The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Speed

The Politics of Speed

After taking some heat from American auto makers the Obama administration has trimmed back proposed fuel economy standards for future trucks and SUVs. [autoblog]

Here is a very cool story about a McLaren F1 that raced British RAF helicopters in Hong Kong. [Jalopnik]

I always enjoy it when I can combine my WWG worlds. This week Tech and Speed meet as Chevrolet agreed to be one of the launch advertisers for Spotify, the British music streaming service that just made the move to the U.S. [autoblog]

Here are some of the more amusing in-car radio rants in NASCAR. These cover the spectrum from the volatile Kurt Busch to the lovely Danica Patrick. Oh, and if you can’t guess, the audio is certainly NSFW. [All Left Turns]

Jeff Smith: John Boehner’s Dilemma

If I were John Boehner,I’d hire a food taster.

Sadly, with Boehner impotent in the face of the tea party-dominated caucus, there are now two camps of leading Washington Republicans. One camp – the cold-eyed power-seekers represented by Cantor in the House and McConnell in the Senate – wants the country to default because it will destabilize the markets, hurt the economy, and thus hurt Obama’s chances of re-election. That’s sad.

The other camp – the Norquist-led “starve the beast” types – wants the country to default because it will prevent the country from borrowing for any purpose, and begin accomplishing their overarching goal of totally discrediting government. That’s nuts.

Where is today’s Bob Dole, the heartland conservative respected by both sides and willing to stand up to his party’s right wing in the name of statesmanship? His name is Rob Portman, and he’s AWOL.

Join the RP on No Labels Radio NOW, until 3:00 PM EDT

RIGHT NOW — until 3:00 PM EDT, the RP is co-hosting No Labels Radio.

The discussion will be on the ongoing debt crisis, and his guests include some of the nation’s top political and economic experts.

No Labels is a new grassroots movement of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents who are united in the belief that we do not have to give up our labels, merely put them aside to do what’s best for America. No Labels Radio will offer a weekly dose of news and interviews with the policymakers who are working to find bipartisan answers to the otherwise intractable problems our country faces.

Follow this link to tune in RIGHT NOW.

Join the RP for No Labels Radio at 2 PM EDT Today

As the clock counts down toward a possible national credit default, Washington policymakers are abuzz.  The RP has already shared his opinions on resolving the crisis.

Today, at 2PM EDT, the RP has the chance to ask some real political and economic experts about the ongoing debate.  Join him for No Labels Radio, with his guests including Jennifer Hoelzer, Chief of Staff to U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, and Rob Shapiro, a top economic advisor to President Bill Clinton.

No Labels is a new grassroots movement of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents who are united in the belief that we do not have to give up our labels, merely put them aside to do what’s best for America. No Labels Radio will offer a weekly dose of news and interviews with the policymakers who are working to find bipartisan answers to the otherwise intractable problems our country faces.

Follow this link to tune in at 2:00 PM EDT.

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Fame

The Politics of Fame

 

 

Ron Paul says America will eventually default regardless of the debt ceiling, because our debt is “unsustainable.” [Real Clear Politics]

British Prime Minister David Cameron defends his actions in the hacking case. [New York Times]

Former U.S. Presidents and famous Americans who have struggled with migraines. [National Journal]

The Republican Party is accused of using “fuzzy math” in the debt-ceiling crisis: read more here. [The Washington Post]

Artur Davis: The Breathtakingly Expensive 2012 Election

The 2012 election will be breathtakingly expensive. President Obama has plausibly set his sights on raising a billion dollars, and the eventual Republican nominee will not be impoverished, given the antipathy toward Obama’s policies in some of the richest precincts in America.

The flood of money will disturb advocates of campaign finance reform. But the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Arizona Free Enterprise Club v. Bennett suggests that there is little even a reform-minded Congress or state legislature could do to stem the tide. Bennett involved a First Amendment challenge to Arizona’s system of public financing for state candidates: under the law, candidates are permitted to opt in or out of a pool that provides public funds for candidates who accept spending limits. For publicly funded candidates who find themselves facing certain expenditure levels by their privately financed opponents, or groups who back them, Arizona’s law furnished extra matching funds. Its principle is that speech by deep pocketed candidates should not be limited but that the public has a major stake in leveling the playing field.

Chief Justice Roberts’ majority opinion reminds that the Court has long considered campaign spending to be protected speech. Roberts reasoned that the Arizona law in effect “burdens” privately financed candidates by putting a de facto penalty on their speech. According to the Chief Justice, this burden does not just level the field, it has the effect of actually “reducing” the speech of the deep pockets.

The newest member of the Court, Elena Kagan, was almost caustic in her dissent. Justice Kagan’s point was that Arizona hardly restricts the speech of big spending candidates; what it does instead is to thwart their ability to dominate the field. Challenging the majority’s viewpoint that Arizona can’t impose its own view of fairness over the speech rights of certain candidates, Kagan recites the familiar rationale that too much private money in politics is corrupting and governments have a compelling interest in countering that influence.

Read the rest of…
Artur Davis: The Breathtakingly Expensive 2012 Election

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Laughter

The Politics of Laughter

Sounds pretty darn good to me. . . [picture]

Interesting interpretation of social media. [picture]

Be careful when combing dreams with therapy sessions. [comic]

4 reasons why men die earlier than women. [pictures]

I feel this way at least once every day. [Some E Cards]

This morning my dog left me a present on the rug. [comic]

This is why I want a Roomba. I imagine my life being just like this. [.gif]

The RP: Write/Call/Email Your Congressman NOW!!

The time is now.  Please act today.

Our country stands less than two weeks away from the brink of an economic disaster. 

For the first time in the more than 230-year history of our republic, we could potentially default on our credit obligations.  Indeed, it would be the first time in global history that a country voluntarily chose to default on its credit.

What does this mean? 

In the short term, we’d likely see a dramatic stock market crash, akin to the fall of 2008 when the first TARP proposal was rejected.    The credit market could freeze again, making it even more difficult to borrow to buy a home or car, or to start or even run a small business.

In the long run, there’s no question that our country would have to borrow money at significantly higher rates, meaning we’d have to find many billions of more dollars of budget cuts and/or tax hikes to balance future budgets.

And this potential fiscal insanity is the result of the disease that is infecting our democracy at its core; in fact, the very reason we launched The Recovering Politician:  Hyper-partisanship in American politics. 

Indeed, many of the solutions that have been offered to the debt ceiling crisis have been strictly focused to meet partisan ends. 

Yesterday, the House Republicans passed a “Cut, Cap and Balance” plan that cuts trillions from the budget; but, in the opinion of many (inlcuding me), strips the nation of much of the safety net that preserves our democracy.  Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell offered a plan to raise the debt ceiling while providing political cover for fellow Republicans — which is certainly more responsible than the Tea Party/credit default approach — but both sides of the partisan divide have criticized it as too ineffectual: simply kicking the can down the road for a few more years.

But yesterday, there was a glimmer of hope.  The “Gang of Six” — three Democratic Senators and 3 GOP Senators — reconstituted after a brief “sabbatical” to offer a bi-partisan proposal that would slash $3.7 trillion from the national debt through a combination of spending cuts and tax hikes, many of which were recommended by The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, co-chaired by Democrat Erskine Bowles and Republican Alan Simpson.

Here is the best summary to date on the “Gang of Six” budget plan.

I’m confident — particularly as details of the Gang of Six plan begins to be defined more clearly — that everyone will find things in it that they dislike, even despise.  But it is the country’s best chance both to emerge from the current debt ceiling crisis, as well as to make enormous reforms of the structural debt problems our nation is facing.

If you agree with me, the time to act is now.

The extremes and special interests wil be placing extraordinary pressure on Congressmen — as they always do — to forego bipartisan compromise.  It is essential that they hear from those of us from both parties who understand that it is sometimes necessary to reach across the aisle to have our voices heard.  We need to reverse the current political dynamic — so that Members of Congress are afraid of the political impact should they act solely in the interests of their party, to the exclusion of the interests of their nation.

So, the time is now to contact your Congressman — by phone, email, mail, tweet, Facebook, Google Plus, homing pigeon, smoke signal, etc., etc.  Let them know that you will have their backs should they make the tough political vote to support a bipartisan compromise such as the Gang of Six’s proposal. Let them know that you want a representative who serves you, not the special interests that dominate Washington.

Click here for an easy link to join the efforts to support bi-partisan compromise on the debt ceiling crisis.

The link above directs you to the No Labels effort to bring Americans together. 

We are not a third party movement. 

Instead, we are proud Democrats, Republicans, and Independents — liberals, progressives, centrists, and conservatives — all of whom recognize that sometimes we must put aside our labels to do what’s right for the nation that we love.

We cannot afford to remain divded as a country.  As Benjamin Franklin famously said on the eve of revolution, “We will either hang together, or we will most surely hang separately.”

The time is now.  Please act today.

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Recovery

Here’s an interview with Marissa Mayer, the woman who broke Google. [Newsweek]

Even if you won’t be in Los Angeles anytime soon, pretend you’re headed to the city’s Natural History Museum and its recently refurbished Dinosaur Hall. [NY Times]

Feeling under the weather? Check out these tips on keeping your career healthy, even when you’re not. [CNN Money]

Miss America 2011 Teresa Scanlan wants to be a Supreme Court justice someday… and she’s slowly overturning stereotypes of pageant culture. [NY Magazine]

The RP Talks Gang of Six on Wall Street Journal Radio

As the debt ceiling deadline approaches, a last minute reconstitution of and proposal from the Senate’s “Gang of Six” (3 Democrats and 3 Republicans) has stirred up homes of a bipartisan compromise that addresses the nation’s long-term debt problems.  The RP was interviewed by Michael Castner of Wall Street Journal’s “Daily Wrap” about the ongoing negotiations.  Listen in:

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