The Wires
powered by Surfing Waves
Help!

To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

Link Code:   <a href="URL">text</a>

OR here's a link generator. The one I had posted died, then Akhilleus found one, but it too bit the dust. He found yet another, which I've linked here, and as of September 23, 2024, it's working.

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

The New York Times lists Emmy winners. The AP has an overview story here.

New York Times: “Hvaldimir, a beluga whale who had captured the public’s imagination since 2019 after he was spotted wearing a harness seemingly designed for a camera, was found dead on Saturday in Norway, according to a nonprofit that worked to protect the whale.... [Hvaldimir] was wearing a harness that identified it as “equipment” from St. Petersburg. There also appeared to be a camera mount. Some wondered if the whale was on a Russian reconnaissance mission. Russia has never claimed ownership of the whale. If Hvaldimir was a spy, he was an exceptionally friendly one. The whale showed signs of domestication, and was comfortable around people. He remained in busier waters than are typical for belugas....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, Lord, do not let Bobby Kennedy, Jr., near that carcass. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: “There’s no evidence that a well-known beluga whale that lived off Norway’s coast and whose harness ignited speculation it was a Russian spy was shot to death last month as claimed by animal rights groups, Norwegian police said Monday.... Police said that the Norwegian Veterinary Institute conducted a preliminary autopsy on the animal, which was become known as 'Hvaldimir,' combining the Norwegian word for whale — hval — and the first name of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'There are no findings from the autopsy that indicate that Hvaldimir has been shot,' police said in a statement.”

New York Times: Botswana's “President Mokgweetsi Masisi grinned as he lifted the diamond, a 2,492-carat stone that is the biggest diamond unearthed in more than a century and the second-largest ever found, according to the Vancouver-based mining operator Lucara, which owns the mine where it was found. This exceptional discovery could bring back the luster of the natural diamond mining industry, mining companies and experts say. The diamond was discovered in the same relatively small mine in northeastern Botswana that has produced several of the largest such stones in living memory. Such gemstones typically surface as a result of volcanic activity.... The diamond will likely sell in the range of tens of millions of dollars....”

Click on photo to enlarge.

~~~ Guardian: "On a distant reef 16,000km from Paris, surfer Gabriel Medina has given Olympic viewers one of the most memorable images of the Games yet, with an airborne celebration so well poised it looked too good to be true. The Brazilian took off a thundering wave at Teahupo’o in Tahiti on Monday, emerging from a barrelling section before soaring into the air and appearing to settle on a Pacific cloud, pointing to the sky with biblical serenity, his movements mirrored precisely by his surfboard. The shot was taken by Agence France-Presse photographer Jérôme Brouillet, who said “the conditions were perfect, the waves were taller than we expected”. He took the photo while aboard a boat nearby, capturing the surreal image with such accuracy that at first some suspected Photoshop or AI." 

Washington Post: “'Mary Cassatt at Work' is a large and mostly satisfying exhibition devoted to the career of the great American artist beloved for her sensitive and often sentimental views of family life. The 'at work' in the title of the Philadelphia Museum of Art show references the curators’ interest in Cassatt’s pioneering effort to establish herself as a professional artist within a male-dominated field. Throughout the show, which includes some 130 paintings, pastels, prints and drawings, the wall text and the art on view stresses Cassatt’s fixation on art as a career rather than a pastime.... Mary Cassatt at Work is on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through Sept. 8. philamuseum.org

New York Times: “Bob Newhart, who died on Thursday at the age of 94, has been such a beloved giant of popular culture for so long that it’s easy to forget how unlikely it was that he became one of the founding fathers of stand-up comedy. Before basically inventing the hit stand-up special, with the 1960 Grammy-winning album 'The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart' — that doesn’t even count his pay-per-view event broadcast on Canadian television that some cite as the first filmed special — he was a soft-spoken accountant who had never done a set in a nightclub. That he made a classic with so little preparation is one of the great miracles in the history of comedy.... Bob Newhart holds up. In fact, it’s hard to think of a stand-up from that era who is a better argument against the commonplace idea that comedy does not age well.”

Washington Post: “An early Titian masterpiece — once looted by Napolean’s troops and a part of royal collections for centuries — caused a stir when it was stolen from the home of a British marquess in 1995. Seven years later, it was found inside an unassuming white and blue plastic bag at a bus stop in southwest London by an art detective, and returned. This week, the oil painting 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' sold for more than $22 million at Christie’s. It was a record for the Renaissance artist, whom museums describe as the greatest painter of 16th-century Venice. Ahead of the sale in April, the auction house billed it as 'the most important work by Titian to come to the auction market in more than a generation.'”

Washington Post: The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., which houses the world's largest collection of Shakespeare material, has undergone a major renovation. "The change to the building is pervasive, both subtle and transformational."

Contact Marie

Click on this link to e-mail Marie.

Constant Comments

A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. -- Edward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Saturday
Oct242015

The Commentariat -- October 25, 2015

Internal links removed.

Sharon LaFraniere & Andrew Lehren of the New York Times: "... an analysis by The New York Times of tens of thousands of traffic stops and years of arrest data in [Greensboro, N.C., a] racially mixed city of 280,000, uncovered wide racial differences in measure after measure of police conduct. Those same disparities were found across North Carolina, the state that collects the most detailed data on traffic stops. And at least some of them showed up in the six other states that collect comprehensive traffic-stop statistics." ...

... CW: This is the type of reporting, BTW, that according to FBI Director James Comey, would constitute "the additional scrutiny and criticism of police officers..., [which] may have led to an increase in violent crime in some cities as officers have become less aggressive.... Mr. Comey said that he had been told by many police leaders that officers who would normally stop to question suspicious people are opting to stay in their patrol cars for fear of having their encounters become worldwide video sensations. That hesitancy has led to missed opportunities to apprehend suspects, he said, and has decreased the police presence on the streets of the country's most violent cities." Most people would call this a purposeful work slowdown or just plain dereliction of duty. What Comey is suggesting here is that First Amendment rights to freedom of speech & of the press cause violence because the police don't want to get caught on tape roughing up citizens. Comey is suggesting that a police state is less violent, or safer, than one that respects human rights. ...

... Amy Brittain of the Washington Post: "There have been "800 fatal shootings by police so far this year.... But only a small number of the shootings -- roughly 5 percent -- occurred under the kind of circumstances that raise doubt and draw public outcry, according to an analysis by The Washington Post. The vast majority of individuals shot and killed by police officers were ... armed with guns and killed after attacking police officers or civilians or making other direct threats."

Katie Zezima of the New York Times: "Faced with mounting and bipartisan opposition to increased and often high-stakes testing in the nation's public schools, the Obama administration declared Saturday that the push had gone too far, acknowledged its own role in the proliferation of tests, and urged schools to step back and make exams less onerous and more purposeful. Specifically, the administration called for a cap on assessment so that no child would spend more than 2 percent of classroom instruction time taking tests. It called on Congress to 'reduce over-testing' as it reauthorizes the federal legislation governing the nation's public elementary and secondary schools."

Allegra Kirkland of TPM: "President Obama compared the 'gloomy' Republican Party to grumpy cat, the dour-faced feline Internet celebrity, on Friday. Pouting in his best imitation of the cat that spawned a thousand memes, Obama was met with raucous laughter from attendees at the Democratic National Committee's Women's Leadership Forum":

Rachel Bade of Politico: "Amid growing Democratic accusations of overreaching, especially on the matter of Hillary Clinton's emails, Republicans on the House Benghazi Committee are now reconsidering how aggressively to pursue the email scandal that's been dogging the Democratic front-runner." ...

... Maureen Dowd criticizes Hillary Clinton's management of the Libyan crisis, post-bombing. She describes Hillary as the prime mover behind the decision to go into Libyan & therefore the one who should have been most on top of the situation: "When you are the Valkyrie who engineers the intervention, you can't then say it is beneath you to pay attention to the ludicrously negligent security for your handpicked choice for ambassador in a lawless country full of assassinations and jihadist training camps." CW: I think both Dowd & Republicans give Hillary too much credit here -- as even Dowd acknowledges, both Samantha Power & Susan Rice were behind the U.S. invasion, too. Oh, & Britain, France & Canada. Dowd completely forgets about them. But she has a point. Hillary isn't a lot better than Dubya at planning an after-invasion. All Middle-Eastern countries are not alike, but there is only one democracy in the Middle East: Israel. (Kuwait is a partial democracy, & Tunisia is working at it.) You might think there's reasons for that.

Juan Cole: "The fruitless carnival barking that was the GOP Benghazi inquisition did the nation the disservice of taking focus off the things really wrong with US policies, and places there really was wrongdoing. So here are some suggestions for real investigations." CW: Sorry, Juan, a GOP-led Congress never does "real investigations."

** Jimmy Carter, in a New York Times op-ed, promotes a five-nation plan to end the Syrian conflict. Read it.

Carol Morello & Hugh Naylor of the Washington Post: "Israel and Jordan have agreed to take steps aimed at quelling a wave of violence, starting with the installation of security cameras on the al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem, Secretary of State John F. Kerry said Saturday. Speaking after meetings with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Jordanian King Abdullah II, Kerry told reporters that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had agreed to King Abdullah's suggestion to install the 24-hour cameras at the holy site, which has been a focus of long-standing tensions between Israelis and Palestinians. 'This will provide comprehensive visibility and transparency,' Kerry said. 'It could be a game-changer in discouraging anybody from disturbing the sanctity of the holy sites.'"

Laurie Goodstein of the New York Times: "A three-week global assembly called by Pope Francis to re-examine church teaching on marriage and family in the modern era ended with bishops stopping short of allowing divorced and remarried Catholics to take communion, but encouraging their fuller participation in the church. The bishops drew a hard line against any acceptance of same-sex marriage, saying in their final document that it is not 'even remotely analogous' to marriage between a man and a woman. They added that gay people should be respected and not subjected to 'unjust discrimination' -- a reiteration of prior church teaching. The next steps are now in the hands of Pope Francis...."

Presidential Race

Jennifer Jacobs & Kevin Hardy of the Des Moines Register: "The three Democratic presidential candidates used adrenaline-filled pop music, emotional ballads and fiery speeches Saturday to try to catch the same tailwind that Barack Obama captured at the Jefferson Jackson dinner eight years ago. The 'JJ' dinner is Iowa Democrats' biggest party of the year, the signal that it's the final stretch before the first-in-the-nation caucuses on Feb. 1.... Front-runner Hillary Clinton arrived for the landmark event in a position of strength, but instead of coasting, unleashed the star power of her husband and pop superstar Katy Perry at a free concert that attracted thousands, then gave a confident, conversational speech to thousands of the party's most trusty activists. " With video. ...

... Links to the Register's complete coverage are here. Bernie Sanders' full speech is here. Hillary Clinton's full speech, taped in pieces, is here. And, if you've got 2 hours & 15 minutes to spare, C-SPAN is the way to go. ...

... Karen Tumulty & Philip Rucker of the Washington Post: "The two leading Democratic presidential contenders on Saturday night drew their clearest and sharpest distinctions yet. At a high-profile Democratic party dinner here, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) took a series of veiled, yet unmistakable jabs at former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton, saying that he would govern on principle. Where Sanders' address represented a new and more aggressive posture against the frontrunner, Clinton delivered one that was close to her standard stump speech, in which she made the argument that she would be a fighter who would find common ground and deliver results."...

... Annie Karni & Glenn Thrush of Politico: In Des Moines, Iowa, Bill Clinton warms up the crowd before performer Katy Perry's concert for Hillary Clinton. It was his first campaign appearance this year. ...

Rachel Maddow interviewed Hillary Clinton (aired Friday):

     ... The full transcript is here.

Kristina Wong of the Hill: "... Donald Trump on Saturday mocked fellow contenders Jeb Bush and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) at a rally in their home state of Florida. Trump teased Bush, a former Florida governor, for his recent decision to lay off campaign staff and cut salaries by 40 percent, and for his planned retreat with donors in Texas on Sunday. 'Bush has no money, he's meeting today with mommy and daddy, and they're working on his campaign,' Trump said at the rally in downtown Jacksonville, Fla. 'He's a guy wants to run our country and he can't even run his own campaign. Think of it,' he added." He also took a shot at Ben Carson's religion: "'I'm Presbyterian. That's down the middle of road,' he said. 'I mean, Seventh-day Adventist I don't know about.'" ...

... Major Garrett of CBS News: "Jeb Bush will attend a finance meeting this weekend in Houston convened by former President George H. W. Bush and attended by Bush's brother, former President George W. Bush, CBS News has learned. The session, designed to assess where Bush's candidacy stands in the face of large-scale staff cutbacks and underwhelming poll numbers, will also be attended by Bush's mother, Barbara Bush. The governor's campaign confirmed the meeting will be held Sunday and Monday." ...

This sounds way more like an intervention than a meeting. -- Daniel Drezner, on Twitter (See also other snarky commentary gathered by Annie Laurie of Balloon Juice at the linked page.) ...

... Ashley Killough of CNN: "A day after slashing salaries and cutting campaign staff..., [Jeb Bush] got an enthusiastic reception and delivered one of his strongest campaign performances to date. He tore into Donald Trump repeatedly and roused some in the crowd to their feet on answers about the military and foreign policy. Bush took part in a town hall series hosted by South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, drawing an audience of more than 500 people, about twice the number Bush normally attracts on the campaign trail." ...

Blah blah blah blah, that's my answer, blah blah blah. -- Jeb Bush, responding to reports that he has cut back his campaign

Nice to learn Jeb! is as articulate as ever. -- Constant Weader

... But, Wait. He's not stopping at "blah blah blah." Which is a mistake:

I've got a lot of really cool things I could do other than sit around being miserable, listening to people demonize me and me feeling compelled to demonize them. That is a joke. -- Jeb!, at that "strong campaign performance" in South Carolina

... Nancy LeTourneau of the Washington Monthly: "In some ways, that might be one of the most honest things Jeb has said this campaign. But letting folks know that he has other cool things he'd rather be doing than fighting for the nomination reeks of the kind of entitlement folks have come to expect from the Republican establishment." CW: I doubt Jeb! does actual "cool things." If he does, he does them awkwardly. "Jeb!" & "cool" are fairly antithetical.

Gubernatorial Race

Kevin Robillard of Politico: "A private investigator working for Sen. David Vitter's gubernatorial campaign [in Louisiana] was arrested Friday and charged with illegally recording a conversation involving a local sheriff, throwing a last-minute wrench into Saturday's all-party primary as other campaigns pounced on the news.... [Sheriff Newell] Normand, a Republican, is a backer of Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne in the governor's race.... 'So we know this about David Vitter. He's cheated, he's lied and now he's been caught spying,' Dardenne says direct to the camera in a web ad his campaign shot late last night."

Kevin Robillard : "Sen. David Vitter spent the summer on a glide path to becoming Louisiana's next governor. But even if Vitter earns a spot in the general election after Saturday's all-party primary, the Republican's ascension to the governor's mansion is in serious trouble. Vitter is still blessed with the most financial backing of any of the candidates and near-universal name recognition in the state. But over the past few months, his approval ratings have slipped underwater after Vitter's opponents -- including two fellow Republicans -- have spent significant time and money rehashing Vitter's 2007 prostitution scandal."

... UPDATE. Julia O'Donoghue of the New Orleans Times-Picayune: "Democratic state Rep. John Bel Edwards and Republican U.S. Sen. David Vitter will continue their heated battle for governor in a Nov. 21 runoff after finishing 1-2 in the primary election Saturday. The Edwards-Vitter pairing was no surprise. Edwards was all but guaranteed 30 percent of the vote as the only major Democrat running; he ended up with 40 percent. Vitter was the candidate of choice for conservative Republicans, but was a distant second with 23 percent. In the end, the two other Republicans in the race -- Public Service Commissioner Scott Angelle and Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne -- couldn't piece together coalitions big enough to overcome Vitter's conservative appeal. Vitter may be popular with his 'super Republican' base, but polling shows he has 'high negatives' among other groups of voters."

News Ledes

New York Times: "Poland's chief right-wing opposition party, out of power for nearly a decade, came roaring back in parliamentary voting Sunday, apparently seizing control of the government with a platform that mixes calls for higher wages with appeals to traditional Catholic values."

New York Times: "Russian submarines and spy ships are aggressively operating near the vital undersea cables that carry almost all global Internet communications, raising concerns among some American military and intelligence officials that the Russians might be planning to attack those lines in times of conflict."

Friday
Oct232015

The Commentariat -- October 24, 2015

Internal links removed.

Michael Schmidt & Matt Apuzzo The F.B.I. director, James B. Comey, said on Friday that the additional scrutiny and criticism of police officers in the wake of highly publicized incidents of police brutality may have led to an increase in violent crime in some cities as officers have become less aggressive. With his remarks, Mr. Comey lent the prestige of the F.B.I. ... to a theory that is far from settled: that the increased attention on the police has made officers less aggressive and emboldened criminals. But Mr. Comey acknowledged that there is so far no data to back up his assertion and that it may be just one of many factors that are contributing to the rise in crime, like cheaper drugs and an increase in criminals who are being released from prison."

Richard Perez-Pena, et al., of the New York Times: In a successful mission to free ISIS hostages, "the only rescuer who died was Sergeant [Joshua] Wheeler, a veteran of 14 deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, with a chest full of medals. His honors included four Bronze Stars with the letter V, awarded for valor in combat; and seven Bronze Stars, awarded for heroic or meritorious service in a combat zone. His body will be returned to the United States on Saturday."

Carol Morello of the Washington Post: "Secretary of State John F. Kerry met with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Jordan's King Abdullah Saturday as he continued his quest to defuse an escalating wave of violence between Israel and Palestinians."

Christian Davenport of the Washington Post: "Four years before Pentagon officials discovered potentially life-threatening problems with the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter's ejection seat, a top official warned in an urgent memo that the escape system should be more thoroughly vetted before pilots were trained on the plane.... [The] warnings were rejected by Pentagon brass, who pressed on with the controversial program, according to internal documents obtained by The Washington Post.... Lighter-weight pilots face a 'high' risk of danger, and the risk is deemed 'serious' for mid-weight pilots, according to an internal risk assessment of the problem.... Lighter-weight pilots, those weighing less than 136 pounds, are now prohibited from flying the aircraft, officials said, until the problem is fixed." ...

     ... CW: Now, I'm sure this has nothing to do with the Pentagon's careless decision, but who do you suppose most of those "lighter-weight" pilots are? Hint: think gender.

Amy Goldstein of the Washington Post: "When HealthCare.gov opens on Nov. 1 for a third open-enrollment season, the online insurance marketplace will be easier for consumers to use, Obama administration officials predict. But one main new tool to help consumers decide on health plans will not be finished."

White House: "In this week's address, the President laid out the importance of serving as good stewards of the environment and maintaining the planet for generations to come":

Sam Thielman of the Guardian: "A federal district court has dismissed a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union against the National Security Agency.... The judge in the case, TS Ellis III, said the suit relied on 'the subjective fear of surveillance', because the NSA did not admit to having collected any of the information it was alleged to have collected by the ACLU." ...

     ... CW: Ellis is a Reagan appointee. Ellis has hit upon an excellent means to reduce -- to almost nothing -- our courts' burdensome caseloads. By his logic, few lawsuits could survive judicial scrutiny because few defendants stipulate that they're guilty. Want to reduce government spending? Throw out all the cases where the defendant does not admit to the underlying crime or tort. Wow!

Another GOP Conspiracy Theory Bites the Dust. Evan Perez of CNN: "The Justice Department notified members of Congress on Friday that it is closing its two-year investigation into whether the IRS improperly targeted the tea party and other conservative groups. There will be no charges against former IRS official Lois Lerner or anyone else at the agency, the Justice Department said in a letter. The probe found 'substantial evidence of mismanagement, poor judgment and institutional inertia leading to the belief by many tax-exempt applicants that the IRS targeted them based on their political viewpoints. But poor management is not a crime,' Assistant Attorney General Peter Kadzik said in the letter." ...

We found no evidence that any IRS official acted based on political, discriminatory, corrupt, or other inappropriate motives that would support a criminal prosecution. We also found no evidence that any official involved in the handling of tax-exempt applications or IRS leadership attempted to obstruct justice. -- Assistant AG Peter Kadzik

... David Nir of Daily Kos: "There's an amazing irony in this. Conservatives have railed against the IRS from the moment it was born, and Republicans have done everything in their power to starve it of funds and undermine its very existence. As a result, the agency was unable to process applications for non-profits in an efficient manner, which those very same conservative haters decided was proof that the IRS was out to get them." CW: Yeah but. It was the Obama DOJ that let Lerner off the hook. This is absolute proof of a vast left-wing conspiracy! ...

... They Just Can't Help Themselves. Right on cue, Paul Ryan says the result was "predictable" & the House Ways & Means Committee will continue to investigate Lois Lerner for "depriv[ing] conservative organizations of their Constitutional rights." ...

... Winger Erick Erickson: "The Department of Justice has, for decades, been a stronghold of progressives. Both [I guess he means the DOJ & the IRS] are hotbeds of partisan Democrats and devoted socialists who use the coercive power of the regulatory state to advance their agenda regardless of who is in the White House. One of the first tasks of a Republican president, should we elect one, is to carry out a ruthless purge of the Civil Service in general and the Department of Justice in particular." ...

     ... CW: Socialists! Investigate Bernie Sanders! How about a House Select Committee with Louis Gohmert as chair. We know Bernie can stand on his feet & talk for 8+ hours straight, but can he stay calm in the face of an 11-hour Gohmert grilling? Since Paul Ryan is so keen on House investigations, he should make the establishment of a Sanders select committee his first order of business as speaker. Hillary got her 11 hours in the spotlight. Give Bernie equal time. ...

... Kevin Williamson of National Review: "DOJ won't lift a pinky against a friend of the Obama administration. This is banana-republic stuff." CW: So the conspiracy theory just gets broader.

John Harwood in the New York Times: "In 2004, when fewer people paid attention to him, Donald J. Trump gave CNN a bottom-line assessment of political parties: 'It just seems that the economy does better under the Democrats.' If that sounds awkward now for Mr. Trump..., it may be even more awkward for his party next year, because its ability to claim superior economic know-how over Democrats has grown weaker ever since he made that assertion." ...

... Simon Rosenberg has the charts to prove it. Via Paul Waldman.

Eric Lipton & Jennifer Steinhauer of the New York Times: "... calls to oust Republican leaders in Congress ... came from conservative websites and bloggers who have helped stoke a grass-roots rebellion to make Congress more conservative, a fevered continuation of the six-year Tea Party movement. But these politically charged appeals to conservatives around the country were often accompanied by a solicitation for money, and the ultimate beneficiaries, records suggest, are the consultants who created the campaigns rather than the causes they are promoting." ...

... Paul Krugman: "As Rick Perlstein pointed out several years ago, the modern conservative movement is in large part a 'strategic alliance of snake-oil vendors and conservative true believers' with 'a cast of mind that makes it hard for either them or us to discern where the ideological con ended and the money con began.'... I don't think you can understand the depth of Obama- and Hillary-hatred without understanding just how much of it is generated by scammers out to make a buck off the racism and misogyny of some -- sad to say, fairly many -- older white men."

Mike Lillis of the Hill: "Democratic leaders warned Friday that they won't negotiate with Republicans on legislation to raise the debt limit. Behind House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), the lawmakers said the economic ramifications of a debt default -- both domestic and global -- are too severe to endanger the bill with additional riders. Siding squarely with President Obama, the Democrats said they won't support anything but a "clean" bill to extend the federal government's borrowing authority." ...

... They Just Can't Help Themselves. Kelsey Snell of the Washington Post: "House Conservatives moved one step closer to forcing President Obama to veto a bill that would repeal large portions of the Affordable Care act and defund Planned Parenthood, but the legislation could still be defeated in the Senate. The House voted 240 to 189 to pass a budget reconciliation bill that seeks to gut Obamacare by repealing key sections of the law, including the individual and employer mandate and the so-called 'cadillac' tax.... House leaders were forced to scale back the legislation in recent weeks to ensure that it conformed with parliamentary rules governing reconciliation bills. That frustrated conservatives who said they were promised a bill that would fully repeal Obamacare." ...

Romney ObamaCare. Without Tom pushing it, I don't think we have had RomneyCare. Without RomneyCare, I don't think we would have ObamaCare. So, without Tom a lot of people wouldn't have health insurance. -- Mitt Romney, commenting on the death of Tom Stemberg, cofounder of Staples

Oops! Looks like the Mittster realized his gaffe. Here's his Facebook retraction: Getting people health insurance is a good thing, and that's what Tom Stemberg fought for. I oppose Obamacare and believe it has failed. It drove up premiums, took insurance away from people who were promised otherwise, and usurped state programs. As I said in the campaign, I'd repeal it and replace it with state-crafted plans.

... They Just Can't Help Themselves. Caitlin Cruz of TPM: "House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) announced Friday the appointment of eight Republicans (four women and four men) to the House Energy and Commerce Committee's Select Investigative Panel focused on 'big abortion providers' -- namely Planned Parenthood. He appointed Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) as panel chair. Other members are Rep. Joe Pitts (PA), Rep. Diane Black (TN), Rep. Larry Bucshon (IN), Rep. Sean Duffy (WI), Rep. Andy Harris (MD), Rep. Vicky Hartzler (MO) and Rep. Mia Love (UT)." ...

... Paul Waldman: "... I guess because the Select Committee on Benghazi has been such a success. And John Boehner even appointed some women to sit on it, which was mighty generous of him." ...

... Charles Pierce: "... John Boehner, who may just be pranking the bastards at this point, on Friday announced the members of the next Special Committee For Expanded Ratfcking. This one will look into the fictitious sale of baby parts by Planned Parenthood. Here are your dogged GOP inquisitors tasked with 'investigating' 'evidence' produced by phony videotapes." CW: You will want to read Pierce's dive into the views of these excellent legislator-investigators, one of whom is a member of the "watch China caucus" on accounta she read an article -- I'm sure in a highly-regarded, peer-reviewed journal -- that China is spying on us through our appliances." ...

... CW: You think life imitates art? In Right Wing World, life is art. Every notion that passes through that thing between their ears is pure fiction, contrived by a vast crackpot conspiracy.

Julian Hattem of the Hill: "House Democrats have decided to stay put on the Select Committee on Benghazi, at least temporarily, despite mounting pressure for them to boycott its work.... Still, after a roughly hour-long meeting with House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) on Friday, the committee's five Democrats repeated their demand that Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) end the 'abusive, wasteful, and obviously partisan effort.' ...

... Dan Balz of the Washington Post: "Former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton's appearance before the House Benghazi committee provided one more example of the breakdown of a Republican Party torn by factionalism and heavily influenced by a cadre of supporters who are far less interested in governing than in expressing its anger." ...

It might as well have been an informercial for the Clinton campaign. Courtesy of the Benghazi Committee. -- Josh Marshall of TPM

Yup. And that's why Fox "News" dropped its coverage when the other cable news networks did not. -- Constant Weader

... Adele Stan of the American Prospect on "why Hillary makes right-wingers so crazy.... In the right-wing mind, there is nothing so ruinous to America as the liberation of women. The right's entire ideological structure is built on worship of the Great White Father and veneration of the stern, Caucasian, disciplinarian dad. It's a worldview centered on a jealous, blue-eyed Father God, a military dispatched to teach the world a lesson, and a president who serves as the national patriarch. A President Hillary Rodham Clinton poses the gravest threat to that worldview yet -- perhaps even graver than the threat to it posed by the nation's first black president, given that more than half of Americans are women."

Annals of "Journalism," Ctd. Paul Krugman: "The Republicans wanted to portray Hillary Clinton as a super-villain, and ended up making her look like a superhero. But the real losers here are the reporters and centrist pundits who let themselves be played, month after month, by Trey Gowdy and company. I mean, anyone who took these chumps seriously has proved himself an ever bigger chump than they are."

Presidential Race

Gail Collins: "Monday is Hillary Clinton's birthday. Don't bother sending a gift. This week has given her all the presents she needs."

Karen Tumulty of the Washington Post: "Throughout her political career, Hillary Rodham Clinton's greatest curse -- the reaction she provokes in her adversaries -- has also been her salvation. That was proved once again during her 11-hour inquisition by the House Select Committee on Benghazi, a Republican-engineered train wreck from which she emerged without a scratch....'She generally has been better with her back to the wall than when she is comfortably ahead,' said David Axelrod, who was Barack Obama's chief political strategist for both of his presidential campaigns...." ...

... Francis Wilkinson of Bloomberg: "... not only is Clinton back where she started, so is the GOP. The party is no closer to gaining Hispanic, Asian or black votes than it was in 2012. (Spanish media has been highlighting Republican anti-immigrant tirades for months.) Meanwhile, the elderly white share of the electorate -- the Republican base -- continues to shrink. Bernie, Biden and Benghazi have been fun, but they've done nothing to alter the demographic dynamic of 2016. And Republicans appear no more prepared to answer the challenge." ...

... Patrick Healy & Trip Gabriel of the New York Times: "With Hillary Rodham Clinton emerging as the unrivaled leader in the Democratic contest, the unruly Republican presidential field suddenly seemed to lack a center of political gravity on Friday, leaving party strategists and voters to fear a long nomination fight that could end with a damaged standard-bearer facing a more unified left. [Jeb] Bush cut salaries, fired consultants and laid off or reassigned many campaign workers. It was the latest sign that contenders vying for support from moderates and the party's establishment are all but running on fumes -- exhausting their cash, or the patience of their supporters, but barely moving in the polls. [Donald] Trump, for months a leading candidate, has now fallen behind in Iowa to [Ben] Carson ... a retired neurosurgeon, raising questions about how aggressively he will act to reverse his sagging poll numbers. And Mr. Carson, whose fund-raising has roughly kept pace with his climb in the polls, is moving to run television commercials in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina...." ...

... "Toasttoasttoasttoasttoast."* Philip Rucker, et al., of the Washington Post: "Jeb Bush acknowledged Friday what has been obvious for weeks: The rise of Donald Trump and other political outsiders has fundamentally reshaped the contours of the 2016 presidential race, forcing Bush to retrench with a major downsizing of his political operation and a reassessment of how and where he will campaign. A week after reporting third-quarter fundraising results that only the Bush staff claimed were adequate, the onetime Republican front-runner who now lags in the polls detailed a series of substantial cutbacks and changes to his strategy." ...

     * Thanks, Gail.

... Here's the Bush campaign staff memo outlining the cutbacks. Includes whiney snark: "We would be less than forthcoming if we said we predicted in June that a reality television star supporting Canadian-style single-payer health care and partial-birth abortion would be leading the G.O.P. primary." ...

... Not a Good sign, Jeb! Eliza Collins of Politico: Megyn Kelly of Fox "News" asks Jeb!, "What would it take to make you get out?" CW: Me, I wonder if his fatcat friends will still support him, as they've been doing, once he leaves the race & has zero prospects of ever becoming a purchasable pol. ...

... Justin Wolfers of the New York Times: "Jeb Bush is no longer the leading contender to become the Republican candidate for president. Instead, prediction markets now rate Marco Rubio as far more likely to get the nod. One broad measure of the betting markets puts Mr. Rubio's chances at 34 percent versus Mr. Bush's at 23 percent."

I don't believe those polls, by the way, because both of those pollsters don't like me. -- Donald Trump on two Iowa polls -- Quinnipiac & the Des Moines Register -- that show him 8 & 9 points respectively behind Ben Carson

Andrew Kaczynski of BuzzFeed: "Conflicting headlines -- such as one from Fox News -- said [Ben] Carson was already close to having Secret Service protection activated. Meanwhile, a Washington Post story threw cold water on the report citing an official saying the Department of Homeland Security was still debating the matter. 'I'd prefer not to talk about security issues but I have recognized -- and people have been telling me for many many months -- that I'm in great danger, because I challenge the secular progressive movement to the very core,' Carson told WABC radio's Rita Cosby Show on Thursday. 'You know, they see me as an existential threat but I also believe in the good lord and we take reasonable precautions.'"

News Ledes

New York Times: "Maureen O’Hara, the spirited Irish-born actress who played strong-willed, tempestuous beauties opposite all manner of adventurers in escapist movies of the 1940s and ’50s, died on Saturday at her home in Boise, Idaho. She was 95."

Weather Channel: "Hurricane Patricia became the strongest hurricane ever known to make landfall on the Pacific coast of Mexico after the center of its eye crossed the coast of Jalisco state early Friday evening. Its winds are rapidly losing strength as its center of circulation slices into the interior of southwest Mexico overnight." ...

... Washington Post: "Hurricane Patricia, packing the strongest hurricane winds ever recorded, weakened overnight to a Category 1 storm as it moved inland over southwestern Mexico, according to the National Hurricane Center. The hurricane is expected to become a tropic storm later today, but could still produce heavy rains that cause flash floods and mudslides, the center warned."

Thursday
Oct222015

The Commentariat -- October 23, 2015

Internal links removed.

Word of the Day

 Gonfalon (or gonfalone): "(from the early Italian confalone) is a type of heraldic flag or banner, often pointed, swallow-tailed, or with several streamers, and suspended from a crossbar in an identical manner to the ancient Roman vexillum." -- Wikipedia

Use "gonfalon" in a sentence: There they were, "a roomful of pompous asses, each flying the Gonfalon of the Daft right behind their self-important persons." -- Akhilleus

*****

Uh, I think some of Jimmy Jordan’s questioning. Well, when you say new today, we knew some of that already, about the emails. In terms of her testimony? I don't know that she testified that much differently today than she has the previous times she's testified. -- Trey Gowdy, responding to questions about what new information the Hillary Clinton interrogation yielded ...

Uh, sounds like an admission that the whole exercise was a multi-million-dollar nothingburger. -- Constant Weader

Michael Shear & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: "Republican lawmakers sharply questioned [link fixed] Hillary Rodham Clinton on Thursday, seeking to build a case that the former secretary of state had been derelict in her duty to secure the American diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, in the months before the 2012 terrorist attacks that resulted in the deaths of four Americans. Mrs. Clinton's long-awaited appearance, billed by Republicans leading a select House committee investigating the Benghazi attacks as a critical moment in a monthslong inquiry, served as a replay of contested arguments from a series of previous congressional hearings and Sunday-morning talk shows." ...

... David Fahrenthold of the Washington Post: "Nine hours after it began, a House committee's questioning of Hillary Rodham Clinton has provided few new details about the 2012 attacks on American installations in Benghazi, Libya -- and, so far, no clear victory for Republicans seeking to trap Clinton in an admission of bad judgment.... The Republicans -- including Gowdy -- seemed to hurt their own cause at times. Several spent their 10-minute periods on oddball lines of questioning: One pressed Clinton repeatedly about an e-mail exchange between two State Department staffers that Clinton said she did not know. Others loudly remarked that Clinton was reading notes passed from aides, a common practice at Washington hearings." ...

... Hillary listens to "questions":

... CW: 7:15 8:15 pm ET & the Benghaazi! interrogation is still ongoing. (The prosecution finally ended at 9 pm ET.) Hillary laughed when Rep. Martha Roby (R-Ala.) asked if "she was alone all night." The Congresslady said it wasn't funny. The whole thing was a shameful spectacle. Here's the New York Times' lowlights video ...

... If you missed seeing any of the inquisition, Charles Pierce provides an accurate synopsis of the morning session: "If it wasn't Congressman Jim Jordan finally getting around to Susan Rice and the talking-points and the offense against the Constitution inherent in getting something wrong on Meet The Press -- which is the only reason we aren't presently enjoying the leadership of President Romney pp then it was Congressman Mike Pompeo, fresh off getting dope-slapped by Andrea Mitchell on that very show last Sunday, intimating that American diplomats were meeting with al Qaeda operatives prior to the attacks on the compound in Benghazi on September 11, 2012. And that is not even to mention the efforts of Congresswomen Susan Brooks and Martha Roby, back-to-back, who didn't seem to wholly understand how you cannot judge a level of interest in something based on the aggregate number of e-mails that are written about it by various people. And then there was Congressman Lynn Westmoreland of Georgia, who said, 'In mah l'il opinion,' security wasn't that good around the Benghazi compound.'" ...

... Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post: "Republicans on the Benghazi Committee have repeatedly questioned why Sidney Blumenthal, a personal friend of former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton, had her private e-mail address while Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens did not. While one can certainly question Clinton;s judgment in paying attention to Blumenthal's musings, there is a simple reason that an ambassador would not have the secretary of state's private e-mail address. It's called the chain of command. With nearly 200 ambassadors in the field, it would invite chaos if each could directly write the secretary of state." ...

... New York Times Editors: "The pointless grilling of Mrs. Clinton, who fielded a barrage of questions that have long been answered and settled, served only to embarrass the Republican lawmakers who have spent millions of dollars on a political crusade.... In a flailing performance, the committee's chairman, Trey Gowdy of South Carolina, made it evident that he and his colleagues have squandered more than $4.6 million and countless hours poring over State Department records and Mrs. Clinton's email. They produced no damning evidence, elicited no confessions and didn't succeed in getting an angry reaction from Mrs. Clinton.... Now that the hearing, which was intended to be the climactic point of the Benghazi committee inquiry, is over, the Democrats who reluctantly agreed to join the panel when it was established in May 2014 should walk away." ...

... Washington Post Editors: "THE HOUSE Select Committee on Benghazi further discredited itself on Thursday as its Republican members attempted to fuel largely insubstantial suspicions about Hillary Clinton&'s role in the 2012 Benghazi attacks.... An astoundingly large portion of ... the hearing focused on petty questioning related to Clinton associate Sidney Blumenthal and other wastes of time.... If the hearing was useful at all, it was in filling out her larger vision for U.S. foreign policy." ...

... Amy Davidson of the New Yorker: "There were several ... rounds of questions, in which her interrogators manifested all of Washington's pathologies -- dysfunction, partisan squabbling, insularity -- in such extreme form that Clinton came across not only as a grownup, as her supporters had hoped, but as the most normal person in the room." CW: I don't think these guys have any idea how ridiculous they are. ...

... Josh Marshall of TPM (writing mid-inquisition): "Republican committee members just seemed pissed because this was supposed to be awesome - after all, a committee designed to bring down Hillary and circulate all those numskull conspiracy theories about Chris Stevens wearing a chest cam and how President Obama was watching everything happening live on his iPhone. Hillary's yet to get at all flustered and has even had the opportunity to gently explain to Republican members how the State Department works. She looks poised; they're radiating spittle. It all doesn't help that Chairman Gowdy is such a comical figure. But the real thing is that they're having their big moment - HILLARY ON THE STAND!!! - just as their credibility is collapsing. She's making them regret this is even happening." ...

... Sahil Kapur of Bloomberg: "During 8 hours and 20 minutes of testimony, Clinton deftly handled some hostile ... questioning from Republicans, keeping her cool and letting Democrats on the committee handle the political attacks. In the end, Republicans threw some red meat to their conservative base but failed to land a blow to Clinton's credibility.... Many conservative commentators were unimpressed, if not angry with the proceedings.... Another sign of the way political tides where turning: The Fox News Channel, which has taken a special interest in the issue of Benghazi in recent years, cut away from the hearing midway through while other networks continued to carry it live." ...

... Kevin Drum points to a moment in the proceedings where Peter Roskam (R-Ill.) imagines what Hillary was thinking. CW: This was one of several imaginary moments for the inquisitors where one or the other of them described what they supposed Hillary Clinton was really up to. It is not a "hearing" when the "testimony" comes from the fertile imaginations of the prosecutors rather than from the witness herself. ...

... Jonathan Bernstein of Bloomberg: The sole purpose of the Benghaazi! committee is to use "government funding to furnish content for conservative media. That's all.... None of [what the GOP members asked or said] is likely to have any effect on public opinion, except perhaps by dragging Congress's approval ratings even lower. But it will provide fodder for conservative talk radio." ...

... Shoulda, Coulda, Never Woulda. John Cassidy of the New Yorker: "... in the ... jousting between Roskam and Clinton about the wisdom of intervening in Libya in the first place, it was possible to glimpse an alternative path that congressional Republicans could have taken over the past three years -- a path that might have saved them from being accused (including by members of their own party) of conducting a witch hunt, and might even have served a public purpose. For ... the current reality in Libya calls into question U.S. policy decisions. The country is a divided, chaotic, and war-torn place, where rival militias are competing for power and jihadist groups, including the Islamic State, control substantial pieces of territory.... [There] are ... legitimate questions, and an old-school Republican authority on foreign policy -- someone like Richard Lugar -- would surely have been keen to gather answers to them.... Gowdy and his colleagues in the House were too small to go in this direction. They preferred to pursue a conspiracy theory that tarred the likely Democratic candidate in 2016, riled up the G.O.P.'s base, and helped the Party to raise money."

Steven Mufson of the Washington Post: "President Obama exercised his veto power Thursday for just the fifth time in his presidency, rejecting a defense authorization bill because of the way it would sidestep budget limitations for the military and because it would restrict the transfer of detainees being held at Guantanamo Bay. The White House said that the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) would tap an overseas contingency operations account designed for emergencies and war costs and use it as a 'slush fund' to avoid budget restrictions. Those restrictions -- known as sequestration -- would impose offsetting across-the-board cuts if spending passed certain levels."

A Fine Mess. John Bresnahan & Jake Sherman of Politico: "... the U.S. government is 12 days from reaching the debt limit without a clear plan of what to do. Boehner, McCarthy and other GOP leaders are refusing at this point to move ahead with a 'clean' debt ceiling bill insisted on by President Barack Obama. Senior leadership aides said they couldn't find the 30 Republican votes needed to join with all 188 Democrats to pass that proposal -- a bleak indication of the current state of play." ...

... CW: So there are not even 30 rational House Republicans. That's amazing. ...

... Keith Laing of the Hill: "Congress has less than a week to prevent a highway-funding shutdown, with federal transportation spending currently set to expire on Oct. 29. Lawmakers are scrambling to pass at least an extension of transportation funding by next Thursday to prevent an interruption. The Department of Transportation has warned that it will have to stop making payments to states and local governments for infrastructure projects in November if Congress does not reach an agreement. Lawmakers on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on Thursday approved a bipartisan bill to spend up to $325 billion on transportation projects over the next six years. But that approach differs from a six-year bill approved by the Senate over the summer. House lawmakers had rejected the Senate bill, which authorizes funding for six years but only pays for three years of spending." ...

... MEANWHILE, in the Senate. Peter Sullivan of the Hill: "Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah) are vowing to oppose any fast-track bill repealing only parts of ObamaCare, narrowing the path for the legislation to pass the Senate. The House is set to vote on Friday on a bill under a fast-track process known as reconciliation that would repeal several parts of ObamaCare. The reconciliation process allows a measure to pass the Senate with 51 votes, instead of the usual 60, and get through to President Obama's desk, where it would face a veto.... Their opposition puts the bill's future in doubt. There are 54 Republican senators, so if Cruz, Rubio, and Lee vote no, Republicans could only afford to lose one more vote and still have a simple majority. Centrist Republicans such as Sens. Mark Kirk (Ill.) and Susan Collins (Maine) have indicated opposition to defunding Planned Parenthood, which is also part of the reconciliation bill."

Mike DeBonis of the Washington Post: "Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) said Thursday he will proceed with a run for House speaker, hours after major GOP factions pledged their support. 'After talking with so many of you, and hearing your words of encouragement, I believe we are ready to move forward as a one, united team,' he said in a letter to colleagues sent late Thursday. 'And I am ready and eager to be our speaker.'" ...

... Mike Lillis of the Hill: "Speaking to reporters Thursday in the Capitol, [Nancy] Pelosi said she's heartened that the discussions surrounding Ryan's candidacy have highlighted 'his respect for his family-work balance. That's very exciting because that's what we want for all of America's families,' she said. 'Members of Congress have paid sick leave -- it means a lot to the family-work balance,' she added. 'I hope that that respect for his particular situation would translate for a recognition of what that means to all of America's families.'" ...

... Lauren French & Jake Sherman of Politico: "Rep. Paul Ryan has agreed to delay a discussion about reforming the procedural motion used to remove a House speaker, a major concession to the House Freedom Caucus. The Wisconsin Republican, now the presumptive next speaker of the House, delivered the message to Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, the chairman of the Freedom Caucus, according to multiple sources familiar with the discussion.... Should he become House speaker, Ryan will set a deadline by which the House Republican Conference will change chamber and party rules."

** "Against Nature." Tim Egan: "... the most feckless Congress in history has just allowed ... the Land and Water Conservation Fund to die. With it could go thousands of projects nurtured along by people who had hoped that the chaos of a political party in a high fever would not reach into their favorite places.... Neighborhood playgrounds, walking trails bordering bustling cities, national parks, beaches, bridges, bike paths and birding sites are all imperiled by the imperious rigidity of a handful of congressional Republicans. For a half century, everything including the hugely popular Appalachian Trail and the memorial in Pennsylvania where Flight 93 went down on Sept. 11 has relied on money from this fund, generated by revenues from oil and gas leases.... Representative Rob Bishop of Utah, chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee ... [is] the villain in this piece.... In a nutshell crammed with nutcases, this is your Congress. It's a place that doesn't work taking on something that does work, and killing it."

... CW: I'm no political strategist, but I think Democrats, for the most part, should quit running against their opponent Rep. Dick Neanderthal, & start running against the Republican party. There should be a unified, nationwide bumpersticker-style slogan that IDs all Republicans as rats to be thrown from the sinking ship Congress. Americans already have a low opinion of Congress, but I'll bet half of them don't really know why, what with the both-sides-do-it media standard. If Democrats vilified the Republican elephant the way confederates did the term "liberal," even low-information, i.e., most, voters would get it.

Carol Leonnig of the Washington Post: "A federal watchdog on Thursday sent the U.S. Secret Service a formal warning that its overworking of employees is jeopardizing security -- citing the discovery that two Secret Service officers were asleep at their posts, according to three government officials familiar with the findings. The inspector general who oversees the Secret Service issued a management alert, a formal designation that indicates investigators have found a problem so urgent or sweeping that it requires swift attention from senior management."

German Lopez & Soo Oh of Vox: "Corey Jones, Freddie Gray, and Jessica Hernandez are just three of at least 1,425 people killed by police since August 9, 2014, the day of the Michael Brown shooting in Ferguson, Missouri."

Ishaan Tharoor of the Washington Post explains to Bibi Netanyahu the real reason Haj Amin al-Husseini, the grand mufti of Jerusalem, was palling around with Hitler: he wanted Hitler's support in securing a Palestinian state with himself as leader. Hitler nixed it. Tharoor cites numerous experts who debunk Netanyahu's claim. CW: And, you know, Bibi, 75 years later, the Palestinians are still seeking that state. Maybe you could do something about that. ...

... New York Times Editors: "The claim by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel that a Palestinian persuaded Adolf Hitler to exterminate the Jews of Europe is outrageous. It is outrageous because the Holocaust is far too terrible a crime to be exploited for political ends, especially in the state linked so closely to the tragedy of the Jewish people. It is outrageous because the only apparent purpose is to demonize the Palestinians and the current leader of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, and to give the impression that their resistance is based solely on a longstanding hatred of the Jews.... Mr. Netanyahu should have the decency to acknowledge that he was wrong and out of line."

O Canada! Paul Krugman: "On Monday, Canadian voters swept the ruling Conservatives out of power, delivering a stunning victory to the center-left Liberals. And while there are many interesting things about the Liberal platform, what strikes me most is its clear rejection of the deficit-obsessed austerity orthodoxy that has dominated political discourse across the Western world. The Liberals ran on a frankly, openly Keynesian vision, and won big.... [Justin] Trudeau ... has an opportunity to show the world what truly responsible fiscal policy looks like."

God News

Jack Healy of the New York Times: "Despite its deep opposition to same-sex marriage, the Mormon Church is setting itself apart from religious conservatives who rallied behind a Kentucky county clerk, Kim Davis, who cited her religious beliefs as justification for refusing to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples. In a speech this week about the boundaries between church and state, Dallin Oaks, a high-ranking apostle in the church, said that public officials like Ms. Davis, the clerk in Rowan County, Ky., had a duty to follow the law, despite their religious convictions.... Elder Oaks said. '... when acting as public officials, they are not free to apply personal convictions -- religious or other -- in place of the defined responsibilities of their public offices. All government officers should exercise their civil authority according to the principles and within the limits of civil government.'"

Benjamin Mueller of the New York Times: How a Bible study group in upstate New York became a church so punishing that it killed one of its members & severely injured another in a "counseling session."

Jane Omara of USA Today (October 21): "The Vatican vigorously denied a report in an Italian newspaper Wednesday that Pope Francis has a small, curable brain tumor, calling the rumors 'totally unfounded.' The report in the Quotidiano Nazionale newspaper was "seriously irresponsible and not worthy of attention,' Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said in a statement. 'As all can see, the pope continues to exercise his intense activity without interruption and in an absolutely normal way.'" ...

... Laurie Goodstein & Gaia Pianigiani of the New York Times: "The Vatican newspaper on Thursday called the report 'unfounded' and 'completely irresponsible,' suggesting a conspiracy was behind it. Italian newspapers had a feast, running a barrage of headlines further fueling suspicion. The center-right daily Il Giornale declared, 'Church in chaos: Who wants the pope dead?'... 'The timing of this reveals an intent to manipulate and create unnecessary uproar,' the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, said."

Presidential Race

Annie Karni of Politico: "After a difficult summer slog, Hillary Clinton appears to be back on top. It began with Bernie Sanders, her chief Democratic rival, getting devastatingly lampooned on Saturday Night Live, the stage where Hillary Clinton had scored points just a few weeks earlier by gamely mocking herself. Then, the spectre of Joe Biden haunting Clinton's campaign disappeared, when the grieving vice president announced he would not compete in 2016. And on Thursday, sitting in the hot seat for a marathon 11-hour hearing, Clinton delivered a win by remaining calm and mostly unflappable as her Republican interlocutors on the House Benghazi committee became heated."

And Then There Were Three. Jonathan Swan of the Hill: "Former Rhode Island Sen. Lincoln Chafee is bowing out of the Democratic race for the White House." Includes Chafee's full statement.

Kyle Cheney & Jason Millman of Politico: "Republicans have fended off accusations for years that they'd gut Medicare for seniors and end the program 'as we know it.' Not Ben Carson. The former neurosurgeon acknowledges he would abolish the program altogether. Carson, who now leads the GOP field in Iowa according to the latest Quinnipiac Poll, would eliminate the program that provides health care to 49 million senior citizens, as well as Medicaid, and replace it with a system of cradle-to-grave savings accounts which would be funded with $2,000 a year in government contributions. While rivals have been pummeled for proposing less radical changes, Carson hasn't faced the same scrutiny -- and his continued traction in polls has left GOP strategists and conservative health care wonks scratching their heads." ...

... So What? The Crazier the Better: Eliza Collins of Politico: "Ben Carson has a nine percentage-point lead on Donald Trump in Iowa, according to a new Bloomberg Politics/Des Moines Register poll out Friday. In the poll -- the second this week to find the retired neurosurgeon moving ahead of the billionaire real estate mogul -- Carson leads with 28 percent of likely Republican caucus goers, followed by Trump at 19 percent."

Eli Stokols of Politico: "The main super PAC backing Donald Trump is shutting down amidst increasing scrutiny of its ties to Trump's campaign. Trump, who has made his independence from wealthy donors a cornerstone of his anti-establishment presidential campaign, never officially blessed the Make America Great super PAC." ...

... The Washington Post story, by Matea Gold is here: "After The Washington Post reported this week on multiple connections between Trump and the Make America Great Again PAC, Mike Ciletti, the Colorado-based operative running the group, said he had decided to close up shop."

Boo Hoo. Most Interesting Man in Politics Could End Up Out of Politics. Shane Goldmacher & Anna Palmer of Politico: "Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and his allies are quietly ratcheting up pressure on Rand Paul to pay more attention to his Senate reelection next year -- and less to his flagging 2016 presidential candidacy. So far, those efforts have stopped short of urging the Kentucky senator, whose presidential bid McConnell has formally endorsed, to outright abandon his national campaign." CW Note to Mitch: The election is more than a year away. Li'l Randy has plenty of time, whenever he drops out of the presidential race, or is drummed from the debate stage, to run a Senate campaign.

Beyond the Beltway

Reuters: "One person has been killed and two others wounded by gunfire on the campus of Tennessee State University in Nashville, police have said. The shootings, which occurred just before 11 pm local time on Thursday, appeared to have stemmed from a dispute over a dice game in a courtyard, the Metropolitan Nashville police department said." ...

... The Tennessean story, by Jordan Buie, is here.

Jon Herskovitz of Reuters: "Texas sent agents to Planned Parenthood facilities on Thursday seeking documents, the group said, calling it a 'politically motivated' move that comes on the heels of the state's Republican leaders barring it from receiving Medicaid money. Members of the Texas Office of the Inspector General made unannounced visits at Planned Parenthood health centers in Houston, Dallas and San Antonio, staying in some cases for several hours and giving Planned Parenthood 24 hours to deliver thousands of pages of documents stored at its facilities across the state, the organization said." ...

... Danielle Paquette & Sandhya Somashekhar of the Washington Post: "Texas health investigators on Thursday served orders for hundreds of documents at Planned Parenthood offices across the state, including patient records and employee addresses. The move came three days after the state announced plans to pull public funding from the organization, energizing the national debate over the nonprofit's fetal tissue donation program."

News Ledes

Boston Globe: "Thomas G. Stemberg, who cofounded Staples Inc. and invented the office superstore, died Friday at his home in Chestnut Hill, two years after he was diagnosed with gastric cancer. He was 66. Intense and driven, he was credited with revolutionizing the way office products were sold, creating a chain that now has $22.5 billion in annual revenue and more than 2,000 stores, and at one point employed as many as 91,000 people."

New York Times: "The strongest hurricane to ever assault the Western Hemisphere slammed into Mexico's southwest Pacific Coast on Friday evening.... The storm, named Hurricane Patricia, was packing winds of about 165 miles per hour as it struck land, having slowed considerably from earlier speeds of about 200 miles per hour as it spun toward a coastline dotted with tiny fishing villages and five-star resorts...."

Washington Post: "Early Friday, the behemoth Hurricane Patricia became the strongest hurricane ever measured by the National Hurricane Center. Patricia is forecast to make landfall on Mexico's west central coast late Friday with destructive winds, torrents of rain, and a devastating storm surge." ...

... The Weather Channel's story is here.

New York Times: "Forty-two people were killed and eight others were injured on Friday morning when a bus and a truck collided on a road in southwestern France, according to local officials."