Home Front: Politix |
The Democrats have a pedo problem |
2022-04-03 |
![]() This is not guilt by association, innuendo, or conjecture; it is a firmly established fact pattern. And this is not to suggest that no Republicans have ever espoused or committed similar atrocities against children; extremely rare countervailing exceptions like Republican Dennis Hastert (who, unlike Democrats, was actually imprisoned in part for his crimes of child molestation) prove the rule that many Democrats have a strong affinity for pedophilia and the normalization of the same. Empirically and factually, an overwhelming majority of public figures who are confirmed and aspiring pedophiles (along with pedo-friendly corporations like Disney) are progressive Democrats in terms of political orientation. All of this is hushed up by our progressive media, and thanks to progressive privilege, virtually nobody is ever prosecuted or punished. Why is it never a national scandal when Democrats routinely prey on young children? Simple — because the progressive media protect Democrats far better than Rome's Praetorian guard ever protected any of the Caesars. If Jeffrey Epstein's client roster had been chock-full of identifiable Republicans (instead of Democrats from Bill Clinton to Bill Gates to Bill Richardson — we knew nothing!), or if FOX News producers were outed as skeevy pedo perverts, the earsplitting cacophony from the media would be maximally amped with hysterical shrieks of sustained, collective outrage. Moreover, if the progressive Epstein had instead been a prominent conservative donor and activist, he would've been rightly imprisoned decades ago. Perhaps he would even be alive today rather than conveniently dead. |
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-Lurid Crime Tales- |
Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert has been released from prison |
2017-07-19 |
[CIRCA] Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) has been released from a Minnesota prison and transferred to a re-entry facility in reliably Democrat Chicago, aka The Windy City or Mobtown ... home of Al Capone, a succession of Daleys, Barak Obama, and Rahm Emmanuel,... , according to Federal Bureau of Prisons records. He is set to be released from the re-entry management office on Aug. 16. Once second in line to the presidency, Hastert, 75, is one of the highest-ranking U.S. politicians to ever go to prison. He had been serving a 15-month sentence in a banking violations case that revealed accusations that he had sexually abused teenage boys while coaching wrestling at Yorkville High School in suburban Chicago from 1965 to 1981. U.S. District Judge Thomas M. Durkin called Hastert "a serial child molester" during his sentencing. Hastert was not charged with child abuse because of statutes of limitation. Hastert pleaded guilty to violating federal banking laws in his efforts to pay $3.5 million to keep the accusations secret. |
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-Lurid Crime Tales- |
Dennis Hastert 'Deeply Sorry' for 'Misconduct', Lawyers Say |
2016-04-08 |
[ABCNEWS.GO] Former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert for the first time today publicly acknowledged the "harm" he caused to "others" for "misconduct that occurred decades ago," his attorneys said in a court filing, ahead of sentencing for a crime allegedly linked to hush money payments and past sexual abuse. "Mr. Hastert is deeply sorry and apologizes for his misconduct that occurred decades ago and the resulting harm he caused to others," the filing says. "Mr. Hastert’s fall from grace has been swift and devastating. Neither we as his lawyers, nor Mr. Hastert, have the present insight to understand and reconcile the unfortunate and harmful incidents he caused decades ago with the enduring achievements, leadership, and generosity that earned him extraordinary affection and respect throughout this country during his many years of public service." Hastert's sorrow only outflanked by the sorrow of his getting caught. Beltway party slime, it knows no political boundaries. The filing does not identify the past "misconduct," but last summer sources knowledgeable of the case told ABC News Hastert was paying a man -- still unidentified except as "Individual A" in court documents -- hundreds of thousands of dollars to hide that Hastert had engaged in sexual misconduct with him while Hastert was a high school wrestling coach. Hastert pleaded guilty in October to a single financial crime connected to the alleged hush money. Hastert technically faces a maximum penalty of five years, but according to the terms of his plea deal, prosecutors previously indicated they will recommended he serve no more than six months. His defense team wants probation. |
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Europe |
Video: Soccer Fans Sing French Anthem as They Leave Stadium |
2015-11-15 |
One of the targets of the attack in Paris was a soccer stadium where a match between France and Germany was going on. Following the game, fans were delayed in exiting by authorities who sent them back inside where they milled around on the field. Finally, the police allowed the stadium to clear. And as the fans marched out, many of them began to sing the French national anthem, La Marseillaise. |
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-Lurid Crime Tales- |
Ex-US House Speaker Dennis Hastert indicted on bank-related charges |
2015-05-29 |
Each count of the indictment carries a maximum penalty of 5 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, according to a statement from the U.S. attorney's office in Chicago. From 2010 to 2014, Hastert withdrew a total of approximately $1.7 million in cash from various bank accounts and provided it to a person identified only as Individual A, according to the indictment. In December last year, "Hastert falsely stated that he was keeping the cash" when questioned by the FBI, the prosecutor's statement says. Hastert, a former high school wrestling coach, was a little known lawmaker from suburban Chicago when chosen to succeed conservative Newt Gingrich. Hastert was picked after favored Louisiana Congressman Bob Livingston resigned after admitting to several sexual affairs. As speaker, Hastert pushed President George W. Bush's legislative agenda, helping pass a massive tax cut and expanding Medicare prescription drug benefits. He retired from Congress in 2007 after eight years as speaker. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Hastert: Pelosi won't hold on as speaker even if Dems keep majority |
2010-10-24 |
![]() San Fran NanPelosi (D-Calif.) is unlikely to remain Speaker of the House even if Democrats hold onto their majority, her predecessor said Friday evening. Former Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) said it would be difficult for Pelosi to hang onto her gavel come next January. "I think even if the Democrats win, which I don't think they'll win, I don't think Nancy Pelosi will be speaker," Hastert said during an appearance on Fox News. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Tea Parties, Third Parties and the Republican Party |
2009-12-23 |
The struggles of the Democrats and the Republicans are making news. The Democrats are learning that it is far easier to make campaign promises than it is to govern. As for Republicans, the party that loses the Presidential election often spends the off-year attempting to refine its message if not find a new message and new messengers. In the watchful eye of 24/7 cable news channels and the Internet, however, such political soul searching can appear rather untidy. As the calendar turns, the process remains unresolved for Republicans to say the least. To say the least. There hasn't been a lot of inspiring leadership coming out of the trunk camp, and none of it from Congressional Publicans. Worse than mere overexposure, according to Rasmussen polling, despite Obama's falling polls and Democrat divisions, the Republican Party would fare worse in an upcoming election than the Tea Party -- a "Third Party" that, as of yet, does not exist. If it's going to be effective next year it had better influence primaries, rather than trying to field candidates. It is no minor issue because with the help of Tea Party activists, Republicans certainly can beat Democrats next year -- without them they may not. I think the Publicans could improve their position with Tea Party neutrality, but I think most people who're paying attention would rather see the lot of them turned out, Publicans and Sinners -- a complete inversion of the current Congress. That won't happen because of the number of nailed seats -- we're never going to see the last of Barney Frank or Nancy Pelosi until they die. There are also lots of seats that are close enough that a few judicious truckloads of "found" ballots will tip them. So I wouldn't get too fired up about Congress turning around. It would seem evident to many that the Tea Party movement should be the natural ally of the Republican Party. Not after the Publicans' record after the first few months of the Contract with America... After all, the issues that inspire most Tea Party activists should not be inimical to Republican Party leaders. However, the fact that the Tea Party movement is at odds with certain aspects of the Republican establishment belies the greater issue as to why the Tea Party movement -- and its potential to be a 3rd Party movement -- arose at all. That reason being that people have come to the perhaps belated realization that their elected pols could give a spit what their opinions are, whether those pols are Publicans or Sinners. It is worthy, as part of this discussion, to note that the rise and fall of third party movements and candidates is directly tied to whether voters perceive the existing parties as being successful. In this context, successful means providing effective leadership on the major issues of the day. Third parties are difficult to get off the ground. Both the Dems and the Pubs trace their roots to the original Democratic-Republicans of Jefferson. Effectively we've had one party with "liberal" and "conservative" wings, only the definitions changing. Federalists and Whigs have fallen by the wayside. Most everybody else either never got started or, like the Conservative Party in New York, rides the same rail as the big party. The Republicans should well know this lesson. After all, the Republican Party came into being because the Whig Party of the 1850's and 1860's was perceived as not willing to provide effective leadership on the most divisive issue of the day -- if not the most divisive issue ever: slavery. Appearing too accomodationist to many voters, a third major party came into being under the leadership of Lincoln and others: the Republican Party -- a party that, in time, took a decisive stand against slavery. The remnants of the Whigs combined with a wing of the Dems, hence the "Republican" name. The Dems were the party of slavery at the time, just as they're the party of the plantation today. More recently, Ross Perot ran twice for President and gave life to the Reform Party. It is more than arguable that Perot handed Bill Clinton the Presidency by drawing so many votes away from President Bush in 1992. But did he? Yes. No doubt in my miniature mind that he did. As a matter of history, Perot was more of a symptom of failed leadership by Republicans than cause of Clinton's victory. The errors of the Bush Administration gave rise to a perception that the Republican Party was the party of higher spending and higher tax rates -- a policy that led to burgeoning deficits. Bush 41 was not perceived as a leader in the wake of breaking his "no new tax pledge" and the Democrats were not exactly considered leaders on how to handle the deficit either. It is on such political battlefields that disgruntled voters take interest in a third voice -- in that case, Ross Perot and his Reform Party. Perot had good financing -- his own bankroll, plus donations -- and he had lotsa good points to make. That sucking sound you heard really was your job heading south. But he also ran what was primarily a vanity campaign, and as soon as Pat Buchanan -- now trying manfully to hop the Tea Party bandwagon -- hijacked the party it evaporated. Buchanan had the ego, but not the message, nor the bankroll. Go, Pat, Go, and Don't Come Back... Of course, the John Anderson presidential run should be noted as well. What's that line about "sound and fury, signifying nothing"? Pretty scary, until he evaporated on election day. There was little doubt that in 1979 and in the beginning of 1980, the public's view of both the Democrat Party and the Republican Party had dimmed considerably. Amidst double-digit inflation and unemployment, 20+% interest rates, and little in the way of Republican Congressional leadership to contrast Jimmy Carter failings, John Anderson ran as an Independent candidate for President. He came out of the gate with 25% in the polls -- 6% higher than Perot's highest ever finish. He was barely there when it was all over... Yet Anderson wound up not winning a single precinct. Why? Because Ronald Reagan ran a stirring campaign behind the theme that "Government is not the solution to our problems. Government is the problem." Nobody's singing that song at the moment who doesn't sound like he's reciting something by rote that he doesn't believe. John McCain as a "foot soldier in the Reagan Revolution" my foot... And with that, Reagan and his strong leadership and policies won two terms (three if you count Bush 41s' first term) and there was no third party challenge until Bush Sr. ceded Reagan's high ground of leadership as referenced above. "Read my lips: No new taxes!... Well, okay. Where do I sign?" I can remember all the editorials in the Washington Post saying how it would take political courage for Bush to sign the tax bill. Once the Dems had siggy there was nary a peep from the Post about how brave he'd been. All of which brings us to the Tea Party movement. Shall we attemtp to make sense of what's surely a complicated matter? The numbers of Independents voters is on the rise again. Voters everywhere believe the Democrat Party and the Republican Party are more partisan than effective. The Tea Party movement is an out-growth of that perception. Existing Third Parties don't fill the bill. The Libertarian Party evaporated under Harry Browne -- he was against going to war in Afghanistan in the wake of 9-11 so he was never heard from again. The Reform Party elected Jesse Ventura and didn't elect either Ross Perot or Pat Buchanan, and has since evaporated. There's something called the Constitution Party, which wants to restore the Constitution as well as the nation's biblical foundations, which kinda leaves room for argument with us agnostics and the Jews and the New Agers and what have you. The Greens are red on the inside, with a sniff like Nader wearing the same socks he had in the Army in 1958 or whenever it was, compounded with the smell of burning weed. If there was anything there to run with somebody would have run with it by now. At its core, the Tea Party movement is a pro-liberty -- limited government movement. Its activists continue to believe in Reagan's cogent message about government. Beneath that over-arching theme, Tea Partiers by-in-large are motivated by four major issues. (1) excessive taxation, (2) out-of-control spending, (3) out of control Legislators who pass bills without reading them, and (4) the apparent lack of adherence/respect for our Constitution. None of those issues should be troublesome for the Republican establishment -- yet there is anything but an easy alliance between the Tea Party movement and the Republican establishment. It is a wonder why that is so. It's no wonder. The Publicans had their time in the driver's seat. They were the reason Bill Clinton finished up his second term pointing with pride at the surplus he'd fought and the end of welfare as he knew it. Even by then they were listening to the Washington Post and all those other fellows telling them to "govern from the center," unwilling to realize that the Dems are better at being Dems than they are. Add in some fairly deep-rooted corruption -- Dennis Hastert springs to mind -- and people were simply disappointed in them. Excessive Taxation. The issue of burdensome taxation has motivated Americans from the time of the Boston Tea Party to today. Always a potent issue, many activists wonder why the Republican Establishment has lost their voice on this important issue. Keep in mind that the issue is not just that people don't want to pay taxes because they are stingy. The issue is why aren't Republican leaders making the case to the American people (1) that high tax rates defeat their own purpose (Keynes), (2) that "that our present tax system ... exerts too heavy a drag on growth ... siphons out of the private economy too large a share of personal and business purchasing power, [and] reduces the financial incentives for personal effort, investment, and risk-taking." (Kennedy), or (3) that through tax relief we can grow the American economy (Reagan). Surely taking up that mantle -- with clarity -- is not a request that is too much for Tea Partiers to ask of Republican leaders. It's not just the taxes. No matter how much we pay in taxes, and it's a bunch, there are always more taxes needed, because there's never any end to the bright ideas pols are coming up with. There are always new programs, and old programs never, ever go away. There is no end to the rapacity of those who regard themselves as a ruling class -- and increasingly as an hereditary ruling class. Out-of-Control Spending. The issue of government waste and spending is of major concern to many activists around the country. Keep in mind that in 1964, the entire federal budget was roughly $130 billion and poverty was approximately 14%. The federal budget is nearly $4 trillion a year now. We currently make social welfare transfers of over $1 trillion per year. Yet the federal poverty rate remains around 14%. Disgruntled Tea Partiers (and Ron Paul supporters) know that intuitively even if they do not always know the statistics. Should not Republican leaders be exposing the stunning level of federal waste (including $1 in every $10 of Medicare spending) at every turn -- even filibustering ever growing budgets which provide little return on investment? Is that request too much to ask? -- let alone insisting they refrain from pork barreling themselves? So not only do the taxes keep trying to go back up, and to appear in new and more inventive guises, but the spending keeps outstripping even the gruesome level of taxes we have. The debt keeps going up every year, we've been effectively in a deficit since... can anyone remember when we weren't? Other than the couple years under the Republican Congress in the last couple Clinton years? And when we did run a surplus, the Dems wanted to spend it. We're looking at a Congress, both Republicans and Democrats, who keep spending without looking at the checkbook, which has been empty. At the same time they're implementing programs that kill our competitiveness and handing out money like it grows in the garden. Which is approximately true, if you regard the taxpayer as a species of vegetable, or a fungus, something like a mushroom. Reading the Bills. Federal legislation now exceeds 1,000 pages at a time. It is well beyond common knowledge that most politicians do not even read the bills upon which they vote. Given that so many congressmen and women are lawyers who would never expect their clients not to read the contracts they sign, is it really an exorbitant request of those same politicians to read bills before they bind us to legislation from which, incredibly, they often exempt themselves? Their staffs write the bills with the assistance of lobbyists, some of whom are subject matter experts, most of whom are owned by Malefactors of Great Wealth. The Constitution. There can be little doubt that our Constitution is not interpreted as our Founders intended. Jefferson and Madison opined that the Constitution did not permit the Congress to tax people to build roads. Now, without so much as an amendment, we tax people to subsidize the purchase of cars that run on those roads built with tax dollars. In that light, many activists well understand Justice Scalia's commentary that "The Constitution is not a living organism, it is a legal document. It says something and doesn't say other things." The question is whether Republican leaders believe the same or are willing to defend the same. They patently don't. The "living document" approach has gutted the 10th amendment especially, while fattening up the commerce clause so that it's eating everything in sight. But the very heart of the problem lies more with congress critters who have no idea what the document actually says. The reality of today is that the Tea Party movement is more than skeptical of whether the Republican establishment is willing to take a stand on those issues or whether they are more interested in playing Let's Make a Deal with American principles. In other words, they do not believe that they are providing effective leadership on those important issues. Instead, they do things such as offering a Presidential candidate who wanted to buy up all the bad mortgages that government encouraged in the first place. A government response to a government problem -- Reagan would not be pleased -- and neither are Tea Partiers. If Republicans were providing effective leadership on those important issues, I would hazard a guess that there would not be a Tea Party movement today. McCain was sadly representative of how the public sees the party: not quite clean -- the Dems didn't bring up the Keating 5 very much because it was relatively small potatoes -- and willing to get along with the opposition. Compromise might be the essence of politix and maverick politicians, but there are times when you have to stand up for what's right. Congress is really good at nibbling at the edges of what's right until there's not much left to it at all. In the final analysis, Republicans never do so well as to defend freedom and the expense of government -- when they run against City Hall instead of defending it. Not coincidentally, Americans never do so well as when freedom is protected from government. Reagan understood that and that is why he ran against the Washington establishment instead of encouraging it. Unless Republicans regain that understanding, rather than winning next year with Tea Party support amidst the troubles of the Democrats, Republicans may well be alone wearing the Whigs of long ago. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Pelosi Made Repeated Requests for Military Aircraft, Documents Show |
2009-03-11 |
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has repeatedly requested military aircraft to shuttle her and her colleagues and family around the country, according to a new report from a conservative watchdog group. Representatives for Judicial Watch, which obtained e-mails and other documents from a Freedom of Information request, said the correspondence shows Pelosi has abused the system in place to accommodate congressional leaders and treated the Air Force as her "personal airline." Pelosi's office disputed the claim, pointing to White House policy enacted after the Sept. 11 attacks allowing for the House speaker to travel to his or her congressional district via military aircraft whenever possible for security reasons. Her office said she typically uses the same kind of aircraft used by her predecessor, Dennis Hastert. But Judicial Watch said that Pelosi was notorious for making special demands for high-end aircraft, lodging last-minute cancellations and racking up additional expenses for the military. The e-mails showed repeated attempts by Pelosi aides to request aircraft, sometimes aggressively, and by Department of Defense officials to accommodate them. "I think that's above and beyond what other members of Congress are doing and what is expected of our elected officials," said Jenny Small, a researcher with the group. In one e-mail, aide Kay King complained to the military that they had not made available any aircraft the House speaker wanted for Memorial Day recess. "It is my understanding there are NO G5s available for the House during the Memorial Day recess. This is totally unacceptable ... The Speaker will want to know where the planes are," King wrote. In another, when told a certain type of aircraft would not be available, King wrote: "This is not good news, and we will have some very disappointed folks, as well as a very upset Speaker." |
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Home Front: Politix |
Pelosi butts heads with Obama |
2009-02-27 |
![]() Pelosis aides say the speaker was comfortable playing the role of Obamas shield during the stimulus fightRepublicans teed off on her rather than on the immensely popular new presidentand that she remains strongly supportive of the administration on health care, energy and education reform. But on Iraq and other high-profile issues that matter to her, aides say Pelosi has no intention of holding her tongue when she thinks Obama is wrong. And shes not alone. While Newt Gingrich complained that Tuesdays night unofficial State of the Union looked like a Democratic pep rally, the aftermath has looked more like a sibling rivalry. On Wednesday morning, Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.)the longest-serving member of the Senateaccused Obama of trying to steal power from Congress by appointing White House czars to handle issues that would otherwise be handled by departments subject to congressional oversight. On Wednesday night, Pelosi made it clear to MSNBCs Rachel Maddow that she wasnt happy with Obamas plan to leave 50,000 U.S. troops in Iraq and that, unlike Obama, she absolutely favors criminal prosecutions for any Bush administration officials involved in torture or other excesses in the fight against terrorism. On Thursday, Pelosi said shed move faster than Obama is to roll back Bush-era tax cuts. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Democratic Caucus Vice Chairman Chuck Schumer joined Pelosis critique of Obamas plan to leave. Reid urged Obama not to push too hard to eliminate congressional earmarks. And Democratic Rep. Gene Taylor of Mississippi took a shot at Obamas budget, saying change is not running up even bigger deficits that George Bush did. Congressional Democrats are hardly in open revolt. But Obama apparently took the criticisms of his Iraq plan seriously enough that he summoned Democratic and Republican leaders to the White House to brief them on the plan Thursday evening in advance of his roll-out Friday at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. A senior Pelosi aide said Thursday that the president and the speaker share the same vision and the same goals overall. She is totally supportive of him on most things, the aide said. But as with anything, there are going to be disagreements. Pelosi's public disagreements with Obama reflect her strongly held personal views as well as the views of the majority of her caucus, which is liberal/progressive. Pelosi is always cognizant that her most important constituency is her base among House Democrats. As she respects and protects that base, pushing back against the president has its advantages. Democratic aides have talked over the past few weeks of Pelosi's need to sometimes "triangulate" against Obama with Reidto deliver a don't-tread-on-me-message to the White House and to keep Reid and Obama from establishing a permanent political double-team. The end-game of the stimulusduring which Pelosi was forced to grapple with a final Obama-Reid deal reinforced those motives. "We can't let the Senate always push us around by shouting, 'We need 6O!" a House Democratic aide said a week ago. Some of the disagreements between Pelosi and Obama are substantive; some of them are about turf. Even before Obama took office, Pelosi told his soon-to-be chief of staff, former Rep. Rahm Emanuel, to butt out of House Democratic affairs. In a recent private meeting, Democratic insiders say Pelosi and Obama butted heads over his desire to cut down in earmarks in annual apending bills. The earmarks are popular punching bagsthe Obama administration vowed that thered be none in the stimulus packagebut theyre also popular with a lot of lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. Pelosi, aware of that reality, told Obama that shed help to cut back on earmarks, but not as quickly as he might like, insiders said. We are reducing them, but members still want them, a Democratic insider said Pelosi told the president. Pelosi, of course, remains a strong Obama supporter. On Thursday, she called his 2010 budget proposal a message of realism, but . . . also a message of optimism and hope. And she expressed support for Obamas proposal to set aside $634 billion as a down payment toward health care reform. Pelosi argued that the country must make changes to the Medicare and Medicaid programs in order to put its financial house in order, and she chided Republicans by arguing that Obamas plan represents the entitlement reform for which they often clamor. If we are ever going to address the fiscal challenge that we face and that includes all of our spending, but sometimes more frequently described through the entitlements we must have health care reform, Pelosi said. Top Pelosi aides downplayed the differences she has with the president, and note that she supports 95 percent of his agenda. They also point out that Pelosi has stated repeatedly that her role is not to simply execute the presidents wishes a lapdog role she repeatedly accused former Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) of playing when the GOP controlled the House during the Bush years. She has a difference of opinion with Obama on some issues, a senior Democratic staffer acknowledged. But unlike recent Republican speakers, shes not going to be a rubber stamp for the president. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Hastert Officially Announces Retirement |
2007-08-18 |
Former House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert officially announced today that he would not seek re-election to Congress, saying he still hoped to be an advocate for his home state of Illinois. Mr. Hastert, who became speaker at the height of the Clinton impeachment era, had served in the post until the Republicans lost their majority in Congress last year. The former wrestling coach and teacher ruled over the House as George W. Bush became president in the wake of the 2000 election mess and through the 2006 midterms, all the while in charge of the membership. |
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Home Front: Politix |
And Thank You For Flying Air Pelosi.... |
2007-02-01 |
H/T to Captain's Quarters. I've got no real heartburn with Rep. Pelosi - in her OFFICIAL function as Speaker Of The House - usuing USAF tranport. She's third in the line of succession;, that's reasonable. It's what she wants instead that is far from reasonable. It didn't take long for Nancy Pelosi to create the imperial Speakership. She has requested that the Pentagon supply her with military aircraft at all times, and not just for herself, but also for her staff, her colleagues, and her family: The office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is pressing the Bush administration for routine access to military aircraft for domestic flights, such as trips back to her San Francisco district, according to sources familiar with the discussions. The sources, who include those in Congress and in the administration, said the Democrat is seeking regular military flights not only for herself and her staff, but also for relatives and for other members of the California delegation. A knowledgeable source called the request "carte blanche for an aircraft any time." "They are pressing the point of her succession and that the [Department of Defense] needs to play ball with the speaker's needs," one source said. The request originally went to the Pentagon, which then asked the White House to weigh in. Mrs. Pelosi's request is not new for a speaker, who is second-in-line in presidential succession. A defense source said the speaker's regular access to a military plane began after the September 11, 2001, attacks. Rep. J. Dennis Hastert, Illinois Republican, who was speaker at the time, started using U.S. Air Force planes for domestic travel to and from his district for security reasons. A former Hastert aide said the congressman did not use military planes for political trips or regularly transport his family. I'm not even sure that the succession is good enough reason to meet the demand for the House Speaker, even if Denny Hastert used that reasoning. The Speaker is second in line for the Presidency in the case of the death of the President and Vice-President, and therefore deserves some special security protocols. It doesn't take a military flight to implement those, especially just to fly home on the weekends. This request by Pelosi goes far beyond even that questionable consideration. Pelosi's staff doesn't have anything to do with the succession, and neither do her colleagues in the House. The military is not a charter service for politicians who want to avoid using the same airports as the rest of the hoi polloi. The military has other responsibilities, especially in a time of war, and pampering Congressmen shouldn't take precedence over them. That most certainly applies to flying Pelosi's family around, too. I seem to recall that Pelosi and her party ran on the notion that the Republicans had grown too fat over the perquisites of power. The GOP lost touch with the people of America, they claimed, and let power go to their heads -- and certainly in some cases they were right. It's hard to square that rhetoric with these new demands that the Pentagon start providing free charter flights to Democratic politicians and their staffs and families at a moment's notice. |
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Home Front: Politix |
GOP Furious Over Timing of Rumsfeld Resignation |
2006-11-10 |
![]() Members and staff still reeling from Tuesday's rout are furious about the administration's decision to dump the controversial defense secretary one day after their historic loss, they said in a series of interviews about the election results. President Bush announced Rumsfeld's resignation on Wednesday and named Bob Gates, a former CIA chief and president of Texas A&M University, as his replacement. "The White House said keeping the majority was a priority, but they failed to do the one thing that could have made a difference," one House GOP leadership aide said Thursday. "For them to toss Rumsfeld one day after the election was a slap in the face to everyone who worked hard to protect the majority." Exit polling suggested that an overwhelming majority of voters disapproved of the administration's handling of the war in Iraq, and members and aides were frustrated with the timing of the announcement because an earlier resignation could have given them a boost on the campaign trail, they believe. "They did this to protect themselves, but they couldn't protect us?" another Republican aide said yesterday. White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten called outgoing House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) on Wednesday morning to notify him of the move, Hastert spokesman Ron Bonjean said Thursday. A spokesman for House Majority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) said the White House also notified the House leader before the news was announced. Citing the various scandals that have roiled the Republican Congress, White House Press Secretary Tony Snow Thursday downplayed the impact of the war in Iraq on Tuesday's election. "The voters said, 'You know what, we expect you to come to Washington and do the people's business,'" Snow said during his regular press briefing Thursday. "And when people lose sight of that, voters tend to remind them of the priorities. That's 10 seats right there." The working relationship between Bush and congressional Republicans will be an interesting subplot for the next Congress as the GOP adjusts to its new role in the minority. Relations between the president and Republicans on the Hill have frayed dramatically since he began his second term, with GOP lawmakers placing increased blame on the administration for its perceived inability to reach to members and staff on legislation, personnel moves and its interpretation of the legal code in the detention and interrogation of suspected terrorists. Republicans cite the fumbled rollout of Social Security reform, the administration's continued support of comprehensive immigration reform and the president's insistence to defend American involvement in Iraq on the campaign trail. There were also very public spats between Hastert and the administration over an FBI raid on Rep. William Jefferson's (D-La.) congressional office and a major split over the near acquisition of port operations in six major cities by a firm based in Dubai. |
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