By RP Staff, on Tue Dec 27, 2011 at 2:00 PM ET The RP was catching some waves in Southern California last week…Er, he was actually home on his phone calling into the public radio station…Whatever…The RP was sharing the No Labels “Make Congress Work” gospel with the people of the Left Coast at KPCC, Southern California’s Public Radio.
Click here to listen in.
And click here to help Make Congress Work.
By RP Staff, on Fri Dec 23, 2011 at 2:15 PM ET The RP is back in The Huffington Post this week with a provocative column crediting Adam Sandler with saving the Jewish people. Sort of…
Here’s an excerpt:
But as silly as his lyrics were on the surface, Sandler’s sing-songy outing of pop culture icons with Jewish blood was sort of revelatory to his fellow Chosen People. Who knew that James Caan — Sonny Corleone! — lit the Hanukkah menorah? And while the Jewish-ness of Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) was well-known (we all learned in Hebrew School that the Vulcan hand salute was a tribute to a rabbinic blessing gesture), the Hebraic faith of Captain Kirk (William Shatner) was a welcome surprise. And Harrison Ford being a quarter Jewish? Not too shabby.
(Actually, Harrison Ford is fully half-Jewish. And contrary to another Sandlerian stanza, baseball Hall-of-Famer Rod Carew — whose wife and children were Jewish — did not convert: The former California Angel and Minnesota Twin was never a Member of the Tribe. But who’s kvetching?)
I remember picturing myself as a child in the ’70s, literally the only kid on my block (with my sis) without a Christmas tree. What I would have given to have known at the time that the epitome of coolness — The Fonz himself (Henry Winkler) — had a Bar Mitzvah! I imagined millions of other children learning the same way that many of their celebrity idols spun the Hanukkah dreidel, just like they did.
Click here to read the full column at The Huffington Post.
And have a Happy Chanukah!
By RP Staff, on Thu Dec 22, 2011 at 6:14 PM ET Oh, well.
House Republicans, fearing the tongue-lashing they were about to receive from the RP on CNBC’s “Kudlow and Company” agreed to the payroll tax cut, prompting CNBC to shift programming and cancel his appearance tonight.
So, if you know any TV producers out there, please recommend the RP as their good-luck charm.
Maybe if he knew that the RP was about to appear on Al Jazeera, Bashar Assad will finally step down in Syria…
Maybe if they knew that the RP was headed for Sportscenter, the Duke Blue Devils would just call it a season and cede the NCAA Championship to the Kentucky Wildcats…
Maybe if they knew that the RP was joining Ryan Seacrest on E! News, the Kardashians would just go away…
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We still need your help building the No Labels army to “Make Congress Work.”
For a primer on “Make Congress Work,” click here to read the RP’s column today up at The Huffington Post.
Click here to read how “Make Congress Work” has impressed nationally-respected political columnist Ezra Klein.
And most importantly, click here to read the full “Make Congress Work” plan and to GET INVOLVED.
By RP Staff, on Thu Dec 22, 2011 at 4:30 PM ET The RP is back on the national TV tubes tonight talking about No Labels’ ambitious “Make Congress Work” proposal.
This time, he will be appearing on CNBC’s “Kudlow and Company” at 7:40 PM EST.
For a primer on “Make Congress Work,” click here to read the RP’s column today up at The Huffington Post.
Click here to read how “Make Congress Work” has impressed nationally-respected political columnist Ezra Klein.
And most importantly, click here to read the full “Make Congress Work” plan and to GET INVOLVED.
By Jonathan Miller, on Thu Dec 22, 2011 at 12:30 PM ET Ezra Klein, one of the nation’s leading political analysts (formerly of The Washington Post, now with Bloomberg View), used his column this week to salute No Labels’ “Make Congress Work” proposals, launched with much fanfare last week. Klein, formerly a No Labels’ skeptic, lauds “Make Congress Work” as a meaningful reform proposal.
Here’s an excerpt from Klein’s, “No Labels Stops Whining; Offers Political Agenda” from today’s Bloomberg View:
Enter No Labels. Rather than confine themselves to wishful thinking about a third-party candidacy or endless scolding over partisanship, its members have come out with a robust agenda for congressional reform.
Some of the items on the agenda are symbolic at best. Holding bipartisan monthly meetings and seating Democrats and Republicans together in Congress isn’t likely to usher in a new age of bipartisanship. Members of Congress are grown-ups responding to real pressures within their parties, and real demands from their most engaged constituents. They don’t need more play dates with the other side. But you know what? More play dates with the other side aren’t likely to hurt anything, either. So why not?
Some of the items on No Label’s agenda would transform the workings of sclerotic and dysfunctional institutions. Nominations to executive or judicial positions, for instance, would get an up-or-down vote after 90 days. If the federal budget was late, members of Congress wouldn’t get paid. Filibustering senators would actually have to do the Mr.-Smith- Goes-to-Washington thing and hold the floor of Congress by talking. No more filibustering without actually working for it. Oh, and filibusters could only be mounted against the passage of a bill — currently, the motion to move to debate is frequently filibustered, which means the filibuster is used to choke off debate rather than protect it.
Click here to read the full column.
And, even more importantly, click here to learn more about “Make Congress Work” and to join No Labels’ critical efforts.
By RP Staff, on Thu Dec 22, 2011 at 12:00 PM ET As the No Labels’ campaign to “Make Congress Work” continues to pick up steam, the RP published a summary of the 12-point plan in The Huffington Post.
Here’s an excerpt:
More than a dozen current and former Members of Congress joined us last week to announce our action plan. And throughout 2012, No Labels will conduct an intensive campaign to mobilize one million Americans behind our efforts to Make Congress Work. Our goal is simple: To see most, if not all, of these reforms adopted when Congress convenes in January 2013.
This is our movement’s first step. But it’s a big one.
If you too are tired of our poisoned political system, click here to become part of the solution, part of the first-of-a-kind grassroots movement to reform Congress from within.
The time to act is now. Will you join us?
Together, we can Make Congress Work again. Together, we can help restore history’s greatest democracy to its rightful perch, as a light unto the nations.
Click here to read the full article at The Huffington Post.
By RP Staff, on Wed Dec 21, 2011 at 12:30 PM ET Since the launch last week of No Labels‘ ambitious “Make Congress Work” campaign, The RP has appeared on over two dozen local radio programs across the country to discuss the initiative. Since not even the RPettes would be interested in listening to each and every one, we have not wanted to bore the RP Nation either.
However, last night, the RP appeared on the hour-long “Late Night with Jim Bohannon” radio program, syndicated to 350 stations across the country. It offered a unique opportunity to discuss all 12 proposals within the plan in detail and answer listener questions.
Click here for the link to Jim Bohannon’s interview of The RP.

Here is the full “Make Congress Work” plan. If you are inspired to join 200,000 Americans in No Labels in supporting the initiative, click here.
By Jonathan Miller, on Wed Dec 21, 2011 at 8:30 AM ET
The Last American Jew.
It was an alarming image for a Jewish adolescent.
Yet in the 1980s, it was a common theme of our temple youth group gatherings.
Jewish teens in Generation X were admonished regularly about demographic trends and intermarriage rates that suggested our community could soon splinter into the dustbin of history — as early as the end of the 21st century.
At the same time, our rabbis began to share a darker take on the holiday of Chanukah, at variance with the bright and fanciful miracle of our childhood celebrations. (You know the legend: how the day’s supply of the Great Temple’s oil lasted eight crazy nights, yadda, yadda, yadda.)
As teens, we were old enough to process the back story — how Judah Maccabee and his brothers successfully revolted against the Greek King Antiochus’ oppressive regime that was exploiting Jewish assimilation, poised to destroy our religion from within. We were warned gravely that 20th century assimilation similarly could lead to our own extinction.
The Eighties indeed were a challenging time for American Jewry. Overt, sometimes violent anti-Semitism had almost entirely vanished, the horrors of the Holocaust still fresh in the minds of our parents’ generation. And yet, in many areas of middle America such as my old Kentucky home, we were still the “other”: There were social clubs my family couldn’t join, classmates’ parties to which I wasn’t invited, civic organizations that excluded my parents — all because of our separate faith. Anti-Zionism coincidentally peaked during the decade, as Israel’s war in Lebanon provoked unbalanced, disproportional coverage of the Jewish State from much of the American media.
It was easy to understand why so many Jews — particularly our youngest — took comfort by fading into the multi-colored fabric of secularized Christianity that enveloped American culture. With Gentile discrimination so diffuse and subtle, the only remaining strident enemy in the 3000-year battle for Jewish survival was, in fact, ourselves.
But then the 1990s brought forth a modern-day Judah Maccabee: Adam Sandler.
OK, so I exaggerate a little.
What the Nineties did bring was an army of modern Maccabees, in the form of prominent, familiar, likable Jews thrust into the pop media spotlight: Jews that were both clearly identifiable and proud of their heritage.
This helped produce a dramatic sea change in Christian Americans’ acceptance of their Jewish neighbors. In the vast center of the country where few Jews lived, ignorance previously had bred distrust and suspicion. Now, through the magic of television — and shows such as Northern Exposure, Beverly Hills 90210, Friends, and most prominently, Seinfeld — Jewish comedians, actors, and characters entered the living rooms of middle America. Rural citizens who’d never met a Jew before now “knew” dozens, and understood that “they were just like us” — maybe a bit wackier.
Just as significant was the impact on Jewish Americans. We could now hold our heads up a bit higher, feel a little more comfortable to publicly pronounce our faith. We were now the tellers of Jewish jokes, alternatively wry and self-deprecating, instead of divisive and mean-spirited.
Read the rest of… The RP: How Adam Sandler’s “Chanukah Song” Helped Save the Jews. Seriously…
By Jonathan Miller, on Tue Dec 13, 2011 at 8:30 AM ET Even in this winter of our political discontent and disunity, Americans are passionately united around a simple idea:
We’re fed up with politics.
And we want our government to work again.
That’s why as part of my second act as a recovering politician, I helped to co-found No Labels, a national grassroots movement, now involving nearly 200,000 citizens: Democrats, Republicans, and Independents. We represent a broad diversity of ideologies, but we all believe that it’s critical to put aside our labels on occasion and do what’s best for our country.
Fundamentally, we recognize that there are common sense solutions to the seemingly intractable policy issues that plague our body politic — from the economy to the environment; from immigration to education. But as a result of hyperpartisan warfare, our government is polarized and paralyzed — seemingly incapable of solving the nation’s very real problems.
Over the past year, No Labels’ citizens network, with representatives from every congressional district, have worked to develop reform ideas to help rebuild our democracy.
And today, we’re announcing a concrete plan of action to Make Congress Work — a package with a dozen substantive proposals, most of which don’t require the passage of new legislation, or any new spending. There’s no partisan advantage to be gained, no special interest break to secure. Instead, the Make Congress Work plan includes simple, straightforward proposals to break the gridlock in Washington, reduce hyper-partisanship, and promote constructive dialogue and bipartisan action in order to deal with the nation’s toughest problems.
Click here to read the full Make Congress Work action plan. Our twelve proposals are summarized below:
- No Budget, No Pay: Congress has passed its spending bills on time only 4 times since 1952. Recent failures to pass a timely budget led to significant disruptions of public services. No Labels believes that if Congress can’t make spending and budget decisions on time, they shouldn’t get paid.
- Up or Down Votes on Presidential Appointments: As of late 2011, more than 200 presidentially appointed positions remain unfilled, as senators of both parties have held up nominations, sometimes for trivial reasons. No Labels believes that all presidential nominations should be confirmed or rejected within 90 days of the nomination being received by the Senate.
- Filibuster Reform: In its first 50 years, the filibuster was used only 35 times — in only the most extraordinary circusmtances. Over the last two years alone, the filibuster was employed over 100 times — often with merely a quick announcement — as a partisan means to disrupt majority rule. No Labels believes that if Senators want to filibuster, they must take to the floor and hold it through sustained debate. We also believe that filibusters never should be permitted to prevent floor debate, as they are paradoxically now.
- Empower the Sensible Majority: Often times, congressional leaders halt popular legislation from reaching the floor to protect partisan advantages. No Labels believes that every Congressman should have the ability to anonymously sign discharge petitions to enable bills to go to the floor for a vote. If a majority signs the petition, the names would be released publicly, and the bill could be voted up or down.
- Make Members Come to Work: In 2012, the U.S. House has scheduled only two weeks when it will be in session for all five days. No Labels believes that Congress should put in a five-day work week like the rest of us — with three weeks in DC, and then one week back home with their constituents.
- Question Time for the President: In January 2010, President Obama attended a House GOP retreat to debate health care publicly. We haven’t seen anything like it, before or since. No Labels believes we should follow the example of the British Parliament and schedule regular, nationally-televised question time for the President and Congress.
- Fiscal Report to Congress — Hear It. Read It. Sign It: One of the greatest obstacles to fixing our economy is that we can’t agree on a method for calculating the balance sheet. No Labels believes that Congress and the President should work off the same set of numbers, and that a nonpartisan leader — such as the Comptroller General — should deliver an annual televised fiscal update, in-person, to a joint session of Congress.
- No Pledge But the Oath of Office: 238 House members have signed a pledge to never raise taxes. Another 110 have signed a pledge to never cut Social Security benefits. That’s 80% of Congress refusing to consider compromise on two of the nation’s biggest budget issues. No Labels believes that Members should make no pledge but the pledge of allegiance to the flag and their formal oath of office.
- Monthly Bipartisan Gatherings: While there always has been partisanship, there recently was a time when members of Congress nurtured relationships with colleagues on the other side of the aisle. Today, they are more likely to glare at each other from their partisan encampments. No Labels believes that the House and Senate should undertake monthly bipartisan gatherings, private and off-the-record, bringing in objective experts to brief them on policy issues.
- Bipartisan Seating: During President Obama’s 2011 State of the Union speech, some Members of Congress left their partisan bunkers to sit next to someone from another party. While not an enormous policy step, it was a powerful symbol of civility and comity. No Labels believes that all joint meetings of Congress should have mixed partisan seating, and committees should arrange seating to promote bipartisanship.
- Bipartisan Leadership Committee: While ideologically polar opposites, President Ronald Reagan and House Speaker Tip O’Neill met regularly, had a cordial relationship, and worked together to make headway on major issues such as entitlement and tax reform. Now, every meeting in DC seems like a partisan pep rally. No Labels believes that Congress should form a bipartisan congressional leadership committee to serve as a forum for discussing both legislation and substantive policy solutions. The committee would meet weekly, and then monthly with the President.
- No Negative Campaigns Against Incumbents: Just a few decades ago, informal custom prevented one party leader from campaigning against a leader of the other party. This practice now has devolved into a cycle of conspiracy and retribution. No Labels believes that incumbents from one party should not conduct negative campaigns against sitting members of the opposing party — no appearances in attack ads or direct mailings, and no traveling to play partisan attack dog.
More than a dozen current and former Members of Congress are joining us today to announce our action plan. And throughout 2012, No Labels will conduct an intensive campaign to mobilize one million Americans behind our efforts to Make Congress Work. Our goal is simple: To see most, if not all, of these reforms adopted when Congress convenes in January 2013.
This is our movement’s first step. But it’s a big one.
If you too are tired of our poisoned political system, click here to become part of the solution, part of the first-of-a-kind grassroots movement to reform Congress from within.
The time to act is now. Will you join us?
Together, we can Make Congress Work again. Together, we can help restore history’s greatest democracy to its rightful perch, as a light unto the nations.
By Jonathan Miller, on Mon Dec 12, 2011 at 8:30 AM ET As the author of a book on the role of faith and public policy and — perhaps more significantly — a religious minority (Jewish) who grew up and lives in the Bible Belt, I’m particularly sensitive to any implication of religious bias and discrimination in my home state of Kentucky.
Indeed, I’ve used this very forum to bemoan anti-Hindu attacks leveled by a gubernatorial candidate, call out anti-Semitic slurs ejaculated by a prominent GOP official, and celebrate the recent emergence of prominent Jew-ish Gentiles in American pop culture.
That’s why I’m especially concerned about the possible outbreak of anti-Christian pandemonium in the wake of a disturbing event Saturday night that rocked the Bluegrass faithful.
Some quick background: I’m often asked how a Jewish pischer like me could get elected to office in a place like Kentucky. My reply is that there is only one organized religion in my home state, and that’s University of Kentucky basketball.
Each fall, people in every corner of the Commonwealth (except discrete subdivisions of Louisville) join together in spiritual reverie to cherish the flagship state university’s roundballers. By March, the devotional frenzy reaches the point of, yes, madness, as the Wildcats inevitably surge deep into the NCAA tourney.
But precisely twenty seasons ago, Kentucky’s hopes for championship salvation were cruelly and iniquitously sabotaged by a Devil named Christian.
Read the rest of… The RP: Anti-Christian Fervor Consumes Kentucky (No, This isn’t a “War on X-mas” Article)
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