Tag Archives: Nancy Pelosi

10 things you need to know today: January 5, 2013

Congress voted to $9.7 billion to cover insurance claims for homes like this one that were damaged or destroyed by Sandy.

The Week

An earthquake strikes Alaska, Congress finally passes a bill for Sandy aid, and more in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion

1. JOBS REPORT: STEADY GROWTH DESPITE FISCAL CLIFF
The Labor Department reported on Friday morning that the economy added a solid 155,000 jobs in December, and that the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 7.8 percent — tied for its lowest level in four years. The report is the latest evidence that the labor market — after years of periodic setbacks — is now on a steady, if slow, climb out of the deep hole caused by the Great Recession. In addition, the economy created 161,000 jobs in November, up from an initial projection of 146,000. [Washington Post]
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2. CONGRESS FINALLY PASSES SCALED-BACK SANDY BILL
The House on Friday voted 354-67 to pass legislation that would provide the National Flood Insurance Program with $9.7 billion to pay out flood claims stemming from Hurricane Sandy. The Senate passed the bill hours later, ending, for now at least, a drama that saw House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) publicly put through a wood-chipper by members of his own party for tabling a $60 billion version of the legislation passed by the Senate. Boehner’s decision to spike the larger bill came shortly after the House passed the fiscal-cliff deal that raised taxes on the wealthiest Americans — a bitter pill to swallow for many in his caucus. But the controversy won’t end with this latest bill passage — the House still has to consider an additional $50 billion in requested aid that was included in the original Senate bill. [The New York Times]
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3. POWERFUL QUAKE RATTLES ALASKA
A 7.5-magnitude earthquake struck Alaska around midnight Friday, centered roughly 60 miles west of Craig, Alaska. The temblor initially triggered a tsunami warning for much of the Alaskan and Canadian coast, but when it was judged that waves posed no threat, the alert was canceled. The earthquake was reportedly widely felt in Alaska, but there haven’t been reports of major damage. [CBS]

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4. BARNEY FRANK EYES JOHN KERRY’S SENATE SEAT
Despite his very recent retirement, former Democratic congressman from Massachusetts Barney Frank said Friday on MSNBC’s Morning Joe that he’s eager to throw his hat back into the ring, and is interested in the interim appointment to fill John Kerry’s Senate seat. Frank rationalized his change of heart by saying that he wants to be present for the next few months, when Congress will likely butt heads again over spending cuts that are to be implemented on March 1. “A month ago, a few weeks ago in fact I said I wasn’t interested,” Frank said. “But that deal now means that February, March, and April are going to be among the most important months in American financial economy.” [ABC News]
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5. ANONYMOUS-LEAKED VIDEO CALLS ATTENTION TO MOCKING OF RAPE VICTIM
The case of an alleged gang-rape of a teenage girl in Steubenville, Ohio, is getting national attention after self-proclaimed “hacktivist” group Anonymous released a video on Jan. 2 purportedly showing an apparently drunk Steubenville football player mercilessly mocking the victim. According to reports, on the night of Aug. 11, the 16-year-old victim passed out after getting drunk at an end-of-summer party. Two Steubenville High athletes, identified in court as Trent Mays and Ma’lik Richmond, are accused of sexually assaulting her repeatedly over the span of several hours. They are scheduled to appear before a judge in juvenile court on Feb. 13. Last month, The New York Times reported that the unconscious girl may have been dragged to multiple parties over the course of the night, and may have been urinated on. [The Week]
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6. FDA PROPOSES SWEEPING FOOD-SAFETY RULES
The Food and Drug Administration on Friday proposed sweeping food safety rules that it says would help reduce the estimated 3,000 deaths a year from foodborne illnesses. The FDA’s proposed rules would require farmers to take new precautions against contamination, including making sure workers’ hands are washed, irrigation water is clean, and that animals stay out of fields. Food manufacturers will have to submit food-safety plans to the government to show they are keeping their operations clean. In the past year, outbreaks of listeria in cheese and salmonella in peanut butter, mangoes, and cantaloupe have been linked to more than 400 illnesses and as many as seven deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control. [Associated Press]
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7. PELOSI DEFENDS DOCTORED PHOTO OF CONGRESSWOMEN
After her office posted a Photoshopped image to Flickr of the new class of Democratic Congresswomen in the 113th Congress, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi defended the edit as “an accurate historical record of who the Democratic women of Congress are.” The photo got attention after someone noticed that there were four additional women in the Pelosi Flickr photo than there were in the original Associated Press picture. “It also is an accurate record that it was freezing cold and our members had been waiting a long time for everyone to arrive and… had to get back into the building to greet constituents, family members, to get ready to go to the floor. It wasn’t like they had the rest of the day to stand there,” Pelosi said. [Associated Press]
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8. DRUNK AMERICAN EAGLE PILOT ARRESTED BEFORE TAKEOFF
An American Eagle pilot in Minnesota set to fly a commercial plane across the country was arrested before takeoff after he failed a blood-alcohol test. A spokesman said the authorities were notified after a witness who claimed to smell alcohol on the pilot’s breath tipped them off. The pilot, who was to fly American Eagle flight 4590 from Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport to LaGuardia Airport in New York City, was suspended pending investigation. [CNN]
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9. NAOMI CAMPBELL ATTACKED BY MUGGERS IN PARIS
The New York Post reports that supermodel Naomi Campbell was attacked in Paris by muggers on motorbikes in late November, and was injured in the process. Campbell, 42, was apparently trying to get into a car in Paris’ historic 4th Arrondissement when the assailants tried to grab her purse, but instead left her with a suspected torn ligament. She had been using a wheelchair and crutches to get around following the attack. [New York Post]
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10. WHITE HOUSE PETITION CALLS FOR JOE BIDEN REALITY SHOW
If Vice President Joe Biden doesn’t run for president in 2016, as some believe he might, he could have a future in reality television. In a new White House petition at the government’s We the People site, some 24,000 people have signed on to demand that Biden be featured in “a recurring C-SPAN television program” because he has exhibited “the ability to bring people together, whether at the negotiating table or at the neighborhood diner.” The petition comes after Biden’s humorous antics at the Senate swearing-in ceremony on Jan. 3 became an internet sensation. [The Hill]

 

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Week in one-liners: Biden, Boehner, Kyl

AP Photos

Politico

The top quotes in politics…

“Go f— yourself.” — House Speaker John Boehner to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

“For me, this is the lowest — one of the lowest points as a member of the United States Senate.” — Sen. Barbara Mikulski venting about fiscal cliff negotiations.

“It was kind of a B-flat.” — Sen. Jon Kyl describing the tone inside a GOP fiscal cliff meeting.

“I said, ‘This is Joe Biden and I’m your buddy.” — Vice President Joe Biden recounting a meeting with Senate Democrats.

(VIDEO: Joe Biden loves moms)

“At the end of the day, we got whooped.” — Rep. Steve LaTourette on the fiscal cliff deal.

“I would do almost anything Tina Fey asks me to do.” — House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi looking forward to her cameo on “30 Rock.”

“I am proud to say that Al Gore finds my principles reprehensible.” — Glenn Beck on being rejected as a bidder for Current TV.

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Allen West Finally Concedes!

Why was Allen West so myopic after the 2012 elections in Florida?

Why did he continue to contest the vote count in specific counties?  I’m not sure we’ll ever know the answer but I can sum it up with a few guesses:  Hubris, Sociopathy or just plain stupidity.

The Huffington Post

Video

Tea party firebrand Rep. Allen West conceded his re-election fight Tuesday, two weeks after the election gave way to court appearances, two partial recounts and unending accusations by his camp that the vote count wasn’t fair.

In a statement, the Republican freshman said “there are certainly still inaccuracies in the results” but not enough to change the outcome, giving the race to Democratic newcomer Patrick Murphy.

“While a contest of the election results might have changed the vote totals, we do not have evidence that the outcome would change,” West said.

Murphy campaign manager Anthony Kusich said he was not aware of any concession call to his candidate, simply an e-mail that was publicly distributed. In his own statement, Murphy said he was “humbled by Congressman West’s gracious concession” and eager to get to work on behalf of all voters.

“To those who supported my opponent, my door is open and I want to hear your voice,” Murphy said. “I campaigned on a message of reaching across the aisle to get things done for the people of the Treasure Coast and Palm Beaches, and that is as important in this district as it is in Washington.”

Murphy declared victory in the wee hours of Election Night and has held his lead ever since, even as thousands of absentee, provisional and overseas ballots were processed and two partial recounts undertaken. But West’s campaign kept up a stream of skepticism about the results, largely focused on St. Lucie County, where elections officials acknowledged missteps.

An initial recount of some early ballots in St. Lucie gave West a slight bump. His campaign fought for a fuller recount, and received it, but it only improved Murphy’s margin of victory. He won by more than 2,000 votes.

Many have speculated West could find a new career in the place where he has been frequently seen, on cable television, but he has not said what his next step will be. “Only God knows what is in store for each of us,” he said in his statement, adding that “I will continue to fight for our republic.”

Whatever the next step, the contest between Murphy and West will go down as one of the most expensive in congressional history. Murphy eked out the win though he was out-fundraised more than four-to-one.

West, 51, is a favorite among the most conservative reaches of the Republican Party. He has made a string of headline-grabbing statements, from calling a majority of congressional Democrats communists to saying President Barack Obama, Rep. Nancy Pelosi and others should “get the hell out of the United States.”

Murphy, 29, portrayed West as an extremist who had done little else in Washington than stoke partisan fires.

In his concession statement, West offered congratulations to Murphy, saying “I pray he will serve his constituents with honor and integrity, and put the interests of our nation before his own.”

 

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AP editor: There wasn’t enough time and space to debunk Bachmann lies

Michele Bachmann via Shutterstock

The woman has no idea what “truth” is.  This is yet another dichotomy of the Christian Right.

The Raw Story

An editor for the Associated Press said in a panel discussion on Wednesday that during coverage of the Republican primaries, fact-checkers for the organization would have to limit themselves to a “quota” of misstatements by Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) during debates.

According to the Washington Post, the AP’s Jim Drinkard confessed that the sheer volume of factually inaccurate assertions, dubious claims and stretchings of the truth threatened to “overload” the stories of the debates.

“We had to have a self-imposed Michele Bachmann quota in some of those debates,” Drinkard told the audience at the National Press Club on Wednesday. Otherwise, Bachmann would have become the story. Of all the Republican candidates who ran, said Drinkard, “Often she was just more prone to statements that just didn’t add up.”

Some more famous Bachmann flubs include her claim that the HPV vaccine has dangerous side effects, including mental retardation and her assertion that Jimmy Carter was responsible for the swine flu epidemic of the 1970s.

Bachmann also claimed that former Speaker of the House Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) was drinking $100,000 worth of liquor on her taxpayer-funded private jet, and that President Obama’s policies drove up grocery prices 29 percentbetween the 2010 and 2011 Memorial Day holiday weekends.

All of those statements were rated “False” or “Pants-on-Fire” by PolitiFact.

Related articles

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Politico’s Week in one liners: Romney, Reid, Pelosi

 

AP images

 

Politico

The top quotes in politics …

“Shove it.” — Romney aide Rick Gorka lashing out at reporters in Poland.

“I came to get a shwarma sandwich, what do you mean?” — GOP donor Sheldon Adelsonplaying coy about his trip to Israel.

“I’m a Kentucky Fried Chicken fan.”— House minority leader Nancy Pelosi deflectingquestions about Chick-fil-A.

“…we’ve got a president who’s all foam and no beer.” — Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlentyknocking Obama.

“It’s sort of a buzz kill.” — Rep. Pete King complaining about Obama’s ‘Forward.’ slogan.

“Ugh.”  Obama staffer Stephanie Cutter‘s one-word response to bad news about Solyndra.

“I am not basing this on some figment of my imagination.” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reidon remarks he made about Romney not paying taxes.

“Well, it’s time for Harry to put up or shut up.”  — Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney responding.

 

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Politico’s: Week in one-liners – Trump, Palin, Bloomberg

Donald Trump, Sarah Palin and Michael Bloomberg are shown.  | AP Photos

The top quotes in politics …

“Are you stupid?” — New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie calling out a reporter.

“First off, Nancy Pelosi is a dingbat.” — Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin going after the House minority leader.

“The fact is, I’m gay, always have been, always will be.” — CNN’s Anderson Cooper coming out.

“Justice Roberts wanted to be loved.” —  Donald Trump blasting the chief justice on his heath care ruling.

“We raised a crap ton of cash.” —  Republican consultant Wesley Donehue touting the GOP’s fundraising haul after the decision.

“I’d be kind of embarrassed if I were him to come over here.” — Sam Wurzelbacher, aka “Joe the Plumber,” dissing President Obama in Ohio.

“Told you it was Jay Carney because he has adorable glasses.” — A teenager identifying the White House press secretary on the road.

“Who wrote this sh-t?” — New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg mouthing off at a hot dog eating contest.

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Politico’s: Week in one-liners: Palin, Rahm, McCaskill

Sarah Palin, Rahm Emanuel and Claire McCaskill are shown. | AP Photos

Politico

The top quotes in politics …

“Obama lies; freedom dies.” — Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin tweeting about the Supreme Court’s health care decision.

“Sweetie, we won!” —  House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi breaking the news to her husband.

“It’s constitutional. Bitches.” —  Patrick Gaspard, executive director of the Democratic National Committee, rejoicing.

“Thank God for the country, he didn’t listen to me.” —  Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel  commending President Obama.

“He’s going to have to change the color of his ‘sox.’” — President Barack Obama joking about the White Sox’s acquisition of Kevin Youkilis

“They were saying ‘Yoooook and not booo’ for God’s sake.” — White House press secretaryJay Carney defending Obama.

“It’s just stupid.” —  Sen. Claire McCaskill on buzz about her skipping the Democratic National Convention.

“I never say never.” — Former White House hopeful Herman Cain not ruling out a 2016 presidential run.

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Politico’s: The week in one-liners: Rove, Pelosi, Reid

Karl Rove, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid are shown. | AP Photos

Politico

The top quotes in politics …

“In Washington, D.C., a gaffe is when you tell the truth.” — Vice President Joe Biden imparting some wisdom.

“That’s a clown question, bro.” — Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid quoting baseball player Bryce Harper.

“It’s pretty much a flat ‘no.’” — Former Sen. Rick Santorum on whether he’d serve in a Romney administration.

“I’d give him an A for strangeness.” — Former Florida GOP chairman Tom Slade evaluating  Florida Gov. Rick Scott.

“I think the people have gotten dumber.” — New York Rep. Gary Ackerman describing what’s changed since he arrived in Congress.

“I could have arrested Karl Rove on any given day.” — House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi on sparing George W. Bush’s former adviser.

“She sounds a little bit like Inspector Clouseau.” — Karl Rove  firing back at Pelosi.

“We prefer brothers, but some people call us boys, whatever.” — Josh Romney on how he and his brothers like to be identified.

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GOP Congressman Calls Pelosi ‘Mind-Numbingly Stupid’ And Suggests She May Be Mentally Ill

Pot, meet Kettle:

Apparently, a GOP congressman from South Carolina, Rep. Trey Gowdy wants to be another Alan West who he calls “my friend”.

West, in particular, says the most outrageous things and then calls the subject of his outrage “crazy”.

Mr. Gowdy appears to be a following in Mr. West’s footsteps…

Think Progress

Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC) yesterday called House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi “mind-numbingly stupid” and said that there is something medically wrong with her brain because she believes Republicans are unfairly targeting Attorney General Eric Holder.

On FOX News, Gowdy ranted about Pelosi’s suggestion that the witch hunt against Attorney General Eric Holder might have to do with his attempts to get rid of Republican’s voter suppression efforts:

But keep in mind, Greta, this is the same woman who said that she would have arrested Karl Rove any day she wanted. So I don’t know what was wrong with her yesterday or today or whenever she said that, but I would schedule an appointment with my doctor if she thinks that we are doing this to suppress votes this fall. That is mind-numbingly stupid.

Watch it:

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Politico’s: The week in one-liners: Paul, Pelosi, Biden

Politico

The top quotes in politics …

“Call me cynical, but I wasn’t sure his views on marriage could get any gayer.” — Sen. Rand Paul talking about President Obama.

“Keep it clean out there, for heaven’s sake.” — CNN host Ashleigh Banfield tearing into an Obama spokesman over a campaign ad.

“I got this.” — New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie joking around about the veepstakes.

“Half his teammates could be his kids.” — President Barack Obama poking fun at David Beckham.

“Just win, baby.” — House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi on her 2012 goal.

“Because she is not part of the good old boys’ permanent political class.” — Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin celebrating a primary upset.

“Mr. Speaker, I like it when you cry.”  — Former President Bill Clinton addressing John Boehner.

“How about some ice cream?”— Vice President Joe Biden springing for treats at an Ohio Dairy Queen.

“I wonder if people have been out drinking tonight.” — Texas Rep. Pete Sessions at a late-night meeting of the House Rules Committee.

“People went like, ‘Uh-oh.’’ — Jimmy Kimmel on reactions to jokes he didn’t tell at the White House Correspondants’ Dinner.

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