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Murdoch Tweets Support For Santorum

Posted by Benjamin Hart On January - 3 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

Rupert Murdoch made waves Monday evening when he tweeted his support of Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum, just a day before the Iowa caucuses.



It was the second time in two days Murdoch had sung Santorum's praises. On New Year's Day, he tweeted:



The latest remarks "didn't quite rise to the level of an official endorsement," The Hollywood Reporter noted. But they constitute a major vote of confidence for the ex-Pennsylvania senator, who is locked in a tight three-way race with Mitt Romney and Ron Paul in Iowa. Santorum's campaign had been marked by ineffectiveness until the past week, when he began to surge in the polls while other social-conservative favorites like Rick Perry and Michele Bachmann faded.

Murdoch and Santorum have a history: Santorum was a paid consultant on the Murdoch-owned Fox News until March when he declared his presidential intentions. As The New York Times's Brian Stelter reports, Santorum has sometimes been critical of Fox News since then.

Some commentators appeared bemused by Murdoch's opinions. The Nation's Chris Hayes tweeted:



But Stelter reported that, "When asked on Monday if Mr. Murdoch -- a computer neophyte -- is indeed on Twitter, his top spokeswoman, Teri Everett, said, 'Oh, yes.'"

Murdoch only joined Twitter on Saturday, but has already amassed over 78,000 followers while letting loose a string of unvarnished opinion. He has endorsed Wall Street Journal editorials and Fox-produced films like "The Descendants," and criticized the biography of Steve Jobs. Murdoch also stirred up a bit of his trademark controversy on his first day on Twitter, when he tweeted -- from St. Barts, no less -- that Brits may spend too much time on vacation. His wife, Wendi Deng, apparently asked him to delete the comment, which he did.


Daily Caller - After his 2006 midterm election loss in Pennsylvania, former Republican Sen. Rick Santorum took a job with the Fox News Channel as a contributor, appearing regularly on the network until he departed last year to run for president.

Going into the 2012 elections people on the progressive end of the political spectrum need to ask the simple question: How will the first post-Citizens United presidential election affect the outcomes for those desperately seeking social change? The most likely result, unfortunately, is that after the mountains of anonymous campaign money come crashing down in a deafening avalanche of sophisticated negative ads aimed at Democratic politicians, Republicans are probably going to come out on top. Our current collection of post-"Hope and Change," tepid, apologetic Democrats at the national level that President Barack Obama has come to personify could get throttled just like they did in 2010.

The reality is that in 2010 the Democrats suffered what President Obama conceded was a "shellacking." Republicans swept the table winning 63 House seats and wiping out in a single election what took the Democrats two arduous election cycles to build. Republicans also made huge gains in governorships and state legislatures, including key states (some of them "swing states") like Ohio, Wisconsin, Florida, Michigan, and Virginia. The first midterm election in the post-Citizens United universe was a Republican rout. Going into 2012 I fear that the smug predictions I've been hearing throughout the corporate media of an inevitable Obama reelection are premature. Surveying the landscape I would not be a bit surprised if the Democrats lost the Senate as well as the presidency this November. The Republican strategy in Washington of making sure that the economy stays in the tank through November is working.

Take a recent example: The political talking heads on the cable news shows and on the editorial pages of what's left of the major newspapers almost unanimously portrayed Obama's recent deal with the Republicans to extend the payroll tax cut for two months as a "victory" for the president and his party. But it was nothing of the sort. As was the case every time Obama "negotiates" with the GOP Congress he dumped his key demand even before the "negotiations" began: the 3.8 percent surtax on millionaires and billionaires to pay for the payroll tax extension. When Senate "minority" leader Mitch McConnell is high-fiving after a deal is cut (and 89 Senators voted for it) what just transpired was no "victory" for Obama and the Democrats.

So things will lumber along in 2012, the economy will remain mired in deep recession, Washington will show again and again its complete dysfunction, and the electorate will grow angrier and angrier. And right-wing SuperPAC money will dominate the airwaves with one simple message: the recession is Obama's fault.

In the land that Gore Vidal called "the United States of Amnesia" one can already sense the 2008 banking meltdown and the misrule of George W. Bush and the Republican Congress (2003-2007) receding into the distance, vanishing into oblivion, going down the memory hole (insert cliché here). In 2012 nobody is going to be talking about the previous administration or the underlying causes of the great Wall Street heist of 2008.

And Obama has no one to blame but himself. The political costs of deciding not to prosecute or investigate any of the perps of the mortgage Ponzi scheme and denying the public even a handful of high-profile cases where we could convince ourselves that a little justice was served, never materialized. Instead, the Obama administration gave the banking executive hucksters a Get-Out-Of-Jail-Free card and his political party is going to suffer the backlash for coddling these white-collar criminals. That failure was a key motivating force for the Occupy Wall Street movement and it is not going to go away.

The backlash will be twofold: 1) A lack of enthusiasm of the Democratic base (just like 2010); and 2) The political energies that might have been put into organizing for Democratic candidates will be focused on other causes and organizations, like OWS. Why would anybody get "fired up" by working to send back to Washington a crew of failed politicians just so they can continue to fail for four more years?

Over the course of his first term President Obama has shown that he will not do the heavy lifting required to build a sustainable and coherent challenge to the dominating narratives that the Republicans have thrown at him. He buckles and capitulates and MSNBC can call these "victories" but that's not what millions of people who voted for Obama in 2008 believe. He was not elected to cut deals with corporate miscreants and tell us that what he really meant by the "fierce urgency of now" was that the country needed a string of U.S. presidents to move toward tiny, incremental "change" that we may or may not see in our lifetimes due to the power of the lobbies and complexity of "our" problems.

Obama's words today, no matter how stirring or eloquent or right on, are just another small part of the cacophony of bullshit we hear from our venal, mediocre politicians every minute of every day (especially in an election year). Few people on the progressive side believe a word that comes out of his mouth anymore because they stopped listening to him about 1,500 betrayals ago.

The Occupy Wall Street movement, as inspiring as it was, unfortunately, could follow the path of the Iraq peace movement that also organized enormous demonstrations during the lead up to the Iraq war only to be brushed aside and rendered irrelevant when it came to actually having an effect on reversing disastrous policies. George W. Bush taught us that mass protest isn't what it used to be -- he compared 15 million people marching worldwide against the Iraq war in mid-February 2003 to a "focus group." Maybe he was right. Maybe in our post-modern, fragmented and compartmentalized social unreality the will of the people matters about as much as one of Frank Luntz's dial-a-view sessions.

Which brings me, after my many depressing points above (for which I apologize), to the subject of this little blog: the powerful right-wing political obstacles that must be sidelined if progressive change can have any chance of success, whether Obama is at the helm or any number of the string of future presidents he now tells us we'll probably need.

1). Grover Norquist

This un-elected, cynical, elitist political animal -- with his denunciations of everything associated with the word "public" -- has carved out a niche for himself in the nation's political discourse that far surpasses any "Czar" we've heard Fox News howl about. Politicians across the country kiss Norquist's ring in the form of signing a "pledge" and taking an "oath" that no matter what crisis the U.S. might enter, they will never turn to increasing taxes on the rich to help deal with it. Unless this guy's power is curtailed there won't be any chance for using public policy to mitigate the effects of the yawning inequality in American society.

2). Frank Luntz

This advertising technician has proved that George Orwell was correct in his prediction that political language would be manipulated by the most powerful elements of society to entrench their power. Like Norquist, Luntz has become a power among the organized Right because his amoral, unethical, manipulative, dishonest, and downright greasy wordsmithing for the 1 percent works wonders and has already polluted our public discourse. With no real watchdog in the press exposing his lies and misinformation Luntz has been free to employ his techniques with great effect for his right-wing clients. Unless his lies, and the motives behind them, are widely and continuously exposed, progressives will have difficulty framing our major political debates.

3). Roger Ailes

This cunning right-wing apparatchik consciously controls the nuances and subtleties of the "news" narratives that Fox pumps up. Ailes's life work has already irreparably damaged the rationality of our political discourse by infusing it with lies and hyperbole in a format that ingeniously mimics a legitimate "news" broadcast. All of the superficial trappings of "journalism" are present on Fox without any of the substance. As long as Democratic presidents feel it necessary to have a sit-down interview with Bill O'Reilly (a McCarthyite blowhard who has been caught in countless lies and misinformation) there's little hope that progressive issues are going to get a fair shake in the mainstream media (of which Fox is now central due to its dominance in the ratings).

4). The Koch Brothers

These 19th Century-style Robber Barons have been so successful in buying politicians to act as servants for their vast oil and gas holdings -- even when one of their governors is exposed (as with the prank phone call to Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin) -- they still keep chugging along in their apparently long-term project of turning over the United States of America lock, stock and barrel to an aggressive right-wing corporate oligarchy. Citizens United has expanded the Kochs' power and others like them to proportions that would be unimaginable as recently as the last presidential election. The millions of dollars they routinely pump into every pet right-wing cause, and who knows how much in anonymous SuperPAC money, just further destroys the election system in the world's oldest "functioning" democracy. Progressives either have to match the Kochs' spending dollar-for-dollar (good luck) or somehow get their damaging effects to American democracy exposed in a vigilant press (don't count on it).

5). Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell

This Machiavellian power monger who has abused the filibuster and imposed minority rule on this country more successfully than any Senator in U.S. history has a 100 percent winning streak in every battle he has enjoined with Obama. McConnell knows whose side he is on and he loved the Citizens United decision so much he attended the Supreme Court's announcement of the ruling. What Obama needs more than anything in 2012 is one -- just one -- confrontation with McConnell where the Kentucky Senator is the clear loser and everybody in the country sees it that way. The recent vote in the Senate on the payroll tax cut extension where McConnell was seen high-fiving with Wyoming Senator John Barrasso does not bode well for the battles to come in 2012.

All these personalities can continue their work in freedom and live in the lap of luxury; they just cannot be allowed to influence the direction of the nation. They cannot be "compromised" with or brought into a "big tent," or be "reached out to" in a spirit of "bipartisan comity" -- they must be fought and pushed aside.

When Herman Cain boasted that he was the Koch Brothers' "brother from another mother" we were shown pretty clearly that this is not your mother and father's Republican Party. They've succeeded in pulling the "center" of American politics far to the right and Obama's tepid compromises are only facilitating this rightward trajectory. We'll have to wait and see where the limit (if any) to this 30-year rightward lurch lies. But as the Tea Party onslaught in 2010 showed us there really is no conceivable limit to how far they can pull the center to the right, unless and until there is a forceful push back from the "opposition." Why did 200,000 people come out to hear Obama's inaugural address? Because they wanted him to reverse the Bush policies, not continue them and in some cases expand them. Therein lies the biggest disappointment.

The 2011 Festival of Sleaze

Posted by Dave Barry, Miami Herald On January - 1 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS
Dave Barry, Miami Herald
Weather | Traffic It was the kind of year that made a person look back fondly on the Gulf oil spill.Granted, the oil spill was bad. But it did not result in a high-decibel, weeks-long national conversation about a bulge in a congressman’s underpants. Which is exactly what we had in the Festival of Sleaze that was 2011. Remember? There were days when you could not escape The Bulge. At dinnertime, parents of young children had to be constantly ready to hurl themselves in front of their TV screens, for fear that it would suddenly appear on the news in high definition. For a...

Gingrich Kills Chapter on Climate in Book

Posted by Sarah Huisenga, Nat'l Journal On December - 31 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
Sarah Huisenga, Nat'l Journal
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Newt Gingrich says he has killed a chapter on climate change in a post-election book of essays about the environment. But the intended author of the chapter, who supports the scientific consensus that humans contribute to climate change, says that's news to her.

SIOUX CENTER, Iowa -- Ron Paul says he might not support his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination.

In an interview Friday with Bloomberg News, the Texas congressman said the other GOP contenders represent the "status quo" and do not differ much from Democrats.

Paul says he would have trouble backing any of them and wants to wait and see if they adopt any of his priorities, such as auditing the Federal Reserve.

Paul and Mitt Romney are leading most polls ahead of Iowa's kickoff caucuses. Paul has attracted support from a coalition of tea party supporters, students and independents.

Paul says Romney's business background makes him more suited for the presidency than Newt Gingrich. The former House speaker has said he couldn't vote for Paul if he became the Republican nominee.

Don’t Settle for Moderate Romney

Posted by Rick Santorum, KTSA On December - 30 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
Rick Santorum, KTSA
The Latest Politics, News & Election VideosTweet${title}Rick Santorum discusses the Iowa GOP race with Steve Malzberg on KTSA Radio in San Antonio. He says that New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who campaigned with Mitt Romney in Iowa on Friday, is "not a conservative Republican.""That's the kind of folks that Mitt Romney's attracting, and that's why he's bringing him out here. He's trying to get the establishment Republicans. I'm perfectly happy he's continuing to go after the establishment Republicans. We're going to go after where...

Media Grill GOP Candidates, Give Obama a Pass

Posted by Richard Benedetto, RCP On December - 30 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
Richard Benedetto, RCP
Over the past five months, the Republican presidential candidates participated in 13 debates where they fielded dozens of penetrating questions on every major issue facing the nation, and some not so major.The nationally televised and/or Internet-streamed forums each drew an average of 5 million to 6 million viewers, along with breathless wall-to-wall coverage, commentary and criticism from the news media, radio and TV talk shows, Internet blogs and partisan websites.Indeed, the GOP hopefuls have been thoroughly queried on a laundry list of issues ranging from immigration problems to the...

Gingrich Launch ‘Pets with Newt’ Website

Posted by Joanna Zelman On December - 29 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

From Mother Nature Network's Russell McLendon:

As the 2012 Republican primaries approach, White House hopeful Newt Gingrich is scrambling to stay atop the heap of contenders. But the former House speaker has vowed to avoid negative ads, and many of his recent policy ideas — such as sending federal agents to arrest "activist" judges — have drawn bipartisan criticism. So he's trying a new strategy, hoping voters will relate to another of his pet issues: pets.

Gingrich is already known for his love of zoos; he claims to have visited 95 in the U.S., and as a child he dreamed of becoming "either a zoo director or a vertebrate paleontologist." He abandoned that dream long ago to pursue politics, but he hasn't lost his soft spot for animals. And now he hopes the two interests can make for a winning combination with primary voters.

Gingrich has created a new website called "Pets With Newt," which aims to highlight his "lighter side" as a presidential candidate, he tells ABC News. The site remains empty as of Tuesday afternoon — aside from a large "Pets With Newt" logo and pawprint — but Gingrich says it will launch soon. (Update, 12/28: Pets With Newt is now live. The site lets users submit photos of their pets, provides links to Gingrich's campaign website and lists his favorite zoos.)

"As speaker I made it possible for people in public housing to keep their pets," he says, referring to his tenure as House majority leader from 1995 to 1999. "I love pets, so we're going to have an entire project."

Gingrich doesn't own any pets, but says he'd like to have a dog in the White House — assuming he and his wife, Callista, can agree on a size. Callista likes small dogs, he tells ABC News, while he prefers bigger ones. "When I was a child I had a cocker spaniel and Doberman pinscher and German shepherd," he says. "But we have not yet had a family conference on this topic."

On top of promoting its candidate's love for animals, the Gingrich campaign is also making a music-education video starring Callista, who is classically trained as a singer and a French horn player. Both projects are part of a broader effort to portray a light-hearted side of the couple, ABC News reports, and to make them seem above the fray. "Politics doesn't have to be mean and nasty and disgusting," according to Gingrich. "You can actually have fun as citizens working together."

The initiatives could also be an attempt to bolster Gingrich's family-values cred among conservative voters, especially since some of his rivals have increasingly alluded to his two divorces and past marital infidelity. Mitt Romney, for example, released a campaign ad earlier this month touting the "steadiness and constancy" of his 42-year marriage, although it didn't specifically compare Romney to other candidates.

Gingrich has recently acknowledged his past behavior was "not appropriate," telling the Christian Broadcasting Network earlier this year that his infidelity was "partially driven by how passionately I felt about this country, that I worked far too hard." And while he's likely still working hard as the Iowa caucuses loom, his campaign seems to be highlighting his domestic life as a way to popularize the new Newt Gingrich. By focusing on wholesome passions like his love of dogs, for instance, maybe he can persuade Republican voters that his own days in the doghouse are behind him.

Santorum Attacks Bachmann For ‘Speed Dating’

Posted by The Huffington Post On December - 29 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) attacked his GOP presidential rival, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), over her last-minute bus tour of Iowa's 99 counties.

"I respect the fact that she's trying to get around, but we did a courtship, we didn't speed date," he said Wednesday at a campaign stop in Dubuque, Iowa according to Yahoo! News. "We went out and talked to folks and had coffee with folks and sat with them and answered their questions. We spent, what, an hour and 20 minutes here. You know, we didn't sort of run in and say, 'Hi, I'm great, vote for me.' I don't think that's what Iowans are looking for."

Santorum has made far more campaign stops in Iowa than any other candidate -- 249 to Bachmann's 190, according to the Washington Post. A CNN/Time poll released Wednesday showed Santorum's campaigning paying off, with him placing third in Iowa with 16 percent behind Mitt Romney and Ron Paul at 25 and 22 percent, respectively.

Bachmann started a bus tour of Iowa's 99 counties on Dec. 16. Tuesday she had 10 scheduled events. She was running late by mid-evening by nearly an hour, forcing crowds to listen to surrogates while she made shorter-than-expected appearances, according to the Des Moines Register.

Bachmann lost her Iowa campaign chairman, Kent Sorenson, Wednesday, who said that she is not a "top tier" candidate. He is now supporting Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas.)

New Year’s Resolutions for Obama, Bachmann, Perry and More (ContributorNetwork)

Posted by Yahoo! News: Politics News On December - 29 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
ContributorNetwork - Yahoo! News asked readers and contributors to write New Year's resolutions for some U.S. politicians. Below are one reader's recommendations.
Daily Caller - Ron Paul’s likely strong showing in next week’s Iowa caucus is causing him to take fire from all sides. The latest: Former adviser to Bill Clinton, Fox News Channel’s Dick Morris.

Winning Our Future: "Newt balanced the federal budget."

Posted by Politifact.com Truth-O-Meter rulings from National On December - 28 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
The Truth-o-Meter says: Half-True | Ad credits Newt Gingrich with balancing the budget

A TV ad airing in Iowa in the final week before the caucuses calls Newt Gingrich a "principled conservative" who has "fought for us." Here’s how: "Newt balanced the federal budget, reformed welfare, cut taxes and created 11 million new jobs," a man’s voice says as photos of Gingrich flash on the screen. The ad was produced the week of Dec. 26, 2011, by a group called Winning Our Future, a "super PAC" that can raise money for elections but isn’t formally affiliated with any candidate. Winning Our Future is clearly pro-Gingrich, ...

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ContributorNetwork - Yahoo! News asked readers and contributors to write New Year's resolutions for some U.S. politicians. Below are one reader's recommendations.

Is A Projected Budget Surplus Worth Statewide Cuts?

Posted by The Huffington Post On December - 28 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

There isn't a final number on Michigan's budget surplus for the 2011 fiscal year yet, but legislators are already debating how (or whether) to spend the leftover money.

Michigan's fiscal year ended Sept. 30, and the state budget office revealed a possible surplus. Estimates ranged from $1.2 billion, as reported by the Gongwer News Service, to more than $800 million, as reported by the Associated Press.

More than $200 million in appropriated funds weren't spent in 2011, according to Gongwer News Service. Some of that money came from one-time lapses in department budgets that don't necessarily reflect longterm budget gains.

Gov. Rick Snyder and other Michigan Republicans are saying it's too soon to start spending the extra money, according to the Associated Press.

Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Roger Kahn (R-Saginaw Township) told Gongwer News Service that most of the surplus funds are already committed for next year.

Others think the state should use extra funds to support schools, especially after drastic cuts to both k-12 and higher education earlier this year.

Just days after the estimated surplus was released, the state Board of Education passed a resolution recommending Michigan spend any significant portion of a surplus on education.

Snyder's controversial $46-billion budget plan for 2012 uses School Aid funds to balance the General Fund, resulting in $300-per-student funding losses. K-12 public schools got a 2.2 percent cut, with 15 and 4 percent cuts for universities and community colleges, respectively.

2012's education cuts follow a $100-per-student reduction this year.

Michigan's 2011 fiscal year started in October 2010 with a $277 million surplus.

The 2011 surplus funds might not get earmarked until early next year, when Snyder presents his budget for 2013 in February. The exact amount of this year's surplus won't be available until the state officially closes the books on 2011 at the end of March.

Barack Obama: "Fifty percent of Speaker Gingrich’s tax plan goes to the top 1 percent."

Posted by Politifact.com Truth-O-Meter rulings from National On December - 28 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
The Truth-o-Meter says: Mostly True | Obama campaign says half of the benefit from Newt Gingrich's tax plan goes to top 1 percent

President Barack Obama’s campaign managers spoke the language of the Occupy Wall Street movement last week when they took aim at the tax plan introduced by Republican candidate Newt Gingrich. "Speaker Gingrich supports the Republican budget plan that would … provide more tax breaks to millionaires, billionaires and large corporations and make the middle class foot the bill," Obama spokesman Ben LaBolt said Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2011, in a conference call with New Hampshire reporters. "Fifty percent of Speaker Gingrich’s tax plan goes to the top 1 percent," LaBolt said. (We're following our ...

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As he tried to overcome a wave of negative ads, Gingrich was forced to answer questions about two potentially damaging news stories on Tuesday — one about his previous support for Gov. Mitt Romney's health care plan and another about his first divorce.

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President Obama’s Slip

Posted by Pete Du Pont, Wall Street Journal On December - 28 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
Pete Du Pont, Wall Street Journal
The Iowa Republican presidential candidate debate was very well done. Fox News people had good questions, Republican presidential candidates had good answers, and there was very little of the candidate nastiness that we had seen in earlier debates. The most successful candidates seemed to be Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney. Rick Santorum was nearly as good, and Rick Perry did better than he had been in the past.

Good News For Obama

Posted by Luke Johnson On December - 27 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

(Reuters) - President Barack Obama's job approval rating climbed steadily this month as he fought Republicans to extend the payroll tax cut and is now above his disapproval rating for the first time since July, a Gallup report showed on Tuesday.

The rating for Obama, who is running for re-election in November, climbed to 47 percent versus a 45 percent measure of disapproval, according to Gallup's three-day rolling average of polls, taken between December 21 and December 23. This was up from approval of 41 percent and disapproval of 51 percent early in the month.

On December 23, the Democratic president signed a two-month payroll tax cut extension after forcing Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives to back his demands or see taxes rise on January 1.

The gain in the Gallup poll echoed other surveys showing his approval ratings on the mend, as public opinion sided with Obama during the bitter dispute to extend a tax cut to around 160 million Americans, worth some $40 per bi-weekly paycheck.

Obama's gain in approval ratings marks the first time since July 7-9 that the number has exceeded his disapproval rating.

U.S. economic data has also been somewhat more positive in recent weeks, and a Gallup poll of economic confidence on Tuesday showed an improvement in otherwise gloomy sentiment, to a reading of minus 38 in December from minus 45 in November.

Household confidence has been hammered since a severe recession that ended in 2009 and unemployment remains at 8.6 percent, which is beneath a 10.1 percent peak but still very high by historic U.S. standards.

The White House aggressively highlighted what $40 would buy a middle class family feeling the pinch in a tough economy, showcasing Obama's key re-election message which claims that he backs ordinary Americans while Republicans favor the rich.

House Republicans caved after their own party in the Senate, and constituents back home, lobbied them to compromise with Obama on an issue seen as a clear vote-loser in the upcoming November general election.

House Republicans wanted the tax break to be extended for all of 2012, and had initially refused to approve a 60-day extension agreed by Democrats and Republicans in the Senate.

Republicans and Democrats disagree over how to pay for the extension of the tax break and resume negotiations in January.

Democrats favor funding the more than $100 billion price tag of the extension, which also applies to longterm unemployment aid, by raising taxes on people who make more than $1 million a year. Republicans prefer to pay for it by cutting spending.

(Reporting By Alister Bull; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

The Case for a Conservative

Posted by Jeffrey Lord, The American Spectator On December - 27 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
Jeffrey Lord, The American Spectator
Did you hear the news about National Review? Somebody dug deep into the archives and came up with a couple of the old classics from the days when William F. Buckley Jr. was sailing at the front of the conservative movement.Who could forget that great 1964 cover story: Earth to Barry, illustrated by an astronaut-suited, helmeted and visored would-be GOP presidential nominee Barry Goldwater, bug-eyed behind the trademark black-framed glasses, floating above the earth tethered to an Arizona cactus way down below. With the cover banner reading "The Editors: Against...

Restore Our Future: Says Newt Gingrich "supports amnesty for illegal immigrants."

Posted by Politifact.com Truth-O-Meter rulings from National On December - 27 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
The Truth-o-Meter says: Half-True | Pro-Romney super PAC says New Gingrich supports amnesty for illegal immigrants

A pro-Mitt Romney "super PAC" is flexing its muscles in the race for the Republican presidential nomination, telling conservative voters not to fall for President Barack Obama’s plan to diminish Romney. The group, called Restore our Future, is running television ads in Iowa and Florida. "Barack Obama’s plan is working: Destroy Mitt Romney, run against Newt Gingrich," the ad says. "Newt has a ton of baggage. He was fined $300,000 for ethics violations and took $1.6 million from Freddie Mac, before it helped cause the economic meltdown. Newt supports amnesty for illegal immigrants, and teamed ...

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Restore Our Future: "As speaker, Gingrich even supported taxpayer funding of some abortions."

Posted by Politifact.com Truth-O-Meter rulings from National On December - 27 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
The Truth-o-Meter says: Half-True | Ad claims Newt Gingrich favored federal funding for some abortions

A pro-Mitt Romney super PAC is keeping up its attacks on Newt Gingrich with just before the Iowa caucuses. An ad posted to YouTube on Dec. 20, 2011, asks, "Know what makes Barack Obama happy? Newt Gingrich’s baggage." Suitcases adorned with Gingrich campaign stickers slide down an airport baggage carousel as a female voice launches into a list of attacks on the former House speaker’s record. Here, we’re checking this one: "As speaker, Gingrich even supported taxpayer funding of some abortions." What we found is a case of ...

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ContributorNetwork - Yahoo! News asked readers and contributors to write New Year's resolutions for some U.S. politicians. Below are one reader's recommendations.

For 2012, TSA expands to train stations, ferry docks, subways (Daily Caller)

Posted by Yahoo! News: Politics News On December - 26 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS
Daily Caller - The Transportation Security Administration had quite a year of free publicity in 2011, including headline-grabbing news of agents groping grandmas, fondling supermodels, joking about passengers’ “junk” while virtually disrobing them and pilfering possessions from luggage.
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