Politics, Politics, Politics

U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos continues to struggle with the conservative base of the GOP as she again declares, “Common Core is dead.”
“I agree – and have always agreed – with President Trump on this: ‘Common Core is a disaster,’” DeVos allied herself with Trump last week during a major policy speech at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI). “And at the U.S. Department of Education, Common Core is dead.”
The secretary’s statement led Alex Newman of the Freedom Project to write:
Despite blasting federal overreach in education and making other statements sure to delight conservatives and constitutionalists, U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos continued to mislead Americans on Common Core last week. Indeed, despite the dumbed-down national standards still being in place in almost every state, DeVos falsely claimed that Common Core was “dead” at the Department of Education.​
In yet another address that at least superficially put forward sound statements reflecting the Constitution’s lack of mention of any federal role in education, DeVos has again failed to convince the base of her party that she actually believes this fact.

http://www.breitbart.com/big-govern...pt-betsy-devos-announcement-common-core-dead/
 
Senate rejects term limits in 24-75 vote
http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-acti...ndment-recommending-congressional-term-limit-


Term-limits amendment fails in House, 227-204

WASHINGTON -- Members of the House last night had their first chance ever to vote to limit their congressional careers -- and decided against it.
Facing opposition from Democrats and from some members of their own party, House Republican leaders suffered the first major defeat of their "Contract with America," falling far short of the 290 votes needed to pass a constitutional amendment to impose term limits.
After a daylong debate over four options, House members selected the least restrictive proposal: a plan to limit House members to six two-year terms and senators to two six-year terms -- without counting service before the measure's passage.
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/19...erm-limits-vote-on-term-congressional-careers
Did you bother to read that Baltimore Sun article you linked to???? Did you try to comprehend???? That backs up exactly what I said. It is talking about the same 1995 contract with America term limits vote I gave you the link to. As it says in YOUR link:

that plan fell short, on a vote of 227 to 204, with 189 of the 230 Republicans supporting it, compared with 38 of 204 Democrats

Assuming your math skills are no better than Mac's, 189 out of 230 is 82% of Republicans voted FOR term limits. 163 out of 204 or 79.9% of Democraps voted AGAINST term limits.
 
no *******...both of the links I gave are on the same thing.....just you twist it one way...and facts state the other
I prefer to think of it as 41 republicans didn't follow the party
No they were not. Your first link was not about the 1995 contract with America. It was a vote in the Senate 17 years later over a "non-binding sense of the Senate".....and guess who controlled the senate in 2012....Democraps of course.

The 1995 vote I linked to was no meaningless sense of the Senate. It was an actual constitutional amendment which would have enacted term limits if it passed.....but no, thee vast majority of Democraps had to vote no.
 
could you add that one more time?
damn hh face it...you have a creditability problem....that happens when you consistently haul 10 tons of ******* in a 5 ton truck
Don't worry, I'll keep pointing out that for years to come. I'm not certain which was more entertaining:

you calling me a moron in a post where you misspelled oxymoron, AND showed you didn't understand the meaning of the word.

Or

Mac calling me shit4brains in a post where he screwed up 7th grade level math.
 
Mmmmm another one?...should the right be worried?

Democrat Wins Special Election for State House Seat
US News & World Report
A Democrat won a special election Tuesday to fill the unexpired term of a Pennsylvania House member who stepped down after pleading guilty to charges related to an illegal gambling machine operation. Austin Davis defeated Republican Fawn Walker-Montgomery in the race to represent a district in the Monongahela Valley, south of Pittsburgh. The seat became vacant in November, after eight-term Democratic Rep. Marc Gergely stepped down as he was sentenced to 18 months of house arrest for misdemeanor conspiracy and campaign violation counts. ...
https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/aa0ba731-f5ab-3234-b3e0-c965acd52318/ss_democrat-wins-special.html
 
American democracy is failing. The courts are finally starting to notice.
thinkprogress.org

There is something profoundly wrong with the United States of America’s system of government. For proof, briefly take stock of the last ten years in American democracy, in which a combination of factors — the filibuster, the way we draw legislative districts, Senate malapportionment, and the Electoral College — converged to rob American voters of a meaningful ability to choose their own leaders. In 2008, President Obama won a resounding victory, defeating Republican Sen. John McCain by nearly 10 million votes. Democrats also won commanding majorities in both houses of Congress, with Democrats holding 60 seats in the Senate at their peak. Nevertheless, the rump Republican minority was able to ...

https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/1c37d1d0-6f8b-35c9-af59-38e7f29ce7c2/ss_american-democracy-is.html
 
good news here

Democratic poll: O’Rourke within single digits of Cruz
McClatchy Washington Bureau

Democrat Beto O’Rourke trails Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz by single digits — 45-37 percent — according to new internal polling released by a Democratic group aimed at keeping corporate money out of politics. End Citizens United’s poll, released Wednesday morning, comes weeks after Cruz’s campaign released its own internal numbers showing him leading O’Rourke 52-34 percent, with 13 percent undecided. O’Rourke, a Democratic congressman from El Paso, has vowed not to accept money from corporate political action committees for his Senate bid. He was the first Senate challenger ECU endorsed for the 2018 midterms. O’Rourke missed out on a different big liberal endorsement earlier this week, from ...

https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/5ffc45b9-0958-3b76-9479-79b61e2dcf22/ss_democratic-poll:-o’rourke.html
 
guess the new norm now will be....every time the president changes parties in the white house....it's ok to fire everyone in government that has affiliations with the other party....if you work for the gov...your vote is not secret....guess it would be complete flush every 4-8 years.....no more career fbi/cia/etc
 
well it seems that Pence had to vote the tie breaker on Brownback

the guy is a proven asshole......and a problem.....and now trump the chump just added another alligator to the swamp!

BUT the nice part of it..........shows how thin things are for trump in the senate!

anyone see where Nunnes has been warned by the feds.........Nail that fucker and a few others for obstruction!
 
now we have even more on the right now following trump's lead.....they don't do what you want or speak out against you...fire them

Wisconsin Republicans Abruptly Decide To Oust Top State Elections And Ethics Officials
Sam Levine,HuffPost

Led by Republicans in a vote along party lines, the state Senate voted to oust Ethics Administrator Brian Bell and Elections Administrator Michael Haas from their respective roles by denying to confirm them on a permanent basis. Both men did not get a customary public hearing before the vote.
Haas and Bell previously worked for the state’s Government Accountability Board when it was probing whether the campaign of Gov. Scott Walker (R) illegally coordinated with outside conservative groups. The probe was shut down by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in 2015, but The Guardian obtained information from the investigation and published an article on its contents. Wisconsin Attorney General Brad Schimel (R) conducted an investigation into the leak and recommended charges against nine people who worked on the probe, but not Bell and Haas. Despite that, House Speaker Robin Vos (R) and Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R) both called on Haas and Bell to resign.
The Government Accountability Board was disbanded in 2015 and replaced with the state ethics commission and election commission.
In 2016, the members of the elections commission, which is bipartisan, unanimously picked Haas to lead it. The six-member body is charged with overseeing and implementing Wisconsin’s election laws.

Haas’ removal comes just weeks before a Feb. 20 primary in the state and a little under three months before the first day when candidates can begin circulating petitions for the 2018 fall election. As Wisconsin’s chief election official, Haas is responsible for administering those elections, ensuring compliance with federal law and overseeing investigation and enforcement of the state’s election code. He is also charged with overseeing the state’s election equipment, a role with increased importance this year because Wisconsin was one of 21 states targeted by Russian hackers ahead of the 2016 presidential election.
Mark Thomsen, a Democrat and the election commission’s chairman, noted during a meeting Wednesday that Haas was the only person in the agency with the required clearance to work with the Department of Homeland Security to secure the state’s election system.
Haas only had a peripheral role in the Walker probe, where he was responsible for legal documents, but not the core part of the investigation into the governor’s campaign, according to the Wisconsin State Journal.
Meanwhile, the members of the state’s ethics commission unanimously picked Bell to serve as their administrator in 2016. The six-member panel is charged with overseeing the state’s campaign finance, lobbying and ethics laws. An investigation by the ethics commission into Bell found there was “not a scintilla of evidence” he was partisan in his duties at the Government Accountability Board. Earlier this month, Bell said he left the board because it was too partisan.
Fitzgerald, the Republican Senate leader, said Tuesday the fact that neither men had been linked to wrongdoing didn’t really matter to him.

“I can’t have confidence in an agency that still is employing some of the individuals that were there [the Government Accountability Board],” he told the Wisconsin State Journal on Tuesday.
Chris Ott, the executive director of the Wisconsin ACLU, said the timing of Haas’ dismissal was suspicious and said the sudden push to oust the officials was out of the blue.
“The Wisconsin Senate’s vote yesterday along party lines to try ousting the head of our Elections Commission looks like political interference in a nonpartisan agency that helps and protects Wisconsin voters, just a few weeks before important statewide elections start,” he said in a statement.
Jay Heck, the executive director of Common Cause in Wisconsin, called the vote not to confirm Haas and Bell “one of the most grotesque abuses of power that has occurred in Wisconsin in its history.”
“No evidence, no charges, no specific examples of misconduct, nothing. Just secret agreement among the members of the majority party in the State Senate to get rid of them both, right before important elections, and replace them, presumably, with sycophants and pawns that the Republicans will dictate what they decide and what the result of their work on elections and ethics will be,” Heck said in a statement.

Wisconsin law says both the election and ethics commissions ”shall be under the direction and supervision of an administrator, who shall be appointed by a majority of the members of the commission, with the advice and consent of the senate” to a four-year term. While the law says the administrator will only serve on an interim basis until approved by the state Senate, it also says the administrator can only be removed “by the affirmative vote of a majority of all members of the commission voting at a meeting of the commission called for that purpose.”
The Walker administration said Wednesday it does not believe the commission can legally appoint Haas to lead it. “Because the Senate voted against confirmation of the potential Administrator who was serving as the interim, there was no way for the statutory requirement of ‘consent of the Senate’ to be met and thus the appointment had to end. This is not a removal of an administrator because the administrator serves as interim until consented to,” Steven Michels, a spokesman for the Wisconsin Department of Administration, said in an email to HuffPost.
A legal fight is expected over Haas’ future at the election commission.
Thomsen, the commission’s chairman, believes only the commissioners can vote to fire Haas despite the Senate vote. The panel met Wednesday afternoon and split along party lines about keeping Haas, with Republicans saying they believed the law made the administrator position vacant after the Senate vote on Tuesday. The election panel eventually voted 4-2 to keep Haas as administrator through April 30 to oversee some of the state’s elections.

Fitzgerald told reporters Tuesday he hoped the Republicans on the commission would decline to support Haas. He said he also wants lawmakers to get rid of the positions of two civil servant lawyers at the ethics and elections commission who worked at the Government Accountability Board.
“It’s just hard to develop any type of cooperative relationship or establish credibility as long as some of those people are over there,” he said, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  • This article originally appeared on HuffPost.
 
Back
Top