Will Senate Miss Kennedy?

A helluva a question.  Looks pretty bleak for a voice in the Senate.  There are those that will step up to try and fill the shoe of the Liberal Lion of the Senate but so far I see none of them that are capable of carrying his briefcase, much less being an adequate Dem leader in the Senate.

There is Chris Dodd…..he could be, but he has his problems with campaign contributions from banks and a strong challenger in his next re-election bid.

How about Harry Reid…Ha Ha…this guy could put a room full of ADD suffers to sleep.  He is NOT the one.

Robert Byrd…no way he is just a banana peel away from a dirt nap

Oh, Specter…..no flippin’ way….he is too wishy washy and who knows if the cancer will return and he will be out again?

Got Baucus–way too conservative to be any kind of liberal voice, even on FOX News.

How about Schumer….nah…he is too egocentrical to be a voice of the people.

Clinton could have been the next liberal voice for the Senate but she chose State over being a voice.

The true Liberal voice of the Senate will be missed…….there does not seem to be anyone ready to step in as a leader of the liberals.  This could prove to be a bad thing for the unity of the party.  There is already disunity, to a small part, with the Yellow Dogs, oh my bad….the Blue Dogs.  But that is in the House and in the Senate we have the cowards like Baucus….or should I say..,..corporate owned instead of coward?

Only time will tell if there is someone in the shadows that has the commitment and principles to be a leader in the Senate….right now, as it stands, I see NO one.

Obama Admin Challenges GOP

Top White House advisers on Sunday challenged Republicans to offer alternatives and not simply criticize administration approaches, as Congress prepared to return from a two-week recess and take up a charged agenda centered on core Obama objectives.

“You have to come constructive,” Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, said Sunday, “and when you’re the party of no, when you’re the party of never, when you’re the party of no new ideas, that’s not constructive.”

He urged Republicans, among other things, to provide a plan for energy independence, and flatly predicted that “at the end of this first year of Congress, there will be an energy bill on the president’s desk.” But speaking on ABC’s “This Week,” Mr. Emanuel he would not predict whether it would encompass the thorny issue of a cap-and-trade plan to contain emissions, which some Republicans consider tantamount to a crippling tax.

Representative John Boehner, the House minority leader and who also appeared on “This Week,” said that Republicans had already offered alternatives to the administration’s economic-stimulus and budget proposals. As to the president’s plans to make health care affordable to more Americans — an issue that may loom over all others — Mr. Boehner said, “We’re working on a plan.”

“We are working on a plan”?  Hopefully it will be a better plan than their budget alternative.  So far their alternatives are just tired recycled BS from the 90’s.  But after 3 months of just saying NO, they still just say NO….that sounds like the only plan they have or will ever have.

Steele: New RNC Leader

The GOP’s RNC has chosen its new helmsman for the future, but damn…I have heard his words before…..

Former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele was elected chairman of the Republican National Committee today, giving the GOP its first African-American leader as the party seeks to reframe its identity under the presidency of Barack Obama.

Steele won after five rounds of balloting, beating four other candidates who sought the chairmanship. He finished with 91 votes in the final round — six more than the threshold required to win election — compared with 77 for Katon Dawson, the chairman of the South Carolina Republican Party.

“This is awesome,” Steele told RNC members after winning the two-year term. “It’s time for something completely different. . . . We’re going to bring this party to every corner, every boardroom, every neighborhood, every community. And we’re going to say to friend and foe alike, ‘We want you to be a part of us, we want you to work with us. And for those of you who are ready to obstruct, get ready to get knocked over.’ ”

Is it me or does that sound a whole lot like Dean’s and then Obama’s 50 state strategy?  But what message will they bring?  If it is the same tired message they tried to pass off in the last election they will not be all that.

When asked about upcoming elections Steele said:   “Our game is not up … our message still rings true with countless Americans, specifically with those in the 20th congressional district.”

If the RNC is looking for a new direction to help them in the center then I would say that his statement points to the same old stuff, just as the Reps in Congress are up to the same old partisanship they have always been up to.

Look for the The GOP move further right than they were with McCain, it has been a proven tack in the past.

Prez Speaks To The Failure

He said this was a critical moment for the U.S. economy. “And we need legislation that decisively addresses the troubled assets now clogging the financial system, helps lenders resume the flow of credit to consumers and businesses, and allows the American economy to get moving again.”  Isn’t the credit thing that got us to this point?  Maybe a little tightening in the credit market might help, after all it probably could not hurt.

“Skin in the game”–the new buzz phrase for the politicos.  Remember when it was “boots on the ground”?  Or how about “country first”?  There is more, “Change we need”.  Slogans, everywhere there are slogans, and none of them will solve the damn problem.  These things sound good and are great for the 30 second sound bite in the media, but what do the accomplish?

If anyone puts their Faith in slogans then they deserve the fate that awaits them.  Americans have been totally amorous of slogans since the beginning and look where that got them.  Slogans are for the simple minded and address nothing more than that.  Most voters remember this slogan or that, “where’s the beef?” or “there you go again” or ….well you get the idea.

Meanwhile back at the Prez……he said the failure of a bill would effect job creation and growth…thinking….we are in the worst unemployment cycle in a while and growth is minimal at best.

Bush looked awful and confused.  There is no leadership in Washington at all…not from Prez or Dems or Repubs or candidates or anyone…they are all running around worrying about their next election.  The Prez needs to work on his poker face the one he has now is not working.

Time to regroup and state a New Year’s resolution, after all it is the Jewish New Year.  Someone needs to step up and take control of the situation.  Please stop using terms like socialism…it is not….it is just an extension of capitalism…no matter which way they go…it will protect capital and profits….that Irene…is NOT socialism!

Labor’s Critical Election Role

This is a piece written by Dick Meister for ZMag.  This is timely since all the candidates, especially the Dems, are courting labor for the next election.  Labor could have a dominate roll in the general, but will they opt for a persoanlity instead of what is best for ALL labor?

Democratic Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio, one of the best friends organized labor has ever had, has some wise words of political advice for unions and their supporters:

Throw all you’ve got into defeating John McCain, the presumptive Republican candidate for president, and unite tightly behind the Democratic candidate, presumably Barrack Obama, even though you may have supported other candidates in the primaries.

You might think Kucinich’s advice is unnecessary since, like virtually all Republicans, McCain has never been a friend of labor – and his policies as president would most certainly not be pro-labor. They’d most likely be as anti-labor as the policies of George W. Bush, one of the most anti-labor presidents in history.

Under Bush, for instance, the Labor Department has become an anti-Labor Department, adopting regulations designed to hamper union organizing and growth. The National Labor Relations Board has become an anti-labor relations board, allowing employers to openly violate the laws governing organizing. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has been outrageously lax in enforcing the job safety laws, even as the number of serious on-the-job injuries and deaths has grown steadily. The union rights of federal employees have been seriously curtailed.

That’s just a small part of it. As AFL-CIO President John Sweeney says, under Bush “working people have been losing income, good jobs, homes and hope in the future.”

Kucinich says that although working people may respect McCain as a former prisoner-of-war, they have to realize “there is no question that on the economy he is an extension of the Bush administration. We must challenge the economic system that is accelerating wealth upwards.”

A vote for McCain would clearly be a vote for four to eight more years of the same, four to eight more years of anti-labor, anti-working people policies in the White House. There should be absolutely no need for Kucinich or anyone else to urge labor to go all-out to defeat McCain.

Yet polls show that 57 percent of union members support McCain for president. That’s right, more than half of the country’s union members actually support John McCain for president — the highest labor support any Republican presidential candidate has ever had.

That’s surely evidence of a great need to do some heavy-duty political educating among the many union members who obviously should no better than to in effect support four to eight more years of Bush.

There’s also a great need to rebuild the labor movement. But with a Republican president, as Kucinich notes, that would be very difficult – if not impossible.

With a Democratic president, however, labor “will have a major influence on our national policy,” And it goes beyond labor. For labor, Kucinich adds, is “the vanguard of the effort to re-create America, to change the direction of history.”

He says Republican control of the White House has put “our entire way of life under attack. Our jobs are on the line, peace is on the line, our kids’ future is on the line, education, housing, everything. America is on the line.

Labor creates ALL wealth, then they should have a major stake in the election of the people who will lead the country.  The problem is the worker has spent years of giving back most of the progress from 100 years all in the name of retaining their employment.  Now is the perfect time for Labor to become the major player in the direction of the country.