Roger Ailes Fears Muslims, Gays: Report
On the heels of a big profile in New York Magazine, Rolling Stone has an
article about Fox News chief Roger Ailes that sheds some light on his
paranoia. According to Dan Cooper, the first managing editor of Fox
News, Ailes had bombproof glass installed in his office - and personally
inspected plexi-glass samples - because, he said, "They'll be protesting
down there, those gays." Rolling Stone also says Ailes tells people he
is an Al Qaeda target - and once put Fox News on lockdown when he
spotted a dark-looking person in apparent Muslim garb on the security
monitor on his desk. It turned out to be a janitor.
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Roger Ailes Fears Muslims, Gays: Report
Sunday, May 29, 2011
AM1280 The Patriot canceled Bradlee Dean days before Capitol 'prayer'
AM1280 The Patriot canceled Bradlee Dean days before Capitol 'prayer'
AM1280 The Patriot canceled Bradlee Dean days before Capitol 'prayer'
By David Brauer | Published Wed, May 25 2011 10:39 am
Last Friday, a track-suited Bradlee Dean stood before the Minnesota House of Representatives to deliver an incendiary “prayer” implying President Obama was not a Christian. But the high-profile moment came just days after a local conservative radio station canceled Dean’s “Sons of Liberty” show. The legislative brouhaha caused another to terminate discussions about picking the program up.
Radio host Bradlee Dean
Radio host Bradlee Dean
Since 2009, Dean’s show had appeared Saturdays on AM1280 The Patriot; like many in the genre, Dean’s “ministry” paid to air the two-hour political show. But Patriot general manager Ron Stone says he canceled Dean after a program in which the host and a sidekick likened Obama to Osama Bin Laden and “did a 6-minute-long spiel in which they mocked black people, which I took offense to. For a minister to do that made no sense.”
On the broadcast, Dean intoned, "I just listened to a bunch of news reporters mistakently calling Obama Osama and Osama Obama. And I just have a serious question: What's the difference, America? ... Your outside enemies are really on the inside. Osama Bin Laden did not call you 'a Muslim nation,' Obama did. ... even so far as to honor Osama Bin Laden with a Muslim eulogy on an American blood-bought ship. ... Osama Bin Laden is not the one that's trying to disarm the American people — Obama is! America, what's the difference? No one has attacked this country and its people as well as its foundations more than this man's administration. Do the math!"
The following Wednesday, “Junkyard Prophet,” a Twitter account linked to Dean’s Christian-metal band, announced:
KTLK is the higher-rated Clear-Channel-owned conservative FM station that’s the local home to Jason Lewis, Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh. Dean (who did not respond to a request for comment) had arguably turned necessity into advantage.
The inaugural KTLK broadcast would’ve run May 21 — the day after Dean’s prayer. It never aired.
Clear Channel operations manager Gregg Swedberg says, “We had been approached about putting Bradlee Dean on KTLK-FM. However, nothing was ever solidified because we would’ve needed him to make some adjustments. We haven’t spoken to his people since the legislature appearance.”
Swedberg did not specify the adjustments. Though daily newspapers ignored Dean until Friday, websites such as Dump Bachmann, Ripple in Stillwater and Minnesota Independent have long chronicled his attacks on gays and lesbians, such as “claims that gay men molest an average of 117 children and that Muslim nations that execute gays are more moral than American Christians.”
The Patriot, owned by Salem Communications, had kept “Sons of Liberty” on through all this. Stone was listed as a director of Dean’s “You Can Run But You Cannot Hide International” on the group’s 2009 federal form 990. That year, “You Can Run” reported spending $35,054 in “radio air time.”
Now, Stone says, “I’ve learned a lot. When the ‘Sons of Liberty’ show first developed, I truly believed it was a conservative radio show in the right spirit. I don’t have an issue with him debating the marriage amendment, photo ID, Obamacare, things that deserve to be debated. What I do have issues with is the divisive tone — we’re not bigots, we’re not racists. Even though we don’t agreed with the president on policy, I don’t think he should be likened to a terrorist. Given what happened at the Capitol, I’m so happy with the decision I made.”
How Not To Hide A Secret Love Child - Baby LK Report For May 29th 2011
Baby LK recaps the week in news for the child protection industry.
Lawrence O’Donnell Offers To Moderate Debate Between Michele Bachmann And 10th Grader
Lawrence O’Donnell Offers To Moderate Debate Between Michele Bachmann And 10th Grader
Earlier this month, high school sophomore Amy Myers challenged Rep. Michele Bachmann to a debate on American history, after the latter made several factual errors in referencing it. Myers received threats and insults for it, but nonetheless agreed to appear with Lawrence O’Donnell last night and explain her cause. O’Donnell, on his part, offered to moderate the debate along with any co-moderator Rep. Bachmann would like.O’Donnell opened the segment by noting that Bachmann had been invited to debate Myers on The Last Word, but declined. Or, rather, she hadn’t responded, because “I didn’t even think about this til about four o’clock this afternoon” and there was no time to put anything together by then. O’Donnell then turned to Myers, whose pursuit he considered somewhat unfair. “I absolutely refuse to debate you on US history because you just told me that, as a tenth grader, you are taking AP US History… you kids today,” he joked. He then asked whether it was a fair match to pit herself against Rep. Bachmann: “Michele Bachmann hasn’t studied US history in, I don’t know, three or four decades.” Myers replied that she believed it was fair to expect public servants to understand “basic civil matters and the Constitution,” and had been shocked that Rep. Bachmann couldn’t keep her facts straight.
Myers also confessed a desire to run for office, but had a separate passion– veterinary care. “Plenty of people have had real careers,” O’Donnell noted, before running for office, and he recommended it to keep from acquiring a certain “tunnel vision” about the world. He also offered to host the debate between Myers and Bachmann along with any co-moderator of Bachmann’s choosing, which is giving Rep. Bachmann an incredible amount of power. Which begs the question: which sympathetic-to-Bachmann political personality would you choose to sit next to O’Donnell in a debate if you were Bachmann? I can’t decide between Sarah Palin and Donald Trump.
The segment via MSNBC below:
Labels:
debate,
foster care,
history,
Michele Bachmann
God Practically Begging Michelle Bachmann to Run for President
God Practically Begging Michelle Bachmann to Run for President
Conservative Group Wins Nonprofit Status From I.R.S.
Conservative Group Wins Nonprofit Status From I.R.S.
Project Veritas, a group founded by the videographer James O’Keefe, received the status from the I.R.S. in April, according to documents gathered by The Chronicle of Philanthropy through a Freedom of Information Act request.
“It will help us expand as an organization and institution,” Mr. O’Keefe said in an interview on Thursday.
He said the money saved with the status would help Project Veritas train and equip “an army” of citizen journalists to carry out its mission: “to investigate and expose corruption, dishonesty, self-dealing, waste, fraud and other misconduct in both public and private institutions in order to achieve a more ethical and transparent society.”
The organization applied for tax exemption in August and received one request for further information from the I.R.S. before it granted approval. The Chronicle of Philanthropy has posted all of the documents the tax agency gave it, along with analysis.
Mr. O’Keefe catapulted onto the national stage in 2009 when, armed with a hidden camera and accompanied by a partner dressed as a prostitute, he caught Acorn workers on tape offering advice about how to finance a brothel.
His next turn in the limelight came last year when he and three other men were charged with entering the New Orleans offices of Senator Mary L. Landrieu, a Democrat, with the purpose of committing a felony. They pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor.
In March, NPR’s top fund-raising executive, Ronald Schiller, resigned after Mr. O’Keefe’s group caught him on tape telling two people posing as Muslim philanthropists that supporters of the Tea Party were “seriously racist, racist people.” A day later, Vivian Schiller, who is unrelated, stepped down as chief executive.
In its application, Project Veritas said it planned to pursue as many as a half-dozen journalism projects and conduct five two- to three-day training sessions for people interested in learning how to do such projects on their own. “I can’t tell you the secret sauce of it, but we do have a training method,” Mr. O’Keefe said. “There are many people learning this method and learning how to expose abusive power in creative ways.”
He said he would work as the organization’s “muckraker in chief,” for which he will be paid about $120,000 a year, according to the group’s application.
It raised $2,367 last year, according to the filing, and expects that figure to grow to $1.65 million over the next three years, though Mr. O’Keefe described that as “a sort of dream.” The group has hired a firm led by Richard Viguerie, a conservative strategist, to help it raise money.
Charities are constrained by law from participating in lobbying and political campaigns, and in response to a question posed by the I.R.S., Project Veritas specifically said it had no plans to lobby on behalf of specific legislation.“We’re designed to expose malfeasance, waste, fraud and corruption, to expose things for what they are,” Mr. O’Keefe said. “That’s not policy work, that’s educational work.”
Jeffrey S. Tenenbaum, a lawyer specializing in nonprofit matters, looked at the Project Veritas Web site and said he could see nothing that would cause the group to run afoul of the rules on politicking.
“Project Veritas’s leading stories have a certain direction in which they lean, and they could all be used by this organization and others for lobbying campaigns or even political campaign activities,” Mr. Tenenbaum said. “But in and of themselves, the things I saw on the Web site don’t do that.”
Paul Streckfus, a former I.R.S. official who edits The EO Journal, a newsletter that follows legal and accounting issues affecting nonprofit groups, noted that several such organizations lean to one side or the other of the political spectrum, including the Heritage Foundation, the Brookings Institution and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.
“This new organization,” Mr. Streckfus said, “is not that different from any of those, it seems to me.”
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
SCOTUS Continues To Strips Whistleblowers of Whistles
The relator approaches the court, on behalf of the United States, on a mission, fearful of those horrible tales of loosing every chance of hope of being made whole again. Out of the darkness of the legal forest, lurking, are the public disclosure bars of "persons, administrative, reports". Oh my.
First the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) says, "Even though all the other laws say a State is a person, we don't think so when it comes to States allowing federal programs to be ripped off under the False Claims Act because it would be too embarrassing for the us because we allowed the States to do whatever they wanted when we give them money, and besides, the States never had to be held to fraud standards before in federal contracts and the Congress was never clear in its intent for the States to be considered as 'persons'."
How dare some average person dare think they have the entitlement right to challenge us! We are the great Supreme Court of the United States! Poor people have no rights and definitely no right to sue and get rich.
SCOTUS False Claims Act Opinion of Justice Scalia
There was a lone dissent which believed States were intended by the Congress to be considered as "persons".
SCOTUS Stevens False Claims Act Dissent in Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. U.S. ex rel. Stevensre
Then came another shaving of the qui tam when SCOTUS decided anything "administrative" fell under the "public disclosure bar" meaning any state or federal report, hearing, audit, or anything else as such are not allowed to be used by an original source.
Supreme Court of the United States GRAHAM COUNTY SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT et al., Petitioners...
But wait, SCOTUS, as well as those whose corporations make substantial killings, literally, bilking Medicaid in child welfare, decided that anything requested through a Freedom of Information of Act request falls under the "public disclosure bar".
Let's pretend this actually happened:
I walk into the residential institution where my child incarcerated after being ripped from his bed in the middle of the night for no reason beyond child protective services and the police going to the wrong address, is being tortured and, with a fake smile I politely ask for his IEP. They hand it to me and it states he is considered "ineligible" for special needs, institutionalization and does not need medication, yet he is locked up in solitary confinement, beaten, raped, tortured, drugged suffering multiple heart attacks, tardive dyskensia, attempted suicides, surviving from meals of dried bread and potatoes with no heat in the winter or air conditioning in the summer, with different dates of birth on the court reports submitted to the court because my child was under aged for the facility.
Then, I go the office of the clerk of the court and pull his child protective services case and find out they fabricated a story of a car crash that never took place and had a duplicate fake case as a juvenile delinquent and were not just double billing, but billing me as a juvenile delinquent, also.
So I go and file a FCA and the court says: "So sorry, those are public docs and therefore, the States can do whatever the fuck they want to do and there is nothing that will ever be done because we only cater to the rich."
Let's keep pretending this did not happen, either.
Supreme Court of the United States SCHINDLER ELEVATOR CORPORATION, Petitioner, v. UNITED STATES ex rel. Dan...
Being a whistleblower and reporting fraud is a right of free speech. Verifying it through FOIA requests makes an original source the subject matter expert. I dare anyone to challenge, publicly of course, my expertise in child welfare fraud, even SCOTUS.
At any time, the Court will crush you using one of these "interpretive buttresses" snatched off the Magna Carta, to beat you down and make you and your children go back to the fields and pick tomatoes and lettuce. (Well, that is the goal once all the anchor babies are cleaned out of the country to give these great jobs to hard working, cheaper laboring American children.)
First the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) says, "Even though all the other laws say a State is a person, we don't think so when it comes to States allowing federal programs to be ripped off under the False Claims Act because it would be too embarrassing for the us because we allowed the States to do whatever they wanted when we give them money, and besides, the States never had to be held to fraud standards before in federal contracts and the Congress was never clear in its intent for the States to be considered as 'persons'."
How dare some average person dare think they have the entitlement right to challenge us! We are the great Supreme Court of the United States! Poor people have no rights and definitely no right to sue and get rich.
SCOTUS False Claims Act Opinion of Justice Scalia
There was a lone dissent which believed States were intended by the Congress to be considered as "persons".
SCOTUS Stevens False Claims Act Dissent in Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. U.S. ex rel. Stevensre
Then came another shaving of the qui tam when SCOTUS decided anything "administrative" fell under the "public disclosure bar" meaning any state or federal report, hearing, audit, or anything else as such are not allowed to be used by an original source.
Supreme Court of the United States GRAHAM COUNTY SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT et al., Petitioners...
But wait, SCOTUS, as well as those whose corporations make substantial killings, literally, bilking Medicaid in child welfare, decided that anything requested through a Freedom of Information of Act request falls under the "public disclosure bar".
Let's pretend this actually happened:
I walk into the residential institution where my child incarcerated after being ripped from his bed in the middle of the night for no reason beyond child protective services and the police going to the wrong address, is being tortured and, with a fake smile I politely ask for his IEP. They hand it to me and it states he is considered "ineligible" for special needs, institutionalization and does not need medication, yet he is locked up in solitary confinement, beaten, raped, tortured, drugged suffering multiple heart attacks, tardive dyskensia, attempted suicides, surviving from meals of dried bread and potatoes with no heat in the winter or air conditioning in the summer, with different dates of birth on the court reports submitted to the court because my child was under aged for the facility.
Then, I go the office of the clerk of the court and pull his child protective services case and find out they fabricated a story of a car crash that never took place and had a duplicate fake case as a juvenile delinquent and were not just double billing, but billing me as a juvenile delinquent, also.
So I go and file a FCA and the court says: "So sorry, those are public docs and therefore, the States can do whatever the fuck they want to do and there is nothing that will ever be done because we only cater to the rich."
Let's keep pretending this did not happen, either.
Supreme Court of the United States SCHINDLER ELEVATOR CORPORATION, Petitioner, v. UNITED STATES ex rel. Dan...
Being a whistleblower and reporting fraud is a right of free speech. Verifying it through FOIA requests makes an original source the subject matter expert. I dare anyone to challenge, publicly of course, my expertise in child welfare fraud, even SCOTUS.
Labels:
administrative,
false claims,
John Conyers,
Medicaid fraud,
persons,
qui tam,
reports,
states,
whistleblower
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Conyers: Limited Government Party Turns Out to Be a Party of the Unlimited
What is the term I am looking for here.....hmmm..... can you say Legally Kidnapped?
Conyers: Limited Government Party Turns Out to Be a Party of the Unlimited
New Bill Authorizes Prolonged and Indefinite Detention With No Respect for the Rule of Law
(Washington) – Today, at a hearing before the House Judiciary Committee on H.R. 1932, Ranking Member John Conyers, Jr. (D-Mich.) criticized the bill as a massive, unconstitutional expansion of the government’s ability to detain immigrants for many years—even indefinitely—with little or no procedural protections at all.
“It is ironic that this bill comes from the Judiciary Committee leadership that should be protecting the Constitution and from the party that prides itself on limited government and the protection of individual liberty,” Conyers said. “The Republican Party’s Pledge to America was all about ensuring limited government and fiscal responsibility. Tea Party Patriots lists ‘Constitutionally Limited Government’ as a core value. And TeaParty.Org says its ‘non-negotiable core beliefs’ include: ‘Intrusive Government Stopped’ and ‘Government Must Be Downsized.’
“Under this bill, thousands of immigration detainees would become subject to mandatory detention—with no opportunity for a bond hearing—even if they pose no risk to the public and no risk of flight.
“Ten years after the Supreme Court cautioned that the Constitution would permit extended detention of immigration detainees only in very narrow circumstances accompanied by strong procedural protections, H.R. 1932 allows immigration detainees to be held indefinitely simply by the stroke of the pen of the Secretary of Homeland Security or the Director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
“The writ of habeas corpus is a fundamental guarantee of the Constitution. If H.R. 1932 becomes law, all habeas corpus petitions challenging the legality of mandatory, prolonged, and indefinite immigration detention would have to be filed in the District Court of the District of Columbia. The only possible explanation for doing that would be to make it harder for a person who may not speak English, almost always has no lawyer, and is being detained in Arizona or Texas to get into court.
“We need to make sure that our detention and removal system works, so that we are holding the right people, under the right conditions, and for the right reasons. And that we remove people from this country when they have gone through the process and received a final decision in their case. But this bill will not advance any of those goals. Instead, it will just increase our already enormous and expensive detention system and will remove or limit the few meaningful checks that still exist.”
###
Labels:
human trafficking,
immigration,
John Conyers,
tea party
Monday, May 23, 2011
Republicans Voted to End Medicare: How Will You Pay?
Sunday, May 15, 2011
Were the Bachmanns Really That Altruistic Taking in Foster Kids?
Were the Bachmanns Really That Altruistic Taking in Foster Kids?
There are 2,060,000 results for a Google search with keywords "bachmann 23 foster". And it's no wonder since Bachmann's constant mantra is " 5 biological kids and 23 foster kids" whenever she's being interviewed. But, as Bachmann takes wing toward the highest public office in the land, will these 23 seemingly selfless acts of altruism stand up to media scrutiny? Or will her resume, like the wax wings of Icarus melt under the glare? DB reader Betty comments:
...and...
|
Labels:
foster care,
Marcus Bachmann,
Michele Bachmann
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Wayne County Road F/unds Investigation
Labels:
Michigan,
roads,
Robert Ficano,
Wayne County
Conyers Introduces PATRIOT Compromise
**Follow Us on Twitter @HouseJudDems**
Contact: Nicole Triplett, 202-226-5543
Date: Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Conyers Introduces PATRIOT Compromise
Calls on House Majority to Support Protections for Privacy and Civil Liberties
(Washington) – House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member John Conyers, Jr. (D-Mich.) has introduced the “USA PATRIOT Act Sunset Extension Act of 2011,” the House counterpart to a bipartisan bill that recently passed the Senate Judiciary Committee. The proposal makes meaningful improvements to the PATRIOT Act and related authorities, and has the support of the Obama Administration and the intelligence community. The bill is co-sponsored by Ranking Member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md).
“In sixteen days, three provisions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act are set to expire,” said Conyers. “It is clear that many members of both parties still have serious concerns about the PATRIOT Act, including these three provisions. But instead of discussing these concerns, the majority has introduced legislation that would make the Lone Wolf authority permanent and extend the business records and roving wiretaps for six years. Their bill would make no improvements to the PATRIOT Act. It includes no new protections for privacy. It requires no reporting to Congress. I do not support this approach.
“Instead, we should be open to negotiation and compromise. I have introduced a bill that has already been reported out by the Senate Judiciary, a bill that has bipartisan support and the backing of the intelligence community. For many, this bill will not go far enough; for others, it may go too far. For me, the bill represents the reasonable middle ground. With the short time we have—and with the need to find a measure that can win the support of the Senate and the Administration—I think this bipartisan compromise measure is the proper vehicle for moving this issue forward.”
A summary of the USA PATRIOT Act Sunset Extension Act of 2011 follows:
***
The USA PATRIOT Act Sunset Extension Act of 2011
A Compromise with Broad Support – This bill is essentially identical to the compromise measure that recently passed the Senate Judiciary Committee with bipartisan support (Mike Lee of Utah voted in favor). It makes meaningful improvements to the Patriot Act and related authorities, yet has the support of the Administration and the intelligence community.
New Sunsets – Section 2 of the Bill reauthorizes the Business Records, Lone Wolf, and Roving Wiretaps provisions for two and a half years - until December 2013. For the first time, it puts a sunset in the use of National Security Letters. Finally, it moves the sunset on the FISA Amendments Act from the end of 2012 to 2013 so that all these inter-related surveillance authorities can be considered together in a non-election year.
Factual Basis Requirement for Business Records Orders – Section 3 modifies the standard for obtaining a FISA court order to obtain business records. It eliminates the overbroad presumption of relevance in these cases, and requires the Government to provide a written statement of the facts and circumstances that justify the applicant’s belief that the tangible things sought are relevant. (DOJ says it already does this as a matter of practice so this would not be an operational burden.) The bill contains additional protections for bookseller or library records. These can be obtained only if the Government shows a direct connection between the records and a terrorist or other agent of a foreign power.
Improvements to National Security Letter Process – The bill makes a number of changes to NSL practices and procedures, in response to the numerous abuses of this tool.
Gag Orders -- Section 5 clarifies the standards for including a gag order in a national security letter. Section 6 significantly improves the process for challenging these gag orders, eliminating the one-year waiting requirement in current law and removing the power of high level government officials to foreclose judicial review by “conclusively certifying” that the gag order is needed. This section also corrects the constitutional defects in NSL gag orders found by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in Doe v. Mukasey, 549 F.3d 861 (2d Cir. 2008), and implements the court’s suggestion for a constitutionally sound process.
Factual Basis Requirement – Section 7 requires the FBI to keep a written record of the facts and circumstances on which it relies to support certain NSLs.
Minimization Procedures – Requires DOJ to implement minimization procedures for NSL collected information, just as it does for FISA collected information, and requires periodic review and notice to Congress regarding changes to these procedures. (DOJ has already begun implementing such procedures, as an administrative matter.)
Roving Wiretaps – Section 15 tightens up the use of roving wiretaps by requiring a description “with particularity” of the target of such wiretaps in cases where the targets name or identify is not known. This will eliminate the possibility of so-called John Doe roving wiretaps.
Sneak and Peek Searches -- Current law requires notification of a sneak and peek (or delayed notice) search within 30 days. Section 11 shortens this time to seven days, or a longer period if specifically justified.
Improved procedures for FISA Pen Registers and Trap and Trace Devices -- Section 4 modifies the standard for Pen Register and Trap and Trace devices, which collect info on calls or emails to and from a particular communications facility. The bill requires the government to provide a written statement of the facts and circumstances showing that the information to be collected is relevant to a national security investigation and so strengthens judicial oversight. This section also requires minimization procedures for this type of collection, which are not required under current law, and makes those procedures subject to court review.
Enhanced Public Reporting on NSLs and FISA – Sections 8 and 9 require enhanced public reporting of the number of NSLs issued each year, and an annual unclassified report on how FISA authorities are used, including their impact on the privacy of United States persons. This report shall be readily accessible on the Internet.
Enhanced Audits – Section 10 requires the DOJ Office of Inspector General to conduct audits on the use during 2007 – 2011 of the Business Records provision, NSLs, and the use of pen registers/trap and trace devices, including both the effectiveness of these tools and any improper or illegal uses. This section also requires the Inspectors General of the Intelligence Community to submit separate reports that also review these three provisions. The audits covering the years 2007-2009 must be completed by March 31, 2012. The audits for the years 2010-2011 must be completed by March, 31, 2013. These due dates ensure that Congress will have time to fully consider the findings of the audits prior to the December 31, 2013 sunsets in the bill.
###
Monday, May 9, 2011
The 2012 Budget Collapse Continues
The 2012 Budget Collapse Continues
Posted by Jim Harper, May 9, 2011 at 9:00 am
One week from today, Congress can start considering appropriations bills, the bills that allocate spending on federal government operations for the 2012 budget year. If it does so, the budget process will be on schedule.
But something has to happen before these bills can go to the floor: there has to be a budget.
There is no fiscal 2012 budget.
Less than a month ago, we talked about thebeginning of the 2012 budget collapse. That collapse continues.
As we explained then, if a budget doesn’t happen, the Appropriations Committees don’t get the amounts they’re supposed to work with. If the Appropriations Committees don’t get the amounts they’re supposed to work with, they don’t move the spending bills. The Congress ends up passing short-term spending bills and making decisions on the fly that the American people don’t get to learn about until they’re already law.
But a Reuters news commentary says that a group of negotiators could come up with a budget before too long.
Lately, the spotlight has shone on what’s being called the “Group of Six Plus One” to save the day: Biden, three senators and three leading members of the House of Representatives. They carry plenty of political heft and the ability to whip rank-and-file members of Congress into supporting a potential deal to enact a wide range of spending cuts. But it is the Senate’s Group of Six, which is avoiding the limelight, that is seen as having the heavyweight expertise to sort out complicated budget issues, along with the willingness to consider tax increases and popular benefit program cuts needed for a long-term fix of the country’s fiscal mess.
We shall see. In the meantime, here are a few things you can do, especially if you are represented by a member of the House or Senate Budget Committee:
Sign our petition: “We Want a Transparent and Orderly Congress.” Do so after you create an account and log in, because then you can comment on the petition. We’re going to use the petition’s page to organize a non-partisan campaign to get Congress doing its job right.
Pass this information along to a friend or colleague. Things only change when people get organized. YOU need to organize the people around you. So send people you think would be interested a link to this blog post!
Contact your member of Congress: Tell him or her that you want to see a final budget agreement, and ask what date he or she expects that agreement to be finalized. Please post anything you learn here or on the “transparent and orderly” petition page. You should especially do this if you are represented by member of Congress on the House Budget Committee, listed below, or on the Senate Budget Committee, listed below that.
Your efforts can make a difference! Don’t delay! Push Congress to do its work!
Paul Ryan (WI-01), Chairman Scott Garrett (NJ-05) Mike Simpson (ID-02) John Campbell (CA-48) Ken Calvert (CA-44) Todd Akin (MO-02) Tom Cole (OK-04) Tom Price (GA-06) Tom McClintock (CA-04) Jason Chaffetz (UT-03) Marlin Stutzman (IN-03) James Lankford (OK-05) Diane Black (TN-06) Reid Ribble (WI-08) Bill Flores (TX-17) Mick Mulvaney (SC-05) Tim Huelskamp (KS-01) Todd Young (IN-09) Justin Amash (MI-03) Todd Rokita (IN-04) Frank Guinta (NH-01) Rob Woodall (GA-07) | Chris Van Hollen (MD-08), Ranking MemberAllyson Schwartz (PA-13) Marcy Kaptur (OH-09) Lloyd Doggett (TX-25) Earl Blumenauer (OR-03) Betty McCollum (MN-04) John Yarmuth (KY-03) Bill Pascrell (NJ-08) Mike Honda (CA-15) Tim Ryan (OH-17) Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-20) Gwen Moore (WI-04) Kathy Castor (FL-11) Heath Shuler (NC-11) Paul Tonko (NY-21) Karen Bass (CA-33) |
Kent Conrad (ND), Chairman Patty Murray (WA) Ron Wyden (OR) Bill Nelson (FL) Debbie Stabenow (MI) Benjamin L. Cardin (MD) Bernie Sanders (VT) Sheldon Whitehouse (RI) Mark R. Warner (VA) Jeff Merkley (OR) Mark Begich (AK) Chris Coons (DE) | Jeff Session (AL), Ranking MemberCharles Grassley (IA) Mike Enzi (WY) Mike Crapo (ID) John Ensign (NV) John Cornyn (TX) Lindsey Graham (SC) John Thune (SD) Rob Portman (OH) Pat Toomey (PA) Ron Johnson (WI) |
Labels:
2012,
appropriations,
budget,
congress,
federal
Friday, May 6, 2011
Farm Subsidies Become Target Amid Spending Cuts
Farm Subsidies Become Target Amid Spending Cuts
WASHINGTON — When it comes to spending cuts, members of Congress like to say that “everything is on the table.” Except, generally, food. But now federal farm subsidies, long decried by policy makers as wasteful and antiquated but protected by powerful political interests, appear to be in serious danger.
This week, Representative Paul D. Ryan, Republican of Wisconsin and the chairman of the House Budget Committee, told reporters, “We shouldn’t be giving corporate farms, these large agribusiness companies, subsidies. I strongly believe that.”
His budget proposal would take $30 billion out of the farm program over the next decade.
Representative Eric Cantor, Republican of Virginia and the majority leader, attended the first session of debt-limit negotiations on Thursday with a list of areas where he saw a potential agreement between Republicans and the White House, including farm subsidies.
A confluence of factors have lined up against the farm programs. While the rest of the economy remains largely stagnant, commodities prices and farm incomes have remained at a protracted high. The House Agriculture Committee, while still dominated by farm state members, is now peppered with freshmen who view cuts to these programs as an essential part of the broader attack on the federal deficit, the centerpiece of their campaigns.
Further, after taking a beating from constituents concerning their Medicare proposal last month, Republicans are eager to find an area of common ground with Democrats. Farm subsidies seem to fit the bill; conservatives condemn them as intrusions into the free market, liberals denounce them for encouraging environmentally harmful overfarming, and both sides see them as a form of corporate welfare.
What is more, some subsidies have placed the nation in violation of trade agreements, and members from both sides of the aisle have questioned why, with biofuel mandates creating such demand for ethanol, the government needs to subsidize it.
Powerful interests and political traditions continue to constrain efforts to cut subsidies. While all the free-market Republicans back reducing subsidies in general, some continue to support targeted aid like the subsidies long enjoyed by ethanol. Newt Gingrich, the former Republican House speaker and likely presidential candidate, has been assertively arguing in favor of maintaining ethanol subsidies in the face of intense criticism from backers of market reforms like the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal.
But in both parties there is a sense that support for subsidies is waning. This year, SenatorRichard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, one of the nation’s biggest farming states, told the state’s farm bureau to expect cuts. Senator Debbie Stabenow, Democrat of Michigan and chairwoman of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, told reporters at a state agriculture conference that “making sure that we’re doing our part in being fiscally responsible” would be the biggest challenge in the next farm bill.
Others are thinking in a similar vein.
“I have been telling folks that the pie is getting smaller,” said Representative Reid Ribble, a Republican freshman from Wisconsin who sits on the House Agriculture Committee. “I am hearing from constituents back home that they want to see the government have less involvement in the pricing. There is a kind of a tenor right now that will allow us to have a significant change.”
Farm advocates say they hope they can stave off the worst.
“The scrutiny of farm programs is stronger than ever,” said Chuck Conner, president of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives. “It’s not that farmers don’t want to participate in deficit reduction, but at the same time, we hope people appreciate that all other federal programs have skyrocketed, which is why we are in this mess, and farm subsidies have not.”
Historically, federal farm subsidies have operated like piles of laundry: there are constant efforts to make them go away, but they always rise right up again.
The program is rooted in the response to the Great Depression, when the nation enjoyed a largely agrarian economy and the federal government recognized that farmers lacked a safety net.
The program has evolved over the years into a series of direct payments, insurance programs, low-cost loans and other benefits. The programs come up for reauthorization every five years, and farm advocates lobby hard against efforts to meaningfully reduce them, though some have been reformed over the years.
“Substantial cuts to agriculture have already been made,” Ms. Stabenow said in an e-mail. “And we’ll continue measuring the performance of every program to reduce the deficit and maximize effectiveness.”
In 2011, taxpayers are projected to pay roughly $16 billion in aid to farmers through various programs, according to figures from the Congressional Budget Office.
The most controversial of these programs are the $5 billion in annual so-called direct payments to farmers of corn, soybeans and other crops, awarded simply for owning tillable farm land, even if they do not plant on it.
“If we can’t figure out a way at this point to trim these payments,” said Representative Ron Kind, Democrat of Wisconsin, who has long fought against farm subsidies, “then it is just embarrassing.”
Large cuts to the agriculture subsidies will not go far in taming federal spending.
“Cutting farm subsidies doesn’t bring that kind of ongoing savings,” said Tyler Cowen, a professor of economics at George Mason University, comparing cuts to farm programs with longer term restructuring to entitlement programs like Medicare. “Still, it is a great one-time gain, and it means lower prices for consumers and is a good idea all around.”
Farmers and their advocates insist that the subsidies have been demonized and overstated.
“Every time you read an article saying Congress better be looking at farm programs I am scratching my head,” Mr. Conner said. “When people think of the U.S.D.A. budget they think of farm programs, but it is really more a rounding error.”
But Mr. Kind and others say the push for broad budget cuts is working in their favor.
“The political dynamics have shifted in light of deficit reduction,” he said. “I am cautiously optimistic.”
Labels:
budget,
Eric Cantor,
farm subsidies,
Paul Ryan
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Justice Department Reaches Settlement with Citizens Republic Bancorp Inc. and Citizens Bank Regarding Alleged Lending Discrimination in Detroit
Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Justice Department Reaches Settlement with Citizens Republic Bancorp Inc. and Citizens Bank Regarding Alleged Lending Discrimination in Detroit
Settlement Provides $3.6 Million to Ensure Equal Lending Services to African-American Community
WASHINGTON – Citizens Republic Bancorp Inc. (CRBC) and Citizens Bank of Flint, Mich., will open a loan production office in an African-American neighborhood in Detroit, invest approximately $3.6 million in Wayne County, Mich., and take other steps as part of a settlement to resolve allegations that they engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination on the basis of race and color, the Justice Department announced today.
The settlement, which remains subject to court approval, was filed in conjunction with the Justice Department’s complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. The complaint alleges that CRBC, as the successor to Republic Bank, and Citizens Bank violated the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, which prohibit financial institutions from discriminating on the basis of race and color in their mortgage lending practices. The lawsuit alleges that Citizens Bank, and Republic Bank before it, have served the credit needs of the residents of predominantly white neighborhoods in the Detroit metropolitan area to a significantly greater extent than they have served the credit needs of majority African-American neighborhoods. Those neighborhoods are easily recognized because t he Detroit metropolitan area has long had highly-segregated residential housing patterns, especially for African-Americans.
“Discrimination in the provision of lending services based on race deprives communities of access to credit and leaves the residents of minority neighborhoods vulnerable to predatory lenders. This type of discrimination is part of the web of intolerable practices that stripped vast amounts of wealth from communities of color in the last decade,” said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “We are pleased that Citizens Bank will partner with the Detroit community to invest in an area that was long neglected, particularly by the former Republic Bank.”
U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan Barbara McQuade added: “Today’s settlement will bring badly needed resources to Detroit and surrounding areas in Wayne County to assist in neighborhood stabilization. It will also broaden opportunities for home ownership for families who have been unlawfully denied credit. We applaud the bank’s cooperation and commitment to community development.”
“Racial or other illegal discrimination has no place in our credit markets,” said Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin. “We are pleased that this settlement is designed to increase fair access to credit.”
Under the settlement, CRBC and Citizens Bank will invest $1.625 million in a partnership with the city of Detroit to aid in neighborhood stabilization by providing existing homeowners with matching grants of up to $5,000 to fund exterior improvements, $1.5 million in a special financing program to increase the amount of credit the banks extend to majority African-American areas in Wayne County, and spend $500,000 for outreach to potential customers, promotion of their products and services, and consumer financial education. Citizens Bank also will open a loan production office in a majority African-American area in Detroit and conduct fair lending training for its employees. The agreement also prohibits CRBC and Citizens Bank from discriminating on the basis of race or color in any aspect of a residential real estate-related or credit transaction.
The lawsuit originated from a 2010 referral by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. Citizens Bank is a member of the Federal Reserve System.
The Civil Rights Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Michigan and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System are members of the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. For more information on the task force, visit www.StopFraud.gov .
A copy of the complaint, as well as additional information about fair lending enforcement by the Justice Department, can be obtained from the Justice Department’s website at www.justice.gov/fairhousing .
Labels:
banking,
citizens bank,
citizens republic bancorp,
Detroit,
fraud,
mortgage
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