No Labels to Unveil 25 Congressional “Problem Solvers” at Meeting to Make America Work! Jan. 14 in New York City

lisanolabelsEleven of the problem solvers will join 1,300 citizens and No Labels Honorary Co-Chairs Gov. Jon Huntsman and Sen. Joe Manchin at No Labels Meeting in New York City

WHAT: No Labels, a national grassroots movement of hundreds of thousands of Republicans, Democrats and everyone in between will unveil 25 problem solvers who have committed to regular meetings to build trust across the aisle. Eleven problem solvers (listed below) will be in attendance at the meeting. No Labels, dedicated to a new politics and attitude of problem solving, is hosting its Meeting to Make America Work! on Monday, Jan. 14, at the Marriott Marquis in New York City.

Gov. Jon Huntsman (R-UT) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) will be unveiled as the organization’s honorary co-chairs. Newark Mayor Cory Booker and Sen. Angus King will also be speaking at the event, along with many other notable business and political leaders.
WHERE: Marriott Marquis, 5th Floor — Times Square, 1535 Broadway, New York
WHEN: 8:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m., January 14
Gov. Jon Huntsman and Sen. Joe Manchin will lead a National Citizens Conversation on “The New Politics of Problem Solving” at 10:30 a.m., followed by a 12 p.m. Press Conference with Gov. Huntsman, Sen. Manchin, and Congressional “Problem Solvers.”

Broadway Superstar Deborah Cox, a multi-platinum selling and multi-talented entertainer, will be performing the No Labels Anthem at 12:30 p.m., eastern time. Press availability to follow.
For a detailed schedule of speakers and timing for the Meeting to Make America Work! on January 14, please visit: http://hq.nolabels.org/page/-/Press%20releases/MMAW%20PRESS%20Agenda.pdf

WHO: No Labels National Leaders:
Gov. Jon Huntsman (R-UT)
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV)
Friends of No Labels:
Newark Mayor Cory Booker
Sen. Angus King (I-ME)
Deborah Cox, Broadway Superstar and Grammy Nominee
Congressional Problem Solvers:
Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI)
Rep. Charlie Dent (R-PA)
Rep. Michael Grimm (R-NY)
Rep. Janice Hahn (D-CA)
Rep. Jim Himes (D-CT)
Rep. Dan Lipinski (D-IL)
Rep. Jim Moran (D-VA)
Rep. Reid Ribble (R-WI)
Rep. Scott Rigell (R-VA)
Rep. Kurt Schrader (D-OR)
Rep. Peter Welch (D-VT)
No Labels Co-Founders:
John Avlon — Contributor, CNN
Lisa Borders — Former President of Atlanta City Council
Bill Galston — Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
Kiki McLean — Senior Partner, Porter Novelli
Mark McKinnon — Global Vice Chairman, Hill and Knowlton Strategies
Jonathan Miller — Former Kentucky State Treasurer
David M. Walker — Former U.S. Comptroller General
Ron Shaich — Founder and CEO, Panera Bread
WHAT: No Labels is a grassroots movement of Democrats, Republicans and everyone in between dedicated to promoting the politics of problem solving.
PRESS INTERESTED IN ATTENDING MUST REGISTER FOR PRESS CREDENTIALS.
Please contact Maggie Simpson at simpsonmas@comcast.net or 301-657-2298 to register for credentials to cover this event.
Press interested in scheduling interviews with a No Labels co-founder or Congressional speaker should also contact Maggie Simpson to arrange interviews in advance.
To learn more about No Labels, please visit http://www.nolabels.org/. You can also visit http://Facebook.com/NoLabels and http://Twitter.com/NoLabelsOrg

Artur Davis: A DLC for Republicans?

DLCI’ve written before that Republicans looking to recast themselves as middle class-friendly and more reform oriented should look for guidance at Bill Clinton’s renovation project for Democrats in the early nineties. So, I am admiring of Bill Kristol’s project to model the Democratic Leadership Council’s role as a vehicle to modernize the post Bush/Romney Republican Party.

Admiring, but still mindful of two limitations that are often glossed over regarding the DLC’s trajectory: both the rough patch the centrist organization endured in its formative years before Clinton’s 1992 campaign, and the decidedly uneven record the group compiled during the Clinton presidency and beyond.

To a degree that is not widely remembered, the DLC’s first phase, which ran from 1985 to Clinton’s ascension to its leadership in 1990, was mired in internecine combat with more conventional Democratic forces, from Jesse Jackson to Mario Cuomo. The DLC was dubbed variously as a stalking horse for KStreet lobbyists (“the Democratic Leisure Class” in Jackson’s parlance), or Southerners trying to reassert their primacy over blacks and feminists, or unprincipled panderers trying to win over Reagan Democrats by channeling their resentment toward the liberal base. During that stretch, the DLC label was damaging enough that aspiring presidential possibilities like a young Al Gore avoided an overt association, and in the case of Missouri’s Richard Gephardt, worked overtime to purge his record of any links to the DLC as he emerged as a serious contender in the 1988 primary derby.

In other words, the DLC’s initial contribution to the Democratic debate was to polarize the party’s internal political landscape and to provide something of a convenient foil for the Democratic liberal wing.  Rather than weakening under a centrist assault, that left wing dominated the 1988 primaries to the point that Jackson ran a competitive second, while a putative moderate like Gore never developed momentum outside his home base of southern whites. Nor was the issue environment that year one friendly to centrists: the spectrum ran, unhelpfully for moderates, from Gephardt’s protectionist pledge to slap tariffs on Korean and Japanese car manufacturers to a near universal consensus among the candidates that Ronald Reagan’s policy of aiding South American counter-revolutionaries be permanently scrapped.

davis_artur-11It is also not likely that Kristol and his cohorts mean to emulate the DLC’s footprints in the administration it unmistakably helped elect. It is worth recalling that the only major DLC initiatives that were written into law were welfare reform, a tangible, signature achievement to be sure, and a valuable but relatively modest agenda of grants for community policy. A much larger portion of the group’s portfolio never made it beyond the policy binders: not middle class targeted tax relief; not vouchers for purchasing health insurance; not national service for college scholarships; not the substitution of class for race as the criteria for affirmative action. The Democratic Party’s embrace of a global free trade campaign did not really broaden beyond NAFTA, which George HW Bush primarily negotiated. S-Chip, a genuine advance for low income children, was less a Clinton or DLC priority than a fallback from the wreckage of the abandoned 1994 effort on national health care.

To be sure, the DLC deserves reams of credit for crafting a brand of political argument that was attractive to suburbanites and blue collars, including a robust emphasis on personal responsibility over entitlement and a newfound Democratic tough-mindedness on crime. But to the extent that conservative reformers are ambitious to construct a specific policy apparatus , the DLC seems like a low baseline of achievement that actually did not succeed in reorienting the ideological instincts of its party in a sustained way. To cite just a few examples, the Democratic Party’s Clinton era hawkishness on deficits and fondness for Social Security reform did not survive Clinton’s own vice president’s messaging in 2000, much less subsequent Democratic campaigns.

Finally, the DLC’s ascension was tied in an indispensable way to the gifts of one preternatural campaigner in Bill Clinton. Democratic centrism notably failed to produce a cohort of like-minded prospects at the federal or gubernatorial level. The DLC never fostered the machinery to wage primary battles on behalf of moderate candidates who were engaged in street fights with more traditional liberals. To the contrary, the model was less to nurture centrist candidacies than to sit on the sidelines and nurture relationships with the ever diminishing class of moderates who managed to win on their own (often by sliding to the left to paper over their centrist ways).

Read the rest of…
Artur Davis: A DLC for Republicans?

Something Big is Happening…

No-Labels-imageSomething big is happening on Monday, and you’re not going to want to miss it.

More than 1,300 citizens are joining No Labels at the Meeting to Make America Work! on January 14 – and although the event is sold out, that doesn’t mean you can’t be a part of it by participating online.

Our honorary co-chairs, Gov. Jon Huntsman and Sen. Joe Manchin, are leading a town hall at the meeting and they want to hear from you. They’ll be taking questions from the audience, they wanted to give you the chance to ask a question too.

Want to know about problem solving, gridlock in Washington, or what it takes to be a leader? Ask your question right now and we’ll have as many questions as possible answered live during the Meeting to Make America Work!

Click here to ask your question via Twitter, using the hashtag #NoLabels.

Click here to ask your question via Facebook, in the comments section.

And don’t forget to tune in on Monday, January 14 to watch the event live online.

Thanks for your help – and for being a part of No Labels!

No Labels Starts Up in Santa Fe

From Keira Hay, [Albuquerque, NM] Journal North:

No-Labels-imageJarratt Applewhite is excited. Really excited.

“I haven’t felt this way since I was getting busted for Vietnam War protests and had a civil defense rap sheet as long as my arm,” Applewhite declared.

The object of his enthusiasm? No Labels, a national movement aimed at getting politicians of different stripes to work together in order to grease the wheels of the nation’s gridlocked governmental machinery.

Applewhite, a former elected official who once served on the Santa Fe School Board, said he’s become tired of turning on the television and seeing partisan leaders who disregard “rules of conduct that kindergartners learn.”

“Who would think that compromise could become a dirty word? It’s an indictment of the way we conduct ourselves as a country,” he said.

Applewhite isn’t alone in his embrace of the No Labels movement.

More than 30 people showed up at the Heart of Mary Retreat and Carmelite Center Saturday for the inaugural meeting of No Labels’ Santa Fe group.

The movement is quickly garnering supporters all over the Land of Enchantment. More than 1,000 New Mexicans have signed on to the No Labels cause and “we haven’t even really started yet,” organizer Dudley Hafner said.

Hafner and other Santa Fe organizers said Saturday they expect the movement to gain even more steam when No Labels holds a conference in New York City later this month. The event is expected to feature statements of support from politicians, including former President Bill Clinton and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

No Labels has already signed up about 94 members of Congress, according to organizers. Former Utah Republican Gov. John Huntsman and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., have agreed to be the group’s national leaders.

On Saturday, meeting attendees learned more about No Labels and participated in a short planning session. They also listened in on a conference call with No Labels co-founder Jonathan Miller, the current Secretary of Finance and Administration for the state of Kentucky.

Miller criticized national leaders as “hyper-partisan, paralyzed actors” who continue “to act against the interests of the nation.”

He said No Labels is focused on parallel outreaches: a grassroots, “living room” effort already comprised of some 600,000 ordinary people, and a growing group of Democratic and Republican Party politicians committed to working together to find solutions.

Miller and other No Labels organizers emphasize that the movement is about making the political system work better – not advocating for particular parties or ideologies.

Click here to read the full article.

Artur Davis: Wishful Thinking in the New Year

Having offered my perspective about the shape of a conservative rebound, I will end the year with a bout of wishful thinking about what 2013 might bring, if the stars align in just the right way. Here are twelve hopes for the next twelve months:

(1)  That George HW Bush and Nelson Mandela have more good health in front of them. They are not a commonly linked pair, but their lives epitomize the values of political tolerance and forgiveness. The elder Bush had his brass-knuckled side, as Michael Dukakis can attest, but he is arguably the last president who regarded election to federal office as a compact for Republicans and Democrats to achieve some rough consensus around the country’s challenges. Some of the deals cut, on federal employment laws and acid rain, looked then and now like sensible compromises; the 1990 tax package only preceded a recession and more rounds of rampant spending. But Bush’s four years were notable for their absence of intense division; it is no accident that he is the only president in my adulthood given the moral credit of never being despised by his partisan foes. And Mandela: what more needs to be said other than that he forged a political peace with a regime that jailed him and snatched the prime of his life away?

(2)   That the missing cause of 2012, education reform, is discovered alive and intact. For that to happen, liberals will need to extricate themselves from the embrace of the teachers’ unions that have wilted the Democratic reform agenda down to charter schools and not much more; conservatives will need to remind themselves that no other initiative satisfies the right’s goal of upward mobility through self determination more effectively.

davis_artur-11(3)  That some influential observer will write the seminal book or article documenting the degree to which modern Democrats have abandoned the political center. For all the hand-wringing over Grover Norquist and the Tea Party, it is today’s House Democratic Caucus that refused to supply a single vote for continuing the Bush tax cuts for all but millionaires, until recently the favored position of Democratic moderates; this year’s Democratic platform that discarded the notion that public policy should strive to make abortions rare; and the current Democratic mainstream that has declared opposition to the Affordable Care Act or same sex marriage—views that thirty- five to forty Democratic congressmen held just a few years ago—as, respectively, stone-hearted or hateful.

Read the rest of…
Artur Davis: Wishful Thinking in the New Year

Tom Allen’s New Book: Dangerous Convictions — What’s Really Wrong With the U.S. Congress

We at The Recovering Politician are proud to announce that one of our own, contributing RP and former Congressman Tom Allen, has published an outstanding new book, Dangerous Convictions: What’s Really Wrong with the U.S. Congress.  Here’s a summary:

Click here to review and/or purchase

Click here to review and/or purchase

The rhetoric of the 2012 presidential campaign exposed the deeply rooted sources of political polarization in American.  One side celebrated individualism and divided the public into “makers and takers;” the other preached “better together” as the path forward.  Both focused their efforts on the “base” not the middle.

In Dangerous Convictions, former Democratic Congressman Tom Allen argues that what’s really wrong with Congress is the widening, hardening conflict in worldviews that leaves the two parties unable to understand how the other thinks about what people should do on their own and what we should do together.  Members of Congress don’t just disagree, they think the other side makes no sense.  Why are conservatives preoccupied with cutting taxes, uninterested in expanding health care coverage and in denial about climate change?  What will it take for Congress to recover a capacity for pragmatic compromise on these issues?

Allen writes that we should treat self-reliance (the quintessential American virtue) and community (our characteristic instinct to cooperate) as essential balancing components of American culture and politics, instead of setting them at war with each other.  Combining his personal insights from 12 years In Congress with recent studies of how human beings form their political and religious views, Allen explains why we must escape the grip of our competing worldviews to enable Congress to work productively on our 21st century challenges.

Already the book has garnered some impressive reviews:

 “With historically low ratings, Congress is regarded as ‘dysfunctional’ by Americans of all political persuasions. Why that is so, and what can be done to reduce excessive partisanship, is the subject of Tom Allen’s well-informed and provocative book.” -Former U.S. Senator George J. Mitchell

 

“This is an extraordinarily valuable examination of the most troubling concern of our time: the inability of our leaders in Washington to find consensus and forge compromise in the public interest. Readers will discover here a deeply penetrating analysis by an author who had unique opportunities to observe from the inside the causes and consequences of our current polarization. Anyone who wants to understand why contemporary politics so often results in failure cannot afford to miss this essential book.” -G. Calvin Mackenzie, Goldfarb Family Distinguished Professor of Government, Colby College

 

“Allen, a former Democratic congressman from Maine and current president and CEO of the American Association of Publishers, offers a panoramic critique of Congress based on his 12 years in office (1997-2009), covering policy areas from the budget to health care….Allen’s pragmatism and reason help frame major issues for Americans hungering for some legislative wisdom after the election.” –Publishers Weekly

 

 

Click here to review and/or purchase.

Michael Steele: NRA Press Conference “Very Haunting and Very Disturbing”

From Talking Points Memo:

Former Republican National Committee chairman and MSNBC commentator Michael Steele on Friday said he found the press conference led by National Rifle Association executive vice president Wayne LaPierre “very haunting and very disturbing.”

Asked by MSNBC anchor Thomas Roberts for his immediate response to the NRA presser, Steele initially appeared speechless.

“I don’t even know where to begin,” Steele said. “As a supporter of the Second Amendment and a supporter of the NRA, even though I’m not a member of the NRA, I just found it very haunting and very disturbing that our country now, that are talking about arming our teachers and our principals in classrooms. What does that say about us? And I do not believe that’s where the American people want to go. I do not believe that is the response that should be coming out of the tragedy in Newtown.”

Watch the exchange:

Matthew Pinsker: Why Did Lincoln Rush the 13th Amendment?

With the recent release of the blockbuster, critically-acclaimed Lincoln, The Recovering Politician has asked Lincoln scholar, Matthew Pinsker — a professor at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania — to share some historical insights about our 16th President.  Click here and here for his prior 2 pieces.

Here is the latest of his columns:

This question is easy to answer as far as the movie is concerned, but much more complicated to explain in real life.  The movie needs a plot device that raises dramatic tension, and so the audience is encouraged to believe through a series of scenes that passage of the Thirteenth Amendment by the House before the war’s end is absolutely essential –both to ending the conflict and for securing the final destruction of slavery.  The implication builds in scene after scene that it was truly now or never for abolition by the end of January 1865.

But in reality, there is no indication that President Lincoln actually considered quick passage of the abolition amendment to be so crucial.  His message to Congress in December 1864 strikes a much different tone.  He wrote that “the next Congress will pass the measure if this does not” and so suggested that since there was “only a question of time as to when the proposed amendment will go to the States” why “may we not agree that the sooner the better?”  The confidence of that taunt (“the sooner the better”) was no accident.  The National Union (Republican) Party had won a sweeping victory in the 1864 elections on a platform that explicitly called for a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery.  The next Congress (39th) was going to have an anti-slavery super-majority in both houses.  Lincoln considered the 1864 elections to have offered an overwhelming mandate.  Many northern Democrats were demoralized and there was open talk in places like Tammany Hall (the New York City Democratic Party) about the need to distance themselves from slavery.  And by every reckoning, the Confederacy was on the verge of total military and political collapse.

Professor Matthew Pinsker

Professor Matthew Pinsker

This is not to argue that Lincoln was somehow reluctant about securing the amendment or not anxious at all about ending the war.  But if Congress didn’t act on slavery at the beginning of January, it was going to do so either by special session in March or during the next regular session in December.  Of course, it’s always possible that Lincoln feared any delays might jeopardize the balky Unionist/Republican coalition (represented in the film by the differences between Thaddeus Stevens / Tommy Lee Jones and his radical faction and old Francis P. Blair, Sr. / Hal Holbrook and his clique of conservatives).

Yet, practically every sign of the times suggested otherwise.  For example, the movie makes much out of Lincoln’s fears regarding the Supreme Court and what they might do to his Emancipation Proclamation, but that was a concern much more relevant circa 1862 than early 1865 when leading abolitionist Salmon P. Chase was being confirmed as the new Chief Justice of the United States (replacing arch Lincoln enemy Roger Brooke Taney).  I don’t think Chase’s name was even mentioned in the movie.  Also left unmentioned was the fact that the Unionists / Republicans had actually packed the Supreme Court after 1863 –adding a tenth justice that helped their majority.  Anti-slavery forces controlled the Supreme Court by the war’s end.

Read the rest of…
Matthew Pinsker: Why Did Lincoln Rush the 13th Amendment?

The RP on Wall Street Journal Radio

daily wrapThe RP was back this week in his semi-regular gig on Wall Street Journal Radio’s “Daily Wrap with Michael Cassner.”  He and Cassner discusse the fiscal cliff and the impact No Labels proposals can have on the discussion. He compared the talks to a dysfunctional family Christmas. You can listen to the entire interview by clicking here.

No Deal: No Break

A surgeon wouldn't walk away in the middle of your surgery, a pilot wouldn't leave in the middle of your flight. Congress shouldn't take a break during the fiscal cliff. SIGN ON NOW: http://hq.nolabels.org/page/s/122112ndnb-p

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