Tag Archives: Greg Sargent

In Two Hours Obama Destroys the GOP’s Benghazi and IRS Scandals

obama-irs

So, there you have it…

PoliticusUSA

Just as Republicans and their media lackeys were getting their Obama scandal machine fired up, President Obama killed both the Benghazi and IRS “scandals” in a couple of hours.

The president put a stake through the heart of the GOP’s attempts to revive Benghazi by releasing 100 pages of emails. (Now, the world can see how badly Jon Karl and ABC News got played when they used the summaries of someone else’s notes.) The Washington Post’s Greg Sargent published an email from Tommy Vietor, who until recently was the spokesperson for the National Security Council. Vietor wrote, “Regarding the talking points, it’s not surprising that the entire government would want the chance to look at and edit that language. This was a dynamic situation and new information was constantly flowing in, and different agencies had important concerns that had to be addressed – the State Department had security concerns, the FBI was worried about its investigation, and the CIA had a major, yet still undisclosed, role.”

Republicans are putting out vague statements about contradictions, but Benghazi is pretty much finished as a scandal. It is difficult to accuse the White House of a cover up, when they’ve released all the emails.

The second part of the one-two punch was Obama speaking about the IRS scandal.

Video:

Transcript

 

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House Republicans and extortion for the sake of extortion

Pitch perfect assessment…

The Washington Post – Post Partisan

Today’s news is about Republican leaders in the House scrambling around to find something that they can blackmail Barack Obama and the Democrats with, so that they can threaten to crash the economy with a government default unless they get it.

Kevin Drum and Brian Buetler interpret this as Republican irresponsibility on the budget. Greg Sargent points out that it’s even worse — Republican leaders in the House, including Speaker John Boehner, have already admitted that they aren’t willing to really force default, so they’re refusing to negotiate for now because they’re waiting until they can threaten to blow up the economy even though they admit they really won’t.

House Speaker John Boehner (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Well, maybe.

I say: It’s worse than that!

As I read this, it’s not really about Republicans demanding debt reduction and using the best leverage they have available to get it. Nor is it about Republicans demanding tax reform — their other possible demand — and using the best leverage they have to get it.

No, it’s the other way around. The House crazy caucus is demanding not debt reduction, not spending cuts, not budget balancing, but blackmail itself. That’s really the demand: The speaker and House Republican leaders absolutely must use the debt limit as extortion. What should they use it to get? Apparently, that’s pretty much up for grabs, as long as it seems really, really, big — which probably comes down to meaning that the Democrats really, really don’t like it.

In other words: I think Greg is correct, and the speaker has decided that he doesn’t actually want to blow past the debt limit. But now he has to find some way to do it without losing his job. And that means satisfying the significant chunk of his conference who demand maximum nuttiness at all times, either because they really believe in it or because they’re terrified to allow any space at all between themselves and those true believers.

It’s the extortion that’s the point. Not the policy.

 

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Filed under Benghazi, GOP Leadership, Republican Politics

Continuing The “President Obama Has Lost His ‘Juice’ With Congress” Meme… Rachel Nails It

Rachel Maddow’s take…

The Maddow Blog - The Green Lantern Theory

Clearly, the phenomenon needs a name. There are so many Beltway pundits blaming President Obama for Republican intransigence so often — for reasons that vary from strange to stupid — that there must be a label to describe this runaway meme.

Greg Sargent has been using a name that makes a lot of sense:  the Green Lantern Theory of Presidential Power.  (I’ve always been more or a Marvel guy than a D.C. guy, but never mind.) Even if you’ve never heard of Green Lantern, it’s easy enough to understand the concept: Beltway pundits seem to think the president has supernatural “leadership” powers that he can use to bend Congress to his will. Party, ideology, policy, elections, history, legislative procedures — none of this matters under the Green Lantern Theory of Presidential Power. The pundits believe Obama has this magical ability, and if Congress is failing to enact the White House’s agenda, it’s necessarily proof that the president is failing to use his mystical powers effectively.

As the argument goes, President Obama is the Man In Charge — of the executive branch, of Congress, of the legislative process, of all federal policymaking — and if he’s not getting his way, well, he’s the one wearing the supernatural ring, so it’s only fair to blame him.

Why does anyone in professional political commentary believe this child-like Green Lantern Theory? I honestly have no idea, but the number of pundits fully embracing the bizarre idea appears to be growing.

Peggy Noonan, today:

“[I]f you’re a leader you can lead right past it.”

Maureen Dowd, Wednesday:

“Actually, it is [Obama's] job to get [congressional Republicans] to behave. The job of the former community organizer and self-styled uniter is to somehow get this dunderheaded Congress, which is mind-bendingly awful, to do the stuff he wants them to do. It’s called leadership.”

Ron Fournier, Wednesday:

“Great presidents rise above circumstance…. Obama needs a coach to look him in the eyes and say, ‘Mr. President, I’m not excusing the other team. They suck. But you need to beat them, sir. That’s your job.’”

Dana Milbank, Tuesday:

“Obama is correct about the dysfunction, and the difficulty of passing even uncontroversial bills. But his stance was frustratingly passive, as if what happens in Congress is out of his hands. It’s the president’s job to lead, and to bang heads if necessary.”

This is really only a small sampling, and it only reflects the pundits who’ve been making the argument in print. Many more have been pushing the same Green Lantern Theory in broadcast media, too.

I don’t imagine I’ll persuade those who believe the Green Lantern Theory to change course, but I hope they’ll keep a few simple observations in mind.

1. Be specific. Media professionals who use their platforms to give the president advice — “lead right past it,” “bang heads,” “somehow get Congress to do stuff” — should be prepared to fill in the gaps. “Lead more” is not an example of serious, mature commentary on public affairs. “Here’s what the president should do to get his agenda implemented….” is more constructive. Those who believe there’s more Obama can do should actually say what more Obama can do.

2. Be mindful of history. Obama has tried schmoozing. He’s tried embracing Republican ideas. He’s tried bringing Republicans onto his cabinet. He’s tried pushing ideas that his base hates. He’s tried meeting Republicans more than half-way. Republicans don’t seem to give a damn and continue to refuse to compromise. With that in mind, constructive commentary won’t blame him for failing to try to get something done.

3. Recognize how different the status quo is. Those who believe there are two mainstream political parties that should be able to find some common ground on the major issues of the day are mistaken. Congressional Republicans are quantifiably radical, and the abandonment of congressional norms and procedures have reached a level unseen in American history. To argue, “Other presidents seem to have been more effective in working with rivals” is to overlook the fact that there is no modern American precedent for what’s become of the Republican Party.

4. Acknowledge the burden of proof. When Fournier was asked on MSNBC yesterday what the president should do to “lead” that he isn’t already doing, he said, “Let me turn that question back on you.” No. Wrong. The burden is on those who believe the Green Lantern Theory to justify its power, not those of us who believe in Civics 101 to prove them wrong.

5. Appreciate how happy you’re making Republicans. GOP policymakers are ignoring popular will, abusing the rules, undermining public institutions and the economy, and refusing to compromise, govern, or even act like responsible grown-ups. Pundits know this, and proceed to blame Obama anyway. They should probably pause one of these days to realize that they’re doing Republicans an enormous favor — what incentive do Republicans have to be responsible if they know the president they hate will be blamed by the political media establishment for their own intransigence?

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Republicans move the budget goal posts again

Official portrait of United States House Speak...

It looks to me that no matter how much President Obama acquiesces to GOP demands, he’s damned if he does and damned if he doesn’t (from both sides)…

The Week

President Obama’s months-delayed budget was finally released today, and it’s being sharply criticized from both sides.

Liberals suggest the president is a “sellout” for proposing cuts to Social Security and other entitlements by using a “Chained CPI” calculation, while Republicans are falling back on their familiar “tax-and-spend liberal” attacks.

John Avlon sees this political posturing as a good sign, noting that the budget “is not a positional bargaining document, designed simply to rally the base at the outset of negotiations.”

While it’s possible the White House is trying to triangulate its way to a “grand bargain” on the budget, what’s striking is that Obama has given Republicans exactly what they’ve asked for — and it’s still not good enough. Republicans remain unwilling to consider additional revenues as part of any package.

In the midst of the “fiscal cliff” negotiations last year, an aide to Speaker John Boehner told Bloomberg that the GOP leader wanted to include a Chained CPI calculation even more than he wanted other entitlement cuts, such as raising the Medicare eligibility age.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) explicitly told the Wall Street Journal that if Obama offered a Chained CPI calculation for entitlement benefits, Republicans would consider finding additional revenue.

Said McConnell: “Those are the kinds of things that would get Republicans interested in new revenue.”

To the annoyance of many liberals in his party, Obama included the Chained CPI in his budget.

But as Greg Sargent correctly points out, the GOP has moved the goal posts: “And so we have a moment of clarity in this debate once again: There is literally nothing that Obama can offer Republicans — not even things they themselves have asked for — that would induce them to agree to a compromise on new revenues.”

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Blog Roundup Wednesday 1-16-2013

This flu has nearly beaten me to a pulp.  It only makes sense to do a blog roundup so that I can work on getting rid of this flu as soon as possible…

Impeachmentum
Momentum for wingnut fantasy impeachment grows: Now on the bandwagon: Reagan confida..

‘Inside Obama’s Presidency’
Frontline goes inside the first term of the Obama presidency in tonight’s episode. A..

What’s Really Behind the Hagel Fight
Aaron David Miller points out that the bumpy nomination and confirmation process for..

NRA Is Simply a Disease on the Body Politic
It takes a lot for the NRA to shock. But this is just beyond disgusting. The NRA has..

New York State Enacts Tough New Gun Measures

Greg Sargent: Debt ceiling endgame comes into view
This is a great catch by Jed Lewison . On MSNBC this morning, Rep. Greg Walden — a ..

Sandy Hook conspiracy theorists need their guns taken away
Just in case you had some doubts as to whether the country was going to hell in a fu..

Nine Media Myths About Proposals To Strengthen Gun Laws
Media figures have smeared the Obama administration and promoted myths and falsehood..

House Passes $50 Billion in Sandy Aid Over GOP Opposition
Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen’s (R-NJ) amendment to complete the Hurricane Sandy recover..

Helpful hint: Shutting down government as political stunt is not compe..
I think at this point any political reporter who does not specifically point out tha..

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Tuesday Blog Roundup 10-2-202

Birtherism is the rocket fuel launching Trump into presidential orbit.  | Reuters photo

Extremely Good Advice!

10 Things to Know for Today

A History Of Dishonest Fox Charts

Video: Scott Brown: Romney who?

Obama Ahead With Strong Support from Women

A Public Service Reminder: Simpson-Bowles Is Terrible

Video: Fraud scandal ends GOP registration drive early

Is Romney The Weakest Candidate In Modern History?

Greg Sargent: Paul Ryan: Cut taxes first, balance budget later

Aging Supreme Court justices may open seats for next president

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Tuesday Blog Round Up 7-31-12

 

Cheers and Jeers: Tuesday

Conversion in the Holy Land

How for-profit schools get rich

Scalia open to regulating guns?

The Best TV Show You’ve Never Seen

Former Bachmann staffer sues campaign

Romney Takes ‘You Didn’t Build That’ Global

Romney praises Jews’ cultural ability to make money

Online Education Will Leave Many Students Behind

Greg Sargent: Why Romney keeps attacking things Obama didn’t say

 

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Monday Blog Round Up

Obama Leads in the Swing States

Divorce in America, by the Numbers

What the Court has wrought: the coming Medicaid wars

Obama signs bipartisan transportation, student loan bill

Wireless Firms Are Flooded By Requests To Aid Surveillance

Obama team targets Romney over taxes, Republicans cry foul

Greg Sargent: Even in bad economy, this election should be a choice

Mitt Romney needs to answer basic questions about his offshore millions..

Global Warming Denier George Will Blames Historic Heat Wave On ‘One Word: Summer’

Jan Brewer Asks Supreme Court To Overturn Ruling Allowing Benefits For Same-Sex Partners

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Saturday Blog Round Up

Hello everyone.  Until I get my strength back from this bout with the flu, I can only submit “Blog Round Ups”.   Hopefully, this flu will dissipate in the near future.

Sheila aka Kstreet607

President Obama calls Georgetown student Fluke
First Read: President Obama offered Sandra Fluke words of encouragement amid a contro..

“I Don’t Know What Else I Can Do.”
Federal judge who circulated racist email about President Obama sends President a letter…

Morning in America?
How does Reagan’s 1984 compare to Obama’s 2012? A bit better than you might think . 

Bill O’Reilly Attacks Sandra Fluke: Claims She Wants Government To Pay..
Bill O’Reilly has joined Rush Limbaugh’s sexist assault on 30-year-old law student S..

Harris Poll crowns Rush Limbaugh America’s ‘least favorite’ political ..
King Blowhard I Congratulations are in order: By a wide margin, a new Harris Poll ha..

Greg Sargent: Pelosi rips Limbaugh over `slut’ comment, calls on House..
Congressional Democrats who have vowed to make the birth control controversy central..

Oceans acidifying at fastest pace ever
How will the anti-science, anti-environment, climate change deniers spin this? 

The Party Of Limbaugh, Ctd
The WaPo editorial board is now demanding that the GOP repudiate Rush. Money quote: ..

Video: Rush Limbaugh doesn’t understand women’s birth control
Rachel Maddow pays close attention to Rush Limbaugh’s smears of Sandra Fluke and rea..

Reagan, Obama, Austerity
Big spending Reagan, austere Obama.

 

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Obama Takes the Gloves Off

Political Wire

In a fiery speech to the United Auto Workers, President Obama defended his decision to bail out the auto industry while ripping into Mitt Romney.

Greg Sargent: “But this speech was about more than the auto-bailout. It was Obama’s case for reelection. This speech constituted Obama’s most ambitious effort yet to weave his defense of the auto rescue into the larger contrast he will try to draw between his vision and the ‘you’re on your own’ ideology he will accuse Republicans of representing.”

Andrew Sullivan: “I worry it positions him a little too far to the left — even if he is addressing a union crowd. But it sure doesn’t make him look afraid or cautious or calculating, does it? It reminds us of the formidable orator any Republican is going to have to counter this fall, and the economic climate and real record that buttresses this president’s case. It’s why he’ll almost certainly win Michigan this fall — and maybe much more.”

Here’s an excerpt:

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