If we retreat from Iraq, will Iran take over?

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Posted on : 18-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post opinion

The larger question is whether Iraq will be forced by a full U.S. pullout to become an Iranian satellite, a development that would undo a huge and painful investment of American blood and treasure and deal a potentially devastating blow to the larger U.S. position in the Middle East.

The administration has made it fairly clear that it is willing to make a deal to leave behind some troops. But coaxing the fragmented and prickly Iraqi leadership into making the right choice would require subtlety, patience and high-level engagement — like that the Bush administration employed when it negotiated a strategic framework with Iraq before leaving office in 2008, or that Vice President Biden used in helping to broker an agreement on a new Iraqi government last year.

So it was startling to hear Defense Secretary Leon Panetta offer, in Baghdad, the following description of his message to Iraqi leaders: “Dammit, make a decision.”

The tone of that remark, like other administration rhetoric on the potential deal, suggests that Obama and his top aides believe they are offering Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki a favor by inviting a request to leave troops behind, and don’t think a stay-on force is a vital U.S. interest.

Others see it quite differently. Maliki, like U.S. commanders in the Middle East, understands very well that without an American military presence, Iraq will be unable to defend itself against its Persian neighbor. Iranian-backed militias are already stepping up attacks on U.S. and Iraqi forces with sophisticated rockets and roadside bombs; without U.S. help, Iraqi forces cannot easily counter them. Moreover, Iraq’s conventional forces are no match for those of Iran.

Consequently, argues Frederick Kagan of the American Enterprise Institute, Maliki and his government face a fateful choice. “If Maliki allows the United States to leave Iraq,” Kagan wrote in a recent report, “he is effectively declaring his intent to fall in line with Tehran’s wishes, to subordinate Iraq’s foreign policy to the Persians, and possibly, to consolidate his own power as a sort of modern Persian satrap in Baghdad.”

Alternatively, Iraq could use its burgeoning oil revenue to rush to construct an army and air force capable of countering Tehran. But either development would be regarded as a strategic threat by Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf states.

Most Iraq watchers believe Maliki wants to ask for U.S. troops. But the problems — in addition to the chronic Iraqi practice of putting off hard decisions until the last minute — are formidable. Perhaps the most serious is Maliki’s political dependence on the Shiite party of Moqtada al-Sadr, an Iranian client. Sadr is threatening armed resistance if U.S. troops stay, and the offensive already underway by Iranian-sponsored militias shows that Tehran is ready to fight.

Administration officials nevertheless argue that the danger of Iranian hegemony in Iraq — and hence the importance of a stay-on force — is overstated by analysts such as Kagan. “Iran is struggling with its own economy,” Antony Blinken, a senior aide to Biden, told me. “Infighting among Iranian leaders has undercut its ability to make decisions about domestic and foreign policy,” and the uprising against the Syrian regime has further shaken Tehran’s confidence.

Maliki, Blinken says, has proven himself a nationalist who will resist Tehran’s diktats, and Iraqis will not tolerate a Persian puppet. And even if all American troops leave, a strong U.S. diplomatic contingent will remain, which, together with arms sales and a embassy-based military liaison group, should ensure continuing U.S. influence.

The only Obama administration official who has publicly made the case for a continued U.S. military presence is former defense secretary Robert M. Gates. In a speech in May, he said it would send “a powerful signal to the region that we’re not leaving, that we will continue to play a part.” He added: “I think it would be reassuring to the Gulf states. I think it would not be reassuring to Iran, and that’s a good thing.”

Gates publicly urged Iraq to keep U.S. troops. Now he is gone, and the message is “dammit, make a decision.” Whether or not Iran is prepared to seize hold of Iraq, those aren’t the right words to keep an ally.



diehlj@washpost.com

If we retreat from Iraq, will Iran take over?

0

Posted on : 18-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, Headlines, Top Headlines, us news, washington post, washington post opinion

The larger question is whether Iraq will be forced by a full U.S. pullout to become an Iranian satellite, a development that would undo a huge and painful investment of American blood and treasure and deal a potentially devastating blow to the larger U.S. position in the Middle East.

The administration has made it fairly clear that it is willing to make a deal to leave behind some troops. But coaxing the fragmented and prickly Iraqi leadership into making the right choice would require subtlety, patience and high-level engagement — like that the Bush administration employed when it negotiated a strategic framework with Iraq before leaving office in 2008, or that Vice President Biden used in helping to broker an agreement on a new Iraqi government last year.

So it was startling to hear Defense Secretary Leon Panetta offer, in Baghdad, the following description of his message to Iraqi leaders: “Dammit, make a decision.”

The tone of that remark, like other administration rhetoric on the potential deal, suggests that Obama and his top aides believe they are offering Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki a favor by inviting a request to leave troops behind, and don’t think a stay-on force is a vital U.S. interest.

Others see it quite differently. Maliki, like U.S. commanders in the Middle East, understands very well that without an American military presence, Iraq will be unable to defend itself against its Persian neighbor. Iranian-backed militias are already stepping up attacks on U.S. and Iraqi forces with sophisticated rockets and roadside bombs; without U.S. help, Iraqi forces cannot easily counter them. Moreover, Iraq’s conventional forces are no match for those of Iran.

Consequently, argues Frederick Kagan of the American Enterprise Institute, Maliki and his government face a fateful choice. “If Maliki allows the United States to leave Iraq,” Kagan wrote in a recent report, “he is effectively declaring his intent to fall in line with Tehran’s wishes, to subordinate Iraq’s foreign policy to the Persians, and possibly, to consolidate his own power as a sort of modern Persian satrap in Baghdad.”

Alternatively, Iraq could use its burgeoning oil revenue to rush to construct an army and air force capable of countering Tehran. But either development would be regarded as a strategic threat by Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf states.

Most Iraq watchers believe Maliki wants to ask for U.S. troops. But the problems — in addition to the chronic Iraqi practice of putting off hard decisions until the last minute — are formidable. Perhaps the most serious is Maliki’s political dependence on the Shiite party of Moqtada al-Sadr, an Iranian client. Sadr is threatening armed resistance if U.S. troops stay, and the offensive already underway by Iranian-sponsored militias shows that Tehran is ready to fight.

Administration officials nevertheless argue that the danger of Iranian hegemony in Iraq — and hence the importance of a stay-on force — is overstated by analysts such as Kagan. “Iran is struggling with its own economy,” Antony Blinken, a senior aide to Biden, told me. “Infighting among Iranian leaders has undercut its ability to make decisions about domestic and foreign policy,” and the uprising against the Syrian regime has further shaken Tehran’s confidence.

Maliki, Blinken says, has proven himself a nationalist who will resist Tehran’s diktats, and Iraqis will not tolerate a Persian puppet. And even if all American troops leave, a strong U.S. diplomatic contingent will remain, which, together with arms sales and a embassy-based military liaison group, should ensure continuing U.S. influence.

The only Obama administration official who has publicly made the case for a continued U.S. military presence is former defense secretary Robert M. Gates. In a speech in May, he said it would send “a powerful signal to the region that we’re not leaving, that we will continue to play a part.” He added: “I think it would be reassuring to the Gulf states. I think it would not be reassuring to Iran, and that’s a good thing.”

Gates publicly urged Iraq to keep U.S. troops. Now he is gone, and the message is “dammit, make a decision.” Whether or not Iran is prepared to seize hold of Iraq, those aren’t the right words to keep an ally.



diehlj@washpost.com

Default would dim American power

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Posted on : 17-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post opinion

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Tom Toles on the debt debate.


Default would dim American power

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Posted on : 16-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post opinion

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Tom Toles on the debt debate.


Not even Rumsfeld escapes TSA’s clutches

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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Even former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld isn’t immune to the probing hands of Transportation Security Administration (TSA).
(TMZ)
The folks at the Transportation Security Agency have been taking a beating this week on the Hill for some 25,000 security breaches at the nation’s airports since 2001. They’ve been hammered in the past for being overly aggressive in patting down even elderly people.

Now, thanks to TMZ, the online celebrity gossip site, it seems even the venerable former secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld, 79, was deemed a possible threat and patted down Wednesday afternoon at Chicago’s O’Hare airport as he tried to board a flight. Rumsfeld was reportedly “all smiles” during the hands-on event.

Rumsfeld, linking to the TMZ report and photos, tweeted Thursday that he had been “en route to Grand Rapids, Mich., to attend the funeral of one of America’s most beloved first ladies, Betty Ford,” when the manhandling, so to speak, occurred.

In another tweet, he noted, “It takes those of us with two titanium hips and a titanium shoulder a bit longer to get through TSA.”

You know, it looks like he’s having too good a time.

Follow In the Loop on Twitter

Read more at PostPolitics

Not even Rumsfeld escapes TSA’s clutches

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
Tags:


Even former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld isn’t immune to the probing hands of Transportation Security Administration (TSA).
(TMZ)
The folks at the Transportation Security Agency have been taking a beating this week on the Hill for some 25,000 security breaches at the nation’s airports since 2001. They’ve been hammered in the past for being overly aggressive in patting down even elderly people.

Now, thanks to TMZ, the online celebrity gossip site, it seems even the venerable former secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld, 79, was deemed a possible threat and patted down Wednesday afternoon at Chicago’s O’Hare airport as he tried to board a flight. Rumsfeld was reportedly “all smiles” during the hands-on event.

Rumsfeld, linking to the TMZ report and photos, tweeted Thursday that he had been “en route to Grand Rapids, Mich., to attend the funeral of one of America’s most beloved first ladies, Betty Ford,” when the manhandling, so to speak, occurred.

In another tweet, he noted, “It takes those of us with two titanium hips and a titanium shoulder a bit longer to get through TSA.”

You know, it looks like he’s having too good a time.

Follow In the Loop on Twitter

Read more at PostPolitics

Romney: Cut, cap, balance to end ‘emergency’

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, has been under pressure to weigh in on the debt-limit negotiations in Washington, but before Thursday had not focused on the issue. He has, however, signed a “Cut, Cap, Balance” pledge endorsed by a number of Republican lawmakers, as the White House and congressional leaders try to negotiate a debt-ceiling increase in time to avoid the prospect of defaulting on Aug. 2.

He said Thursday he would make cuts to discretionary spending. “I’d divide that between those things we have to do and those things we don’t have to do. And those thiings we don’t have to do, I’d cut pretty dramatically,” he said.

As Romney began his remarks, he took at jab at President Obama.

“Did you see I got a big plate of peas? I ate all my peas,” he said, referring to Obama’s comment that it was time to “eat our peas” on the debt. “Now it’s the president’s turn to cut federal spending.

Before Romney arrived for his first of three events here Thursday, his campaign escalated its assault on Obama’s economic policies, releasing a provocative new video featuring an emotional testimonial from a struggling New Hampshire real estate broker.

The film, the latest installment in Romney’s “Obama Isn’t Working” campaign, centers on Packy Campbell, who said his Rochester firm, RSA Realty Development, had been devastated by the recession. The video cuts between dark shots of an empty conference room and Campbell talking to the camera.

“At this point, it’s just my wife and I left here in the business, but at one point we had about 35 employees,” Campbell, a former Republican state representative and a 2008 McCain supporter, says in the film.

“I paint a lot of houses, a lot of apartments myself,” he adds. “If you ever paint with somebody who doesn’t know what they’re doing, it’s like sooner or later you say, ‘Hey, stop, you’re making a mess, you’re getting paint everywhere.’ And that’s kind of what the government’s doing to the economy right now.”

Romney plans to meet with Campbell and tour his business’s Rochester office Thursday afternoon, following his economic speech to the Portsmouth Rotary Club. Romney will hold a town hall meeting later Thursday afternoon in Derry.

Romney has used similar testimonials in the past to attack Obama’s economic record, trying to place the blame for high unemployment and declining home values squarely on the president.

The latest campaign video opens with footage of Obama at the Democratic National Convention in 2008, saying Democrats “measure progress by how many people can find a job that pays the mortgage. Whether you can put a little extra money away at the end of each month so you can someday watch your child receive her college diploma.”

Then the film flashes the words, “THREE YEARS LATER,” and cuts to Campbell’s testimonial. Campbell, a father of five, says he wants to take his children on a summer vacation to Disney World. But he says he can’t.

“Last week was ground zero for me, you know,” he says in the film. “I had to file my own personal bankruptcy. I had to close my business. For me, I look at holding onto my business and not giving up and working through my bankruptcy and continuing to show up every day.”

Thursday marked Romney’s first of three days of campaigning in New Hampshire. On Friday, he will stump in the state’s remote North Country, where he plans to talk about the economy at a roundtable with community leaders in Berlin. Romney will be back on the trail Sunday, attending a NASCAR race at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, where he plans to meet with drivers in the infield.

Romney starts the race with a heavy advantage in New Hampshire. He has a vacation home here and has been a regular presence in the state since his 2008 campaign.

Romney is staking his hopes on winning the New Hampshire primary, making almost weekly visits here and largely avoiding trips to Iowa and South Carolina, the other two early states where social conservatives have relatively more sway in the nominating contest.

To coincide with Romney’s visit Thursday, one of his opponents, former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty, announced the endorsement of former state senator Bruce Keough, who had served as Romney’s New Hampshire co-chairman in the 2008 race. Keough will serve on Pawlenty’s national policy committee and on his New Hampshire steering committee. Keough’s defection is hardly a surprise, as he had a public falling out with Romney.

Romney, meanwhile, countered by adding another elected official to his list of New Hampshire backers. State Sen. Jim Rausch officially endorsed Romney on Thursday.

Romney: Cut, cap, balance to end ‘emergency’

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
Tags:

Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, has been under pressure to weigh in on the debt-limit negotiations in Washington, but before Thursday had not focused on the issue. He has, however, signed a “Cut, Cap, Balance” pledge endorsed by a number of Republican lawmakers, as the White House and congressional leaders try to negotiate a debt-ceiling increase in time to avoid the prospect of defaulting on Aug. 2.

He said Thursday he would make cuts to discretionary spending. “I’d divide that between those things we have to do and those things we don’t have to do. And those thiings we don’t have to do, I’d cut pretty dramatically,” he said.

As Romney began his remarks, he took at jab at President Obama.

“Did you see I got a big plate of peas? I ate all my peas,” he said, referring to Obama’s comment that it was time to “eat our peas” on the debt. “Now it’s the president’s turn to cut federal spending.

Before Romney arrived for his first of three events here Thursday, his campaign escalated its assault on Obama’s economic policies, releasing a provocative new video featuring an emotional testimonial from a struggling New Hampshire real estate broker.

The film, the latest installment in Romney’s “Obama Isn’t Working” campaign, centers on Packy Campbell, who said his Rochester firm, RSA Realty Development, had been devastated by the recession. The video cuts between dark shots of an empty conference room and Campbell talking to the camera.

“At this point, it’s just my wife and I left here in the business, but at one point we had about 35 employees,” Campbell, a former Republican state representative and a 2008 McCain supporter, says in the film.

“I paint a lot of houses, a lot of apartments myself,” he adds. “If you ever paint with somebody who doesn’t know what they’re doing, it’s like sooner or later you say, ‘Hey, stop, you’re making a mess, you’re getting paint everywhere.’ And that’s kind of what the government’s doing to the economy right now.”

Romney plans to meet with Campbell and tour his business’s Rochester office Thursday afternoon, following his economic speech to the Portsmouth Rotary Club. Romney will hold a town hall meeting later Thursday afternoon in Derry.

Romney has used similar testimonials in the past to attack Obama’s economic record, trying to place the blame for high unemployment and declining home values squarely on the president.

The latest campaign video opens with footage of Obama at the Democratic National Convention in 2008, saying Democrats “measure progress by how many people can find a job that pays the mortgage. Whether you can put a little extra money away at the end of each month so you can someday watch your child receive her college diploma.”

Then the film flashes the words, “THREE YEARS LATER,” and cuts to Campbell’s testimonial. Campbell, a father of five, says he wants to take his children on a summer vacation to Disney World. But he says he can’t.

“Last week was ground zero for me, you know,” he says in the film. “I had to file my own personal bankruptcy. I had to close my business. For me, I look at holding onto my business and not giving up and working through my bankruptcy and continuing to show up every day.”

Thursday marked Romney’s first of three days of campaigning in New Hampshire. On Friday, he will stump in the state’s remote North Country, where he plans to talk about the economy at a roundtable with community leaders in Berlin. Romney will be back on the trail Sunday, attending a NASCAR race at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, where he plans to meet with drivers in the infield.

Romney starts the race with a heavy advantage in New Hampshire. He has a vacation home here and has been a regular presence in the state since his 2008 campaign.

Romney is staking his hopes on winning the New Hampshire primary, making almost weekly visits here and largely avoiding trips to Iowa and South Carolina, the other two early states where social conservatives have relatively more sway in the nominating contest.

To coincide with Romney’s visit Thursday, one of his opponents, former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty, announced the endorsement of former state senator Bruce Keough, who had served as Romney’s New Hampshire co-chairman in the 2008 race. Keough will serve on Pawlenty’s national policy committee and on his New Hampshire steering committee. Keough’s defection is hardly a surprise, as he had a public falling out with Romney.

Romney, meanwhile, countered by adding another elected official to his list of New Hampshire backers. State Sen. Jim Rausch officially endorsed Romney on Thursday.

U.S. cyber approach ‘too predictable’ for one top general

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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Hours later, Deputy Defense Secretary William J. Lynn III presented a strategy whose thrust, he said, is defensive and focused on “denying the benefit of an attack.”

To illustrate the growing threat, Lynn disclosed that in March, the Defense Department discovered that a foreign intelligence service had hacked into a defense contractor’s system and stolen 24,000 computer files related to a weapons system under development, one of the largest known cyberattacks targeting the U.S. military.

Lynn did not name the contractor or the government behind the intrusion but said the Pentagon was reviewing whether the weapons system needed to be redesigned.

The Defense Department’s newly unveiled strategy relies on deploying sensors, software and special signatures, or lines of code, that detect and stop intrusions before they affect operations.

“If an attack will not have its intended effect, those who wish us harm will have less reason to target us through cyberspace in the first place,” Lynn said.

Cartwright, in his remarks to defense reporters, suggested that stronger deterrents would be needed. “We are supposed to be offshore convincing people if they attack, it won’t be free,” he said, adding that adversaries should know that the United States has “the capability and capacity to do something about it.”

Cartwright, who appeared with Lynn at a news conference after the strategy rollout, described the cyber plan as a first step. “This starts us down the path of building out both our defenses and our awareness skills,” he said. Eventually, he added, more aggressive cyber tactics, as well as legal and diplomatic measures, would be needed to “raise the price” of attacking.

Over the past year, President Obama had asked Cartwright several times whether he would be willing to become chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, The Washington Post reported in May, but Obama later turned to another candidate. Cartwright is leaving office this summer.

Stewart A. Baker, a former National Security Agency general counsel, in a blog post likened the Pentagon’s new cyber plan to a nuclear deterrent strategy of building more fallout shelters. “This is at best a partial strategy,” he wrote. “The plan as described fails to engage on the hard issues, such as offense and attribution and, well, winning.”

Rep. Jim Langevin (D-R.I.), co-founder of the Congressional Cybersecurity Caucus, said that the plan was a good start but that key areas were missing. “What are acceptable red lines for actions in cyberspace? . . . Does data theft or disruption rise to the level of warfare, or do we have to see a physical event, such as an attack on our power grid, before we respond militarily?”

Lynn said that the United States has not yet been hit by an act of cyber war and that there was deterrent value in remaining ambiguous about what would constitute one. But ultimately, he said, it is the president and Congress that would decide that the human or economic damage is severe enough to consider a cyber event an act of war. He said the Pentagon would take the lead only if, in the “judgment of the leadership of the country, it required a military response.”

Cartwright, at the news conference, said the disabling of computerized patient records at a hospital such that the patients cannot be treated would be a violation of the law of armed conflict. “Then you have proportional responses” that can be undertaken, he said, without specifying which or by whom.

But when it comes to an act of war, he said, “it’s in the eye of the beholder.”

Staff writer Jason Ukman contributed to this report.

U.S. cyber approach ‘too predictable’ for one top general

0

Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
Tags:

Hours later, Deputy Defense Secretary William J. Lynn III presented a strategy whose thrust, he said, is defensive and focused on “denying the benefit of an attack.”

To illustrate the growing threat, Lynn disclosed that in March, the Defense Department discovered that a foreign intelligence service had hacked into a defense contractor’s system and stolen 24,000 computer files related to a weapons system under development, one of the largest known cyberattacks targeting the U.S. military.

Lynn did not name the contractor or the government behind the intrusion but said the Pentagon was reviewing whether the weapons system needed to be redesigned.

The Defense Department’s newly unveiled strategy relies on deploying sensors, software and special signatures, or lines of code, that detect and stop intrusions before they affect operations.

“If an attack will not have its intended effect, those who wish us harm will have less reason to target us through cyberspace in the first place,” Lynn said.

Cartwright, in his remarks to defense reporters, suggested that stronger deterrents would be needed. “We are supposed to be offshore convincing people if they attack, it won’t be free,” he said, adding that adversaries should know that the United States has “the capability and capacity to do something about it.”

Cartwright, who appeared with Lynn at a news conference after the strategy rollout, described the cyber plan as a first step. “This starts us down the path of building out both our defenses and our awareness skills,” he said. Eventually, he added, more aggressive cyber tactics, as well as legal and diplomatic measures, would be needed to “raise the price” of attacking.

Over the past year, President Obama had asked Cartwright several times whether he would be willing to become chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, The Washington Post reported in May, but Obama later turned to another candidate. Cartwright is leaving office this summer.

Stewart A. Baker, a former National Security Agency general counsel, in a blog post likened the Pentagon’s new cyber plan to a nuclear deterrent strategy of building more fallout shelters. “This is at best a partial strategy,” he wrote. “The plan as described fails to engage on the hard issues, such as offense and attribution and, well, winning.”

Rep. Jim Langevin (D-R.I.), co-founder of the Congressional Cybersecurity Caucus, said that the plan was a good start but that key areas were missing. “What are acceptable red lines for actions in cyberspace? . . . Does data theft or disruption rise to the level of warfare, or do we have to see a physical event, such as an attack on our power grid, before we respond militarily?”

Lynn said that the United States has not yet been hit by an act of cyber war and that there was deterrent value in remaining ambiguous about what would constitute one. But ultimately, he said, it is the president and Congress that would decide that the human or economic damage is severe enough to consider a cyber event an act of war. He said the Pentagon would take the lead only if, in the “judgment of the leadership of the country, it required a military response.”

Cartwright, at the news conference, said the disabling of computerized patient records at a hospital such that the patients cannot be treated would be a violation of the law of armed conflict. “Then you have proportional responses” that can be undertaken, he said, without specifying which or by whom.

But when it comes to an act of war, he said, “it’s in the eye of the beholder.”

Staff writer Jason Ukman contributed to this report.

Rebekah Brooks resigns from Murdoch’s News International

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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The phone hacking scandal roiling Great Britain has cast a new light on billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his outsize influence on political life in that country and around the world. (July 15)

The phone hacking scandal roiling Great Britain has cast a new light on billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his outsize influence on political life in that country and around the world. (July 15)

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Rupert Murdoch’s empire: A look at media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s business ventures over the years.

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Timeline

News of the World scandal


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Rebekah Brooks resigns from Murdoch’s News International

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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The phone hacking scandal roiling Great Britain has cast a new light on billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his outsize influence on political life in that country and around the world. (July 15)

The phone hacking scandal roiling Great Britain has cast a new light on billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his outsize influence on political life in that country and around the world. (July 15)

Gallery


Rupert Murdoch’s empire: A look at media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s business ventures over the years.

Timeline

Timeline

News of the World scandal


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A rock star on the campaign trail, Bachmann wields little influence on the Hill

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) says President Obama and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner are trying to pass a misnomer to the public about the debt ceiling. (July 13)

Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) says President Obama and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner are trying to pass a misnomer to the public about the debt ceiling. (July 13)

Graphic

Which federal programs would you choose to pay?

Which federal programs would you choose to pay?


A rock star on the campaign trail, Bachmann wields little influence on the Hill

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) says President Obama and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner are trying to pass a misnomer to the public about the debt ceiling. (July 13)

Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) says President Obama and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner are trying to pass a misnomer to the public about the debt ceiling. (July 13)

Graphic

Which federal programs would you choose to pay?

Which federal programs would you choose to pay?


Palin political committee spent tens of thousands on bus trip

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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But the total for the trip is likely much more, because many bills came in after the June 30 filing deadline, Sarah PAC treasurer Tim Crawford said in an interview. In addition, many other expenses associated with the trip, such as photography, videography, Internet fundraising and airfare, are more difficult to account for. (One item in the report describes $6,999 paid to an air charter company called Republican Presidential Travel on June 9, at the tail end of “One Nation.”)

The details of the Palin committee’s expenditures for the first six months of the year came out on the same day that the National Park Service issued an official reply to Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), who had written Park Service Director John Jarvis in early June for an accounting of whether the Palins received special treatment or whether taxpayer resources were spent to accommodate them.

In his response, Jarvis said that the Palins were not asked to obtain permits to their visits to the national parks because the stops “were personal, family visits.”

“The governor was not looking to hold an event, give a speech, or conduct any other activity that would require a National Park Service permit,” Jarvis wrote. “They also told us that they were not publishing her schedule in advance. However, given the significant media attention, and the large ‘branded’ bus in which the family would be traveling, it was clear that these would not be the typical family visits that we see most days in most national parks.”

For that reasons, Jarvis said, the agency did what it often does for celebrities: accommodated the Palins to minimize disruption not only for them but for other visitors to the parks she visited.

“For example, at Gettysburg” National Military Park, Jarvis wrote, “because the museum tends to be busier later in the day, the Gettysburg Foundation offered an early tour by its non-government staff to avoid interfering with the visits of as many people as possible. At Independence [National Historical Park in Philadelphia], Governor Palin and her family walked through the Liberty Bell Center with other visitors.”

Jarvis continued: “All parks used on-duty staff during Governor Palin’s visits. No overtime was incurred or paid. The visits were short, and upon her departure, all NPS employees directly involved in her visit immediately returned to regularly scheduled assignments.”

Palin billed her “One Nation” trip as nothing more than a family vacation complete with kids, grandparents and many hours on Interstate 95.

But there was nothing typical about this vacation, which attracted endless national attention and ignited widespread speculation about whether the popular conservative was testing the waters for a presidential campaign. The trip is expected to resume in the Midwest this summer, but it has been delayed in part because Palin was called for jury duty in Alaska and must report to the local courthouse each morning for the rest of July or until she is placed on a jury.

The bus tour required a good deal of planning and preparation by the historic sites that received her. Although they didn’t ask for it, Palin and her family received VIP treatment just about everywhere they went: a private guided tour of Mount Vernon, early admission into the National Archives, and private tours at all of the federally managed National Park Service properties they visited, including a 10-person escort of national parks employees and New York City police officers at the Statue of Liberty.

The Palins also bypassed long lines and avoided crowded exhibit rooms — and hitched a ride to the statue on a National Park Service boat from New Jersey, avoiding the often hours-long wait for the public boat from Lower Manhattan.

In his letter, Blumenauer described Palin’s trip as a “partisan political tour” that provided her with “personal and political” benefits. On Thursday, Blumenauer spokesman Derek Schlickeisen said: “Not every American family had a federal PAC to pay for their family vacations.”

In the FEC report, SarahPAC reported raising a total of nearly $1.7 million during the first six months of the year and having $1.4 million on hand on June 30.

Palin political committee spent tens of thousands on bus trip

0

Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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But the total for the trip is likely much more, because many bills came in after the June 30 filing deadline, Sarah PAC treasurer Tim Crawford said in an interview. In addition, many other expenses associated with the trip, such as photography, videography, Internet fundraising and airfare, are more difficult to account for. (One item in the report describes $6,999 paid to an air charter company called Republican Presidential Travel on June 9, at the tail end of “One Nation.”)

The details of the Palin committee’s expenditures for the first six months of the year came out on the same day that the National Park Service issued an official reply to Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), who had written Park Service Director John Jarvis in early June for an accounting of whether the Palins received special treatment or whether taxpayer resources were spent to accommodate them.

In his response, Jarvis said that the Palins were not asked to obtain permits to their visits to the national parks because the stops “were personal, family visits.”

“The governor was not looking to hold an event, give a speech, or conduct any other activity that would require a National Park Service permit,” Jarvis wrote. “They also told us that they were not publishing her schedule in advance. However, given the significant media attention, and the large ‘branded’ bus in which the family would be traveling, it was clear that these would not be the typical family visits that we see most days in most national parks.”

For that reasons, Jarvis said, the agency did what it often does for celebrities: accommodated the Palins to minimize disruption not only for them but for other visitors to the parks she visited.

“For example, at Gettysburg” National Military Park, Jarvis wrote, “because the museum tends to be busier later in the day, the Gettysburg Foundation offered an early tour by its non-government staff to avoid interfering with the visits of as many people as possible. At Independence [National Historical Park in Philadelphia], Governor Palin and her family walked through the Liberty Bell Center with other visitors.”

Jarvis continued: “All parks used on-duty staff during Governor Palin’s visits. No overtime was incurred or paid. The visits were short, and upon her departure, all NPS employees directly involved in her visit immediately returned to regularly scheduled assignments.”

Palin billed her “One Nation” trip as nothing more than a family vacation complete with kids, grandparents and many hours on Interstate 95.

But there was nothing typical about this vacation, which attracted endless national attention and ignited widespread speculation about whether the popular conservative was testing the waters for a presidential campaign. The trip is expected to resume in the Midwest this summer, but it has been delayed in part because Palin was called for jury duty in Alaska and must report to the local courthouse each morning for the rest of July or until she is placed on a jury.

The bus tour required a good deal of planning and preparation by the historic sites that received her. Although they didn’t ask for it, Palin and her family received VIP treatment just about everywhere they went: a private guided tour of Mount Vernon, early admission into the National Archives, and private tours at all of the federally managed National Park Service properties they visited, including a 10-person escort of national parks employees and New York City police officers at the Statue of Liberty.

The Palins also bypassed long lines and avoided crowded exhibit rooms — and hitched a ride to the statue on a National Park Service boat from New Jersey, avoiding the often hours-long wait for the public boat from Lower Manhattan.

In his letter, Blumenauer described Palin’s trip as a “partisan political tour” that provided her with “personal and political” benefits. On Thursday, Blumenauer spokesman Derek Schlickeisen said: “Not every American family had a federal PAC to pay for their family vacations.”

In the FEC report, SarahPAC reported raising a total of nearly $1.7 million during the first six months of the year and having $1.4 million on hand on June 30.

Minnesota governor, GOP lawmakers agree to end shutdown

0

Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
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The agreement to end the shutdown came after Dayton reluctantly acceded to Republican demands not to raise any taxes to balance the state’s two-year budget and to embrace a deal the GOP had proposed just before the shutdown.

Dayton, who wanted to include a tax increase on the state’s top 2 percent of wage earners as part of the mix to close the funding gap, said the refusal of GOP legislators to budge left him with little choice but to go along with their alternative.

The plan would balance the state’s budget by cutting programs, delaying state aid to local school districts and borrowing against future tobacco company settlement payments.

“Despite my serious reservations about your plan, I have concluded that continuing the state government shutdown would be even more destructive for too many Minnesotans,” Dayton said in a letter to GOP legislative leaders. “Therefore, I am willing to agree to something I do not agree with — your proposal — in order to spare our citizens and our state from further damage.”

Dayton did ask Republicans to back off of their proposals to shrink state government employment by 15 percent in each agency. He also called for policy proposals favored by the GOP to be shelved for the rest of the year. In earlier talks, GOP leaders had pressed for abortion and stem-cell research restrictions, as well as stricter voter identification laws.

Dayton also called for Republican support in passing at least $500 million in bond sales to finance work on publicly owned buildings, including work at state colleges and universities, prisons and public-works facilities.

Those conditions caused some consternation among Republicans, whose leaders, nonetheless, agreed to the framework outlined by Dayton. “We believe the caucus will ultimately support this,” Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch (R) said.

Some Democratic lawmakers were also dissatisfied. “No way can I support this awful ‘compromise’ further tanking schools, deeper debt, kicking the whale down the road,” wrote state Rep. Mindy Greiling (D).

Dayton’s communications director, Katharine Tinucci, stressed that the agreement was a compromise by both sides. “The true sense of a compromise is that no one’s happy,” she said in a statement. “It’s not a win or a loss for any of the politicians involved.”

The battle in Minnesota echoes the ongoing fight over federal spending. As in Washington, Minnesota Republicans refused to consider any new taxes during the partisan wrangling. The fight caused nonessential parts of the state government to close after the new fiscal year began July 1.

Although critical services such as state police and prisons remained in operation, the shutdown closed state parks, made business licenses unobtainable and caused the layoff of more than 20,000 state employees. A rating agency also lowered Minnesota’s bond rating, increasing future borrowing costs for the state.

Republican lawmakers rebuffed several compromise offers from Dayton, who searched futilely for a way to end the impasse without totally abandoning his original position.

“If something works, you keep doing it,” said Larry Jacobs, a University of Minnesota political scientist. “Right now it feels like the Republicans have a winning formula, and it keeps generating concessions for them. They have found a bargaining style that satisfies their hard conservative base and has the Democrats on the defensive.”

Jacobs explained that the shutdown put more pressure on Democrats than Republicans, because of the growing antipathy toward government felt by many Republicans and their fervent belief that taxes and government stifle economic growth.

“For the governor, this was an existential crisis,” Jacobs said. “But many Republicans are so dubious about government and the role it plays that they view this in purely tactical terms.”

Using a shutdown to put pressure on Democrats is “not a lesson that I would say to anybody,” Speaker of the House Kurt Zellers (R) said. “We did not want a shutdown in the first place. We wanted a lights-on bill that would keep the government funded at 70 or 80 percent while we worked this out.”

Zellers viewed the apparent resolution as a Republican victory. “From the standpoint of whether there’s a tax increase or not, absolutely,” he said. “Is there more spending than we wanted? Absolutely.”

Minnesota governor, GOP lawmakers agree to end shutdown

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
Tags:

The agreement to end the shutdown came after Dayton reluctantly acceded to Republican demands not to raise any taxes to balance the state’s two-year budget and to embrace a deal the GOP had proposed just before the shutdown.

Dayton, who wanted to include a tax increase on the state’s top 2 percent of wage earners as part of the mix to close the funding gap, said the refusal of GOP legislators to budge left him with little choice but to go along with their alternative.

The plan would balance the state’s budget by cutting programs, delaying state aid to local school districts and borrowing against future tobacco company settlement payments.

“Despite my serious reservations about your plan, I have concluded that continuing the state government shutdown would be even more destructive for too many Minnesotans,” Dayton said in a letter to GOP legislative leaders. “Therefore, I am willing to agree to something I do not agree with — your proposal — in order to spare our citizens and our state from further damage.”

Dayton did ask Republicans to back off of their proposals to shrink state government employment by 15 percent in each agency. He also called for policy proposals favored by the GOP to be shelved for the rest of the year. In earlier talks, GOP leaders had pressed for abortion and stem-cell research restrictions, as well as stricter voter identification laws.

Dayton also called for Republican support in passing at least $500 million in bond sales to finance work on publicly owned buildings, including work at state colleges and universities, prisons and public-works facilities.

Those conditions caused some consternation among Republicans, whose leaders, nonetheless, agreed to the framework outlined by Dayton. “We believe the caucus will ultimately support this,” Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch (R) said.

Some Democratic lawmakers were also dissatisfied. “No way can I support this awful ‘compromise’ further tanking schools, deeper debt, kicking the whale down the road,” wrote state Rep. Mindy Greiling (D).

Dayton’s communications director, Katharine Tinucci, stressed that the agreement was a compromise by both sides. “The true sense of a compromise is that no one’s happy,” she said in a statement. “It’s not a win or a loss for any of the politicians involved.”

The battle in Minnesota echoes the ongoing fight over federal spending. As in Washington, Minnesota Republicans refused to consider any new taxes during the partisan wrangling. The fight caused nonessential parts of the state government to close after the new fiscal year began July 1.

Although critical services such as state police and prisons remained in operation, the shutdown closed state parks, made business licenses unobtainable and caused the layoff of more than 20,000 state employees. A rating agency also lowered Minnesota’s bond rating, increasing future borrowing costs for the state.

Republican lawmakers rebuffed several compromise offers from Dayton, who searched futilely for a way to end the impasse without totally abandoning his original position.

“If something works, you keep doing it,” said Larry Jacobs, a University of Minnesota political scientist. “Right now it feels like the Republicans have a winning formula, and it keeps generating concessions for them. They have found a bargaining style that satisfies their hard conservative base and has the Democrats on the defensive.”

Jacobs explained that the shutdown put more pressure on Democrats than Republicans, because of the growing antipathy toward government felt by many Republicans and their fervent belief that taxes and government stifle economic growth.

“For the governor, this was an existential crisis,” Jacobs said. “But many Republicans are so dubious about government and the role it plays that they view this in purely tactical terms.”

Using a shutdown to put pressure on Democrats is “not a lesson that I would say to anybody,” Speaker of the House Kurt Zellers (R) said. “We did not want a shutdown in the first place. We wanted a lights-on bill that would keep the government funded at 70 or 80 percent while we worked this out.”

Zellers viewed the apparent resolution as a Republican victory. “From the standpoint of whether there’s a tax increase or not, absolutely,” he said. “Is there more spending than we wanted? Absolutely.”

The big questions on FEC day

0

Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
Tags:

Today is the last day for federal candidates to file their second quarter financial reports, and The Fix has got your hook-up.

We know most of the presidential numbers have already been announced, but there is plenty left to be discovered today, from Rep. Michele Bachmann’s (R-Minn.) much-anticipated fundraising numbers down to some early incumbent-versus-incumbent matchups in the House.

Keep an eye on The Fix for all the latest. But to get you started, here are some of the big questions that will be answered:

* Can Bachmann match the hype? The Bachmann campaign’s decision to give very little indication of their fundraising numbers could either pan out very well or very poorly. So far, it seems to have only upped the ante as far as how much she is expected to have raised, and that could be a dangerous expectations game.

At this point, if she doesn’t finish second in the GOP presidential primary behind former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney’s $18.5 million and ahead of the $4.5 million raised by Rep. Ron Paul (Texas) and former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty (whose number was upped after initially being announced as $4.2 million), it will register as a disappointment among most observers.

Indeed, it may come to that, as CBS News cites a source close to the campaign putting the number at $4 million, including a $2 million transfer from her House campaign. Bachmann’s team wouldn’t confirm those numbers late Thursday.

Keep in mind, though – Bachmann didn’t officially launch her campaign until late June, and she didn’t pick up momentum until after the debate June 13 in New Hampshire. Even if you’ve caught the attention of lots and lots of conservatives looking for a fresh face, that’s still only two weeks in which she was considered a real contender.

By the same token, this is a woman who raised $1.7 million for her HOUSE campaign in the first quarter, so she should have a much bigger number than that.

* What’s in Obama’s report? We know the topline numbers for President Obama — $47 million for his campaign and $38 million raised for the Democratic National Committee — but a lot will be revealed when the actual report is filed, including who is bundling money for him, what percentage of money he raised from small-dollar donors and how much he has spent building up his 2012 infrastructure.

On small-dollar donors, for instance, Obama’s campaign has said that 98 percent of donations came in at $250 or less, but it hasn’t said what percentage of the total money raised came from those small donors. (Indeed, a promotion that asked for $5 contributions to enter a raffle for dinner with the president likely inflated those numbers.)

The document itself will be upwards of 15,000 pages, so it will take time to comb through.

* Do GOP Senate candidates assert themselves? Republicans are counting on winning four seats and re-taking the majority in the Senate in 2012. To do that, though, they’ll need money. And in a few states, GOP candidates will need to prove they can raise funds.

Among those with something to prove are Attorney General Jon Bruning in Nebraska, former state treasurer Sarah Steelman and Rep. Todd Akin in Missouri, and former congresswoman Heather Wilson and Lt. Gov. John Sanchez in New Mexico.

The GOP already got some good news when Ohio state Treasurer Josh Mandel (R) announced an outstanding $2.3 million raised. In Virginia, meanwhile, former Democratic National Committee chairman Tim Kaine raised nearly as much, giving his party renewed hope of holding that seat.

Nebraska and Missouri are pretty close to must-wins for the GOP in 2012, so the fundraising of the GOP field in those two states will be especially key. If the GOP can count on winning those two seats, plus North Dakota, and it holds all its seats, it would be in a 50-50 tie with Democrats.

* Can House GOP freshman pick it up? The huge class of freshman House Republicans didn’t exactly get out of the gate quickly in the first quarter, raising significantly less than its Democratic counterparts did after big Democratic waves in 2006 and 2008.

With Democrats now saying that the majority is winnable in 2012 and the GOP’s Medicare reform proposal weighing down the party, the onus is on those Republicans to raise the money to fight back against those attacks.

* Who’s raising more money in member-versus-member races? The most interesting House races of 2012 will likely be the ones that feature two members of Congress thrust into running against each other thanks to redistricting. We know some of their totals already – Rep. Tom Latham (R-Iowa), for example, had a huge $580,000 quarter as he prepares to face Rep. Leonard Boswell (D-Iowa), and Rep. Charles Boustany (R-La.) raised a very strong $474,000 for his matchup with Rep. Jeff Landry (R-La.).

In other cases, members who are getting a raw deal from redistricting may decide to throw in the towel, in which case they will likely turn in a small fundraising report.

If you want to know who else could face such a matchup, check out our Friday Line from last week.

Bachmann’s husband says clinic does help gays turn straight, but only upon request: Bachmann’s husband, Dr. Marcus Bachmann, told the Minneapolis Star Tribune on Thursday that, while the couple’s clinic does offer to help turn gay people straight — otherwise known as “reparative therapy” — that is not the focus of its practice, and it only does so at the patient’s request.

Bachmann said a gay rights activist who recorded a video showing a counselor trying to push him toward heterosexuality was given the treatment he asked for.

“This individual came to us under a false pretense,’’ he said. “The truth of the matter is, he specifically asked for help.’’

Bachmann also said such treatment is only done when requested.

“Will I address it? Certainly we’ll talk about it,” he said. “Is it a remedy form that I typically would use? … It is at the client’s discretion.”

Reparative therapy is a controversial subject, especially in professional medical circles.

Wallace: Bachmann flake question was fair: In an interview with Don Imus yesterday, “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace said that the question he apologized for asking Bachmann last month was legitimate — if poorly phrased.

Wallace asked Bachmann in a late June interview, “Are you a flake?” Bachmann responded that the question was insulting, and Wallace later apologized in a video.

“I thought that the topic was perfectly legitimate and I certainly would do it again. The topic was basically that she has said some questionable comments, things that were demonstrably wrong over the past,” Wallace said. “I certainly had no intention to be disrespectful and I certainly was not saying, ‘You are a flake.’ What I was basically saying was, ‘How do you respond to the perception that you are a flake?’ But it came out wrong.”

Fixbits:

Rep. Mazio Hirono (D-Hawaii) outraised former congressman Ed Case (D-Hawaii) in the second quarter. Both are running for retiring Sen. Daniel Akaka’s (D-Hawaii) seat.

Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) raised $900,000 in the second quarter and has $2.9 million on hand for what will be a tough reelection campaign.

Rep. Todd Akin (R-Mo.) raised $511,000 for his Senate campaign.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) opine on spending in the Post.

Romney finally weighs in on the debt ceiling, calling for a balanced budget amendment.

There’s talk of canceling the president’s 50th birthday party, which just happens to fall on the day after the debt limit is supposed to be hit.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who has irritated tea partiers with his proposal to give Obama the ability to raise the debt limit, signs the Cut, Cap and Balance pledge.

Bachmann announces her campaign team.

Bob Vander Plaats
stands by the “Marriage Vow.”

Rep. Joe Walsh (R-Ill.) accuses Obama of lying.

Bachmann hits Whoopi Goldberg in a fundraising letter.

Fix-approved “Friday Night Lights” airs its last episode tonight.

Must-reads:

McConnell leaves door open to McConnell ‘back-up plan’ on debt limit” — Felicia Sonmez, Washington Post

Minnesota governor, GOP lawmakers agree to end shutdown” — Michael A. Fletcher and Rachel Weiner, Washington Post

GOP ‘young gun’ Cantor draws controversy, ire” — Nancy Cordes, CBS News

Democrats attack Romney PACs” — Dan Eggen, Washington Post

The big questions on FEC day

0

Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
Tags:

Today is the last day for federal candidates to file their second quarter financial reports, and The Fix has got your hook-up.

We know most of the presidential numbers have already been announced, but there is plenty left to be discovered today, from Rep. Michele Bachmann’s (R-Minn.) much-anticipated fundraising numbers down to some early incumbent-versus-incumbent matchups in the House.

Keep an eye on The Fix for all the latest. But to get you started, here are some of the big questions that will be answered:

* Can Bachmann match the hype? The Bachmann campaign’s decision to give very little indication of their fundraising numbers could either pan out very well or very poorly. So far, it seems to have only upped the ante as far as how much she is expected to have raised, and that could be a dangerous expectations game.

At this point, if she doesn’t finish second in the GOP presidential primary behind former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney’s $18.5 million and ahead of the $4.5 million raised by Rep. Ron Paul (Texas) and former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty (whose number was upped after initially being announced as $4.2 million), it will register as a disappointment among most observers.

Indeed, it may come to that, as CBS News cites a source close to the campaign putting the number at $4 million, including a $2 million transfer from her House campaign. Bachmann’s team wouldn’t confirm those numbers late Thursday.

Keep in mind, though – Bachmann didn’t officially launch her campaign until late June, and she didn’t pick up momentum until after the debate June 13 in New Hampshire. Even if you’ve caught the attention of lots and lots of conservatives looking for a fresh face, that’s still only two weeks in which she was considered a real contender.

By the same token, this is a woman who raised $1.7 million for her HOUSE campaign in the first quarter, so she should have a much bigger number than that.

* What’s in Obama’s report? We know the topline numbers for President Obama — $47 million for his campaign and $38 million raised for the Democratic National Committee — but a lot will be revealed when the actual report is filed, including who is bundling money for him, what percentage of money he raised from small-dollar donors and how much he has spent building up his 2012 infrastructure.

On small-dollar donors, for instance, Obama’s campaign has said that 98 percent of donations came in at $250 or less, but it hasn’t said what percentage of the total money raised came from those small donors. (Indeed, a promotion that asked for $5 contributions to enter a raffle for dinner with the president likely inflated those numbers.)

The document itself will be upwards of 15,000 pages, so it will take time to comb through.

* Do GOP Senate candidates assert themselves? Republicans are counting on winning four seats and re-taking the majority in the Senate in 2012. To do that, though, they’ll need money. And in a few states, GOP candidates will need to prove they can raise funds.

Among those with something to prove are Attorney General Jon Bruning in Nebraska, former state treasurer Sarah Steelman and Rep. Todd Akin in Missouri, and former congresswoman Heather Wilson and Lt. Gov. John Sanchez in New Mexico.

The GOP already got some good news when Ohio state Treasurer Josh Mandel (R) announced an outstanding $2.3 million raised. In Virginia, meanwhile, former Democratic National Committee chairman Tim Kaine raised nearly as much, giving his party renewed hope of holding that seat.

Nebraska and Missouri are pretty close to must-wins for the GOP in 2012, so the fundraising of the GOP field in those two states will be especially key. If the GOP can count on winning those two seats, plus North Dakota, and it holds all its seats, it would be in a 50-50 tie with Democrats.

* Can House GOP freshman pick it up? The huge class of freshman House Republicans didn’t exactly get out of the gate quickly in the first quarter, raising significantly less than its Democratic counterparts did after big Democratic waves in 2006 and 2008.

With Democrats now saying that the majority is winnable in 2012 and the GOP’s Medicare reform proposal weighing down the party, the onus is on those Republicans to raise the money to fight back against those attacks.

* Who’s raising more money in member-versus-member races? The most interesting House races of 2012 will likely be the ones that feature two members of Congress thrust into running against each other thanks to redistricting. We know some of their totals already – Rep. Tom Latham (R-Iowa), for example, had a huge $580,000 quarter as he prepares to face Rep. Leonard Boswell (D-Iowa), and Rep. Charles Boustany (R-La.) raised a very strong $474,000 for his matchup with Rep. Jeff Landry (R-La.).

In other cases, members who are getting a raw deal from redistricting may decide to throw in the towel, in which case they will likely turn in a small fundraising report.

If you want to know who else could face such a matchup, check out our Friday Line from last week.

Bachmann’s husband says clinic does help gays turn straight, but only upon request: Bachmann’s husband, Dr. Marcus Bachmann, told the Minneapolis Star Tribune on Thursday that, while the couple’s clinic does offer to help turn gay people straight — otherwise known as “reparative therapy” — that is not the focus of its practice, and it only does so at the patient’s request.

Bachmann said a gay rights activist who recorded a video showing a counselor trying to push him toward heterosexuality was given the treatment he asked for.

“This individual came to us under a false pretense,’’ he said. “The truth of the matter is, he specifically asked for help.’’

Bachmann also said such treatment is only done when requested.

“Will I address it? Certainly we’ll talk about it,” he said. “Is it a remedy form that I typically would use? … It is at the client’s discretion.”

Reparative therapy is a controversial subject, especially in professional medical circles.

Wallace: Bachmann flake question was fair: In an interview with Don Imus yesterday, “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace said that the question he apologized for asking Bachmann last month was legitimate — if poorly phrased.

Wallace asked Bachmann in a late June interview, “Are you a flake?” Bachmann responded that the question was insulting, and Wallace later apologized in a video.

“I thought that the topic was perfectly legitimate and I certainly would do it again. The topic was basically that she has said some questionable comments, things that were demonstrably wrong over the past,” Wallace said. “I certainly had no intention to be disrespectful and I certainly was not saying, ‘You are a flake.’ What I was basically saying was, ‘How do you respond to the perception that you are a flake?’ But it came out wrong.”

Fixbits:

Rep. Mazio Hirono (D-Hawaii) outraised former congressman Ed Case (D-Hawaii) in the second quarter. Both are running for retiring Sen. Daniel Akaka’s (D-Hawaii) seat.

Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) raised $900,000 in the second quarter and has $2.9 million on hand for what will be a tough reelection campaign.

Rep. Todd Akin (R-Mo.) raised $511,000 for his Senate campaign.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) opine on spending in the Post.

Romney finally weighs in on the debt ceiling, calling for a balanced budget amendment.

There’s talk of canceling the president’s 50th birthday party, which just happens to fall on the day after the debt limit is supposed to be hit.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who has irritated tea partiers with his proposal to give Obama the ability to raise the debt limit, signs the Cut, Cap and Balance pledge.

Bachmann announces her campaign team.

Bob Vander Plaats
stands by the “Marriage Vow.”

Rep. Joe Walsh (R-Ill.) accuses Obama of lying.

Bachmann hits Whoopi Goldberg in a fundraising letter.

Fix-approved “Friday Night Lights” airs its last episode tonight.

Must-reads:

McConnell leaves door open to McConnell ‘back-up plan’ on debt limit” — Felicia Sonmez, Washington Post

Minnesota governor, GOP lawmakers agree to end shutdown” — Michael A. Fletcher and Rachel Weiner, Washington Post

GOP ‘young gun’ Cantor draws controversy, ire” — Nancy Cordes, CBS News

Democrats attack Romney PACs” — Dan Eggen, Washington Post

Sarah Palin and the debt limit debate

0

Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : Feeds, us news, washington post, washington post politics
Tags:



(BRIAN SNYDER/REUTERS)

“There are departments that can be revamped and some bills that can wait. And, again, it’s our president’s job, as the leader of the executive branch, to prioritize and administer those dollars that Congress has allocated. And our president obviously isn’t capable of doing that, because he has no plan that he can even put forward to say here are my priorities.”

–Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R)

Potential presidential candidate Sarah Palin popped up on the Sean Hannity Show on Wednesday night, making a series of somewhat contradictory statements about the battle over the national debt ceiling.

 “If I were in Congress, I would not vote to incur more debt,” she asserted. But she also said, “We cannot default.” But then she also said: “We cannot afford to retreat right now.”

 Eventually, she got around to making the point above, saying the president simply has to prioritize what bills he is going to pay, “revamp” some departments and so forth. She made it sound all so very easy.

 As we have written, there is substantial debate over what the Obama administration can or cannot do once the putative Aug. 2 deadline is reached, especially regarding the disbursement of Social Security checks. The most impressive analysis thus far was published by The Bipartisan Policy Center, a report written Jay Powell, a former top Treasury official in the George H.W. Bush administration. He makes it clear this would be uncharted and very difficult territory.

But Palin’s statement also suggests she has a fundamental misunderstanding of the debt limit, which we will explore.

 

The Facts

 The debt limit was originally crafted to make life easier for Congress. Before World War I, Congress literally had to cast a vote every time Treasury borrowed money to make purchases authorized by Congress (such as tanks). In 1917, Congress decided to do away with the cumbersome procedure and simply gave blanket approval for most types of borrowing. To keep a check on the executive branch, Congress established a limit.

But this is not the same as a credit card limit, a frequently used analogy. A credit card limit prevents someone from making more purchases. You may want to buy that $1,000 refrigerator but if you only have $500 left on your credit card, tough luck—unless you round up some cash.

 In this case, Congress has already authorized the expenditures for fiscal year 2011. In many cases, the products, so to speak, have already been purchased, and now the bills are coming due. If the United States government does not pay for these items (which includes interest on the national debt), then it goes in default.

 We have had trouble coming up with a real-life equivalent, but here’s stab at it. Suppose the son of a millionaire was told he could spend $100,000 in a year, and not only that, but he was told exactly how he needed to spend the money.   (That’s the fiscal year appropriations bills passed by Congress.). At the same time, the parent told the son the bills would not be paid after a certain date unless he got additional permission to pay them. (That’s the debt limit.)

 In other words, the money has been spent, but an arbitrary ceiling has been set for how much can be paid. If it doesn’t make much sense, it is not supposed to.  But it is the exact opposite of a credit card limit or any such similar analogy.

 As the Government Accountability Office puts it in its useful primer on government debt

“The debt limit does not control or limit the ability of the federal government to run deficits or incur obligations. Rather, it is a limit on the ability to pay obligations already incurred. While debates surrounding the debt limit may raise awareness about the federal government’s current debt trajectory and may also provide Congress with an opportunity to debate the fiscal policy decisions driving that trajectory, the ability to have an immediate effect on debt levels is limited.”

 Palin further confuses matters when she says, “it’s our president’s job, as the leader of the executive branch, to prioritize and administer those dollars that Congress has allocated.” Under the Constitution,  the executive branch cannot spend money that has not been appropriated by Congress. But with the debt ceiling, Congress has allocated no more dollars for payments, even though it has appropriated the money to be spent.

 Palin also said, “there are departments that can be revamped and some bills that can wait.” Actually, it takes time—and the approval of Congress—to “revamp” departments. As for delaying some bills, we guess she means that the United States has to stiff a few creditors. The technical term for that is “default.”

 Much as politicians like to compare the government’s budget to the family budget, this is going too far. In tough economic times, some families do indeed delay paying some bills in order to make payments deemed more important, such as the mortgage. Eventually that can harm the family’s credit rating, which the current impasse threatens to do to the prized AAA rating now held by the United States.

 

 The Pinocchio Test

 We concede that American politicians have a long history of playing politics with the debt rating. Given his current rhetoric, President Obama, in particular, should feel ashamed at his posturing on the debt limit in 2006, when he voted not to raise the debt limit. (He since has said such “a political vote” was a mistake.)

 As then Sen. Obama put it, in words that seem to echo Palin’s language today: “The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills.”

 (An aside: Obama also noted “it took 42 Presidents 224 years to run up only $1 trillion of foreign-held debt. This [Bush] administration did more than that in just five years.” The debt has risen under Obama by nearly $4 trillion in less than three years. Oops.)

 But past rhetoric by other politicians, even the president, is no excuse for continuing to mischaracterize the debt limit. Palin either has a fundamental misunderstanding of the issue or she purposely is being misleading.

 

Three Pinocchios

 

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Sarah Palin and the debt limit debate

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(BRIAN SNYDER/REUTERS)

“There are departments that can be revamped and some bills that can wait. And, again, it’s our president’s job, as the leader of the executive branch, to prioritize and administer those dollars that Congress has allocated. And our president obviously isn’t capable of doing that, because he has no plan that he can even put forward to say here are my priorities.”

–Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R)

Potential presidential candidate Sarah Palin popped up on the Sean Hannity Show on Wednesday night, making a series of somewhat contradictory statements about the battle over the national debt ceiling.

 “If I were in Congress, I would not vote to incur more debt,” she asserted. But she also said, “We cannot default.” But then she also said: “We cannot afford to retreat right now.”

 Eventually, she got around to making the point above, saying the president simply has to prioritize what bills he is going to pay, “revamp” some departments and so forth. She made it sound all so very easy.

 As we have written, there is substantial debate over what the Obama administration can or cannot do once the putative Aug. 2 deadline is reached, especially regarding the disbursement of Social Security checks. The most impressive analysis thus far was published by The Bipartisan Policy Center, a report written Jay Powell, a former top Treasury official in the George H.W. Bush administration. He makes it clear this would be uncharted and very difficult territory.

But Palin’s statement also suggests she has a fundamental misunderstanding of the debt limit, which we will explore.

 

The Facts

 The debt limit was originally crafted to make life easier for Congress. Before World War I, Congress literally had to cast a vote every time Treasury borrowed money to make purchases authorized by Congress (such as tanks). In 1917, Congress decided to do away with the cumbersome procedure and simply gave blanket approval for most types of borrowing. To keep a check on the executive branch, Congress established a limit.

But this is not the same as a credit card limit, a frequently used analogy. A credit card limit prevents someone from making more purchases. You may want to buy that $1,000 refrigerator but if you only have $500 left on your credit card, tough luck—unless you round up some cash.

 In this case, Congress has already authorized the expenditures for fiscal year 2011. In many cases, the products, so to speak, have already been purchased, and now the bills are coming due. If the United States government does not pay for these items (which includes interest on the national debt), then it goes in default.

 We have had trouble coming up with a real-life equivalent, but here’s stab at it. Suppose the son of a millionaire was told he could spend $100,000 in a year, and not only that, but he was told exactly how he needed to spend the money.   (That’s the fiscal year appropriations bills passed by Congress.). At the same time, the parent told the son the bills would not be paid after a certain date unless he got additional permission to pay them. (That’s the debt limit.)

 In other words, the money has been spent, but an arbitrary ceiling has been set for how much can be paid. If it doesn’t make much sense, it is not supposed to.  But it is the exact opposite of a credit card limit or any such similar analogy.

 As the Government Accountability Office puts it in its useful primer on government debt

“The debt limit does not control or limit the ability of the federal government to run deficits or incur obligations. Rather, it is a limit on the ability to pay obligations already incurred. While debates surrounding the debt limit may raise awareness about the federal government’s current debt trajectory and may also provide Congress with an opportunity to debate the fiscal policy decisions driving that trajectory, the ability to have an immediate effect on debt levels is limited.”

 Palin further confuses matters when she says, “it’s our president’s job, as the leader of the executive branch, to prioritize and administer those dollars that Congress has allocated.” Under the Constitution,  the executive branch cannot spend money that has not been appropriated by Congress. But with the debt ceiling, Congress has allocated no more dollars for payments, even though it has appropriated the money to be spent.

 Palin also said, “there are departments that can be revamped and some bills that can wait.” Actually, it takes time—and the approval of Congress—to “revamp” departments. As for delaying some bills, we guess she means that the United States has to stiff a few creditors. The technical term for that is “default.”

 Much as politicians like to compare the government’s budget to the family budget, this is going too far. In tough economic times, some families do indeed delay paying some bills in order to make payments deemed more important, such as the mortgage. Eventually that can harm the family’s credit rating, which the current impasse threatens to do to the prized AAA rating now held by the United States.

 

 The Pinocchio Test

 We concede that American politicians have a long history of playing politics with the debt rating. Given his current rhetoric, President Obama, in particular, should feel ashamed at his posturing on the debt limit in 2006, when he voted not to raise the debt limit. (He since has said such “a political vote” was a mistake.)

 As then Sen. Obama put it, in words that seem to echo Palin’s language today: “The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills.”

 (An aside: Obama also noted “it took 42 Presidents 224 years to run up only $1 trillion of foreign-held debt. This [Bush] administration did more than that in just five years.” The debt has risen under Obama by nearly $4 trillion in less than three years. Oops.)

 But past rhetoric by other politicians, even the president, is no excuse for continuing to mischaracterize the debt limit. Palin either has a fundamental misunderstanding of the issue or she purposely is being misleading.

 

Three Pinocchios

 

(About our rating scale)

 

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More on PostPolitics.com

Palin’s PAC spent tens of thousands on bus trip

Obama’s mother had health insurance, according to biography

GOP dissent complicates path to resolving debt-ceiling crisis

Watch Sarah Palin on the Hannity Show

Obama still pushing for ‘big deal’ on debt

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Which federal programs would you choose to pay?

Which federal programs would you choose to pay?

Video

As bond-rating agencies warn they could soon downgrade U.S. debt, the U.S. Treasury secretary warns default is looming and an increasingly frustrated President Barack Obama is giving crisis deficit talks a deadline. (July 14)

As bond-rating agencies warn they could soon downgrade U.S. debt, the U.S. Treasury secretary warns default is looming and an increasingly frustrated President Barack Obama is giving crisis deficit talks a deadline. (July 14)

Live QA, Noon ET

Live QA, Noon ET

Dana Milbank Live: Obama presser and debt talk


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Obama still pushing for ‘big deal’ on debt

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Which federal programs would you choose to pay?

Which federal programs would you choose to pay?

Video

As bond-rating agencies warn they could soon downgrade U.S. debt, the U.S. Treasury secretary warns default is looming and an increasingly frustrated President Barack Obama is giving crisis deficit talks a deadline. (July 14)

As bond-rating agencies warn they could soon downgrade U.S. debt, the U.S. Treasury secretary warns default is looming and an increasingly frustrated President Barack Obama is giving crisis deficit talks a deadline. (July 14)

Live QA, Noon ET

Live QA, Noon ET

Dana Milbank Live: Obama presser and debt talk


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Research Desk: Are government workers overpaid?

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : business news, economy, Feeds, washington post, washington post economy

t_seltzer asks:

Today on the Diane Rehm show, Grover Norquist said that public sector workers earn total compensation roughly twice that of private sector workers, $120K vs. $60K. Is this factual? If not, what are the actual comparative figures?

Norquist also used this talking point in an interview with Ezra in March, and, as Ezra said then, it’s very misleading. Norquist is relying on this USA Today analysis, which estimates that the average private- sector worker made $61,051 in total compensation (wages, health benefits, pension, etc.) in 2009 to the average federal worker’s $123,049, and the average state or local worker’s $69,913. But the USA Today analysis did not take into account differences in level of experience and education between public-sector and private-sector workers. Federal workers tend to be better educated than private-sector workers, and so it would make sense for them to be paid more.

Keith Bender and John Heywood, economists at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, did a comparison of state and local and private sector compensation that controlled for age, education level, experience and other factors, and found that state and local workers are consistently underpaid, and have been growing more so since the early ’90s:


Similar comparisons of federal and private-sector compensation are rather few and far between. An Office of Personnel Management study suggests that federal salaries are 22.13 percent lower than private sector ones on average, but that does not include non-salary compensation and, as FactCheck.org noted when it tackled this question, it uses a data set that makes it hard to do an apples-to-apples comparison. But in any case, the $123,049 figure Norquist produces isn’t at all useful in answering this question, and falls into his habit
of using technically correct data that sounds like it supports his point but actually doesn’t.

Research Desk: Are government workers overpaid?

0

Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : business news, economy, Feeds, washington post, washington post economy

t_seltzer asks:

Today on the Diane Rehm show, Grover Norquist said that public sector workers earn total compensation roughly twice that of private sector workers, $120K vs. $60K. Is this factual? If not, what are the actual comparative figures?

Norquist also used this talking point in an interview with Ezra in March, and, as Ezra said then, it’s very misleading. Norquist is relying on this USA Today analysis, which estimates that the average private- sector worker made $61,051 in total compensation (wages, health benefits, pension, etc.) in 2009 to the average federal worker’s $123,049, and the average state or local worker’s $69,913. But the USA Today analysis did not take into account differences in level of experience and education between public-sector and private-sector workers. Federal workers tend to be better educated than private-sector workers, and so it would make sense for them to be paid more.

Keith Bender and John Heywood, economists at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, did a comparison of state and local and private sector compensation that controlled for age, education level, experience and other factors, and found that state and local workers are consistently underpaid, and have been growing more so since the early ’90s:


Similar comparisons of federal and private-sector compensation are rather few and far between. An Office of Personnel Management study suggests that federal salaries are 22.13 percent lower than private sector ones on average, but that does not include non-salary compensation and, as FactCheck.org noted when it tackled this question, it uses a data set that makes it hard to do an apples-to-apples comparison. But in any case, the $123,049 figure Norquist produces isn’t at all useful in answering this question, and falls into his habit
of using technically correct data that sounds like it supports his point but actually doesn’t.

Thirty years of the debt ceiling in one graph

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : business news, economy, Feeds, washington post, washington post economy

Nice graphic by the visual whizzes at The Post:



(THE WASHINGTON POST)

The one caveat to this graph is that the colors on the bar showing control of the House of Representatives look to be reversed. But that doesn’t distract from its main point: “Since 1980, the debt ceiling has been raised 39 times. It was raised 17 times under Ronald Reagan, four times under Bill Clinton and seven times under George W. Bush.”

At any given time, the minority party likes to pretend that the debt is all the majority party’s fault. That’s the whole theory behind the McConnell plan. But every president and congress is paying for the decisions of every previous president and congress. This is, and always has been, a bipartisan affair.

Thirty years of the debt ceiling in one graph

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : business news, economy, Feeds, washington post, washington post economy

Nice graphic by the visual whizzes at The Post:



(THE WASHINGTON POST)

The one caveat to this graph is that the colors on the bar showing control of the House of Representatives look to be reversed. But that doesn’t distract from its main point: “Since 1980, the debt ceiling has been raised 39 times. It was raised 17 times under Ronald Reagan, four times under Bill Clinton and seven times under George W. Bush.”

At any given time, the minority party likes to pretend that the debt is all the majority party’s fault. That’s the whole theory behind the McConnell plan. But every president and congress is paying for the decisions of every previous president and congress. This is, and always has been, a bipartisan affair.

Lunch break: Great moments in local news

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : business news, economy, Feeds, washington post, washington post economy

These are hard times for a lot of old media, but I actually think YouTube has propelled local news into a new golden age. Case in point:

By Dylan Matthews
 | 
12:16 PM ET, 07/15/2011



Next:
Thirty years of the debt ceiling in one graph




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Lunch break: Great moments in local news

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Posted on : 15-07-2011 | By : staffwriter | In : business news, economy, Feeds, washington post, washington post economy

These are hard times for a lot of old media, but I actually think YouTube has propelled local news into a new golden age. Case in point:

By Dylan Matthews
 | 
12:16 PM ET, 07/15/2011



Next:
Thirty years of the debt ceiling in one graph




SuperFan

SuperFan badge holders consistently post smart, timely comments about Washington area sports and teams.

If your comments or those of another user measure up, please let Post editors know.

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Fact Checkers contribute questions, information and facts to The Fact Checker.

If your comments or those of another user measure up, please let Post editors know.

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Washingtologists consistently post thought provoking, timely comments on events, communities, and trends in the Washington area.

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This commenter is a Washington Post editor, reporter or producer.

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Grains futures rise on the Chicago Board of Trade; beef and pork prices trade mixed

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Grains futures rise on the Chicago Board of Trade; beef and pork prices trade mixed

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Obama: Rare chance to stabilize fragile economy while raising critical national debt limit

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  • ( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) - President Barack Obama answers questions on the ongoing budget negotiations during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.
  • ( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) - President Barack Obama answers questions on the ongoing budget negotiations during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.
  • ( Susan Walsh / Associated Press ) - House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., center, and Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas., second from left, leave a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.
  • ( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) - President Barack Obama walks to the podium to talks about the ongoing budget negotiations during a news conference, Friday, July 15, 2011, in the briefing room of the White House in Washington.

( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) – President Barack Obama answers questions on the ongoing budget negotiations during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.

Obama: Rare chance to stabilize fragile economy while raising critical national debt limit

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  • ( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) - President Barack Obama answers questions on the ongoing budget negotiations during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.
  • ( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) - President Barack Obama answers questions on the ongoing budget negotiations during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.
  • ( Susan Walsh / Associated Press ) - House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., center, and Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas., second from left, leave a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.
  • ( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) - President Barack Obama walks to the podium to talks about the ongoing budget negotiations during a news conference, Friday, July 15, 2011, in the briefing room of the White House in Washington.

( Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ) – President Barack Obama answers questions on the ongoing budget negotiations during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 15, 2011.

The middle, held hostage in the debt debate

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Stocks only slightly higher after morning swings; shares headed for big weekly loss

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Unshackling Montgomery County police

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Tom Toles goes local: A collection of cartoons on D.C., Maryland and Virginia.

Oil rises above $97 per barrel as analysts warn of lengthy supply problems from Libya

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Five truths about the deficit and the debt

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Debate heats up between Obama, lawmakers over debt limit: Negotiations are in limbo as the clock is ticking toward an Aug. 2 deadline for raising the debt ceiling.


A balanced budget amendment isn’t the answer

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Tom Toles on the budget battle: Collection of cartoons on the federal budget and the fight to get it right.

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Ann Telnaes animation: Republicans scuttle negotiations with President Obama

Ann Telnaes animation: Republicans scuttle negotiations with President Obama


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