Showing posts with label the GOP have lost their senses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the GOP have lost their senses. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 03, 2017

Casualty



apparently they changed their mind

By Steve Benen
Last night, House Republicans met behind closed doors and agreed to gut their own ethics rules. The vote, for which there was no roll call, was 119 to 74, and by all accounts, the GOP leadership opposed making the change.

The blowback was as quick as it was intense. Of the 119 members who voted for the ethics overhaul, only a few were willing to publicly defend the change – or even acknowledge having voted for it. Coverage was brutal, members’ phones were reportedly ringing quite a bit this morning, and even Donald Trump, the ethically challenged president-elect, suggested his party’s timing was unwise.

And with this in mind, just a half-day after adopting their own plan, House Republicans reversed course.
Facing fierce criticism from members of both parties – including President-Elect Donald Trump – House Republicans backed down Tuesday from an initial attempt to gut an independent ethics office that investigates House lawmakers and staff accused of misconduct.

The decision to scrap changes to the ethics office came during an emergency GOP conference meeting Tuesday morning.
The agreement to drop the plan was reportedly reached by unanimous consent – which means the 119 House Republicans who voted for this last night, in effect, declared, “Never mind.”

This is a pretty brutal fiasco on literally the first day of the new Republican Congress. Screwing up this badly, in such a high-profile way, takes quite a bit of effort.

There are multiple angles to a story like this one, but here are just a few key elements to keep in mind:

* Shame works. Most of the time, Trump seems immune to shame and public pressure, but this morning is a reminder that congressional Republicans occasionally care about public humiliation. Had there not been a public backlash, there’s little doubt the rules gambit would have been approved by the House GOP majority.

And in the process, an interesting precedent has been set. If there are similar public backlashes when Republicans consider gutting health care plans, eliminating Wall Street safeguards, slashing tax rates on billionaires, or any number of other far-right priorities, just how far will GOP members stick out their necks to pursue unpopular ideas? This debacle over ethics serves as a reminder of what pressure can do.

* It’s not over. Trump’s modest pushback against changing the ethics rules had nothing to do with the substance and everything to do with the timing. Why is that important? Because House Republicans have shelved last night’s plan, but that doesn’t mean GOP members can’t bring back the idea when they think no one’s looking.

* The leadership challenge. House Republican leaders urged their members not to pursue this, but rank-and-file GOP lawmakers did it anyway. For six years, there have been tensions between the Republican leadership and its radicalized members, and those tensions haven’t gone away.

This creates all kinds of challenges, and not just for the Speaker’s office. If you’re Donald Trump or Mitch McConnell, and you want to work out a deal with the House, who do you negotiate with? If Paul Ryan and Kevin McCarthy aren’t calling the shots in the lower chamber, who is?

* History repeats itself. Twelve years ago, after Republicans won a clean sweep, their first action was to weaken their own congressional ethics rules. Soon after, in the face of public pressure, they reversed course on some measures.

History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme.

Tuesday, October 08, 2013

Please spread the word

There is a petition going around to charge those in D.C. who are holding our Country hostage with Sedition.

Sedition is a conspiracy to disrupt or destroy the normal functioning of the government. some time ago 80 Republican representatives signed a pledge to shut down the US government. This was unquestionably an act of Sedition. Millions of American Citizens, and active Troops overseas and at home are already suffering, and many may die because of this action. The action of these men and women has absolutely given aid and comfort to our enemies. We ask that you hold them accountable to the full extent of the law, and arrest them for treason and Sedition.

Why is this important?

The House Republican Tea Party Caucus is a seditionist group intent on overthrowing the legitimate Government and subverting the Constitution. They have publicly stated this on many occasions, and recently enacted a long planed act of insurrection by completely destroying the function of the government with a purely political shut-down. It is time that we stop pussyfooting around, and call this group what it is, a Terrorist Organization, and arrest and charge them accordingly.

Here's a link to the petition. Please sign it. Thank you.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Scuzzbuckets of the Week

I am really at a loss as to how the GOP thinks. They continuously try to kill the Affordable Care Act (AKA Obamacare). I heard somewhere that they have fought the plan - which is now the law - over 45 different times. And the cost of their temper tantrums is unimaginable.

Their latest move is to slash Food Stamp funding in order to effort to effort to "pare the cost and size of government by reducing federal spending." As if there aren't any other alternatives to cut federal spending.

The map below shows Food Stamp averages by state for 2012. Not all Food Stamp recipients are living on the government dole, as some like to think of them. The average Food Stamp monthly benefit in 2012 is $133 per month. Yeah, that's sure dragging down government spending


Food stamp monthly averages 2012 participation in SNAP, as a percent of total state population

Here - by state - are the names of those people who voted to cut $39 million dollars over the next decade for Food Stamps.


Alabama

Robert Aderholt

Spencer Bachus

Mo Brooks

Martha Roby
Mike Rogers

Arizona

Trent Franks

Paul A. Gosar

Matt Salmon

David Schweikert

Arkansas

Tom Cotton

Rick Crawford

Tim Griffin

Steve Womack

Robert Woodall

California

Ken Calvert

John Campbell

Paul Cook

Jeff Denham

Duncan D. Hunter

Darrell Issa

Doug LaMalfa

Kevin McCarthy

Tom McClintock

Buck McKeon

Devin Nunes

Dana Rohrabacher

Ed Roycei

Colorado

Mike Coffman

Cory Gardner

Doug Lamborn

Scott Tipton

Florida

Gus Bilirakis

Vern Buchanan

Ander Crenshaw

Ron DeSantis

Mario Diaz-Balart

John Mica

Jeff Miller

Richard Nugent

Bill Posey

Trey Radel

Tom Rooney

Ileana Ros-Lehtinen

Dennis Ross

Steve Southerland

Daniel Webster

Ted Yoho

C.W. Bill Young

Georgie

Paul Broun

Doug Collins

Phil Gingrey

Tom Graves

Jack Kingston

Tom Price (R-Ga.)

Austin Scott

Lynn A. Westmoreland

Idaho

Raul R. Labrador

Mike Simpson

Illinois

Rodney Davis

Randy Hultgren

Adam Kinzinger

Peter J. Roskam

Aaron Schock

John Shimkus

Indiana

Susan W. Brooks

Larry Bucshon

Luke Messer

Todd Rokita

Marlin Stutzman

Jackie Walorski

Todd Young

Iowa

Steve King

Tom Latham

Kansas

Tim Huelskamp

Lynn Jenkins

Mike Pompeo

Kevin Yoder

Kentucky

Andy Barr

Brett S. Guthrie

Thomas Massie

Harold Rogers

Ed Whitfield

Louisiana

Rodney Alexander

Charles Boustany

William Cassidy

John Fleming

Steve Scalise

Maryland

Andy Harris

Michigan

Justin Amash

Dan Benishek

Kerry Bentivolio

Dave Camp

Bill Huizenga

Candice Miller

Mike Rogers

Fred Upton

Tim Walberg

Minnesota

Michele Bachmann

John Kline

Erik Paulsen

Mississippi

Gregg Harper (R-Miss.)

Alan Nunnelee

Steven Palazzo

Missouri

Sam Graves

Vicky Hartzler

Billy Long

Blaine Luetkemeyer

Jason Smith

Ann Wagner

Montana

Steve Daines

Nebraska

Lee Terry

Adrian Smith

Nevada

Mark Amodei

Joe Heck

New Jersey

Rodney Frelinghuysen

Scott Garrett

Leonard Lance

Jon Runyan

New Mexico

Steve Pearce

New York

Chris Collins

Tom Reed

North Carolina

Howard Coble

Renee Ellmers

Virginia Foxx

George Holding

Richard Hudson

Patrick T. McHenry

Mark Meadows (R-N.C.)

Robert Pittenger

North Dakota

Kevin Cramer

Ohio

John Boehner

Steve Chabot

Bob Gibbs

Bill Johnson

Jim Jordan

David Joyce

Robert E. Latta

Jim Renacci

Steve Stivers

Pat Tiberi

Michael Turner

Brad Wenstrup

Oklahoma

Jim Bridenstine

Tom Cole

James Lankford

Frank Lucas

Markwayne Mullin

Oregon

Greg Walden (R-Ore.)

Pennsylvania

Lou Barletta

Charles W. Dent

Jim Gerlach

Mike Kelly

Tom Marino

Tim Murphy

Scott Perry

Joseph R. Pitts

Keith Rothfus

Bill Shuster

Glenn W. Thompson

South Carolina

Jeff Duncan

Trey Gowdy

Mick Mulvaney

Tom Rice

Mark Sanford

Joe Wilson (R-S.C.)

South Dakota

Kristi Noem

Tennessee

Diane Black

Marsha Blackburn

Scott DesJarlais

John J. Duncan, Jr.

Stephen Fincher

Chuck Fleischmann

Phil Roe

Texas

Joe Barton

Kevin Brady

Michael C. Burgess

John Carter

Michael K. Conaway

John Culberson

Blake Farenthold

Bill Flores

Louie Gohmert

Kay Granger

Ralph M. Hall

Jeb Hensarling

Sam Johnson

Kenny Marchant

Michael T. McCaul

Randy Neugebauer

Pete Olson

Ted Poe

Pete Sessions

Lamar Smith

Steve Stockman

Mac Thornberry

Randy Weber

Roger Williams

Utah

Rob Bishop

Jason Chaffetz

Chris Stewart

Virginia

Eric Cantor

Randy J. Forbes

Bob Goodlatte

Morgan Griffith

Robert Hurt

Scott Rigell

Robert J. Wittman

Washington

Doc Hastings

Cathy McMorris Rodgers

David G. Reichert

West Virginia

David McKinley

Wisconsin

Sean P. Duffy

Thomas Petri

Reid Ribble

Paul Ryan

James F. Sensenbrenner

Wyoming

Cynthia M. Lummis

A Message from Robert Reich

  After Trump and Vance’s disgraceful treatment of President Zelensky last Friday, some of you might feel ashamed of America. You might even...