The Commentariat -- April 22, 2016
Afternoon Update:
Sari Horwitz & Jenna Portnoy of the Washington Post: "Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) will make all ex-felons in Virginia eligible to vote in the upcoming presidential election, part of a years-long effort to restore full voting rights to former convicts. McAuliffe's announcement in Richmond on Friday will allow an estimated 180,000 to 210,000 former felons who are not in prison or on probation or parole to register to vote this year in Virginia, a battleground state, according to a coalition of civil rights groups that had pushed for the restoration of voting rights. Advocates said McAuliffe's move was the biggest-ever single action taken to restore voting rights in this country." -- CW
*****
CW: The Washington Post has just posted a big package of stories & opinion pieces on President Obama's legacy. It begins with this essay by biographer David Maraniss. I haven't delved into any of it yet, but thought you'd like to know.
Arlette Saenz of ABC News: "President Obama is extending birthday greetings to Queen Elizabeth over lunch today, one day after Britain's longest-serving monarch turned 90. On his first full day in London, the president and First Lady Michelle Obama traveled to Windsor Castle for lunch with Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip." -- CW
Mark Berman & Matt Zapotosky of the Washington Post: "FBI Director James Comey suggested Thursday that the bureau paid more than $1 million to access an iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino attackers, the first time the agency has offered a possible price tag in the high-profile case. While speaking at a security forum in London hosted by the Aspen Institute, Comey would not offer a precise dollar figure, saying only that it cost 'a lot' to get into the phone." -- CW ...
... The Guardian story, by Danny Yadron, is here. --safari ...
... Update. Eric Lichtblau & Katie Benner of the New York Times do the math: "The director of the F.B.I. suggested Thursday that his agency paid at least $1.3 million to an undisclosed group to help hack into the encrypted iPhone used by an attacker in the mass shooting in San Bernardino, Calif." -- CW
Nathaniel Popper of the New York Times: "Regulators released on Thursday long-awaited proposed rules that would restrict how big financial institutions can pay their top executives. The new rules would make bankers wait at least four years to receive portions of their bonuses and force banks to find ways to claw back bonuses from bankers if their behavior leads to big financial losses. The new rules would apply only to incentive-based compensation -- generally bonuses -- which varies according to the performance of the bank and the individual executive." -- CW
Jack Ewing of the New York Times: "Volkswagen agreed on Thursday to fix or buy back nearly 500,000 diesel cars in the United States that are equipped with illegal emissions software. But the measures fell short of a broader settlement that will eventually also include fines and additional compensation for owners stemming from the carmaker's admission that it rigged diesel vehicles to cheat on pollution tests." -- CW (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
...Christoph Rauwald of Bloomberg: "Volkswagen AG more than doubled provisions to pay for the emissions-cheating scandal, leading to the biggest loss in the German automaker's history while giving it a path toward assessing the full financial impact of the crisis." -- unwashed
Devin Henry of the Hill: "Senate Democrats on Thursday blocked a Republican effort to prevent further spending on an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rule designed to establish federal regulatory control over small waterways. The measure ... failed to meet the 60-vote threshold needed to overcome a Democratic filibuster; the vote was 56-42." -- CW
Rebecca Savransky of the Hill: "House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said he thinks he's doing a better job than his predecessor, John Boehner (R-Ohio). 'I think I do it better,' he told CNN in an interview this week." CW: That's not really a boast. A hampster would do a better job than the Boehner.
... Cristina Marcos of the Hill: "Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) warned Thursday that overturning North Carolina's controversial bathroom law would make it easier for sex offenders to harass young children.... Gohmert singled out Target, which this week said that it will allow transgender people to use the restroom or fitting room facility that corresponds with their gender identities. That didn't sit well with Gohmert, who declared he won't be shopping at the retail giant anymore." -- CW
Dan Keating & Lenny Bernstein of the Washington Post: "The U.S. suicide rate has increased sharply since the turn of the century, led by an even greater rise among middle-aged white people, particularly women, according to federal data released Friday. Last decade's severe recession, more drug addiction, 'gray divorce,' increased social isolation, and even the rise of the Internet and social media may have contributed to the growth in suicide, according to a variety of people who study the issue." -- CW
Tiq Milan of The Guardian: "Over the last few years, trans people have been visible like never before, with several television shows and reality series showcasing their lived experience... That increased cultural prominence has led to more acceptance than ever, yes, but also to an uncloaking of an ongoing strain of anti-trans prejudice and hatred." --safari
Paul Krugman reminds us of why we are in Alexander Hamilton's debt, in more senses than one. ...
Andrew Jackson had a great history. I think it's very rough when you take somebody off the bill. Andrew Jackson had a history of tremendous success for the country.... I think Harriet Tubman is fantastic. I would love to leave Andrew Jackson and see if we can come up with another denomination. Maybe we do the $2 bill or another bill. I don't like seeing it.... Yes, I think it's pure political correctness [to replace Jackson. He's] been on the bill for many, many years and really represented somebody that was really very important to this country. -- Donald Trump, on the "Today" show yesterday
If you saw yesterday's Commentariat, you know this is exactly what Ben Carson said, & if you read Steve M.'s post linked yesterday, you also know both of these nitwits learned their "history" watching Fox "News" Three Stooges morning show. -- Constant Weader ...
... Kevin Levin of The Daily Beast: "While the announcement [of Harriet Tubman] has been received with a great deal of excitement, it is not the first time in American history that African Americans have been featured on currency. African Americans were depicted in a wide range of scenes on Confederate currency during the first year of the war. Their presence ... highlight[s] the importance that Confederate leaders placed on the preservation of slavery and white supremacy to their new nation." --safari ...
... Ana Swanson of the Washington Post speaks to Harriet Tubman biographer Catherine Clinton about Tubman. -- CW
Brianna Ehley of Politico: "The Florida mailman who piloted a gyrocopter over Washington, D.C. and landed on the West Lawn of the Capitol last year was sentenced to 120 days of prison, U.S. Attorney Channing Phillips announced on Thursday. Douglas Hughes of Ruskin, Fla., pleaded guilty in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia last fall for flying his gyrocopter without a license into D.C. airspace. Hughes, dressed as a mailman at the time of the incident, said he was protesting campaign finance laws and came to deliver letters to members of Congress." -- CW
Presidential Race
And This Pantsuit Comes with a Full Metal Jacket, Ma'am. Mark Landler in the New York Times Magazine: "Throughout her career [Hillary Clinton] has displayed instincts on foreign policy that are more aggressive than those of President Obama -- and most Democrats.... Clinton's foreign-policy instincts are bred in the bone -- grounded in cold realism about human nature and what one aide calls 'a textbook view of American exceptionalism.'... For all their bluster about bombing the Islamic State into oblivion, neither Donald J. Trump nor Senator Ted Cruz of Texas have demonstrated anywhere near the appetite for military engagement abroad that Clinton has." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...
... CW: To readers put off by Ben Nelson's Norton's over-the-top diatribe against the Clintons -- here's a scary dose of reality for ya.
Stephan Braun of the AP: "It's not just Wall Street banks. Most companies and groups that paid ... Hillary Clinton to speak between 2013 and 2015 have lobbied federal agencies in recent years, and more than one-third are government contractors, an Associated Press review has found. Their interests are sprawling and would follow Clinton to the White House should she win election this fall.... Clinton's two-year speaking tour, which took place after she resigned as secretary of state, 'puts her in the position of having to disavow that money is an influence on her while at the same time backing campaign reform based on the influence of money,' said [Lawrence] Noble [of the Campaign Legal Center &], a former general counsel at the Federal Election Commission. 'It ends up creating the appearance of influence.'" -- CW
John Harwood of the New York Times: Vice President Joe Biden "remains neutral in the battle between Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton, but not between their campaign styles. He'll take Mr. Sanders's aspirational approach over Mrs. Clinton's caution any day. 'I like the idea of saying, "We can do much more," because we can,' Mr. Biden said in an interview on the Washington-to-Wilmington, Del., Amtrak train.... 'I don't think any Democrat's ever won saying, "We can't think that big -- we ought to really downsize here because it's not realistic,"' he said in a mocking tone. 'C'mon man, this is the Democratic Party! I'm not part of the party that says, "Well, we can't do it."'" -- CW ...
... Tim Egan, who uses his column today to slam Bernie Sanders & Donald Trump, acknowledges that Hillary Clinton lacks a big idea, & he urges her to get one.
Nicholas Confessore & Sarah Cohen of the New York Times: "Hillary Clinton has burned through tens of millions of dollars to counter Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont in states that are unlikely to be general election battlegrounds, delaying any pivot to the general election and shrinking her potential financial advantage over the eventual Republican nominee." -- CW
Nick Gass of Politico: "Hillary Clinton slammed the abundance of guns in the United States on Thursday, in her latest remarks stressing the need for a national movement to blunt the influence of the gun lobby and end the cycle of violence perpetuated with firearms. 'It is just too easy for people to reach for a gun to solve their problems. It makes no sense,' Clinton said in remarks preceding a panel in Hartford, Connecticut, that featured family members of gun-violence victims, including at nearby Newtown's Sandy Hook Elementary in 2012." -- CW ...
... Christine Stuart of ctnewsjunkie.com: "Hillary Clinton ... focus[ed] her message on the gun issue Thursday during a campaign stop at the YMCA on Albany Avenue in Hartford's north end'... 'If anything else we're killing 33,000 people a year,' Clinton said. If that was any other epidemic 'we'd be doing everything we possibly could to save lives.'" -- unwashed
... While Hill's talking guns, Bill's getting pizza according to Randall Beach of the New Haven Register: "Bill Clinton gets a warm welcome at New Haven's Pepe's." -- unwashed
... Nick Gass: Jane Sanders ... laced into [Clinton's] approach Thursday. 'I just don't like to see it be politicized. I think that Secretary Clinton's gun record is a lot more spotty than Bernie's,' Jane Sanders ... said in an interview with CNN.... Sanders noted that her husband [Bernie] has, since 1988, 'been consistently supportive of instant background checks, opposed to assault weapons, the sale and manufacture of assault weapons, for closing the gun show loophole, ending the strawman problem. And I think that's been since 1988.." -- CW
Robert Costa & Philip Rucker of the Washington Post: "A contested [Republican] convention would mean that instead of focusing on a running mate that would most improve their chances of swaying voters nationwide in November, Donald Trump, Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich may first consider whether someone will help them win over delegates. -- CW
Jonathan Martin of the New York Times: A Republican National Committee panel on Thursday overwhelmingly rejected an effort to make preliminary changes to the rules governing the party's convention this summer, batting away a move to make it more difficult for party leaders to draft a 'white knight' candidate into the race.... The House Rules[, which the panel let stand,] can be interpreted as allowing the chairman of the convention, Speaker Paul D. Ryan, to reopen presidential nominations...." -- CW ...
... Jonathan Martin: "The Republican National Committee is scaling back its financial commitments to some of the most hotly contested states because of flagging fund-raising, the most concrete evidence yet of how the party's divisive and protracted presidential race is threatening the entire Republican ticket in November." -- CW ...
... Jonathan Martin & Jeremy Peters of the New York Times: "Donald J. Trump's newly installed campaign chief sought to assure members of the Republican National Committee on Thursday night that Mr. Trump recognized the need to reshape his persona and that his campaign would begin working with the political establishment that he has scorned to great effect. Addressing about 100 committee members at the spring meeting [in Hollywood, Florida]..., the campaign chief, Paul Manafort, bluntly suggested the candidate's incendiary style amounted to an act." ...
... CW: Maybe Trump is capable of toning down the obnoxious. (Or maybe not.) Maybe he can learn to use a teleprompter. Reportedly, he is practicing. But exactly how is he going to stop being ignorant? Are we to believe a guy who is "speaking mainly with myself" because "I've said a lot of things" will now master policy books compiled by the leading (Oxymoron Warning!) confederate intellectuals"? ...
... Best sentence in Times story: "Mr. Manafort's comments, which included a PowerPoint presentation, came during a happy-hour reception at the beachside hotel resort here." Kinda reflects the gravity of the matter, doesn't it? ...
... ** Will the Real Donald Trump Please Stand Up? Paul Waldman comments, in the Washington Post, on Trump's upcoming "transformation": "... the truth is that Trump is the most inauthentic candidate there is.... Just try to imagine for a moment what the reaction in the media would be if Hillary Clinton -- another politician who is constantly criticized for being insufficiently 'real' -- had her campaign manager say in public that she would be transforming her personality for the general election, because it's all an act anyway." -- CW
Eli Stokols & Kyle Cheney of Politico: "Delegates face death threats from Trump supporters. At the Republican National Committee's spring meeting, delegates describe vicious missives demanding they support the GOP front-runner." -- CW
Clinton May Be a Scary Hawk, but Trump Is Scarier. Edward-Isaac Dovere & Bryan Bender of Politico: "President Barack Obama is trying but failing to reassure foreign leaders convinced that Donald Trump will be the next president of the United States. They're in full-boil panic.... In meetings, private dinners and phone calls, world leaders are urgently seeking explanations from Obama and Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State John Kerry, Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Trade Representative Michael Froman on down. American ambassadors are asking for guidance from Washington about what they're supposed to say. 'They're scared and they're trying to understand how real this is,' said one American official in touch with foreign leaders." -- CW
Eric Levitz of New York: "Donald Trump says transgender people should be able to "use the bathroom that they feel is appropriate.' On NBC's Today show Thursday morning, the GOP front-runner said he opposes North Carolina's 'very strong' bathroom bill, which allows businesses to prohibit transgender people from doing just that." -- CW (Also linked yesterday.) ...
... Eric Levitz: "Call Ted Cruz old-fashioned, but he just doesn't think we should legalize child molestation for the sake of political correctness. That was the essence of the Texas senator's rebuttal to Donald Trump on Thursday, after the GOP front-runner declared his opposition to North Carolina's 'bathroom bill.'" --safari ...
Donald Trump is no different from politically correct leftist elites. Today, he joined them in calling for grown men to be allowed to use little girls'; public restrooms. As the dad of young daughters, I dread what this will mean for our daughters -- and for our sisters and our wives. It is a reckless policy that will endanger our loved ones.... Donald stands up for this irresponsible policy while at the same time caving in on defending individual freedoms and religious liberty. -- Ted Cruz, in a thoughtful, measured response to Donald Trump's opposition to the North Carolina law -- CW
Steve Benen: Donald Trump said again Thursday morning, to applause, that he believes in raising taxes for the wealthy. "... when Trump earns applause for saying he supports raising taxes on the wealthy, he conveniently overlooks the fact that he's running on a platform that calls for massive tax breaks for the wealthy.... It's entirely possible ... that Trump has no idea what his campaign has put forward in terms of tax plans, and in turn, he may not realize the great distance between his rhetoric and reality.... But either way, there's ample evidence that Trump does not agree with his most popular policy position." -- CW ...
... CW: Now wouldn't it be something if some journalist asked him about the discrepancy between his rhetoric & his plan-on-paper? Nah, too much to ask when we're more concerned about the source of that thing on his head:
Matt Flegenheimer of the New York Times: "Senator Ted Cruz says the party's nominating rules have been in place from the beginning. Mr. Cruz is right, and he may be losing the public argument anyway. With polls showing a strong preference for nominating the candidate with the most popular votes -- even if he fails to secure a majority of delegates before the convention in July -- Mr. Cruz has brushed up this week against an uncomfortable reality: His only road to victory is a messy one.... Mr. Cruz ... has appeared increasingly frustrated amid questions about his path." -- CW
Unsurprisingly, Ted Cruz rushes to the defense of longtime jerkwad Curt Schilling. -- Paul Waldman
ESPN fired Curt Schilling for making the rather obvious point that we shouldn't allow grown male adult strangers alone in a bathroom with little girls. That's a point anyone who is rational should understand. -- Ted Cruz, in a thoughtful, measured response to Curt Schilling's firing for forwarding & defending an obnoxious photo of his idea of a trans person -- CW
"John Kasich Reveals Secret Balanced-Budget Plan Is Stored in Undisclosed Location in Columbus, Ohio." Jonathan Chait:" John Kasich has been running for president as the candidate of sobriety and 'ideas,' the main one of which is his 'plan' to balance the budget. The trouble ... is that such a plan does not exist.... The other day, Kasich stopped by the Washington Post editorial page for an interview, where columnists Catherine Rampell and Ruth Marcus attempted to pin him down. The result was a comic masterpiece best appreciated if read in the voice of Jerry Lundegaard, William H. Macy's Fargo character." -- CW (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...
... Here's a transcript of the full Kasich interview. -- CW
Beyond the Beltway
Kevin Miller of the Portland (Maine) Press Herald: Maine's "Gov. Paul LePage vetoed a bill Wednesday that would allow pharmacists to dispense an anti-overdose drug without a prescription, saying that allowing addicts to keep naloxone on hand 'serves only to perpetuate the cycle of addiction.' The Legislature passed the bill 'under the hammer' -- or unanimously without a roll call -- this month as part of lawmakers' attempts to address Maine's growing opioid addiction epidemic." -- CW
David Edwards of RawStory: "Sheriff Chuck Wright of Spartanburg County, South Carolina came under fire this week after he recently argued that minorities were 'the most racist people in America' and compared the NAACP to the Ku Klux Klan." --safari
Josh Gerstein of Politico: "A federal judge in Los Angeles has again shut down California Attorney General Kamala Harris' drive to obtain the donor list for Americans for Prosperity, an influential political group funded by Charles and David Koch. U.S. District Court Judge Manuel Real issued a permanent injunction Thursday barring Harris' office from requiring AFP to submit the donor list. And AFP may not be considered deficient or delinquent in its filings because it won't turn over the form, the judge said. In his ruling, Real said the California attorney general's claims that she needed the information for investigative purposes were dubious...." -- CW
Derek Markham of Treehugger: San Francisco "just took a big step toward its goal of powering the city with 100% renewable electricity by 2025 with the passage of a bill that will require new residential and commercial buildings to include rooftop solar, either solar electric or solar water heating. This ordinance, which was unanimously passed by the city's Board of Supervisors, is essentially the extension of an existing regulation that required new building projects to designate 15% of a building's roof as being "solar ready," which means unshaded and clear of obstructions and reserved for solar." -- CW
Way Beyond
Ian Shapira of the Washington Post: "More than 13 years after an Egyptian cleric was kidnapped off the streets of Milan by CIA operatives, one former agency officer now living in Portugal faces extradition to Italy and the possibility of a four-year prison sentence for the abduction -- an outcome that a former agency historian describes as 'unprecedented.' Sabrina De Sousa, 60, was one of 26 Americans convicted in absentia by Italian courts for her alleged role in the February 2003 rendition of Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, also known as Abu Omar." -- CW (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
Robinson Meyer of The Atlantic: "Among the world's rivers, the Amazon reigns with the heaviest crown. Now, researchers have added yet another jewel to the river's crown. A team of Brazilian and American scientists have discovered a new sponge and coral reef more than 600 miles long (1,000 kilometers), located at the mouth of the Amazon River." --safari
Bennish Ahmed of ThinkProgress: "A state of emergency was declared after 11 members of a single, remote community of Aboriginal Canadians tried to take their lives earlier this month. But as many indigenous and political leaders noted, the issue isn't isolated to Attawapiskat Canada -- it isn't even limited to Canada. According to a report by Survive International, interference by outside forces has effected indigenous communities around the world for the worst."--safari
News Lede
TMZ: The performer "Prince was treated for a drug overdose 6 days before his death ... multiple sources tell TMZ." CW: TMZ is not the most reliable source, but the celebrity sheet does often get stories right. Obviously, I have no idea if TMZ is right about this, but I read elsewhere that an autopsy would be performed, so sooner or later, the public should get some clarity.