Tuesday, May 22, 2012
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…do you think it's good or bad pork?

Barack Obama: On support for gay marriage.

Posted by Politifact.com Truth-O-Meter rulings from National On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
The Truth-o-Meter says: Full Flop | President Barack Obama's shifting stance on gay marriage

ABC broke into its daytime lineup May 9, 2012, to announce a historic shift: the president of the United States declaring his personal support for gay marriage. "I've been going through an evolution on this issue," President Barack Obama told ABC News. Indeed. While the president has consistently supported civil rights for gay couples — peppering his comments with specifics such as hospital visitation, transfer of property and Social Security benefits — his discussion of marriage has differed. He’s called same-sex marriage unstrategic, against his religious beliefs, and something ...

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How to Balance Budget Without Tax Hikes

Posted by Veronique de Rugy, Examiner On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Veronique de Rugy, Examiner
Austerity is destroying Europe, we are told. In fact, this "anti-austerity" slogan is supposedly an important reason for defeat of former French president Nicolas Sarkozy and for the victory of newly elected socialist Francois Hollande.

Poll Shows Growing Economic Pessimism

Posted by Agiesta & Raum, Associated Press On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Agiesta & Raum, Associated Press
By Jennifer Agiesta and Tom Raum - May 11, 2012WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans are growing more pessimistic about the economy and handling it remains President Barack Obama's weak spot and biggest challenge in his bid for a second term, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll.And the gloomier outlook extends across party lines, including a steep decline in the share of Democrats who call the economy "good," down from 48 percent in February to just 31 percent now.Almost two-thirds of Americans — 65 percent — disapprove of Obama's handling of gas...

J.P. Morgan’s Losses Reveal Market Chaos

Posted by David Weidner, MarketWatch On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
David Weidner, MarketWatch

Gay Marriage a Moral & Political Win for Obama

Posted by Bob Shrum, The Week On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Bob Shrum, The Week
The Truth-o-Meter says: Mostly False | Charlie Bass says expiration of Bush tax cuts would be highest tax increase in history

U.S. Rep. Charles Bass sees a perfect financial storm looming. Meeting last month with The Telegraph editorial board, Bass, a New Hampshire Republican, ran through the list of upcoming votes that could divide Congress and American taxpayers over the coming months. "We now have a sequester of about $1 trillion hanging over our heads at the end of the year," Bass said in the April 3 meeting, referring to mandatory cuts that will take effect if Congress doesn't act. He added, "We have the payroll tax issue to address. We ...

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At the end of the 1980 campaign, Republican Jacob Javits of New York, a four-term Senator, came to my law school to deliver a foreign-policy speech to the students and faculty.

Javits was a moving force in New York politics and a powerful player in the Senate, but he was suffering the onset of Lou Gehrig's Disease. So in his campaign for a fifth term, he was challenged -- and defeated -- in the GOP primary by Town of Hempstead Supervisor Alfonse D'Amato.

Javits should have bowed out gracefully after the primary, but instead chose to fight on as a third-party candidate.

When he appeared in the lecture hall, he had to be helped to the podium. When he began to speak, you could see the ailment had impaired the great man's ability to speak and think. It was a sad and painful spectacle to watch.

Javits, the last great liberal Republican, captured only 11 percent of the vote in that election and his defeat marked the end of an era in which the Republican Party could win statewide in liberal New York.

I'm reminded of Javits by Indiana's six-term Sen. Dick Lugar, who just lost his primary challenge to Richard Mourdock, an event Tea Party activists say show the movement remains alive and well.

The truth is that Lugar, 80, should have announced his retirement this year, but made the same mistake as Javits in not bowing out in a dignified manner.

Politics is like gambling: you have to know when to walk away from the table, particularly if you want to go out a winner.

This is particularly true these days, when career politicians are perceived so poorly by frustrated voters. Some are starting their re-election bids as underdogs, so overwhelming is the anti-incumbent attitude in our national politics.

Lugar lost not because of a great outpouring of support for Mourdock and his intransigent Tea Party beliefs, but because he had lost touch with the Republican base in his state. Neither did it help that he had become old, arrogant and ran a poor campaign.

Too often, moderate incumbents like Lugar lose perspective of why they were elected, how to do their jobs and the plight of their constituents.

Others, like Maine Sen. Olympia Snowe, know when it's time to quit and retire.

Some, like Arizona's Sen. John McCain, recast themselves as super conservative to win re-election.

And those like Javits and Lugar, who feel entitled to die in their seats, suffer humiliating defeats.

Lugar's loss shows the electorate is looking for solutions to the country's ills. Come November, voters will be ousting more incumbents -- no matter their party -- who have contributed to the stalemate in Washington and don't know when it's time to quit.

The lesson of Lugar's defeat shouldn't be lost on only Republicans.

Incumbents who have lost touch will be term-limited by the electorate, the way the system is supposed to work.

Published on May 11, 2012 in Florida Voices.

Steven Kurlander blogs at Kurly's Kommentary, writes a weekly column for Fort Lauderdale's Sun-Sentinel and Florida Voices and is a South Florida communications strategist.

Why Jindal May Be Romney’s Ticket

Posted by Scott Conroy, RealClearPolitics On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Scott Conroy, RealClearPolitics
People have always told Bobby Jindal to slow down.The Louisiana governor has a tendency to speak faster than his audience is able to think, so when it came time to deliver the Republican response to President Obama's first address to a joint session of Congress in 2009, the most important speech of Jindal's political life, he made sure to take it slow.What resulted was an oratorical disaster.On live national television, Jindal spoke in a jarring, singsong pitch that replaced his natural rapid-fire monotone. Even longtime friends found it difficult to concentrate on what he was...

The Antietam of the Culture War

Posted by Pat Buchanan, Pitt Tribune-Review On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Pat Buchanan, Pitt Tribune-Review
It took Joe Biden's public embrace of same-sex marriage to smoke him out.But after Joe told David Gregory of "Meet the Press" he was "absolutely comfortable" with homosexuals marrying, Barack Obama could not maintain his credibility with the cultural elite if he stuck with the biblical view that God ordained marriage as solely between a man and woman. The biblical view had to go.Obama had to move, or look like a malingerer in secularism's next great moral advance into post-Christian America.Consider. Obama had an appearance coming up on "The View,"...

CEOs Rate California Dead Last for Business, Again

Posted by Orange Cty Register On May - 11 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

Global investors increasingly prefer President Barack Obama to Republican challenger Mitt Romney and most say they believe the incumbent will remain in the White House for another four years.

Will Obama Pay for Gay Marriage Stance?

Posted by Simendinger & McPike, RCP On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Simendinger & McPike, RCP
President Obama's personal embrace of same-sex marriage could cost him votes in key swing states in November, he conceded during an interview with ABC News on Wednesday.Political analysts said it is impossible to gauge in a vacuum whether the first-ever presidential endorsement of gay marriage will prove a net loss for Obama on Election Day, compared with the support his change of heart might mobilize, including among younger voters, who overwhelmingly back marriage equality, according to recent polling."There are obvious risks in this, but I dispute the conventional wisdom that...

Echoes of ’67: Israel Unites

Posted by Charles Krauthammer, Investor's Business Daily On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Charles Krauthammer, Investor's Business Daily
In May 1967, in brazen violation of previous truce agreements, Egypt ordered U.N. peacekeepers out of the Sinai, marched 120,000 troops to the Israeli border, blockaded Eilat (Israel's southern outlet to the world's oceans), abruptly signed a military pact with Jordan and, together with Syria, pledged war for the final destruction of Israel.May '67 was Israel's most fearful, desperate month. The country was surrounded and alone. Previous great-power guarantees proved worthless.

Can Romney Breach Dems’ "Blue Wall"?

Posted by Ron Brownstein, National Journal On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Ron Brownstein, National Journal
In the six presidential elections from 1968 to 1988, Democrats effectively competed for so few states that their own strategists lamented that the party needed to draw an “inside straight” to reach the 270 Electoral College votes required for victory. But since then, the parties have played very different hands.In that earlier period, Gerald Ford in 1976 was the sole Republican presidential nominee to win fewer than 301 Electoral College votes. Jimmy Carter, who beat Ford, was the only Democratic nominee during those years to win more than 191. 

Trolling for Dirt on the President’s List

Posted by Kim Strassel, Wall Street Journal On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Kim Strassel, Wall Street Journal
Here's what happens when the president of the United States publicly targets a private citizen for the crime of supporting his opponent.Frank VanderSloot is the CEO of Melaleuca Inc. The 63-year-old has run that wellness-products company for 26 years out of tiny Idaho Falls, Idaho. Last August, Mr. VanderSloot gave $1 million to Restore Our Future, the Super PAC that supports Mitt Romney.

LOS ANGELES -- President Barack Obama is telling major Hollywood donors that his decision to support same-sex marriage is a logical extension of where he believes America ought to be.

Obama also says that the issue illustrates the difference in visions for the country between himself and Republicans.

Obama addressed about 150 top-dollar supporters Thursday night at actor George Clooney's Tudor-style canyon home in the Studio City area of Los Angeles

The president's remarks about his gay marriage stance were brief and oblique, without ever mentioned the word marriage.

Obama began his remarks by simply saying: "Obviously, yesterday we made some news." That drew the most enthusiastic applause of the evening.

An anonymous former high-school classmate of Mitt Romney's told ABC News on Thursday that many fellow students have "really negative memories" of the Republican presidential candidate, and that his behavior during those years was "like
'Lord of the Flies.'"

The interview came on the heels of a Washington Post report that detailed Romney's behavior as a student at the Cranbrook School, a prestigious institution in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. In the article's most explosive revelation, multiple classmates of Romney's recall how he led a group of students that forcibly cut the hair of John Lauber, a student who was thought to be gay.

Romney countered the allegations quickly, making a surprise appearance on Fox host Brian Kilmeade's radio show Thursday morning.

"They talk about the fact that I played a lot of pranks in high school," he said. "And they describe some that you just say to yourself, back in high school I just did some dumb things, and if anybody was hurt by that or offended by it, obviously I apologize."

“I participated in a lot of hijinks and pranks during high school, and some might have gone too far, and for that, I apologize," he added.

Earlier in the interview, Romney said that during his high-school days -- the mid 1960s -- a student's sexual orientation "was the furthest thing from my mind."

Romney's advisers are hoping for backup on those words. http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/05/romney-friend-stu-white-says-campaign-wants-him-to-counter-prank-accusations/" target="_hplink">ABC News reports that his campaign has approached some of the candidate's Cranbrook friends to counter the sometimes harsh image put forth in the Washington Post article.

WASHINGTON -- Shortly before President Barack Obama voiced his support for gay marriage, Vice President Joe Biden apologized to the president for comments that led him to speed up his public pronouncement.

Biden and Obama spoke in the Oval Office on Wednesday, a person familiar with the exchange said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the private talk. Obama accepted his vice president's apology, saying he knew Biden was speaking from his heart when he declared in a television interview that he was "absolutely comfortable" with gay couples marrying.

Biden's comments pushed gay marriage to the forefront of the presidential race and focused a fresh spotlight on Obama's vague position on the matter. The president, who once opposed gay marriage, had been saying for more than a year that his personal views were "evolving."

The vice president spoke out on gay marriage without White House consent, leaving Obama aides deeply frustrated.

In an interview with ABC News, Obama said he wasn't angry at Biden, though he thought the vice president had gotten "a little bit over his skis" by voicing his support for gay marriage ahead of his boss.

"Would I have preferred to have done this in my own way, in my own terms, without I think, there being a lot of notice to everybody? Sure," Obama said. "But all's well that ends well."

By the time Biden's interview on NBC's "Meet The Press" aired on Sunday morning, a handful of close Obama aides knew that the president had already finished that evolution. He had decided to speak publicly about his personal support for gay marriage sometime before the Democratic convention in early September.

The White House and Obama's presidential campaign at first tried to play down Biden's remarks, insisting that the vice president had gone no further in support of equal rights for same-sex couples. But gay rights advocates latched onto Biden's remarks, declaring him the highest-ranking U.S. official to support gay marriage.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan, a longtime friend of the president, stirred the political pot further on Monday, declaring unequivocally that he also supported gay marriage.

By Tuesday morning, the president came to the conclusion that he couldn't stay silent on the issue any further. The White House hastily arranged a television interview with ABC News for Wednesday, during which Obama explained to the public that he had decided it was important for him to "affirm that same-sex couples should be able to get married."

Mortgage Settlement Monitor Wants To Hear Your Gripes

Posted by Ben Hallman On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

If your client has a complaint about the bank managing his or her home loan, Joseph Smith, the former North Carolina banking commissioner charged with enforcing the national mortgage settlement, would like to know about it.

On Thursday, Smith announced the launch of an online tool for attorneys and other advocates to report their clients' mortgage servicing complaints. (There is also a tool for homeowners to lodge a complaint directly.)

“This allows me, as monitor, to hear complaints and learn more about advocates’ impressions of how the settlement is working," he said. "Although I’ll extensively review reports and monitoring from the banks and my own team of auditors, it is still critical for me to receive information from the heart of each community this settlement serves.”

While filing a grievance may help the settlement's top enforcer keep an eye on the banks -- Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Ally Financial -- Smith does not have the power to investigate individual complaints or help homeowners. This speaks to the limitations of the mortgage settlement, which expires in three years and was never intended to give individual homeowners an opportunity to have their appeals for help directly heard.

Under the settlement, banks pledged to overhaul how they manage troubled loans. That includes eliminating "dual-tracking," the practice of banks pursuing foreclosure proceedings against homeowners who are at the same time seeking a trial loan modification. Financial institutions must also establish a single point of contact for troubled borrowers -- a response to widespread complaints from homeowners that when they called for help, they never could speak to the same person twice.

Homeowners' biggest complaint over the past few years is the lack of response from banks and the government to their claims about wrongful fees, misapplied payments and botched foreclosures.

In an interview late last year, one elderly borrower near Baltimore told of sleepless nights and a worsening of medical problems due to stress caused by dealing with his bank, which he claimed was foreclosing based on faulty loan calculations. No one at the institution or in the government would hear his pleas, this borrower said.

Another homeowner in distress recently emailed The Huffington Post, desperate to save her home. "CAN ANYONE HELP US?" this California homeowner wrote. "Or are we going to be like other seniors we have seen lose their home who now live in vans, or push grocery carts on the street with what they can save to live on, sleeping on the street?"

But while the mortgage settlement monitor can't help, the federal government has created two other avenues for borrowers to appeal for direct assistance.

The simplest is to lodge a complaint with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. That agency promises to forward a grievance to the financial institution, assign it a tracking number and keep borrowers updated on the status. What's not clear is how often the agency intervenes on a borrower's behalf.

For borrowers whose homes were in some stage of foreclosure during 2009 or 2010 there is the Independent Foreclosure Review. The program, agreed to by 14 loan servicers as part of consent decrees signed with regulators last year, is designed to give borrowers a chance to have a loan file reviewed by an impartial third party if the mortgage was involved in any stage of foreclosure from 2009 to 2010 -- and they believe that they suffered financial harm. (So far, just 3 percent of eligible borrowers have applied).

Smith will use the information gathered from these recorded complaints to investigate any notable trends, he said.

“Lawyers, caseworkers and other consumer advocates are the eyes and ears on the ground who will know first, and know intimately, what kind of difference these payments, adjustments and programs are making," Smith said. "That’s why we’ve created this dedicated tool -– to see what they’re seeing."

Gay Marriage: Why Obama Couldn’t Wait

Posted by Richard Socarides, New Yorker On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Richard Socarides, New Yorker
Even though the waiting was frustrating, President Barack Obama’s announcement today that he fully supports marriage equality for gay and lesbian Americans is historic. It will certainly go down in record books with events like Stonewall as an important milestone in the equal-rights movement. Having a President, especially this President, take a strong moral stand in favor of rights for gays will help the country complete its own evolution on the issue and lead to a day where, once again, our understanding of American freedom will have been expanded.

Dead Cat Bounce for Socialism

Posted by Brian Wesbury & Robert Stein, First Trust On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Brian Wesbury & Robert Stein, First Trust
The Social Welfare State is dying. Like the Berlin Wall and the Iron Curtain, the cradle-to-grave social welfare experiment must eventually collapse. A system of taxing work and profits, while subsidizing leisure, sloth, and retirement, must eventually fail.The end of the Social Welfare State is painful for many, and it will not end quickly or quietly as the elections of this past weekend prove. Francois Hollande, a Socialist, was elected president of France, while Greece saw a surge in votes for “anti-bailout” political parties in parliament.

Yes, I Pretty Much Think the Euro Is Doomed

Posted by Kevin Drum, Mother Jones On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Kevin Drum, Mother Jones
Could Europe cut Greece loose with only a moderate amount of pain and chaos? That's steadily becoming the mainstream view, but Ryan Avent begs to differ:

Lugar’s Loss a Threat to D.C. Establishment

Posted by John Kass, Chicago Tribune On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
John Kass, Chicago Tribune
A few weeks after the recent synod of the bishops of journalism — known to us taxpaying chumbolones as the White House Correspondents' Association dinner — the secular clergy pronounced sentence on Indiana Republican Richard Mourdock. Mourdock had the audacity to whomp the heck out of six-term U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar in Tuesday's Indiana Republican primary.

ObamaCare Taxing Jobs Out of Existence

Posted by George Will, Washington Post On May - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
George Will, Washington Post
Bill Hewlett and David Packard, tinkering in a California garage, began what became Hewlett-Packard. Steve Jobs and a friend built a computer in the California garage that became Apple’s birthplace. Bill Cook had no garage, so he launched Cook Medical in a spare bedroom in an apartment in this university town. Half a century ago, in flight from Chicago’s winters, he settled here and began making cardiovascular catheters and other medical instruments. One thing led to another, as things have a way of doing when the government stays out of the way, and although Cook died...
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