webb.


source:http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2009/12/23/2159690.asx

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President Obama Hails Senate Health Care Bill as Ben Nelson Jumps on Board

Posted by blog master Saturday, December 19, 2009

City of LincolnImage via Wikipedia

Senate Democratic leaders inched closer to attaining their goal of passing a health care bill by Christmas as Ben Nelson, the Nebraska senator who had been skeptical of the bill, jumped on board, winning major concessions for his state, and the Congressional Budget Office released an optimistic cost estimate of the legislation.
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How did Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson come on board for health care deal?

The Senate health care bill will reduce the deficit by $132 billion over the next 10 years and will cost $871 billion over the same time period, according to the CBO report released today. The revised health care bill would expand coverage to about 94 percent of eligible Americans under age 65, excluding illegal immigrants.

President Obama today hailed the legislation as "the largest deficit reduction plan in a decade," and praised the changes for making the health care bill stronge

source: http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/HealthCare/senator-ben-nelson-approves-health-care-bill-obama/story?id=938104

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