The RP on St. Louis Radio LIVE at 8:50 AM ET/7:50 CT

This morning at 8:50 AM ET/7:50AM CT on KMOX radio in St. Louis, the RP will be discussing “No Budget, No Pay,” the important new legislation supported by No Labels that would withdraw the pay of Congress if they fail to pass a budget on time.

Click here to listen LIVE from anywhere in the world.

Click here to learn more about “No Budget, No Pay.”

Click here to take action — with easy links to your Congressmen

The RPs Debate Presidential Greatness: The People Rebut

[Artur Davis’ Provocation, Robert Kahne’s Rebuttal #1, Ron Granieri’s Rebuttal #2]

As our RPs debate the greatness of our most recent presidents, we offer the results of a recent Gallup poll:

Americans believe history will judge Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton as the best among recent U.S. presidents, with at least 6 in 10 saying each will go down in history as an above-average or outstanding president. Only about 1 in 10 say each will be remembered as below average or poor. Three years into Barack Obama’s presidency, Americans are divided in their views of how he will be regarded, with 38% guessing he will be remembered as above average or outstanding and 35% as below average or poor.

How do you think each of the following presidents will go down in history -- as an outstanding president, above average, average, below average, or poor?

John Johnson: The Kid Passes On

1985 was the first baseball season when I truly became a fan of the sport. 

My team was the New York Mets.  I became a fan through the legacy fandom passed on
by my Uncle John, who used to take me to Shea stadium.  That summer we constantly exchanged stories about the team, the pitching, and hated St Louis Cardinals, and one very special catcher–Gary Carter. 

I remember that summer being the first when I really understood box scores and baseball standings.  As Fall approached, I anxiously counted the number of wins the Mets needed to overtake the Cardinals.  Realizing as the days of the regular season dwindled the Mets were going to run out of time..there only chance to clinch the NL East was a sweep the last weekend.  Time ran out…a 98 win season just wasn’t  enough.  And disappointment filled me realizing that only one team can win the
championship…and even in a season as long as baseball, there was still such a
thing as having not enough time.

Time running out on the 1985 season was the first thing I thought about today
when I heard that one of the bedrocks of the Mets team in 1985 and 1986, Gary Carter, died tragically yesterday of brain cancer at the age of 57.

The next season–1986–the Mets exploded our of the gate to run away with the NL East.  I followed every game that season.  1986 was, to steal a phrase from this website, a season of “recovery”….the unfinished business of a season where they got oh so close but time ran out.  Gary Carter was right in the middle of so many of those 108 wins that year.  He was the steady presence in the battery raising the game of Doc Gooden, Ron Darling, Sid Fernandez, Bobby Ojeda, and Rick Aguilera.  He was a constant home run threat to drive in Lenny Dykstra, Wally Backman, Keith Hernandez, Darryl Strawberry.   The stats speak for themselves…24 homeruns, 105 RBIs. 

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John Johnson: The Kid Passes On

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The RP: I Heart Jeremy Lin

Some random Valentines Day musings on the latest professional sports phenomenon, Jeremy Lin — the Harvard grad and current New York Knicks basketball point guard, who came out of seemingly nowhere to light up a sports nation frozen in the post-Super Bowl, pre-March Madness tundra of February:

  • A recent Sunday ritual of mine — donning a Tom Brady jersey and stepping up to the bar at my neighbor Buffalo Wild Wings — continually was challenged by by fellow Kentuckians who’ve wondered how I became a New England Patriots fan.  The first reason — my man-crush on Pretty Boy Brady (as revealed in this piece about Pretty Boys I Begrudgingly Admire) — is not sports bar-appropriate.  Neither is the other — my seven year tour of Harvard University — so I would mumble something about living in Boston.  Next year, I know I can lift my head up proudly in this basketball-fanatic town and announce, “I went to the same school as Jeremy Lin!”
  • One previously unremarked consequence of our Twitter and Facebook dominated world is how quickly jokes now become old and clichéd. Over the weekend, I must have read 500 tweets struggling for a laugh by adding appending “Lin” to a word or making some pun with a word that can be transformed somehow to use “lin.” (I.e., “Linsanity” “Blew up like the Lin-denburg”) Yesterday, I received an email from a fellow Harvard alum (see now I don’t need to hide it!) who passed on this bon mot: Jeremy Lin’s ball-handling is so sick; the other teams are in need of some insu-Lin.  My response?  That joke’s so February 10.

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    The RP: I Heart Jeremy Lin

Read No Labels Ad in Today’s New York Times

A11 is the one must-read page in today’s copy of The New York Times. That’s because No Labels’ full-page ad on The No Budget, No Pay Act is there, front and center. 

The ad coincides with the release of the President’s budget this coming Monday, and to drive the message home No Labels also sent a letter to congressional leadership calling on Congress to pass the bipartisan No Budget, No Pay Act (H.R. 3643 / S. 1981), sponsored by Senator Dean Heller (R-NV) and Congressman Jim Cooper (D-TN). The Senate bill will receive a hearing by the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee in March. The press release is here and the complete ad copy is here.

For Your Tuesday Evening Listening Enjoyment…

My sister, Jennifer, is expanding her entertainment empire with the release of a song she produced with local musician Duane Lundy.

Without further ado, from 10 in 20: A Lexington Recording Project, here’s “Riot Goin’ On” by Willie Eames!

The RP: No Budget? No Pay!

While the RP has recently been stirring the pot with pieces on highly controversial issues such as legalizing marijuana, expanded gaming, and Tim Tebow, he now addresses an idea that should have nearly-universal support: Cutting Congressional pay when they fail to pass a budget.  Read this except from his piece today in The Huffington Post:

 

A thousand days.

In our gazelle-paced, über-networked society, so many remarkable, epochal events have taken place during the last thousand days:

Both the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street emerged as powerful rebuttals to the status quo in American politics…

The Arab Spring ushered in a domino effect that toppled vicious dictators across the Middle East…

A handful of European democracies teetered on the brink of collapse, while world powers rushed to preserve the global economy…

And most significant of all…Two Kardahsian weddings were followed by one Kardashian divorce.

But one critical thing has not occured:

It’s been more than one thousand days since the U.S. Congress passed a budget resolution.

And in the meantime, the congressional appropriations process – the means by which all federal spending is authorized and allocated – has simply broken down.  During the current fiscal year, only 3 of the 12 regular appropriations bills have been passed.

Sound like a lot of inside the Beltway jargon?

Here’s what it means:

When Congress acts without a budget, it essentially is spending taxpayer money without first evaluating and prioritizing its services. A budget, in essence, is a blueprint that allows us as a nation to make deliberate decisions on how to allocate our scarce resources.  Without one, taxpayers are forced to pick up the tab for the waste and inefficiencies.

When Congress fails to pass spending bills on time, it relies instead on temporary spending measures.  In the past fiscal year, there were eight such temporary “continuing resolutions.”  This start-and-stop spending process causes havoc for federal agencies that provide for our national defense, transportation financing, education support, environmental protection, and product and food safety. Government is forced to operate in a fog of financial uncertainty, resulting sometimes in delays of critical national services.

But guess who’s been paid right on time, like a Swiss clock, during this entire thousand day period?

No need for a spoiler alert: It’s just too delicious an irony…the U.S. Congress.

Click here to read the entire piece, “No Budget? No Pay!” at The Huffington Post.

 

The RPs Debate the GOP Mudfest: The RP Responds

The RP’s First Response

[Krystal Ball’s Provocation; Artur Davis’ Rebuttal #1; Jeff Smith’s Rebuttal #2; Ron Granieri’s Rebuttal #3; The RP’s Rebuttal #4; Ron Granieri’s First Response; Rod Jetton’s Rebuttal #5]

Ron Granieri is correct that I’m a passionate Marxist, but he’s got the wrong Marx brother.  I prefer Groucho.  (Karl’s the mute with the curly hair, right?)

Speaking of farcical comedy, with his shocking Romney endorsement, have we seen the last of Donald Trump’s involvement in Campaign 2012?  OK, just kidding.

But seriously folks…I hesitate to respond to Ron Granieri’s latest piece because frankly I don’t understand his big words, French references and elite, ivory-tower sophistry. (or is it sapphistry?)  I am, after all, just an ordinary, unfrozen caveman lawyer.

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The RPs Debate the GOP Mudfest: The RP Responds

The RPs Debate the GOP Mudfest: The RP Rebuts

The RP: Rebuttal #4

[Krystal Ball’s Provocation; Artur Davis’ Rebuttal #1; Jeff Smith’s Rebuttal #2; Ron Granieri’s Rebuttal #3]

First of all, a hearty Mazel Tov to Ron Granieri for being the first person ever at the Internet tubes to use both the terms Schadenfreude and QFT in a post.

(I had to look the latter up at the Urban Dictionary and assume he is using definition #1, not #2)

I know that Ron’s childhood hero, William F. Buckley would be proud.

(No, seriously, RP Nation.  When the rest of us were reading comic books and the backs of baseball cards, Ron was queuing Firing Line repeats, poring through back issues of the National Review, and dog-earing his prized first edition of God and Man at Yale.)

I have to take issue, however, with the Reagan analogy which has been über-abused by the TV screaming heads who tend to fill up air time with clichéd analyses.  Gingrich (or Paul…or Santorum…or Bachmann…yadda, yadda, yadda) is no Reagan in any sense of the word, particularly when it comes to electability. Certainly both of our liberal fathers misjudged Reagan’s general election appeal (My Dad…ugh…voted for Bonzo’s BFF in fact because he eerily predicted Carter’s antipathy toward Israel), as did much of America.

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The RPs Debate the GOP Mudfest: The RP Rebuts

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