Tag Archives: Dick Durbin

Undeterred By Court Order, Iowa Official Tries Again To Push Through Voter Purge

Iowa Secretary of State Matt Schultz

Many have suggested that the Republican Party is headed toward obscurity and insignificance.

This story and all the efforts at voter suppression, the war on women and other nefarious measures to insure that conservative ideology is dominant national policy, will be the main reason for the demise of the GOP…

Think Progress

When Secretary of State Matt Schultz attempted to purge voters from the rolls in advance of the November 2012 election, a county judgetemporarily blocked the move, finding that the rules issued by Schultz created fear and uncertainty and could deter legitimate voters. But that risk of voter suppression hasn’t stopped Schultz from proposing a new slightly tweaked rule to remove registered voters in the name of alleged voter fraud.

The rule would allow Schultz’s office to challenge the legitimacy of registered voters who are listed as noncitizens in the Department of Transportation database. Citing a DOT list of some 3,000 registered voters labeled noncitizens, Schultz said, “I have to do something. I can’t just sit back and do nothing when we know people are taking advantage of the system.”

But Schultz’s testimony just last month before the Senate Judiciary Committee shows that he doesn’t know people are taking advantage of the system. When probed by Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) for evidence of voter fraud, Schultz cited just six arrests — not convictions – out of 1.6 million votes cast. And this was after a special agent was designated to specifically target voter fraud.

As for the list of 3,000 people, that claim was easily dismissed by the Mexican American Legal Defense Fund’s Nina Perales during the same hearing:

Secretary Schultz … said he had identified 3,500 noncitizens using the driver’s license rolls. He did not. He identified 3,500 people who were noncitizens at the time that they obtained their driver’s licenses. And we know that since that time and before they registered to vote, the overwhelming majority and perhaps all of them have become naturalized citizens. So at this point, anyone who undertakes to accuse people of non-citizenship based on driver’s licenses should be on notice that this is not correct and should not be done. It’s fundamentally unfair.

Attempts to prove voter fraud nationwide have fallen similarly short, with less than 20 instances of fraud charges offered in most states. Florida GOP officials have even publiclyadmitted voter suppression was the goal of that state’s aggressive and inaccurate purge.

The American Civil Liberties Union and other groups are also arguing that Schultz cannot implement a purge without going through the state legislature. The ruling that blocked Schultz’s last attempt said that, at the very least, Schultz should have gone through the proper rulemaking procedure that allows for public input instead of going forward on his own. Schultz is now going through that procedure, but the court could still hold this process insufficient.

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Social Security and its role in the nation’s debt

This information is vital when debating right-wingers who blame a large part of the deficit on Social Security…

The Washington Post Fact Checker

“Social Security has not added one penny to the deficit.”

— Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), Nov. 27, 2012

In 2011, we evaluated a similar statement about Social Security and gave it a relatively rare rating — “true but false” — which seemed to please no one. Yet as the “fiscal cliff” negotiations have heated up, Democrats have once again been using this talking point to shield Social Security from the chopping block.

Durbin, to his credit, in a speech to the Center for American Progress this week, acknowledged that Social Security’s long-term financing is an important issue that cannot be deferred. He advocates creating a commission that would separately address how to ensure 75 years of solvency to the program.  So we don’t mean to pick on Durbin since plenty of Democrats in recent days have made similar comments.

But we remain troubled by the reemergence of this talking point, especially given the further decline in Social Security’s finances in the past year. We do not think this line is a slamdunk falsehood, as some believe, but it is certainly worth revisiting.

 

The Facts

Social Security is a pay-as-you-go system, which means that payments collected today are immediately used to pay benefits. Until recently, more payments were collected than were needed for benefits. So Social Security loaned the money to the U.S. government, which used it for other things, which in effect masked the overall size of the federal budget deficit.  In exchange, Social Security received interest-bearing Treasury securities, which now total more than $2.7 trillion.As we have repeatedly explained, the bonds held by Social Security are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government. The bonds are a real asset to Social Security, but — here’s where it gets complicated — they also represent an obligation by the rest of the government. Like any entity that issues debt, such as a corporation, the government will have to make good on its obligations, generally by taking the money out of revenue, reducing expenses or issuing new debt.

So what is happening today? The Congressional Budget Office tracks the flow of money in and out of the Social Security fund, and below is a summary of the data for fiscal 2013. To keep things simple, we will include transfers made for the payroll tax holiday as part of “other income.”

Continue reading here…

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Lawmakers split on Murdoch scandal

Politico

Reacting to the arrest of media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s former deputy, Rebekah Brooks, in the ongoing scandal over potentially illegal activity by executives at the British tabloid, News of the World, two members of Congress disagreed on Sunday about whether they should pursue an investigation into the actions of Murdoch’s American papers.

Asked on NBC’s “Meet the Press” whether he would like to see congressional hearings to investigate whether there was any wrongdoing in Murdoch’s domestic news organizations, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.)  said, “Yes, I would.”

“What’s going on in England is startling to think of the extent that they went to to break the law to try to report a story,” Durbin said. “We need to follow through with the FBI investigation and also with Congressional investigation.”

But Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), appearing on the same program, said that Congress has more pressing tasks in front of it.

“We need to let law enforcement work here,” DeMint said. “Congress has got a big issue in front of us. We need to handle our own business for a change.

Related articles

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With Clock Ticking, Washington Debt Talks Move Past a “Grand Bargain”

The President met with leaders of both parties yesterday to continue talks about raising the debt limit.  John Boehner and Mitch McConnell nixed any idea of a ‘grand bargain’ which President Obama had pushed for…

Time Magazine

President Obama and congressional leaders met again on Sunday night for 75 minutes at the White House as they tried to hash out an agreement on a deficit reduction deal tied to the impending deadline to raise the federal debt limit. No deal was reached except to agree to meet again on Monday.

Obama and the Democrats in the room — House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin – continued to push for a grand bargain that would achieve some $4.5 trillion in savings. They also insisted that entitlement reforms — changes to Medicare and Social Security — remain on the table. “We came into this weekend with the prospect that we could achieve a grand bargain,” Pelosi said in a statement. “We are still hopeful for a large bipartisan agreement, which means more stability for our economy, more growth and jobs, and more deficit reduction over a longer period of time.”

House Speaker John Boehner, who had pushed for a bigger deal when negotiators convened last Thursday, reversed course on Saturday night, announcing he would seek a smaller package of just over $2 trillion in cuts. In Sunday’s meeting, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor did most of the talking for the GOP, insisting that all revenue increases in any deal be offset by tax cuts. Also present at Sunday’s gathering were Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl. “It’s baffling that the President and his party continue to insist on massive tax hikes in the middle of a jobs crisis while refusing to take significant action on spending reductions at a time of record deficits,” said Don Stewart, a McConnell spokesman. “Sen. McConnell believes we need to reduce Washington spending, reform and strengthen entitlement programs, and prevent the more than trillion dollars in tax hikes that Democrats want to add at a time of rising unemployment.”

Before the grand bargain broke down, Democrats had demanded that $1 trillion in revenue increases be coupled with $3.5 trillion in spending cuts. About $300 billion of that would have come from ending corporate tax breaks and another $700 billion would’ve come from letting some of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans expire. Boehner had argued the Bush tax cuts, along with other issues, should be left to a comprehensive tax reform package that could be taken up immediately following the deficit reduction deal. Obama had insisted that the Republicans should have to share in the sacrifice for a larger deficit reduction package. And, indeed, on Sunday night, Democrats argued that any package would have to include some concessions from Republicans.

Read more…

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Blog Round Up from Friends of The Fifth Column

I’ve been looking at some of the blogs on my blogroll lsit and from commenters to this blog.  There’s some really good stuff out there…

Birtherism Abounds As Taitz Commits Fraud To Help It Along - Crazy Internet People

Movin’ on down the road - Whatever Works

Seriously, there are no racists in the Tea Party - New Land Press

Trust Your T**t to Walgreens - WriteChic Press

Chat Spot - The Regulator

donald trump and humility - The Upside of Inertia

What has happened to Dick Durbin? He’s criticizing Bernie Sanders over Social Security - AMERICABlog

AZ Gov. Jan Brewer Vetoes The Birther’s ‘Show Us Your Penis’ Bill - Crooks & Liars

On Fevers and Bad Films Based On Dumb Ideological Books - Mario Piperni

Open letter to conservatives, 2011Russ’ Filtered News

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