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  • State of the Union set for Jan. 25

    As most thought, the State of the Union will take place Jan. 25th.

    House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) invited the president to address Congress on that date, Boehner's office confirms to First Read.'

    *** UPDATE 2 *** A White House aide tells First Read that the president has accepted and that is when it will take place.

    *** UPDATE *** NBC's Kelly O'Donnell has more with the full letter:

    January 11, 2011

    The Honorable Barack Obama
    The President of the United States
    The White House
    Washington, D.C. 20500

    Dear Mr. President:

    A new Congress provides us a renewed opportunity to find common ground and address the priorities of the American people. Our actions must be driven by their desire for freedom, economic recovery, and fiscal sensibility, as well as a need to rebuild the broken bonds of trust between the people and their government.

    Recent events have reminded us of the imperfect nature of our representative democracy, but also how much we cherish the ideal that our government exists to serve the people. Even in the wake of tragedy, we must never waiver from our obligation to carry out their will and provide solutions to keep moving our nation forward.

    As many great challenges lie ahead for our nation, we welcome an opportunity to hear your proposals. Therefore, I am honored to invite you to offer an address on the State of the Union on January 25, 2011, before a Joint Session of Congress.

    Thank you for your consideration, and I look forward to your response.

    Sincerely,
    JOHN A. BOEHNER
    Speaker of the House

    Show more
  • Oil commission members meet at WH; call for more regulatory funding


    Speaking with reporters after a White House meeting, two oil commission members stressed the need to increase funding for regulating offshore oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and establish higher safety standards to prevent another disastrous oil spill like the one that crippled the region last spring.

    Former Florida Gov. and Sen. Bob Graham, as well as William Reilly, who was the Environmental Protection Agency administrator under the first President Bush, said they had spent "an hour or so" meeting with President Obama, Department of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, environmental adviser Carol Browner and science adviser John Holdren, answering their questions, providing suggestions and discussing the way forward after releasing the recommendations of six months of work on the oil commission earlier today.

    Jane Lubchenco, administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and Council on Environmental Quality Director Nancy Sutley also participated in the meeting, according to the White House.

    Reilly said the oil industry was "highly resourced" and "highly capable" and that the problems revealed by the BP catastrophe in the Gulf were "fixable," with the help of increased funding.

    "There has been a long period, through many administrations, of an under-resourced regulatory agency," he said. "It did not have the capability, the competence, the technical training, nor frankly the compensation sufficient to be a match for the people whom it was inspecting and evaluating and enforcing laws on. That needs to change. Congress needs to appropriate more resources for that department."

    The Minerals Management Service, the agency that regulates drilling, has undergone a restructuring in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon disaster that took 11 lives and wreaked havoc on the region's fishing and tourist industries. It is now called the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement.

    In calling on the drilling industry to establish a safety institute to upgrade their safety performance -- just as other high-risk industries like the nuclear and chemical industries did after disasters at Three Mile Island and Bhopal, India -- Graham noted that the BP spill was not inevitable.

    "The fundamental finding of our commission is that this was an avoidable, a preventable disaster," he said. "There are steps that can be taken to move America to a substantially higher level of safety in offshore drilling in the Gulf."

    Graham said many of the commission's suggestions could be implemented by executive action and said Obama had indicated that he would give close attention to the commission's list and would direct his administration to take those executive actions, where appropriate.

    The White House did not confirm the content of the discussion. Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said the president thanked the members of the commission for the important work they have done and noted that the response to the oil spill was still ongoing as officials try to mitigate its effects and examine the impact to the Gulf ecosystem. He said the mistakes and oversights by the industry and government must not be repeated and added that the administration had already taken steps to reform the oil and gas industry.

    "These efforts -- a priority for the administration -- have included an overhaul of the bureau that oversees the industry within the Department of Interior and the implementation of new safety and environmental standards," Gibbs' statement read in part. "And while we have already taken significant action, the Commission's recommendations will help inform the work that remains to be done."

  • Daniels on 2012 run: Don't 'hold your breath'

    Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels (R) says he's testing the waters for 2012, but he's clearly not convinced yet it would be the right move.

    He has expressed misgivings about exposing his family to the scrutiny of a White House bid. He has already drawn the ire of some social conservatives for calling for a "truce" on social issues. Daniels, a "pro-life conservative," explains that it's about prioritization.

    And today, there was this in the Northwest Indiana Times, based on an interview with a Chicago radio station:

    "Addressing speculation he may be seeking a run at the White House himself, Daniels said, 'I wouldn't hold your breath for that.'

    "'We're thinking about it,' he said. 'A lot of people have asked me to think about it, so we will.'"

    Daniels is slated to address the Conservative Political Action Conference Feb. 10 here, but at least one conservative group is vexed by CPAC's decision to invite him to speak.

    The American Principles Project -- which protested CPAC's invitation of conservative-leaning gay-rights group GOProud -- wrote the following about Daniels:

    “Unfortunately, while Governor Daniels is slated to speak at CPAC’s ‘Reagan Dinner,’ he has failed to understand how Ronald Reagan fused the three critical legs of the conservative movement into one coherent governing philosophy. Discarding one makes the whole obsolete.

    “Governor Daniels’ selection is an affront to the millions of conservatives who believe that social issues such as abortion and traditional marriage are non-negotiable.

    “The Beltway wisdom among Republican insiders boils down to a simple mantra: Social issues are a thing of the past. But this theory falls apart outside of the Washington bubble. The Republican sweep in the House was dominated by pro-life, pro-family candidates, and polling shows large majorities want to see action on these issues."

    This all creates a difficult landscape for Daniels to navigate. It may be that his best path to the nomination is for the former Bush budget director to make it about the numbers, about the economy, and how to reduce fiscal deficits and debt. He's comfortable talking on that ground, and it distinguishes him from much of the rest of the 2012 GOP field.

    But making fiscal issues the top issue in GOP primaries in states like Iowa and South Carolina, where social issues usually dominate, could prove very difficult if he decides to run, especially, if unemployment trends continue downward, and if President Obama takes up the fiscal mantle in 2011 and 2012, working with Republicans to try and implement his fiscal commission's recommendations.

  • House unveils resolution honoring Giffords, others

    From NBC's Luke Russert and Shawna Thomas
    The text of the resolution honoring Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D) and others who were killed or injured in Tucson, AZ on Saturday has been released. The resolution also honors those who acted bravely to subdue the gunman.

    GOP aides say the resolution was constructed in a bipartisan manner with special input from Giffords' office. The expectation is that Speaker John Boehner will bring the resolution to the floor on Wednesday soon after the House is gaveled into session at 10:00 am ET. The resolution condemns the "horrific attack" and honors a democracy "in which intimidation and threats of violence cannot silence the voices of any American."

    Here's the full text of the resolution:

    Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives with respect to the tragic shooting in Tucson, Arizona, on January 8, 2011.

    Whereas on January 8, 2011, an armed gunman opened fire at a ''Congress on your Corner'' event hosted by Representative Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Arizona, killing 6 and wounding at least 14 others;

    Whereas Christina Taylor Green, Dorothy Morris, John Roll, Phyllis Schneck, Dorwan Stoddard, and Gabriel Zimmerman
    lost their lives in this attack;

    Whereas Christina Taylor Green, the 9-year-old daughter of John and Roxanna Green, was born on September 11,
    2001, and was a third grader with an avid interest in government who was recently elected to the student council
    at Mesa Verde Elementary School;

    Whereas Dorothy Morris, who was 76 years old, attended the January 8 event with George, her husband of over 50
    years with whom she had 2 daughters, and who was also critically injured as he tried to shield her from the shooting;

    Whereas John Roll, a Pennsylvania native who was 63 years old, began his professional career as a bailiff in 1972,
    was appointed to the Federal bench in 1991, and became chief judge for the District of Arizona in 2006, and was
    a devoted husband to his wife Maureen, father to his 3 sons, and grandfather to his 5 grandchildren;

    Whereas Phyllis Schneck, a proud mother of 3, grandmother of 7, and great-grandmother from New Jersey, was
    spending the winter in Arizona, and was a 79-year-old church volunteer and New York Giants fan;

    Whereas Dorwan Stoddard, a 76-year-old retired construction worker and volunteer at the Mountain Avenue Church of
    Christ, is credited with shielding his wife Mavy, a longtime friend whom he married while they were in their 60s, who was also injured in the shooting;

    Whereas Gabriel Matthew Zimmerman, who was 30 years old and engaged to be married, served as Director of Community
    Outreach to Representative Gabrielle Giffords, and was a social worker before serving with Representative
    Giffords;

    Whereas Representative Gabrielle Giffords was a target of this attack, and remains in critical condition at an Arizona hospital;

    Whereas 13 others were also wounded in the shooting, including Ron Barber and Pamela Simon, both staffers to Representative Giffords; and

    Whereas several of those in attendance at this event, including Patricia Maisch, Roger Sulzgeber, Joseph Zimudie,
    and Daniel Hernandez, Jr., helped apprehend the gunman and assist the injured, thereby risking their lives for
    the safety of others, and should be commended for their bravery: Now, therefore, be it

    Resolved, That the House of Representatives-
    (1) condemns in the strongest possible terms the horrific attack which occurred at the ''Congress on your Corner'' event hosted by Representative Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Arizona, on January 8, 2011;

    (2) offers its heartfelt condolences to the families, friends, and loved ones of those who were killed in that attack;

    (3) expresses its hope for the rapid and complete recovery of those wounded in the shooting;

    (4) honors the memory of Christina Taylor Green, Dorothy Morris, John Roll, Phyllis Schneck,Dorwan Stoddard, and Gabriel Zimmerman;

    (5) applauds the bravery and quick thinking exhibited by those individuals who prevented the gunman from potentially taking more lives and helped to save those who had been wounded;

    (6) recognizes the service of the first responders who raced to the scene and the health care professionals who tended to the victims once they reached the hospital, whose service and skill saved lives;

    (7) reaffirms the bedrock principle of American democracy and representative government, which is memorialized in the First Amendment of the Constitution and which Representative Gabrielle Giffords herself read in the Hall of the House of Representatives on January 6, 2011, of ''the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances'';

    (8) stands firm in its belief in a democracy in which all can participate and in which intimidation and threats of violence cannot silence the voices of any American;

    (9) honors the service and leadership of Representative Gabrielle Giffords, a distinguished member of this House, as she courageously fights to recover; and

    (10) when adjourning today, shall do so out of respect to the victims of this attack.

  • Gunman fired 31 times in Ariz. shooting


    Investigators say 31 shell casings were recovered from the scene of Saturday's shooting. That means, they say, that Jared Loughner fired 31 times. They say he had a 30-round magazine on his Glock-19, plus one round in the chamber, for a total of 31 rounds on the weapon. Of the 31 rounds, 20 struck those present -- killing six and wounding 14.

    It's not entirely clear whether Loughner was able to put the second magazine into the Glock to continue shooting. An examination of the second magazine shows that its spring was defective, so it would not have functioned properly. But witnesses have said they grabbed the magazine as he tried to load it.

  • Closed for Business: Members, aides undeterred


    When we left the Capitol on Friday of last week, we were prepping for the coverage of the bickering that was going to ensue on the House floor this week. The GOP had decided on seven hours of debate on the "Repeal the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act" starting today and ending with a vote to repeal the bill tomorrow.

    It was going to be, as one Democratic congresswoman repeated multiple times, "political theater." And journalists were already stocking up on popcorn and Dr. Pepper to watch the fireworks take place.

    Things are different now. The schedule has been cleared, and the only business that will take place on the House floor this week are resolutions and tributes to Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ), her staff member that was tragically gunned down, Gabe Zimmerman, other members of her staff that were injured and the citizens who were also caught in the crossfire.

    Yesterday, members and staff went to the East Front of the Capitol for a moment of silence. As they stood there with the flag at half staff in the background, the Chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, Emanuel Cleaver (D- MO), had everyone bow their heads, as he began to pray. "We ask blessings on the spirit of this nation,” he said. “Help us move from this dark place to a place of sunshine, hope. … Bless these, God, your servants who serve this nation. Keep them safe."

    Walking back to their offices staffers were hugging, but they seemed undeterred.

    "I've been on Capitol Hill for a few years, and I'm aware that there is a target on my office building," said Danielle Rodman, an aide to Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) when asked about security concerns. She added, "This isn't going to make us stop connecting to the people and talking to them, because that's the reason we're here."

    Her colleague Coby Dolan echoed that. "We need to always take precautions,” Dolan said, “but not in a way that prevents a vibrant Democracy from happening."

    With the rising talk of whether violent rhetoric during the last election fed into this tragedy, members and staffers were cautious about jumping to conclusions.

    "We know ourselves and ... average Americans should be able to say what they believe in,” Democratic Rep. Allyson Schwartz (PA) said after the moment of silence. “That's what makes this country great. Again, is there a difference between that and a real demonization of government as the enemy. I think that there is. So where do we draw that line. Again, we live in a free society and free speech matters a great deal to each of us, and I don't want it to dampen that."

    And while free speech is important, U.S. Senate Sergeant-at-Arms Terry Gainer said all Capitol Hill offices have to do a better job of securing events and speeches.

    "I think interactions that the members have are so routine and some are so quick and so small, that I think that they don’t think through that security portion,” he said, adding, “If you don't report a threat, shame on you, because that's the only way we can measure trends and have a proper response."

    He continued, "We don’t mind you calling us. Call us when you get a threat, call us when the hairs on your neck go up."

    But a day after two members -- Reps. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) and Heath Shuler (D-NC) -- said they were going to start carrying guns to their events, Gainer spoke out against that.

    "I don't think that's a good idea," he said on ABC. "I think we should leave the law enforcement and security to those professionals. … I've been a policeman for 42 years, and I don't think introducing more guns to the situation is helpful.”

    It is expected that, next week, the repeal of health care will make its way to the floor to be hotly debated. But that debate -- at least for now -- may be tempered.

  • N.Y. Republican wants to outlaw guns near officials, judges


    New York Rep. Peter King, chairman of House Homeland Security Committee, will introduce a bill to ban carrying a gun within 1,000 feet of a member of Congress and federal judges. The measure will also apply to carrying weapons near the president or vice president.

    King announced the measure at a press conference today with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who heads a gun control group, Mayors Against Illegal Guns and who is backing the bill. King's move may indicate there may be gaining momentum for some sort of gun-control measures in the wake of the Tucson shooting.

    King's spokesman was unable to immediately say whether the congressman, who has been generally supportive of gun control measures, would back a separate bill being pushed by New York Democrat Rep. Carolyn McCarthy and New Jersey Democrat Sen. Frank Lautenberg to ban the kind of high capacity magazines that alleged Tucson shooter, Jared Lee Loughner, used during Saturday's attack.

    Here is part of King's statement:

    “Congressman Peter King today also announced that he will introduce legislation that will make it illegal to knowingly carry a gun within 1,000 feet of the President, Vice President, Members of Congress or judges of the Federal Judiciary. In the United States, it is illegal to bring a gun within 1,000 feet of a school. Passing a similar law for government officials would give federal, state, and local law enforcement a better chance to intercept would-be shooters before they pull the trigger.”

    King is a moderate Republican from a state with some of the toughest gun laws in the nation. He has often worked with Bloomberg on gun issues. It remains to be seen whether any of his fellow Republicans would sign on to such a bill. Remember, the new GOP-led House is composed of many members that have strong pro-gun ratings from the National Rifle Association.

  • Oil commission calls for agency, stricter regulations, increased liability

    Updated 12:04 pm ET.


    Here are the key recommendations from the president's oil spill commission:

    - Congress and the Administration should create an independent safety agency to oversee all aspects of offshore drilling safety (including both operational and occupational safety).

    - U.S. offshore drilling regulations and enforcement practices should be the most advanced in the world. These new regulations should be, at a minimum, at least as stringent as those regulations in peer oil-producing nations (such as Norway and the United Kingdom).

    - Broader consultations among federal agencies, including the Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), prior to leasing and exploration will help identify and address risks.

    - Industry should be required to demonstrate how their processes and procedures will better manage risk to achieve safer outcomes. After exploration has begun, industry should be required to constantly update its risk management plans to reflect actual experience..

    - Drilling operators should be financially responsible for the consequences of failure. The current $75 million cap on liability for offshore facility accidents is totally inadequate and places the economic risk on the backs of the victims and the taxpayers. The cap should be raised significantly to place the burden of catastrophic failure on those who will gain the economic rewards, and to compensate innocent victims.

    - The oil and gas industry must adopt a culture of safety.

    - The oil and gas industry should establish a "Safety Institute."

    - Spill response planning by both government and industry must improve.

    - The government must develop in-house expertise to effectively oversee well-containment operations and to accurately estimate flow rates following a blowout. Industry must be required to develop well-containment technologies that are rapidly deployable and must demonstrate their effectiveness in deepwater.

    - The penalties paid by BP and other parties responsible for the oil spill should be primarily devoted to Gulf restoration. The Gulf will continue to be under stress as energy development continues. Congress should dedicate 80 percent of any Clean Water Act civil and criminal penalties to long-term restoration of the Gulf of Mexico in partnership with the states.

    *** UPDATE *** NBC's Kelly O'Donnell updates with this statement from Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid:

    "I commend the bipartisan panel for its work. Its findings and recommendations are largely in line with a Democratic plan to ensure that taxpayers are never again on the hook for the damages caused by BP or any other oil company's catastrophic missteps. Unfortunately that proposal was blocked last year by Senate Republicans.

    "The White House, Congress and even the oil industry must work together to pass bipartisan legislation that will prevent and contain a similar environmental disaster and support continued efforts to restore the environment and economy of the Gulf Coast. We must make whole the fishermen, business owners and families whose lives and livelihoods have been altered.

    "Congress must take action this year to prevent another catastrophic spill through smart regulation, and by giving regulators the tools and resources they need to do their jobs effectively. We need to ensure safe and responsible use of our very limited offshore oil reserves. But we must also quickly develop our homegrown clean energy resources, such as the solar, wind and geothermal power available in Nevada and around the country, in an environmentally sensible way. This will create jobs and lessen our dangerous reliance on oil."

  • Kerry derides 'divisive, overly simplistic dialogue'

    We noted in First Thoughts that Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) would address the shooting in Tucson during a speech at the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning think tank.

    Kerry said he thought about postponing the speech, but "the truth is," he said, "talking about the business of our country is more urgent than ever." He added, "[S]erious times call for serious discussions." And he said he "felt that not only should this speech not be postponed, but that, in fact, it was imperative to give it."

    Kerry continued according to remarks sent out by his Senate office, "Many observers have already reduced this tragedy to simple questions of whether overheated rhetoric is to blame, or one partisan group or another. And surely today many pundits and politicians are measuring their words a little more carefully and thinking a little more about what they’re saying. But in the weeks and months ahead, the real issue we need to confront isn’t just what role divisive political rhetoric may have played on Saturday -- but it’s the violen[t], divisive, overly simplistic dialogue does to our democracy every day.

    "In the wake of this weekend’s tragedy, Speaker Boehner was right to suspend the House’s usual business; the question now is whether we’re all going to suspend and then end business as usual in the United States Capitol. Because even before this event shook us out of our partisan routine, it should have been clear that on bedrock questions of civility and consensus -- discourse and democracy -- the whole endeavor of building a politics of national purpose -- the big question wasn’t whose rhetoric was right or wrong, but whether our political conversation was worthy of the confidence and trust of the American people.

    "Millions of Americans know we can do better than we’ve done these last bitter years – because our history has proven it time and again."

    He continued, noting the collapse of cooperation and the increased partisanship on issues ranging from health care and the START treaty with Russia to energy.

    He concluded, "[I]n this time of crisis and mourning, in this time of challenge and opportunity, we need to commit to reaching across the aisle, as colleagues did before us, to unite to do the exceptional things that will keep America exceptional for generations to come."

    Below is the full text of his remarks:

    The full text of his speech, as prepared, is below:

    Someone might ask why, with our country in mourning, we are here this morning continuing to talk about the business of the country. But the truth is that is what Gabrielle Giffords was doing – talking about the business of the country. And the truth is, talking about the business of our country is more urgent than ever.

    John and I considered postponing this speech, which had been planned for some time. But serious times call for serious discussions. And after some reflection, both of us felt that not only should this speech not be postponed, but that, in fact, it was imperative to give it.

    So obviously, as we gather here this morning, last weekend’s unspeakable tragedy is at the forefront of all of our minds. Our thoughts are with Congresswoman Giffords and the families of all the victims. We pray for her full recovery, even as a nation mourns the loss of innocent life in such a senseless act.

    All of us struggle to understand this horrific event. There is much we still don’t know about what happened and why. But here’s what we do know without any question: on Saturday, a public servant went to meet with her constituents in the best tradition of our democracy, and while out, just doing her job, Congresswoman Giffords was shot down. Today she's fighting for her life, and six people lost their lives in this senseless assault not just on them, but, in its calculated planning for assassination, an assault on our democracy itself.

    Eerily, I heard this weekend’s news while in Sudan, representing our country in our collective effort to help a people who have endured unspeakable violence and who are trying to make a fresh start through their democracy. Yet as I stood beside those Africans who have lost loved ones in pursuit of the democratic values we Americans so proudly export to the world, there was an unavoidable clash with the events unfolding in Tucson – a dramatic underscoring of the work that must be done to revitalize our own democracy here at home.

    Many observers have already reduced this tragedy to simple questions of whether overheated rhetoric is to blame, or one partisan group or another. And surely today many pundits and politicians are measuring their words a little more carefully and thinking a little more about what they’re saying. But in the weeks and months ahead, the real issue we need to confront isn’t just what role divisive political rhetoric may have played on Saturday – but it’s the violence divisive, overly simplistic dialogue does to our democracy every day.

    In the wake of this weekend’s tragedy, Speaker Boehner was right to suspend the House’s usual business; the question now is whether we’re all going to suspend and then end business as usual in the United States Capitol. Because even before this event shook us out of our partisan routine, it should have been clear that on bedrock questions of civility and consensus– discourse and democracy – the whole endeavor of building a politics of national purpose – the big question wasn’t whose rhetoric was right or wrong, but whether our political conversation was worthy of the confidence and trust of the American people.

    Millions of Americans know we can do better than we’ve done these last bitter years – because our history has proven it time and again.

    When the Soviets sent the first satellite in history into orbit half a century ago, leaders from both parties rose with a sense of common purpose and resolved that never again would the United States fall behind anyone, anywhere. President Kennedy summoned our nation to reach the great and audacious goal "before (the) decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth."

    There were no partisan divisions that blocked the way. With daring and unflagging determination we moved immediately to unprecedented levels of investment in science and technology, engineering and R&D – and only twelve years after Sputnik, two Americans humbly took mankind's first steps on the moon.

    Back then – just as today - our leaders, Democrat and Republican, had deep disagreements on many issues, but back then, they shared an even deeper commitment to stand together for the strength and success of our country. For them, at that turning point, politics stopped not just at the ocean’s edge, but at the edge of the atmosphere. For them, American Exceptionalism wasn’t just a slogan; they knew that America is exceptional not because we say we are, but because we do exceptional things.

    As I first said last month, we as a people face another Sputnik moment today. And the great question is whether we will meet this moment as Americans did so boldly five decades ago. The decisions we make – or fail to make – in this decade on new energy sources, on education, infrastructure, technology, and research , all of which are going to produce the jobs of the future, and our decisions on deficits and entitlements will without doubt determine whether the United States will continue to lead the world – or be left to follow in the wake of others, on the way to decline, less prosperous in our own land and less secure in the world.

    Some will question how in the world this could be possible – America less prosperous? America on the decline? They forget that exceptionalism for America has never been an automatic fact – a birthright on autopilot – but an inheritance of opportunity to be renewed and revitalized by each generation.

    So, let me share some facts with you. Right now, other developed and developing countries are making far-reaching choices to reshape their economies and move forward in a new and very different global era. But instead of us responding as Americans have in the past, the frustrating reality is that our American political system is increasingly paralyzed and Balkanized into a patchwork of narrow interests that have driven the larger “national good” far from the national dialogue altogether. Increasingly, overheated ideology and partisan infighting leave us less able to address or even comprehend the decisive nature and scale of the challenges that will decide our whole future.

    The fact is – our strength at home determines our strength in the world. And other countries are constantly taking our measure, sizing us up, watching our politics, measuring our gridlock.

    On issue after issue, enduring consensus has been frayed or shredded by lust for power cloaked in partisan games. Health care’s individual mandate? Guess what -- it started as a Republican idea-- a pro-business idea-- because rising insurance costs leave big holes in profits. Cap and trade? Guess again -- another Republican idea based on market principles and, with bipartisanship, successfully implemented by President George Herbert Walker Bush, now denounced as ideological heresy. And energy independence? For forty years, every President since Richard Nixon has recognized that foreign oil imports are America’s Achilles heel. But whenever we’ve had a chance to act, we’ve been blocked by entrenched influence and the siren call of short-term interest instead of achieving long-term success.

    Even as we were clawing our way to the ratification of START Treaty last month, I noted that far more ambitious treaties had previously been ratified by votes of 90 or 95 to zero. I joked that in this Senate, in this hyper-partisan Washington, 67 might be the new 95. I’m proud that in the end we sent a signal to the world that in American foreign policy, however uphill the slog and improbable the victory, partisan politics can still stop at the water’s edge. But the fact remains that it was closer than it ever should have been.

    All of this underscores the current danger to our country in ways that go far beyond that single debate and highlight a host of other issues that demand and deserve common resolve, not constant suspicion and division. If treaties ratified almost unanimously yesterday get just 71 votes today, what’s the forecast for other decisive endeavors that once would have commanded 79 votes in the Senate? We can’t afford for the old 79 to become the new 49, dooming our national will to unbreakable gridlock. Because in the 21st century where choices and consequences come at us so much faster than ever before, the price of Senate inaction isn’t just that we will stand still; it isn't just that America will fall behind; it's that we will stay behind as we cede the best possibilities of this young century to others who are more disciplined.

    Just think about an issue as simple and fundamental as building and investing in America – an issue that was once so clearly bi-partisan. The Republican Mayor of New York City Fiorello LaGuardia famously said: “There’s no Republican or Democratic way to clean the streets.” Well, for decades there was no Democratic or Republican way to build roads and bridges and airports. The building of America was every American’s job. This wasn’t narrow pork; it was a national priority. But today, we’re still living off and wearing out the infrastructure put in place by Republicans and Democrats together, starting with President Eisenhower’s interstate highway system. We didn’t build it; our parents and grandparents did. Now partisan paralysis has kept us from renewing that inheritance even as it decays from neglect. And the question is – what are we building for our children and our future generations?

    Reliable, modern infrastructure isn’t a luxury. It’s the lifeblood of our economy-- the key to connecting our markets, moving products and people, generating and sustaining millions of jobs for American workers, to not wasting hundreds of thousands of hours and millions of gallons of gas on clogged highways.

    In the face of global competition, our growth and exports are directly tied to the modernity of our infrastructure. As we invest too little and our competitors invest more and more, the harder and harder it will be to catch up – and the more and more attractive those countries will be for future investments.

    In 2009 China spent an estimated $350 billion on infrastructure-- 9 percent of its GDP. Europe’s infrastructure bank financed $350 billion in projects across the continent from 2005 to 2009, modernizing seaports, expanding airports and high speed rail lines, and reconfiguring city centers. Brazil invested over $240 billion in infrastructure in the past three years alone, with an additional $340 billion planned over the next three years.

    And what about us? Well, we know that Americans have always been builders. We built a transcontinental railroad. We built an interstate highway system. We built the rockets that let us explore the farthest edge of the solar system and beyond. But as a result of our political gridlock and attention to the short-term, that’s not what we’re doing today.

    For too long we’ve underbuilt and underinvested, and too much of what we have done has been uninformed by any long-term strategic plan. In 2008, it was estimated that we had to make an annual investment of $250 billion for the next 50 years to legitimately meet our transportation needs. Right now, we aren’t even close to that. Right now, we are as many miles away from it as we ought to be building to get there.

    Other countries are doing what we ought to do. They’re racing ahead because they created infrastructure banks to build a new future ; but we’ve yet to build a new consensus for our own national infrastructure bank to make Americans the world’s builders again-- and to keep our country the leader in the new world economy.

    Imagine the possibilities that would come from this endeavor - financing projects from high-speed rail to air and sea ports, all with the expectation of being repaid, lending directly to economically viable initiatives of both national and regional significance, without political influence, run in an open and transparent manner by experienced professionals with meaningful Congressional oversight. That is an indispensable strategy for prosperity and a legitimate vision that Americans could embrace. And if we offer America the leadership it deserves, it ought to be an undoubted opportunity and necessity for bi-partisanship.

    It’s not just infrastructure where we must rebuild our sense of great national purpose: virtually every measure shows that we’re falling behind. Today the United States is ranked 10th in global competitiveness among the G20 countries. America is now 12th worldwide in the percentage of 25-to-34-year-olds with a college degree, trailing, among others, Russia, New Zealand, South Korea, and Israel. This year investors have pulled $74 billion out of domestic stock funds and put $42 billion into foreign stock funds. High-profile multinational companies including Applied Materials and IBM are already opening major R&D centers in China. And as we look to the Googles of the future, it is increasingly possible that they will be founded by students from Tianjin University, rather than MIT or Stanford.

    We need to face up these new challenges-- not just as individuals or separate interests, but as a nation with a national purpose. The world of the next generation will change too rapidly for political parties to focus too narrowly on the next election. And the 21st Century can be another American century-- but only if we restore a larger sense of responsibility and replace the clattering cacophony of the perpetual campaign with a wider discussion of what is best for our country.

    For the last months we’ve watched the news and read the campaign literature and heard a lot the soundbites. We've heard politicians say they won't become a part of Washington. That say they're for small government, lower taxes, and more freedom. But what do they really mean?

    Do they want a government too limited to have invented the Internet, now a vital part of our commerce and communications? A government too small to give America’s auto industry and all its workers a second chance to fight for their survival? Taxes too low to invest in the research that creates jobs and industries and fills the Treasury with the revenue that educates our children, cures disease, and defends our country? We have to get past slogans and soundbites, reason together, and talk in real terms about how America can do its best.

    If we are going to balance the budget and create jobs, we can’t pretend that we can do it by just eliminating earmarks and government waste. We have to look at the plain facts of how we did it before, and by the way, you don't have to look far. In the early 1990's, our economy was faltering because deficits and debt were freezing capital. We had to send a signal to the market that we were capable of being fiscally responsible. We did just that and as result we saw the longest economic expansion in history, created over 22 million jobs, and generated unprecedented wealth in America, with every income bracket rising. But we did it by making tough choices. The Clinton economic plan committed the country to a path of discipline that helped unleash the productive potential of the American people. We invested in the workforce, in research, in development. We helped new industries. Then, working with Republicans, we came up with a budget framework that put our nation on track to be debt free by 2012 for the first time since Andrew Jackson's administration.

    How we got off track is a story that doesn’t require retelling. But the truth of how we generated the 1990’s economic boom does need to be told. We didn’t just cut our way to a balanced budget; we grew our way there.

    And nothing played a more important role than the fact that we developed a one trillion dollar technology market with one billion users. Today we’re staring another economic opportunity of extraordinary proportions right in the face – and so far we’re doing precious little about it. The current energy economy is a $6 trillion market with 4 billion users (and the possibility of growing to 9 billion in the next 30 years) – and the fastest growing segment of that is green energy – projected at $2.3 trillion in 2020. Yet, as of today, without different policy decisions by us, most of this investment will be in Asia, and not the United States. Two years ago, China accounted for just 5 percent of the world’s solar panel production. Now it boasts the world’s largest solar panel manufacturing industry, exporting about 95 percent of its production to countries including the United States. We invented the technology but China is reaping the rewards.

    China's government is poised to outspend the U.S. 3 to 1 on public clean-energy projects over the next several years. They have installed 36 percent of the global market share in wind energy in 2009 and surpassed the United States as the fastest growing market. Deutsche Bank's Kevin Parker, who manages $7 billion in climate change-related investments, calls the US “asleep at the wheel on climate change...[and] on the industrial revolution taking place in the energy industry." Because of political uncertainty and inaction in this country, he’s now focusing Deutsche Bank’s “green” investment dollars more and more on opportunities in China and Western Europe, where governments provide a more positive environment. Today only $45 million of the $7 billion green investments fund that Deutsche Bank manages is from the United States. Simply put, because we are asleep, the investments are going elsewhere.

    Now is the moment for America to reach for the brass energy ring – to go for the moon here on earth by building our new energy future-- and, in doing so, create millions of steady, higher paying jobs at every level of the economy. Make no mistake - jobs that produce energy in America are jobs that stay in America. The amount of work to be done here is just stunning. It is the work of many lifetimes. And it must begin now. This shouldn’t be a partisan issue; but instead of coming together to meet the defining test of a new energy economy and our future, we’re now leaving a political season in which too many candidates promised not to work with the other party. And this in the wake of a Senate session that started for Republicans with a power point presentation pronouncing - and I quote - "the purpose of the majority is to pass their agenda, the purpose of the minority is to become the majority."

    It’s no secret that I’m a convinced Democrat. And I know it’s better to be in the majority than in the minority. And I don't want anyone to come to the Senate, check their beliefs at the door, and "go Washington." Neither did the Founding Fathers. And certainly no one's elected to the Senate promising to join an exclusive club-- or to forget where they came from. But the truth is some of the most fiercely independent, plain-talking, direct, and determined partisans I've ever known in the Senate have also been the ones who tackled the toughest issues, finding common ground with people they disagreed with on damn near everything else.

    Daniel Patrick Moynihan was a New York liberal. Alan Simpson was a Wyoming conservative. But they could sit down and talk and debate and disagree about deficits, debts, and entitlements and somehow someway they could shape a way forward. And they did it in a way that enlisted liberals like Bill Bradley, moderates like Jack Heinz, and conservatives like John Danforth because they knew that certain issues were just too important to be lost in partisan squabbling.

    And you couldn't find three more proudly partisan and ideologically distinct politicians than Ronald Reagan, Tip O’Neill, and Bob Dole. But they found a way to put politics aside and save Social Security for a generation rather than saving it for misuse as a cudgel in the next campaign. They didn't capitulate - they compromised. And, speaking of backroom deals, they agreed NOT to let either party demagogue the issue against the incumbents who cast the tough votes to pass the bill. Now, if you’ve got to have a backroom deal, that’s the kind to have.

    Folks, you won't find a Republican today who would dare criticize Ronald Reagan. Last week, when the candidates for chairman of the Republican National Committee had their debate, Grover Norquist asked each of them to name their favorite Republican other than Ronald Reagan. He said he had to add that caveat so everyone didn't give the same answer. But we'd all be better off if some of these Republicans remembered that Ronald Reagan worked across the aisle to solve big problems. And we'd all be better off if Grover Norquist thought of THAT Ronald Reagan before he announced that "bipartisanship is just another word for date rape."

    That's the difference today. Ideology isn't new to the American political arena and ideology isn't unhealthy. The biggest breakthroughs in American politics have been brokered not by a mushy middle or by splitting the difference but by people who had a pretty healthy sense of ideology. Ted Kennedy and Orrin Hatch were a powerful team precisely because they didn't agree on that much and they spent a lot of time fighting each other --and so the Senate leaned in and listened on those occasions when somehow this ultimate odd couple found things they were willing to fight for together.

    Sometimes, as John Kennedy once said, “party asks too much.” Sometimes, party leaders also ask too much, especially if they exploit the rules of the United States Senate for the sole purpose of denying a President a second term. But that is what we have witnessed the last two years; Republicans nearly unanimous in opposition to almost every proposal by the President and almost every proposal by Democratic colleagues. The extraordinary measure of a filibuster has become an ordinary expedient. Today it’s possible for 41 Senators representing only about one tenth of the American population to bring the Senate to a standstill.

    Certainly, I believe the filibuster has its rightful place. I used it to stop drilling for oil in the Arctic Wildlife Refuge because I believed that was in our national interest --and 60 or more Senators should be required to speak up on such an irrevocable decision. But we have reached the point where the filibuster is being invoked by the minority not necessarily because of a difference over policy, but as a political tool to undermine the Presidency.

    Consider this: in the entire 19th century, including the struggle against slavery, fewer than two dozen filibusters were mounted. Between 1933 and the coming of World War II, it was attempted only twice. During the Eisenhower administration, twice. During John Kennedy’s presidency, four times-- and then eight during Lyndon Johnson’s push for civil rights and voting rights bills. By the time Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan occupied the White House, there were about 20 filibusters a year.

    But in the 110th Congress of 2007-2008, there were a record 112 cloture votes. And in the 111th Congress, there were 136, one of which even delayed a vote to authorize funding for the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps during a time of war. That’s not how the Founders intended the Senate to work-- and that's not how our country can afford the Senate not to work.

    Chris Dodd said it best in his farewell address just a few weeks ago – a speech the Republican Leader called one of the most important in the history of the chamber. Chris sounded a warning: “What will determine whether this institution works or not, what has always determined whether we will fulfill the Framers’ highest hopes or justify the cynics’ worst fears, is not the Senate rules, the calendar, or the media. It is whether each of the one hundred Senators can work together.”

    That was a speech that needed to be heard. But the question now isn’t whether it was heard; it’s whether we really listened to it. Because when it comes to the economy, our country really does need 100 Senators who face the facts and find a way to work not just on their side, but side by side.

    No one runs for the Senate arguing that the United States should have one fifth of its foreign debt held by China. No winning candidate has ever suggested that the United States should trail Poland in education. Or that Germany should invent the next Google or develop the cutting edge new clean energy industries. No one has ever gone into a debate pledging that Indian workers should hold the jobs of the future not American workers.

    There’s a bi-partisan consensus just waiting to lift our country and our future if Senators are willing to sit down and forge it and make it real. If we're willing to stop talking past each other, to stop substituting soundbites for substance. If we're willing finally to pull ourselves out of an ideological cement of our own mixing.

    We will no doubt continue to be frustrated and angry from time to time, but I believe that more often than not, we can rise to the common ground of great national purpose. Surely we can agree and act to realize the goal set by the President who called his fellow citizens to meet that earlier Sputnik moment-- an America " that is not first if, not first but, but first period."

    So, in this time of crisis and mourning, in this time of challenge and opportunity, we need to commit to reaching across the aisle, as colleagues did before us, to unite to do the exceptional things that will keep America exceptional for generations to come.

  • First Thoughts: The right pushes back

    The right pushes back on the Arizona tragedy… So does the left… Why are partisans playing the victim card when they’re not really the victim?... Obama to speak in Arizona on Wednesday… John Kerry discusses political gridlock (and the state of American political discourse) at 10:00 am ET… Sarah Palin’s silence… A big 2012 week takes a back seat to what happened in Arizona… Romney’s in the Middle East… And the white flight from Obama and the Dems.


    *** The right pushes back: Well, that didn’t take long. After we wrote yesterday that the horrific shootings in Arizona offered the possibility of ushering in a more civil and responsible tone in American politics, activists and commentators on both sides refused to back down. In fact, Monday was all about trying to define the other side as out of their minds. Sad. On the right, Rush Limbaugh accused Democrats of politicizing the tragedy. “The desperate hope that the losers in November of 2010 had was that they could revitalize their political fortunes because of this unfortunate shooting of a congresswoman in Arizona,” Limbaugh said, per Roll Call. “But the left is depraved, empty and without any political substance whatsoever.” Glenn Beck added, “They are using every opportunity to convince you that Sarah Palin is dangerous.” The Tea Party Express, meanwhile, sent a fundraising solicitation entitled, “Tea Party won’t be silenced after shooting.” And the Media Research Center’s Brent Bozell argued that the media was trying to “criminalize conservatism.”

    *** So does the left: On the left, the New York Times’ Bob Herbert today writes, “The vitriol that has become an integral part of our political rhetoric, most egregiously from the right, is just one of the myriad contributing factors in a society saturated in blood.” And Paul Krugman asked yesterday, “So will the Arizona massacre make our discourse less toxic? It’s really up to G.O.P. leaders. Will they accept the reality of what’s happening to America, and take a stand against eliminationist rhetoric? Or will they try to dismiss the massacre as the mere act of a deranged individual, and go on as before?”

    *** Playing the victim card when you’re not really the victim: What was particularly striking to us is how activists, especially on the right, were playing the victim when there are so many actual victims -- the deceased, the wounded, the grieving -- in Arizona. And here’s our point from yesterday: Although it appears that Jared Lee Loughner had nothing to do with mainstream conservatism or liberalism, can’t we all agree to condemn violent, de-humanizing, or de-legitimizing rhetoric -- “2nd Amendment remedies,” “Don’t retreat, instead reload,” “Gather your armies” "facism/socialism," etc. -- aimed at our politicians and government institutions? In today’s political climate, as we pointed out, opponents just don’t disagree, they de-humanize each other; they just don’t question those in power, they de-legitimize them; and we in the media just play along, giving attention to the extremes and the shiny metal objects. It’s time for all of us to act more responsibly. But what's happening in the land of opinion is cringe-worthy. There are so many folks in search of a high horse to mount. Those poor horses.

    *** Obama to speak in Arizona on Wednesday: So far, however, elected officials in both parties have reacted more responsibly. And we learned last night that President Obama will speak tomorrow in Tucson at the University of Arizona. The White House, per NBC’s Savannah Guthrie, says the speech will be primarily about remembering the victims, although it’s unclear whether Obama will address the divisive political climate (before and after Saturday’s shootings). If the president does address the divisive climate, the Washington Post’s Greg Sargent makes this point: Those calls for civility usually prove to be short-lived. Also today: Democratic Sen. John Kerry gives a speech at 10:00 am ET on political gridlock at the liberal-leaning Center for American Progress, and he’ll address the tragedy in Tucson -- as well as the state of American discourse -- at the top of his remarks. http://wapo.st/i4bO0K

    *** Palin’s silence: By the way, the silence from Sarah Palin -- besides her offer of condolences on Saturday and her email to Glenn Beck -- has been deafening. As Republican David Frum said in Andrea Mitchell’s “TODAY” piece this morning, “You can hunker down, and you say, ‘It’s not my fault.” And, of course, she’s right -- it’s not her fault. Or you can be bigger than that. You can go out and … you can be the leader that Americans want to see.” In many ways, this moment is a presidential test, and she's chosen to ignore it so far. And don’t miss this comment about Palin by Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty via the New York Times: “‘There’s no indication at present that those cross hairs, Fox News, any particular commentator or show or set of remarks or person was a motivating factor in his thoughts,’ Mr. Pawlenty said of Mr. Loughner. When asked if he would have produced a similar map, Mr. Pawlenty said, ‘I wouldn’t have done it.’”

    *** Big 2012 week takes back seat to Arizona tragedy: Speaking of Pawlenty, this was supposed to be a fairly big 2012 week for Republicans weighing White House bids. Before going on his tour this week to promote his new book, “Courage to Stand,” Pawlenty (R) appears today on “The View.” Mitt Romney, meanwhile, is in the Middle East. Former Pennsylvania GOP Sen. Rick Santorum visits New Hampshire today. And Newt Gingrich will head to South Carolina on Thursday.

    *** Romney in the Middle East: As mentioned above, Romney has traveled overseas to visit Afghanistan, Israel, Jordan, and the United Arab Emirates; in fact, Romney met with Afghan President Karzai yesterday. He later meets with Israeli PM Netanyahu and Jordan’s King Abdullah. “The purpose of the trip is not to conduct private diplomacy but to give Gov. Romney a first-hand look at what is happening in an important region of the world,” his PAC said in a statement on Sunday. “The trip is being paid for by a combination of private sources. In Afghanistan, Governor Romney is traveling under the auspices of the International Republican Institute, and as part of his itinerary there he will train Afghans and share with local leaders his views on issues of leadership, public service, economic opportunity and democratic participation. The Israel portion of the trip is sponsored by the American Israel Education Foundation.”

    *** White flight? We missed this when it first came out, but Ron Brownstein in the latest National Journal examines the exit polls from the 2010 midterms and finds that Democrats underperformed with white voters. “The new data show that white voters not only strongly preferred Republican House and Senate candidates but also registered deep disappointment with President Obama’s performance, hostility toward the cornerstones of the current Democratic agenda, and widespread skepticism about the expansive role for Washington embedded in the party’s priorities. On each of those questions, minority voters expressed almost exactly the opposite view from whites.” Brownstein’s conclusion: In 2012, Obama and Dems will have to improve their performance with whites, or will have to pull of what they did in ‘08 (and what Michael Bennet did in ‘10): overperform with minorities, young voters, and women.

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  • Tragedy in Tucson: Rhetoric still flies

    “As the nation reflected on the tragedy in Tucson, Ariz., on Monday, everyday politics remained frozen for official Washington. But on the airwaves and among left- and right-leaning activists, there was no cease-fire,” Roll Call writes. “The Democratic Party, Limbaugh said, is ‘a party that seeks to profit out of murder.’ He added that the political left ‘openly wishes for such disaster in order to profit from it.’ ‘The desperate hope that the losers in November of 2010 had was that they could revitalize their political fortunes because of this unfortunate shooting of a Congresswoman in Arizona,’ Limbaugh said. ‘But the left is depraved, empty and without any political substance whatsoever.’”

    The Boston Globe’s top headline with the mug shot of the shooting suspect: “Few words as suspect faces court.”

    The New York Post: “Psycho with a ‘killer smile.’”

    The New York Daily News also splashes Loughner’s mug shot on its cover with this headline: “Face of evil.”

    “In an earlier time, the emerging portrait of a deeply troubled young man might have given Jared Loughner’s lawyers the basis of an insanity defense. But John Hinckley’s successful insanity claim after shooting President Reagan led Congress to raise the bar, making the task harder,” AP writes.

    “Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords wrote an e-mail Friday, a day before she was grievously wounded, congratulating [Trey Grayson], the new director of Harvard’s Institute of Politics and saying she wanted to talk with him about ways to tone down the political debate,” the Boston Globe writes. Grayson, a Republican, ran for the U.S. Senate in Kentucky.

  • Obama agenda: Raising Arizona

    President Obama and the first lady will speak at a memorial service in Tucson tomorrow for the victims of the shooting, NBC’s Savannah Guthrie reported.

    The Washington Post: “Now the question becomes, when Obama next addresses the nation, what he will say… Obama is likely to deliver a speech about tolerance, a theme that could also be featured in his State of the Union address on Jan. 25. However, with liberals and conservatives assuming their assigned battle stations over whether gun laws and partisan rhetoric are to blame, the White House is undecided about the exact message the president will send.”

    NPR notes, “In the past, presidents have been able to unify the country during moments like these. But in today's hyperpartisan political climate, even those potentially unifying moments can be hard to pull off.”

    The New York Daily News looks at the difference between President Obama and NYC Mayor Bloomberg on how they talk about guns.

    The gun debate: “In the wake of the attempted assassination of a member of Congress, politicians on both sides of the aisle are passionately debating the role of incendiary rhetoric,” Politico writes. “Very few of them are talking about guns… The fact that the shooting does not appear to be prompting an episode of hand-wringing is exactly the way the gun lobby likes it. That the gun issue has been so secondary, and the approach to the gun component of the incident so tentative, indicates the extent to which the issue has subsided in the past decade. A bipartisan truce is in effect on gun control issues in Washington -- a truce on the National Rifle Association’s terms.”

    The Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson: “We may not be sure that the bloodbath in Tucson had anything to do with politics, but we know it had everything to do with our nation's insane refusal to impose reasonable controls on guns.”

    “Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik introduced the issue strongly during a press conference,” NPR notes. ‘I have never been a proponent of letting everybody in this state carry weapons under any circumstances that they want and that's almost where we are,’ he said.”

    Vice President Biden was in Afghanistan yesterday; so was Mitt Romney.

    And another tragedy: “An energy lobbyist, the wife of an aide to President Obama, died yesterday in a fiery car crash in the garage of her Washington home,” Bloomberg News writes, adding, “A police statement said the vehicle crashed in the interior of the garage, igniting a fire that engulfed the car and the garage… The Washington Police Department’s major crash investigations unit is probing the accident.

  • Congress: Focusing on the gun debate

    Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-L.I.) pushed to ban high-capacity gun clips on Monday in response to the Arizona shootings, but quickly got pushback from her Staten Island rookie colleague,” the New York Daily News writes.

    “A longtime Senate gun control advocate announced plans Monday to introduce legislation banning high-capacity ammunition clips like the one linked to a weekend shooting that left six dead and an Arizona congresswoman gravely wounded,” the AP says. “Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., said he would introduce the measure to re-establish a prohibition that lapsed in 2004 on clips that feed more than 10 rounds at a time.”

    Roll Call: “The latest iteration of the gun control debate on Capitol Hill -- touched off after Saturday’s tragic events in Tucson, Ariz. -- is set to focus on banning the type of extended handgun magazine clip used in the shooting that left six dead and 14 wounded.”

    A day after Reps. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) and Heath Shuler (D-NC) said they were going to start carrying guns to their events, the Sergeant at Arms says members should not do that. "I don't think that's a good idea," Terrance Gainer said on ‘Good Morning America.’ "I think we should leave the law enforcement and security to those professionals." He added, "I've been a policeman for 42 years and I don't think introducing more guns to the situation is helpful.”

    “FBI agents on Friday arrested a Colorado man who threatened Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) and his staff.” And: “The man, whom the Denver Post identified as John Troy Davis, reportedly was upset about his Social Security benefits and had previously threatened to ‘shoot’ Bennet’s staff as well as ‘set fire to the perimeter’ of Bennet’s Denver office.”

  • 2012: Pawlenty’s dig at Palin’s map

    DANIELS: Yesterday, “Daniels laughed about the possibility that his State of the State address will be of as much interest in Washington, D.C., as in Washington, Ind.,” the Indianapolis Star notes. “’You know, I hope they do, because I want them to notice Indiana,’ Daniels said. ‘We want people to notice Indiana so they'll bring more jobs here. That's the whole point, and I guess anything that gets them to tune in, I'm for it.’”

    GINGRICH: “Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich is headed back to Iowa, and plans to speak at the Iowa Renewable Fuel Association’s annual summit in Des Moines on Jan. 25, aides to the Georgia Republican said today,” the Des Moines Register reports.

    The Washington Post: “On the right, former House speaker Newt Gingrich lashed out at liberals who have blamed the shooting rampage in part on tea-party-inspired anger, arguing these same liberals ‘cannot bring themselves’ to draw connections between accused terrorists and ‘radical Islam ideology.’”

    PALIN: The Washington Post’s Balz: “Palin caught in crosshairs map controversy after Tucson shootings.” “The controversy, which may have caught the Republican by surprise, is the kind of test candidates commonly face in a presidential campaign. How she navigates it, several Republican strategists said Monday, could be a defining moment for her politically,” Balz writes.

    PAWLENTY: “In an interview Monday with reporters at The New York Times, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota, considered another contender for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012, defended Ms. Palin, if only to a point. ‘There’s no indication at present that those cross hairs, Fox News, any particular commentator or show or set of remarks or person was a motivating factor in his thoughts,’ Mr. Pawlenty said of Mr. Loughner. When asked if he would have produced a similar map, Mr. Pawlenty said, ‘I wouldn’t have done it.’”

    PENCE: The (Columbus, IN) Republic reports that “Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., said today that he hopes to make a decision on his political future by late January.”

    An adviser close to Pence told First Read of the timing: "We're looking at weeks, not months." Asked if Pence decides not to run for president would it then be clear if he will run for governor of Indiana, the adviser said, “Stay tuned.”

    ROMNEY: “Mitt Romney [yesterday] met with President Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan, as part of a week-long overseas trip that could bolster the former Massachusetts governor’s foreign policy credentials,” the Boston Globe writes.

  • GOP watch: DeLay sentenced to 3 years in prison

    The AP: “A judge yesterday ordered Tom DeLay, former US House majority leader, to serve three years in prison for his role in a scheme to illegally funnel corporate money to Texas candidates in 2002.” DeLay said, “I can’t be remorseful for something I don’t think I did.” More: “DeLay’s attorney Dick DeGuerin said he expected the conviction would be overturned on appeal.”

    Could Steele win on Friday? “Steele, the current chairman who has been beset by two years of almost continuous controversy and gaffes, is widely assumed to have no chance at winning a second term. But that outcome is not a lock, despite the fact that key Republicans have been working tirelessly to ensure Steele is defeated,” The Daily Caller’s Jon Ward writes.

    The Hill: Wisconsin Party chairman Reince “Priebus leads the field with 36 RNC members publicly backing him, according to a count by National Review Online. Current RNC Chairman Michael Steele is a close second with 27 members backing him. Priebus' front-runner status could prove a liability, according to Mike Duncan. The former RNC chairman, who was Steele's predecessor serving from 2007-2009, said the leader typically ‘loses momentum after the first or second ballot,’ he said recently.”

    Hotline’s Whip Count gives Priebus 38, Steele 17, MI committeeman Saul Anuzis 14, fmr. MO party chair Ann Wagner 14, fmr. Bush official Maria Cino 12 with 73 undecided.

  • Centrist group seeks to turn down the temperature, foster bipartisanship

    In the wake of the shootings in Arizona, the head of the centrist group Third Way penned a letter to congressional leaders with suggestions of ways to turn down the temperature on political rhetoric and build more bipartisanship.

    Among the suggestions:

    1. Mixed (bipartisan) seating at the SOTU, to avoid the spectacle of one side jumping up to applaud and the other sitting glumly.
    2. A bipartisan retreat for each house of Congress.
    3. Regular visits to the district/state of a member of a different party.

    The letter is addressed to House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY). In it, Third Way President Jonathan Cowan writes:

    "This is a moment of tragedy and reflection for the body you lead. We believe--as you all do--that perhaps a greater, more enduring sense of comity and common purpose can emerge from the senselessness in Tucson. We also share you belief that civility can fit comfortably with strong political views and that profound substantive disagreements about the governance of our nation can be deliberated without vitriol."

    Here's the full letter.

  • Blog Buzz: The role of rhetoric

    The shooting in Tucson, AZ, of, among others, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, prompted a debate among conservative and liberal bloggers over whether heated, often-violent rhetoric should be discouraged from political discourse or left alone for the sake of free speech.

    Jack Shafer from the left-leaning Slate wrote over the weekend that any restrictions on language, inflammatory or not, would contradict the democratic principle of freedom of speech, and the ability to express one's views verbally, rather than through violence or other actions.

    Our spirited political discourse, complete with name-calling, vilification—and, yes, violent imagery—is a good thing. Better that angry people unload their fury in public than let it fester and turn septic in private. The wicked direction the American debate often takes is not a sign of danger but of freedom. And I'll punch out the lights of anybody who tries to take it away from me.

    Conservative blogger Ed Morrissey at Hot Air also wrote of what he saw as a slippery slope if any type of political discourse, violent or otherwise, is discouraged.

    Already we have at least one member of Congress proposing to outlaw the use of crosshair symbols in political advertisements, a bill that should run afoul of the new House rule to cite constitutional authority for any new legislation. It also would create the ironic situation where the government could create a prior restraint on political speech by banning the use of crosshairs or bullseyes when the plain meaning isn’t violence, but where their use on actual shooting targets would still be allowed. What’s next, the banning of dart boards?

    But Steve Benen, the liberal blogger at the Washington Monthly, who has been critical of overheated rhetoric in politics, said that he doesn't advocate legal limits on speech, just simply the cooling of particularly inflammatory speech.

    I'd like to see conservatives turn down the temperature on some of their more extreme rhetoric, but it's never occurred to me to call for legal restrictions on anyone's speech...

    ...Perhaps the single most outrageous form of political speech I can think of in recent history was Sharron Angle's talk of 'Second-Amendment remedies.' All kinds of people said Angle's comments were disgusting, but did anyone suggest for a moment she shouldn't have been allowed to say it? Shafer fears a slippery slope -- first we urge people to show restraint, and the next thing you know, the First Amendment is under attack. These fears seem wholly unnecessary -- the point is about unenforced societal expectations and basic political norms. Nothing more.

    Daily Kos' Barbara Morrill maintained that Jared Lee Loughner's shooting spree was affected, to some degree, by Republicans' use of violent rhetoric, despite proof that Loughner was influenced by any organized political group or ideology.

    Since the election of Barack Obama, the right, both elected Republicans and their minions in the media, have pounded the non-stop drumbeat that Obama/Democrats/liberals want to destroy the country, they want to kill your grandmother, they're shredding the Constitution, they're terrorist sympathizers, they're going to take away your guns, that they're enemies of humanity, that the government is the enemy ...

    And that, as much as the obvious examples of violent rhetoric, can appeal to the extremist, the mentally unstable, or the 'lone nut,' to act. And last Saturday, one of them did.

    Mistermix at Balloon Juice responded to a New York Times op-ed by the conservative columnist Ross Douthat in which Douthat wrote:

    If overheated rhetoric and martial imagery really led inexorably to murder, then both parties would belong in the dock. (It took conservative bloggers about five minutes to come up with Democratic campaign materials that employed targets and crosshairs against Republican politicians.) When our politicians and media loudmouths act like fools and zealots, they should be held responsible for being fools and zealots. They shouldn’t be held responsible for the darkness that always waits to swallow up the unstable and the lost.

    Mistermix's response:

    The final fallacy in these two paragraphs is the straw man that people are holding Republicans responsible for the actions of the killer in Tucson. No, they aren’t. We’re saying that the whole climate of the past couple of years stinks, and that it’s time to tone it down.

  • Tom DeLay sentenced to 3 years in prison

    The day's big non-Arizona political news, per the AP:

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- U.S. judge sentences ex-House Majority Leader DeLay to 3 years in prison in money laundering scheme.

    *** UPDATE *** Another write-through from the AP:

    A judge ordered former U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay to serve three years in prison Monday for his role in a scheme to illegally funnel corporate money to Texas candidates
    in 2002.

    The sentence comes after a jury in November convicted DeLay on charges of money laundering and conspiracy to commit money laundering. DeLay was once one of the most powerful men in U.S. politics, ascending to the No. 2 job in the House of Representatives.

    Senior Judge Pat Priest sentenced him to the three-year term on the conspiracy charge. He also sentenced him to five years in prison on the money laundering charge but allowed DeLay to accept 10 years of probation instead of more prison time.

  • McConnell, in KY, speaks about AZ shooting


    During a event near Louisville, KY this morning, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell commented on the Giffords shooting in Tucson on Saturday. McConnell was giving a talk to high school students, an event that had been scheduled long before the weekend's tragedy. McConnell said Congress would take a look at "the way security is provided."

    McConnell cautioned, "We don't want to get into a situation where elected representatives don't feel comfortable interacting -- what we're doing this morning -- interacting with people they represent. And I don't think we'll, that we will end up in that position."

    Interestingly, McConnell strongly disagreed that stronger gun laws are needed in the wake of the shooting. "I think it is extremely unlikely that any kind of gun control laws would have prevented a young man who was obviously as troubled as this one. He would have found some way to do what he did. I don't think that's the appropriate reaction, to what happened."

    At the end of his event, McConnell participated in a moment of silence with the school.

  • Loughner's motives?


    The current thinking about Jared Loughner's motive -- such as it was -- is that he was affected by two currents in his life.

    On the one hand, he was becoming more and more fixated on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D). He had met her, he had become interested in her, and he found himself disagreeing with her positions, as she became more successful and prominent.

    On the other hand, he was experiencing setbacks as his life moved into a downward spiral. He was turned down by the military and asked to leave the community college, as he was apparently becoming increasingly more mentally troubled.

    To the extent that he was reading extremist Web sites, investigators at this point believe that's not likely a major factor. However, they say they are still going through his computer and emails to learn more about that.

  • Rubio says no interest in being VP, but what else is he supposed to say?

    Marco Rubio (R-FL) says, per the St. Pete Times, flat out, that he is not open to the possibility of being the vice-presidential candidate in 2012.

    Question: "Are you at least open to the possibility?"

    Answer: "No, I'm not.

    Pretty definitive, no? Sure, but honestly, what else is he supposed to say? He was just sworn in as a U.S. Senator, and the naming of a presidential team is a year and a half away.

    Rubio continued, "And I'll tell you why I'm not. ... To be the senator from Florida is a big job. In addition to the votes you take in Washington of national importance, our state has a multitude of issues. I mean, it will soon be the third largest state in the country and perhaps the most complex in the country in terms of the set of issues it faces. In order to do that job, and do it well, you've got have to have 100 percent focus on it. You don't have time to sit around and daydream ... I want to be a U.S. Senator because I believe I can make a difference from that position. ... It's flattering sometimes, but that's about it."

    Exactly. It's not a good idea, it's not in his best interest, even if he's interested, to fuel speculation.

    So don't read too much into these kinds of statements from potential veeps. Remember, not a single GOP presidential candidate has announced yet.

  • First thoughts: A new chance for civility?

    Does Saturday’s tragedy in Arizona offer a new chance for civility, or simply a pause? … GOP-led House cancels all legislative activity this week, including health-care repeal… Obama led a national moment of silence today at 11:00 am ET… But will the kumbaya last?... Everyone needs to look the mirror -- combative conservatives, vociferous liberals, and even the news media… Does the tragedy haunt Palin, if she decides to run for higher office? … BCS politics makes the New York Times’ front page.

    *** A new chance for civility? President Obama called to change the way American politics is practiced when he ran for president. So, too, did John Boehner and House Republican leaders when they campaigned to take control of Congress. But those calls were drowned out by the usual political shouting, yelling, and threats. Tragically, however, the shooting Saturday at a congressional event in Arizona -- killing six and wounding 14, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D) -- now has the real ability to do what these elected officials haven’t been able to do: usher in a more civil era in politics and, at a minimum, simply start a SERIOUS conversation about the awful tone. The Republican-led House has canceled all legislative activity this week, including the bill to repeal the health-care law. Obama, meanwhile, has called for a moment of silence today at 11:00 am ET and has postponed his Tuesday trip to Schenectady, NY. And at Boehner’s direction, Congress will also observe that moment of silence.

    *** But will it all last? Yet National Journal’s Reinhard writes, “[W]hile the take-no-prisoners rhetoric may subside for a while, it’s unclear whether any political truce would last longer than the temporary cooling-off periods after Oklahoma City and 9-11. There's not much interest in kumbaya in a 24/7 media culture that thrives on the latest conflict. ‘I'm hoping that people would reflect on some of the language that they use and realize that honorable people can disagree, but I'm not optimistic,'’ said John Weaver, a Republican advisor to former presidential nominee John McCain. ‘We don't reflect on much of anything in this society.'”

    *** Everyone needs to look in the mirror: In fact, the finger-pointing has already begun. Liberals have blamed the overheated Tea Party/conservative rhetoric for contributing today’s vitriolic political climate (and there’s little question that the past two years have been worse than at any time since the 1960s). Conservatives, meanwhile, have started to aggressively push back against that critique (and it’s clear that the shooter, Jared Lee Loughner, was so disturbed and outside the mainstream of either political party). But everyone -- combative conservatives, vociferous liberals and, yes, the media -- needs to take a hard look in the mirror, because we’ve all contributed to a political environment where opponents just don’t disagree, they de-humanize each other; they just don’t question those in power, they de-legitimize them; and we in the media just play along, giving attention -- not condemnation -- to the extremes. And what's happening in the new media (blogosphere and Twitterverse), where each side is trying to find a high horse to climb or find anything to grasp to prove their own point, is awful. Instead of trying to prove that one person's form of toxic political rhetoric is more damaging than another's doesn't lead us in the direction of cleaning up this cesspool of hateful political speech that's become more mainstream.

    *** The spotlight on Palin: Of course, this all brings us to Sarah Palin. What took place on Saturday in Arizona could end up haunting her, if she decides to run for higher office. More than any other public actor, Palin -- the 2008 GOP VP nominee -- has embodied today’s combative political rhetoric (“Don’t retreat, instead reload), and her “target” list to defeat Democratic members who voted for the health-care bill (including Giffords) has received a considerable amount of attention since Saturday. As Politico’s Martin writes, “Whether she defends, explains or even responds at all to the intense criticism of her brand of confrontational politics could well determine her trajectory on the national scene—and it’s likely to reveal the scope of her ambitions as well.”

    *** Condoning violent imagery or language isn’t responsible: Here’s a final point we want to make about Saturday’s shooting: No responsible leader condones violence, but simply saying you don't condone violence and allowing your colleagues or allies to use violent imagery and language without speaking out against it isn't being responsible -- whether you are a Republican or a Democrat. We're going to make our own effort here at First Read to avoid gun and war images when talking about politics. To political professionals, the use of these images has no impact; the problem is when these images are digested by those who are already a bit unstable. No one is calling for censorship, only responsibility.

    *** BCS politics: Saturday’s tragic shooting isn’t the only focus on Arizona. The state also is home to tonight’s national championship game in college football. And the New York Times uses tonight’s game as a peg to profile the political action committee pushing for playoffs in college football. “The committee, which was founded in 2009, has emerged as one of the few organized voices opposing the college bowl system… Critics say the B.C.S. is unfair to teams from outside the six most powerful and wealthiest conferences, whose champions are guaranteed a berth in the series, and they disagree with the national championship being determined by a complicated set of polls and computer rankings rather than on the field.”

    Countdown to the RNC chair election: 4 days
    Countdown Chicago’s mayoral election: 43 days
    Countdown to Election Day 2011: 302 days
    Countdown to the Iowa caucuses: 392 days
    * Note: When the IA caucuses take place depends on whether other states move up

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  • Tragedy in Tucson

    The Boston Globe’s front-page top headline: “Agonizing aftermath.”

    The Washington Post: Federal authorities filed murder charges Sunday against 22-year-old Jared Loughner, as new evidence suggested the alleged gunman in Saturday's rampage had fixated on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) while his mental health deteriorated. Loughner appeared to have planned the shooting, according to court documents. In a safe at his parents' home, investigators found an envelope with the words ‘I planned ahead’ and ‘my assassination’ written on it, along with the name ‘Giffords.' Loughner's signature is also believed to be on the envelope, the complaint says.”

    More: “In the same safe, authorities found a 2007 letter to Loughner from Giffords, using congressional stationery to thank him for attending a ‘Congress on Your Corner’ event in Tucson. Saturday's shooting took place at another such event, where Giffords was meeting constituents outside a supermarket.”

    The AP says, “Recovering from a gunshot wound to the head depends largely on the bullet’s path, and while doctors were optimistic yesterday about the prospects for Representative Gabrielle Giffords, they said it can take weeks or months to tell the damage. Doctors said the bullet traveled the length of the left side of the Arizona congresswoman’s brain, entering the back of the skull and exiting the front. Fortunately, it stayed on one side of her brain, not hitting the so-called ‘eloquent areas’ in the brain’s center where such wounds almost always prove fatal. Giffords was responding nonverbally to simple commands in the emergency room -- such as “squeeze my hand.”

    The New York Post: “According to a Department of Homeland Security memo, the agency is trying to determine whether Loughner is linked to the fanatical group American Renaissance, Fox News reported The group promotes views that are ‘anti-government, anti-immigration, anti-ZOG (Zionist Occupation Government), anti-Semitic,’ the memo says. Giffords is ‘the first Jewish female elected to such a high-position in the US government. She was also opposite the group's ideology when it came to immigration debate,’ according the memo.”

    Mother Jones' Corn: At 2:00 a.m. on Saturday—about eight hours before he allegedly killed six people and wounded 14, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), in Tucson—Jared Lee Loughner phoned an old and close friend with whom he had gone to high school and college. The friend, Bryce Tierney, was up late watching TV, but he didn't answer the call. When he later checked his voice mail, he heard a simple message from Loughner: 'Hey man, it's Jared. Me and you had good times. Peace out. Later.'"

  • The politics of the tragedy

    “A day after the shooting of Ms. Giffords and 19 other people in Arizona focused the nation’s attention on the heat of its political culture, Republicans and Democrats began the delicate task of navigating a tragedy that has the potential to alter the political landscape,” the New York Times writes. “Leaders in both parties sought Sunday to project a nonpartisan civility, with President Obama, whose advisers were weighing the possibility of a national address, calling for a national moment of silence and the House speaker, John A. Boehner, replacing a contentious health care debate on Wednesday with a bipartisan security briefing for lawmakers.”

    “Yet beneath that public sense of comity was a subtle round of jockeying — on cable news, blogs, Twitter and even Ms. Palin’s Facebook page — as both sides sought to gain the high ground and deal with the risks and challenges presented by the shootings.”

    The Boston Globe quotes Clarence Dupnik, the sheriff of Arizona’s Pima County saying, “When you look at unbalanced people, how they respond to the vitriol that comes out of certain mouths about tearing down the government -- the anger, the hatred, the bigotry that goes on in this country is getting to be outrageous,” said Dupnik, noting that Arizona, roiled by the illegal immigration debate, has “become the mecca for prejudice and bigotry.”

    The Globe’s editorial adds, “This may be true about Arizona, but the shootings could have happened almost anywhere in the United States, given how thoroughly both ‘lock and load’-style gun metaphors and the demonization of opponents have saturated the nation’s politics… [T]he red-meat rhetoric -- the declarations of revolution, the casual depictions of people as unpatriotic, the brandishing of guns as a symbol of political resistance -- should be renounced across the political spectrum… No political leader or movement should be held responsible for crimes that appear to be Loughner’s alone, and all Americans would benefit from a culture less conducive to the fantasies of unstable minds. Liberals are justified in expressing alarm over the coarsening of the political dialogue. But those who have rushed to blame conservative causes or leaders for the killings should pause and consider whether they, too, are waving a bloody shirt and feeding a culture of denunciation. The responsibility for maintaining a civil dialogue starts in every home and with every individual.”

    The Hill: “Reaction on the blogosphere was swift Saturday to the mass shooting in Arizona that killed at least six and critically wounded Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. But expressions of shock and sympathy for the victims of the shooting quickly gave way to a left-right battle over what may have motivated the gunman.”

    Roll Call’s Bellantoni: “The stunning Tucson, Ariz., ambush during the most basic act of democracy — a Congresswoman meeting with constituents back home — has illuminated an ugly breakdown in American political discourse.” Here’s former Sen. Bob Kerrey (D-NE): "Sarah Palin needs to apologize for putting gun sights on her website,” but added, "Wait a minute, I don't want to say that. Those of us who are appalled by it, those of us who are angered by it, we need to stop it." More: “The examples of inflammatory discourse abound, from gas lines being cut at the home of then-Rep. Tom Perriello's (D-Va.) brother when his address was posted on the Internet, to Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) asking her supporters to get ‘armed and dangerous.’ Republican Sharron Angle referred to ‘Second Amendment remedies’ as she campaigned to unseat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D) in Nevada.” And: Giffords' 2010 rival held an event offering supporters a chance to shoot an M16 and ‘help remove Gabrielle Giffords from office.’”

    And… Defeated Virginia Rep. Tom “Perriello told Roll Call he has less of a problem with Palin's target list (he was on it) than with the subtle "dehumanization" of political enemies that can spark violence. ‘To a crazed mind or a mind that might be prone to violence,’ name-calling can feed vitriol more than any campaign flier using cross hairs, he said.”

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