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Jim Amann visits

Well, if Groton is any indication, Amann is not much of a draw. Granted, our Town Committee attendance is often dreadful, but we pretty much hit rock bottom tonight. I believe we had about 11 people in attendance, not counting Amann and his retainers. Even I sort of felt sorry for the guy wasting his time to come speak to a handful of people.

I did “ask” him about the Lieberman issue. I use the quote marks because this particular issue gets me somewhat hot under the collar. I had to struggle to contain myself, and I’m sure there are some who would say that I failed. Anyway, his justification is that Lieberman had done him a lot of favors, so he owed him his support out of personal loyalty. On the other hand, he assures us that he would never do it again, nor would he have done it if he could ever possibly have imagined that the future would play out the way it did. No one could possibly have imagined that Lieberman would betray the Democratic party and back the Republican presidential candidate, excepting for us stupid bloggers, of course, and who listens to us? What about the fact that back in 2006 Lieberman was neutral about whether it would be a good idea for the Democrats to become the majority party? He “must have missed that”.

One thing I didn’t ask him about, because, quite frankly, I wanted to go home, was his backing for another Joe-Joe Gentile. He was the scam artist to whom the town of Preston almost gave the rights to develop the old Norwich Hospital grounds. Even after the town saw the error of its ways, Amann was pushing to try to keep Gentile in play. On that issue, there are two possibilities, neither of which is very flattering for Amann. First, he may actually have believed in Gentile, in which case he’s such a shockingly bad judge of people that he has no business being a governor. The other is that he was fully aware that Amann was a con artist, but he backed him in order to curry favor with the unions, to whom Gentile had promised the world (as he had to everyone else). In that case, the guy is both incredibly cynical and incredibly short sighted, because had Gentile ever gotten control of that property the unions would have been just as much victims of the con as everyone else.

One last observation. He apparently really does believe that Rell is not going to run, and that he will win a cakewalk election against the current lieutenant governor, whose name I of course cannot recall and refuse to take the time to Google. I suppose a lieutenant governor has gotten the nomination to succeed the sitting governor at some point in Connecticut’s storied history, though I can’t think of any examples. I.e, it’s not impossible, but it hardly seems like it makes sense to count on it.


David Sirota wants a new job

Apparently David Sirota is a possibility for the 10:00 just after Rachel Maddow slot on MSNBC. Currently that slot is occupied by a repeat of the 8:00 Countdown show. He sent out a mass email about it, and I reproduce the bulk of it below. It certainly can’t hurt to have another progressive voice on the idiot box. It is worrisome that these news networks are becoming something akin to party organs, though MSNBC does have some heretics. The fact that “they started it” doesn’t make the development any more welcome. That being said, it’s the way the battle is being fought, and there’s no principle involved big enough to justify staying aloof from the fray.

David’s email:

Last month, the New York Times ran a story about MSNBC looking for a
host to fill its open 10pm time-slot and many of you encouraged me to
apply for the job after seeing me on programs like The Rachel Maddow
Show, Bill Moyers Journal and The Colbert Report. Of course, I didn’t
really know what that meant – after all, how the heck do you “apply”
for a TV show? Well, today, my friend and fellow OpenLeft.com writer
Chris Bowers launched a formal campaign to ask MSNBC to consider me
for the slot, and now I’m asking for your help – and the good news
is, I’m not asking you for money, I’m just asking you to take 1
minute of your time to send an email, join a Facebook group and tell
all your friends to do the same.

MSNBC president Phil Griffin told the New York Times he wants the
process of selecting a host to be “organic.” That means I need as
many of you as possible to send an email to MSNBC at
letters@msnbc.com with a simple message: Tell them you’d like them to
bring me on for the 10pm job. It also means you forwarding on this
email to as many people as you know asking them to do the same. It
means blogging about this, Twittering this message to friends, and
joining the Facebook group about this campaign at:

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=53711796165

Griffin has told reporters he’s not sure MSNBC is going to fill the
slot with a progressive, but that he is watching to see viewer
response for feedback. That’s why your help in this campaign is so
important – and I wouldn’t ask for your help unless I was sure it
could make a significant impact.

As many of you know, I’ve appeared on MSNBC many times as a guest
with my friend Rachel Maddow, and appear regularly on other networks.
I also have a syndicated newspaper column, two bestselling books and a
blog, thanks in no small part to all of your support over the years.
So, after a lot of scratching and clawing (and help from you), my
work is starting to get out there. And in all of those forums, I try
to focus on the economic and political issues important to regular
folks – the issues that get short shrift by so much of the media.
Over the years, I’ve worked with so many of you – you’ve given me
ideas, provided leads for stories and critiqued me. It’s improved my
work so much, and now we have a chance to take it to the next level –
and if we do, our work together will only intensify.

At this moment of economic crisis, we need as many populist
progressive voices in the media as possible. If we make this happen –
if you help me in this campaign – we can bring all of those issues we
care so much about to the forefront of the national media
conversation.

Let me close by saying that while I’ve never been bashful about
promoting a campaign, a cause, a candidate or a book, campaigning for
myself is new to me. It feels a bit uncomfortable, because I’ve tried
to make all of my work about the issues, not about me personally. But
MSNBC has made clear that it wants viewer input in this process of
selecting a host for 10pm, so I decided to swallow my pride, get over
my unease, and do whatever I could to make a real go at this, because
this opportunity to amplify all of our work is real and achievable if
we make our voices heard.

Chances like this come around so rarely-so I hope you’ll take a moment and email letters@msnbc.com and ask them to bring me aboard, and then forward this email to all of your friends, join the Facebook group and blog/twitter about it where you can.

As I said before, I wouldn’t ask you to do this if it wasn’t
important, and if I wasn’t sure it would make a huge difference. With
your help, we have a real shot at making this opportunity a reality –
one that can boost all the causes we’ve been pushing for so long.

I’m twitter and Facebook-phobic, but I do have a blog and I’ve sent an email. MSNBC could do far worse than David, so if you’re so inclined, send an email or twitter, etc.


Obama 1, Jindal 0

Wasn’t it refreshing to hear a politician advocate for the progressive philosophy in an assertive and unapologetic fashion? The Democrats have been in a defensive crouch for 29 years, and have essentially ceded the terms of the national debate to the right. For a time there it became terribly un-hip to advocate for a governmental role in anything. Obama has changed all that, with help from an economic crisis that has focused a lot of minds on what’s important. Social issue distractions don’t work so well when everyone is worried about their jobs.

I only regret that I opted not to watch Jindal. I’ll have to settle for the anticipated roast on Countdown. It’s a bit hard to believe that the Republicans believe they can get public support by telling a panicked public that there’s nothing to worry about, and in any event there’s nothing that can be done.

Speaking of Jindal, Krugman makes the point that his speech was emblematic of the party of one idea-that government has no role, even in those areas where only government can be effective:

But both sides, I thought, agreed that the government should provide public goods — goods that are nonrival (they benefit everyone) and nonexcludable (there’s no way to restrict the benefits to people who pay.) The classic examples are things like lighthouses and national defense, but there are many others. For example, knowing when a volcano is likely to erupt can save many lives; but there’s no private incentive to spend money on monitoring, since even people who didn’t contribute to maintaining the monitoring system can still benefit from the warning. So that’s the sort of activity that should be undertaken by government.

So what did Bobby Jindal choose to ridicule in this response to Obama last night? Volcano monitoring, of course.

And leaving aside the chutzpah of casting the failure of his own party’s governance as proof that government can’t work, does he really think that the response to natural disasters like Katrina is best undertaken by uncoordinated private action? Hey, why bother having an army? Let’s just rely on self-defense by armed citizens.

The intellectual incoherence is stunning. Basically, the political philosophy of the GOP right now seems to consist of snickering at stuff that they think sounds funny. The party of ideas has become the party of Beavis and Butthead.

It would be refreshing to see one of our TV journalists ask a guy like Jindal whether he has actually taken the time to find out anything about the programs he chooses to heap scorn upon.


Very Sad

My wife and I baled on the Courant about six months ago, but I still have a soft spot in my heart for the nation’s oldest newspaper. It’s unfortunate, but that title will probably soon be passed on to some other paper. Today, the Courant announced another 150 layoffs, including 30 in the newsroom.

It’s hard not to see this as part of the death spiral.

Had the Courant stayed locally owned, might things have been different? Had the LA Times Company not been acquired by Sam Zell, might things have been different. I have little good to say about Rupert Murdoch, but at least he’s a newspaperman, who cares about his newspapers. It’s not at all clear what Zell was looking to do, but besides himself he’s managed to destroy a fair number of newspapers.


Coming Events

Gubernatorial politics are heating up. This Thursday the Groton Democratic Town Committee holds is monthly meeting at the Town Hall Annex. The meeting starts at 7:00, and at 7:30 Jim Amann will be there to try to get us to sign on to his delusional quest for the governorship. It’s at times like this that I wish I paid more attention to statewide politics. I’m really not sure what substantive questions I’d like to ask him. I do intend to take the opportunity to remind him that there are many among us who will neither forgive or forget his sins of 2006. Of course, on the merits he’d be a terrible governor. A hack of the highest order.

More importantly, our local State Central Committee member, Scott Bates, is organizing a gubernatorial candidates forum to be held at the Groton Municipal Building on March 14th, at 10:00 AM. Amann, Malloy and Wyman have agreed to attend. Scott is still waiting to hear from Bysiewicz. Hopefully, Susan will come, so we’ll have the opportunity to hear from three serious candidates. I’ll post again on this as the day approaches, because we do want to have a good turnout.


Corporate America at its best

Via Americablog:

I don’t practice in the worker’s comp area, but what little I know leads me to believe this would not be even a close call in Connecticut. I doubt that it will be a close call even in Arkansas.

Why do they do this? They have nothing to lose. Their potential losses are capped by a statutory formula, and they don’t have to worry about the ire of a jury or a judge, unless Arkansas law happens to allow for some sort of enhanced damages for bad faith, which I doubt. Any settlement at less that the statutory maximum is a win for them.

This is the paradise that awaits us when the right wing achieves its goal of outlawing personal injury and products liability cases.


60 votes

One disadvantage to being a reality based type of blog, is that you are under a certain obligation to admit that you are wrong. So today, I must admit that I have been wrong on a regular basis about something.

I have, on a number of occasions, bemoaned the fact that Harry Reid has passively accepted the idea that it takes 60 votes to pass anything in the Senate, and that he has never forced the Republicans to actually filibuster. It turns out that theactual filibuster, the round the clock talking, the reading phone books, etc., may not exist:

Reid’s office has studied the history of the filibuster and analyzed what options are available. The resulting memo was provided to the Huffington Post and it concludes that a filibustering Senator “can be forced to sit on the [Senate] floor to keep us from voting on that legislation for a finite period of time according to existing rules but he/she can’t be forced to keep talking for an indefinite period of time.”

As both Reid’s memo and Dove explain, only one Republican would need to monitor the Senate floor. If the majority party tried to move to a vote, he could simply say, “I suggest the absence of a quorum.”

The presiding officer would then be required to call the roll. When that finished, the Senator could again notice the absence of a quorum and start the process all over. At no point would the obstructing Republican be required to defend his position, read from the phone book or any of the other things people associate with the Hollywood version of a filibuster.

This, apparently, is a result of a rule change in 1917, which provided for cloture votes. Prior to 1917 a few determined Senators could forestall legislation indefinitely.

When the Republicans were in charge, they were poised to exercise the “nuclear option” and declare the filibuster, as it related to judicial appointments, unconstitutional. They felt they could do it by a parliamentary ruling. The Democrats responded to the threat: they preserved the filibuster by basically promising not to use it, which essentially preserved it for the Republicans.

The “nuclear option” at that time, applied only to judicial nominations. The theory, it seems to me, could easily be extended to all legislation. Indeed, in light of the fact that the Senate rules essentially give veto power to a minority, one must wonder whether there are some constitutional questions raised here. Could a majority of 51 pass a rule requiring 100 votes to invoke cloture, effectively requiring unanimous consent for all legislation? Is the majority principle sufficiently enshrined in the constitution to warrant some protection? My guess is that it’s not. There is nothing in the Constitution that states that a majority vote is sufficient to pass legislation, and there is something that allows each House to “determine the Rules of its Proceedings”.

But, as the Republicans showed, there is more than one way to skin a cat. If the Democrats opted to “go nuclear” with regard to the legislative filibuster, there might not be much the Republicans could do about it, just as the Democrats might have been helpless when they were in the minority. The courts, assuming they were intellectually honest, could not get involved in the internal operations of the Senate.

In any event, it looks like making the Republicans stand up and talk is not a viable option. That doesn’t let Reid completely off the hook. Where there’s a will, there’s a way, and there has to be a way to make the cost of obstruction heavy enough that the filibuster once again becomes a rarely used tool. Denying the offender earmarks might be a good place to start.

Update: Another take, from Ari Melber, at the Nation:

When I worked as a legislative aide in the U.S. Senate in 2002 and 2003, both parties used “holds” and filibuster threats all the time. By mutual agreement, however, these filibuster threats operate out of the public’s view. So senators — even a single one — can threaten to stall the entire chamber’s proceedings, while avoiding the cost of any public criticism for their maneuver.

Forcing senators to actually filibuster on the floor would increase public information and scrutiny of this practice. It would almost certainly reduce some of the recent abuse. It really doesn’t matter much whether senators talk the whole time, or ask for quorums, or play sudoku. Yes, movie filibustersmay be full of dramatic sermons. But if the Republicans were forced into even a silent filibuster, spending weeks thwarting up-or-down votes on the country’s economic agenda, the public would surely notice. Especially if Sen. Reid criticized them for it — instead of writing memos defending the status quo.


Partisanship

Sunday is becoming prime rant day. Today, as so often in the past, I must take exception to a “balanced, pox on both their houses” article by Sheryl Gay Stolberg of New York Times.

The current trope is that Washington has become more partisan in the past 20 years. It may very well be true that, since so many house districts have been gerrymandered into safe status, the ideological difference between the typical members of Congress has widened. But when one talks about raw partisan behavior, including the take no prisoners obstructionism exhibited by the Republicans, there is simply no comparison between the parties.

It’s likely the case that Bush was warmly and rightly detested by the majority of Democrats. There is simply nothing in the historical record to compare with the Republican record compiled in just the last four weeks, and for which the pattern has now been set for the next four years. Unanimous opposition in the House, rigidly enforced. Promises of filibusters in the Senate, on everything.

What’s laughable about Stolberg’s article is that she attributes this opposition, apparently without irony, to ideological principles:

…[I]n the partisan politics of recent decades, another view developed, advanced by Congressional leaders like Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker, that the minority party has the right, even obligation, to stick to its ideological principles

That would be the ideological principle against deficits, in case you were wondering. The one they stuck to with such fidelity when they were running things.

Then we have the token example of Democratic perfidy:

Republicans haven’t cornered the market for blocking presidential initiatives. Democrats were so successful at filibustering Mr. Bush’s judicial nominees that their Senate leader,Tom Daschle, was labeled “an obstructionist” and lost his seat in 2004.

A little deconstruction is in order. First, labeling someone an obstructionist does not make him so, and this article is purportedly about real obstructionism, not ginned up but baseless charges. Second, a judicial nomination is not a presidential initiative. Third, the “successful” Democrats blocked 10 out of 229 Bush first term nominations, hardly a huge number, and quite comparable to the Republican record in the last Clinton term. More importantly, it is well nigh impossible to come up with an instance of the Democrats blocking any Bush legislative initiative by using the filibuster. Would that they had in many instances. The Constitution might not be damaged, perhaps beyond repair, if they had. In fact, the record is pretty clear on Bush initiatives. Most of them passed pretty much as Bush wanted them, right up until the end, even while his numbers were only slightly ahead of Osama bin Laden’s.

One can argue about whether or not the Republicans are justified or not in adopting the strategy they have, but one can not argue that this behavior is symmetric. It simply isn’t. There are a lot of reasons for this. The Democrats are far more ideologically diverse. Rahm Emmanuel’s contingent of Blue Dog Democrats guarantees that. The Democrats in the Senate have had two recent leaders from Republican leaning states, both of whom have had to keep a wary eye out for their own re-election prospects while supposedly leading their party. (Republicans would never thing of giving such power to a Senator who had to worry about a substantial left leaning constituency.) Thus Harry Reid’s passive insistence that it takes 60 votes to pass anything in a Democratically controlled Senate, while 51 votes always did quite nicely while he led the minority. And there, once again, is the rub. Until the Democrats break the back of the filibuster, by forcing the Republicans to endure public scorn for utilizing it, they will be unable to govern effectively.

An added observation: It’s important to bear in mind that there is a world of difference between voting against a presidential initiative, and preventing a vote on that initiative. Bush, who promised to be a uniter, was never held to that promise and governed as a divider. His legislation came to a vote under both Democratic and Republican Senate Majorities. Obama is being held to account for failing to convert an obstreperousRepublican minority that announces opposition to his plans before they are announced, and who are prepared, in the Senate, to block votes on any legislation Arlen Specter, Olympia Snowe, and/or Susan Collins don’t like.


Jersey Boys

My wife and I, along with my sister and one of her friends, went to see Jersey Boys at the Bushnell in Hartford.

Unsurprisingly, the youngest people in the theater by far were the folks on the stage. For those who don’t know, Jersey Boys is a musical based on the career of the Four Seasons. For people of a certain age, the play is a sure fire draw, since the music is both familiar and great.

Our memories get distorted as they recede farther in the rear view mirror. I think of the Four Seasons as being primarily a pre-Beatles phenomenon, though I do remember clearly that what I consider their best song, December, 1963, came along quite a bit later. In reality, in one form or another, they endured into the early 70s, and put out quality music throughout that period. The members of the group never acquired distinct public identities as far as I know. Everyone could name the Beatles, and lots of folks could identify each Stone, Byrd, etc., but I doubt that many could name each Season, and if their travails were documented in the pages of Rolling Stone, I was never aware of it.

Turns out their relations were, if anything, stormier than those of that more famous British quartet. Getting mixed up with the mob will have that effect, I guess. The show is leaving soon, so this review is rather late, but I give it two thumbs up, which is all the thumbs I have.

Here’s the real thing, by the way, with a medley on the old Hulabaloo. Videos of the original Four Seasons are hard to find; Valli has apparently been backed by a succession of Seasons since the originals broke off.


A Building occupied at NYU

Yesterday my wife took advantage of her weekly furlough day to visit Son #2 in New York. She met him around lunchtime. Turns out he was fresh from occupying a building at NYU, which the authorities appear to have re-taken shortly after he exited to keep his date with his Mom. The tactics were oddly reminiscent of a dim and distant era, though the non-negotiable demands were not:

The N.Y.U. students created a Web site (takebacknyu.com) where they published their demands, including thorough annual reporting of the university’s operating budget, expenditures and endowment. They also want the university to provide 13 scholarships a year to students from the Gaza Strip and give surplus supplies to the Islamic University of Gaza.

The students also called on the school to allow graduate teaching assistants to unionize and to freeze tuition.

One caveat: the demand is not that tuition be frozen, but that increases not apply to students currently attending, i.e., that the tuition you pay as a senior will be the same you paid as a freshman. As things stand now a freshman paying almost $50,000.00 a year might find his or her tuition increased by 10-20% a year, imposing a tremendous and unpredictable financial burden. The real cost of a private college education, adjusted for inflation, has skyrocketed and is rapidly exceeding the grasp of all but the most affluent.

I won’t say who might have been pushing for the graduate student demand, except to note that my son, a grad student, is a seasoned union hand. The grad students were previously unionized, until their right to do so was rescinded by the Bush NLRB. (Just another example, Mr. Nader, of how there was a substantial difference between Bush and Gore, and another reason we can be thankful for Obama. The NLRB has been virulently anti-worker since Bush gained a majority of its five members). As soon as it legally could, the school refused to deal with the union.

The other demands, which can be found at the link in the quote, are actually quite reasonable. Some might regard the entire process of “issuing demands” as a quaint, archaic relic of a bygone era. But as Frederick Douglass said, Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Here’s hoping this is the opening act in a new era of activism.

Needless to say we did not greet the news of our own son’s participation in this incident with delight. It’s all very well for other people’s kids to put their necks on the line, but we’d much prefer our little boy keep his head down and neck safe. For the life of me I can’t figure out where he got the political views that lead him to do these things.

Here’s some video. What I find interesting is that the cops holding back, and using nightsticks on, the protestors, look most uncomfortable when the kids drop the profanity and start chanting “Shame on You”. That’s a tactic we never tried in the 60s, so far as I know, but in my opinion, it’s brilliant.

I blame all this on Obama. My son told my wife that there’s a new optimism in the air. People are beginning to think they can actually change things. Who knows, Obama may have released forces even he can’t control. There’s a word for it. Rhymes with “pope”.