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Showing posts with label Bill Clinton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Clinton. Show all posts

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Keep Fighting, Dems: Obama-GOP Tax Deal Entrenches Plutocracy

Dennis Kucinich is not planning to challenge President Barack Obama in 2012. Maybe we can draft Robert Reich, who justifies efforts Kucinich and other rowdy Dems may make to beat the Obama-GOP tax-rate deal into better shape:

If the Democratic Party has stood for anything over the years it is to maintain and restore upward mobility for the majority of working Americans, ensure that the playing field isn’t tilted in the direction of the privileged, and limit the power of the richest among us to entrench themselves and their heirs into a semi-permanent plutocracy.

Continuing the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003, including a sharp cut in the estate tax, violates these core principles. Doing so in the midst of an economic emergency that demands bold measures to rescue America’s vast middle and working class adds further insult. For President Obama and former President Clinton to tell America there’s “no other choice” or that “this is the best we can do” — when Democrats remain putatively in control of the House, Senate, and the presidency — is misleading [Robert Reich, "Why Democrats Should Disregard Bill Clinton's Endorsement of Obama's Tax Deal," blog, 2010.12.11].

Among the things I appreciate about Reich's call to principle is that he acknowledges that he admires his former boss and the current Commander-in-Chief as "good men." Yet he disagrees with them, civilly and passionately... just as we could in a good healthy primary. Hmmm... Reich-Kucinich 2012? Weiner-Paul?

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Green White House: Obama Continues Bush, Clinton Tradition

For my Republican friends who enjoy riffing on the "Change We Can Believe In" slogan, here's another toy to play with: President Obama's greening of the White House continues a recent tradition of environmental innovations at the presidential mansion.
The White House has led home greenification recently in some other ways:
It's good to know that the White House under both parties has been trying to set a good example. Keep up the good work, Mr. President!

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Bill Clinton in Madison -- Photos!

Bill Clinton's visit to Madison was only the second Presidential visit ever to our fair city. (Well, maybe the third: DeLon tells me that when President Bush came with then-Representative Thune to speak at the Dakota Ethanol plant in Wentworth, a bunch of serious dudes in dark suits, earpieces, and big black SUVs pulled up, got lots of sacks of cheeseburgers, and then sped away.) When history like this happens, even if you're voting for the other guy (and my wife and I still are!) you put your kid in the backpack and go to town to see history.

Erin fired up the camera again -- here's what she caught:

Bill Clinton speaks at Madison Public Library
Ivy, columns, beautiful trees -- Is that President Clinton at the Madison Public Library or Harvard Yard? (Mrs. Madville Times loves those angled photos.)
Bill Clinton speaks in Madison as sun comes out
President Clinton outlasts the sprinkles -- out comes the sun on a beautiful Saturday summer evening in Madison.

Bill Clinton works the stage, away from podium
We don't need no stinking podium -- Bill Clinton works the stage... and, in a remarkable departure from his usual speaking style, points with his finger fully extended rather than that old familiar knuckle-point of his. Vote for Hillary -- he must really mean it!

Bill Clinton addresses large crowd at Madison Public Library
The Madville Times crowd estimate: 700 people... at least 150 baseball caps, and one nice sun hat. (Horseshoe Seven offers a more conservative estimate of 400... and more pictures!)

Bill Clinton points again
See? No half-fingered/half-hearted pointing from Clinton in this speech!


Bill Clinton tells Lauck, Heidelberger, and other sneaky Madison bloggers not to mess with his wife
Any bloggers out there? Heidelberger? Lauck? Don't you pick on my wife! Even from behind, Lauck looks skeptical.

Clinton wears cowboy boots
I had my doubts about that orange necktie, but it does match the boots... sort of. The former President is evidently always ready for the horsehockey to get deep.

Notice also Madison's finest on the job... and cleverly camouflaged behind that audio equipment! Darn near invisible! Good work, men!


Bill Clinton, Geoff Wetrosky, and Johnny Five
President Clinton shakes hands with the Madison crowd. He even shook my hand, and I was still wearing my Obama button on my hat. Mighty nice of him! Following the President is Beresford favorite son Geoff Wetrosky, state director of the Hillary Clinton SD campaign. And hey, isn't that Johnny Five back there? Need input, more input!


Bill Clinton, profile
Nice to meet you, glad to be here....

President Clinton shakes hands, looks for ice cream?
Hey, that's a good-lookin' ice cream cone. Mind if my Secret Service man has a lick?

Bill Clinton in Madison -- Details from the Speech

It's a strange world where Schaff and Blanchard give the in-depth Obama coverage and the Madville Times gives the Clintons big press.

Neener-neener to the whiners in Florida and Michigan: President Bill Clinton followed his wife to Madison, South Dakota, yesterday evening to stump for Hillary's bid to take the family back to the White House. Only the second President to ever visit Madison (Nixon was the first, in 1969, to dedicate the Karl E. Mundt Library), President Clinton made his pitch to about 700 listeners in Library Park on why they should vote for Hillary Clinton in the South Dakota primary on Tuesday.

Making his fifth stop of the day, the former President showed no signs of wearing down. (His eyes look tough, but they always have, and so do nearly every politician's.) For under an hour, he hammered away with policy details of what the Clinton Administration 2.0 would do. He used the phrase "For example" just slightly more than the phrase "people like you in places like this."

The policy issues (with a few Obama notes thrown in for good measure):

Inequality of Wealth: Time to Go to War?

President Clinton noted that under his administration, America added 22.7 million jobs (and when he came into office, Clinton had promised 8 million). Under Bush, we've seen less than half that amount of job growth. President Clinton asserted that 90% of the economic gains of the past decade have gone to the top 10% of Americans, and that 43% of the economic gains have gone to the top 1%. "The U.S. used to attack dictators for that kind of inequality," said Clinton.

(Obama sounds a similar note in Aberdeen, and has all along.)

Rural America Needs Energy Independence (and Less Gambling!)

Clinton said he has driven through more of South Dakota than he has flown over, and as he looks at our landscape, he thinks, "Not enough windmills." Wind power, said Clinton, means more jobs for everyone in South Dakota, especially on the reservations. In an interesting connection, Clinton portrayed wind power as a way for the Indians to stop relying on gambling for income. Clinton said the Indians shouldn't have to resort to gambling to pay the bills and went so far as to argue South Dakota's reservations don't have the population density necessary to make gambling really profitable.

Clinton said his wife's plan will promote wind power by giving federal funds for building transmission lines (Bill, read the blog!). He also advocated green building practices for all public buildings (ah! Bill is reading the blog!). Do that, said Clinton, and your town, school district, county, etc. get lower utility bills forever. Plus, start building every school, courthouse, and library by green principles, and you eliminate the need for any new power plants for 40 years.

On oil, Clinton offered his wife's three-point plan:
  1. Investigate speculation among energy traders and price gouging among the oil companies.
  2. Cut gas prices by 40 cents for six months by (a) stopping the flow of oil to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (it's 97% full, says Clinton, and 90% full is plenty) and (b) cutting the federal gas tax and taking it out of the hide of Big Oil.
  3. Get more high-mileage cars, SUVs, pickup trucks, and semis (!) on the road by (a) giving a $10,000 tax credit for the purchase of plug-in hybrids and (b) pumping money in to research and development of battery technology and recycling.
(Not a word about needing more pipelines or oil refineries.)

(Obama in Aberdeen: close tax breaks for Big Oil, give middle-class $1,000 tax credit to put money in our pockets to cover gas prices, invest in alternative energy, increase fuel efficiency standards.)

Health Coverage: Talking Like Kucinich, Making Policy Like Romney

Clinton asked for a show of hands of people who know someone who doesn't have health coverage. Lots of hands went up. He said that only in America can you ask that question and get any response. Other countries don't let their people go without health coverage. Said Clinton, you can't control cost without covering everybody. The private insurance companies spend $50 billion each year figuring out ways not to cover us. With hundreds of companies and thousands of policies, we also burn up 30 cents of every health care dollar on paperwork. Meanwhile, Medicare (a.k.a. government-run health care) spends 3 cents per dollar on paperwork.

Nice to see the Clinton campaign has finally picked up on what Dennis Kucinich has been telling us since his 2004 campaign. Too bad the Clinton-Romney health care plan won't give us real universal, single-payer, not-for-profit health coverage. Instead, it leaves those hundreds of companies and thousands of complicated, bureaucracy-laden policies intact.

(Obama at least has the good sense not to mandate that we buy coverage from the private insurers who are profiting from sickness and driving the American health care system into the ground.)

Education: Bag No Child Left Behind

President Clinton gets the same good crowd response his wife does when he calls for ending No Child Left Behind. It doesn't work, the President said. It causes cuts in history, economics, arts, and other important curriculum and discourages hard courses and tests. Instead of focusing on a few standardized tests, Clinton said we need to follow the lead of other countries and keep kids in school longer, start the hard classes sooner, and pay teachers more.

(O.K., on NCLB, Clinton beats Obama, who still maintains that the broken law can be reformed. But no worries -- VP Richardson will straighten him out.)

Research: We Like Elite Experts After All

President Clinton noted that agriculture is built on research. We need to get back to funding research, said Clinton. We need research on manufactured materials to produce lighter vehicles for energy efficiency. We need research on energy. We especially need research on health care to address the diseases of old age (we're going to live to be a hundred, but what good is that if we have Alzheimer's or Parkinson's for those last 30 years?) and young age (Hillary is on the Senate autism caucus -- who knew there was an autism caucus?).

(And if you think that pesky intellectual elitist Obama won't meet or beat any Clinton proposal for increasing R&D funding, well, you haven't been paying attention.)

Don't Slap the Banker -- Balance the Budget!

President Clinton said free, fair trade is great, but it will only work if we balance the budget. Remember the poison dog food and toys from China? How'd that happen? Don't we have trade regulations to stop such crimes? Sure we do, said President Clinton, but we can't enforce them against China, Japan, Korea, or the big oil powers when we fund our deficit with big loans from China, Japan, Korea, and the big oil powers. As Clinton said, you won't go downtown and slap the banker (even though you might want to) and then expect him to give you a loan. Deficit spending puts our health and security at risk; we need to balance the budget.

(Note: Obama in Aberdeen advocates his pay-as-you-go approach to government.)

There's the policy breakdown -- photos and more commentary to come!

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Bill Clinton in Madison -- Rifle Shot?

If South Dakota votes for her, it will be like a rifle shot....

—President Bill Clinton, on what a South Dakota victory for Senator Hillary Clinton in Tuesday's primary could mean, campaign rally, Madison, SD, 2008.05.31

Bill Clinton in Madison -- Guest Photographer!

Just the tip of the iceberg here: Mrs. Madville Times has beaucoup pix of the 42nd President of the United States at Madison's Library Park this evening. But first, a shot from guest photocorrespondent (and South Dakota blogging godfather?) Jon Lauck. Jon read my review of his book and still sends me this good shot. Thanks, Jon! More to come....

Thursday, May 29, 2008

First Hillary, Now Bill...

I just heard it straight from Trudi Nelson -- or at least, straight from a call she recorded for the Clinton campaign. Former President Bill Clinton will speak in Madison around suppertime Saturday at Library Park. Trudi says "doors open at 5 p.m."... odd, since the park doesn't have many doors. When exactly President Clinton starts speaking will be anyone's guess. The Clinton campaign site says Madison is President Clinton's last of five stops Saturday, after Elk Point, Canton, Dell Rapids, and Flandreau.

Saturday's forecast -- ah... partly cloudy, 76 degrees, gentle westerly breeze. Nice afternoon/evening to bring the kids to see real life Secret Service agents, not to mention another slice of history for Madison.

Update 20:55 CDT: O.K., so I'm thinking Bill's speech will wrap up around 7-7:30, maybe later, given all the delays sure to come up from all his stops before he gets to Madison. He'll be tired, he'll be thirsty, and he'll be a block away from Madison's famed Four Corners. Come on, somebody, invite the President downtown for a drink, or at least some gizzards. Mark Janke! Get him to come to Rumors! You'd get unbelievable press!