el retorno
Member
If they had to talk for every filibuster they'd have time to do nothing else.Someone should also ask about filibuster reform. Why is he against reform that would require both sides to do exactly what he did last week.
If they had to talk for every filibuster they'd have time to do nothing else.Someone should also ask about filibuster reform. Why is he against reform that would require both sides to do exactly what he did last week.
Doesn't seem like they're doing anything else anyway.If they had to talk for every filibuster they'd have time to do nothing else.
Lady and Gentlemen Paul Ryan's budget
If they had to talk for every filibuster they'd have time to do nothing else.
The only good thing is that it proves how full of shit the Beltway is; wining and dining republicans won't convince them to be sensible.
Doesn't seem like they're doing anything else anyway.
I would love someone to provide details on how many hours senators and house members spend on the floor or in their offices, committees and how many they spend giving speeches and going to fundraisers.They wouldn't be able to go give speeches and fundraise. The stuff that really matters
I'm glad Ryan and co. are doing something about this scary scary chart.
what other options are there? you either cut expense, or raise revenues. that's how you either make more money or lose less money
This Paul Ryan objectivist stuff always seems to come up now and then, I fundamentally disagree with that outlook on how society should function and am the opposite of Ryan, but I want to be able to know more than just philosophical arguments against it and learn more real world facts/implications.
I'm glad Ryan and co. are doing something about this scary scary chart.
i'm glad the GOP is doing everything the can to lose more house seats.
Nope. This stuff in abstract is popular in those seats. It shows seriousness and fiscal responsibility
I'm glad Ryan and co. are doing something about this scary scary chart.
Nope. This stuff in abstract is popular in those seats. It shows seriousness™ and fiscal responsibility™
Where's that comic strip about extropolating being a hobby?
Not really. It would be tough for the GOP to lose safe seats, but Medicare vouchers are one of the things that could do it if they got enough play, because the GOP base abhors the idea. That's why Ryan campaigns so hard against that label.
The thing is tea party candidates don't really hurt them in house seats as much because of the structure of the districts. You can point to Allen West and people like him but they were already in pretty mixed districts.it wasn't as popular last election, and all you need is some sane person to come against it and get primaried by a tea party candidate.
Rep. Allyson Schwartz, former Rep. Joe Sestak or state Treasurer Rob McCord would lead Corbett by 11 points at this moment, 45 percent to 34 percent, PPP finds. Against businessman and former revenue secretary Tom Wolf, Corbett would be 9 points behind (42-33) and against former state Environmental Protection head John Hanger, he'd trail by 7 points (41-34).
It's a remarkable turnaround for the governor from a January survey by PPP, which found Corbett leading Hanger by 4 percentage points, Sestak and McCord by six, Schwartz by seven and Wolf by 12.
Further, the pollsters said, the Democratic candidates are not very well known compared to the governor. The most famous is Sestak, with 52 percent of respondents saying they had heard of him enough to have an opinion, to 38 percent for Schwartz, 31 percent for McCord and 22 percent who had heard about Wolf.
The poll finds Corbett's approval rating at 33 percent, with 58 percent disapproving.That approval number is down from PPP's January survey, which found a 38 percent approval rate.
These results may represent a "ceiling" of support for Corbett at this point, the pollsters said, noting that most of the undecided voters in the survey leaned Democratic.
Looks like without a big turnaround Corbett has a real chance to go down as one of the few governors in PA history that couldn't win re-election. He is currently polling behind every single democrat he is polled against.
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/...ett-losing-to-every-likely-Dem-candidate.html
Looks like without a big turnaround Corbett has a real chance to go down as one of the few governors in PA history that couldn't win re-election. He is currently polling behind every single democrat he is polled against.
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/...ett-losing-to-every-likely-Dem-candidate.html
These GOP Govs in blue states are horrible save for Christie who is smart enough to buck his party at times.
but I thought 2010 proved the public approved GOP ideas!
oh no doubt, 2010 should be a seared into ever democrats brain as a reason why you don't stay home.
2010 is gonna be the last of that. Demographics are going to prevent that from happening again. The electorate gets 1% less white every 2 years. so its already 1.5% less white from 2010.
2010 was the last hurrah of that voting bloc. That's not to say the GOP can't win but they have to retool their message and platform, which the Ryan Budget shows they fully understand.
I'm confused. Even as whites diminish they'll still be the dominant group that shows up for mid term elections, at least for another 2-3 elections. Especially older white folks. 2010 isn't the last hurrah, but it will be the last "no show" from a demoralized based at least until the next recession.
If the USA had mandatory voting, would it be liberal all the time? Australian seems to fluctuate, but they have more than two parties.
If the USA had mandatory voting, would it be liberal all the time? Australian seems to fluctuate, but they have more than two parties.
If the US had mandatory voting, we'd have at least 2 more viable parties and would have to change our current FPP voting system and electoral college
If the US had mandatory voting you wouldn't have the modern GOP. So you'd have saner parties and probably a bit more to the left with constant shifts in power from the conservative and liberal parties both more "liberal" than the Republican and Democratic parties today.
I don't like mandatory voting though and hope it never comes here
Sounds like mandatory voting is just what the country needs.If the US had mandatory voting, we'd have at least 2 more viable parties and would have to change our current FPP voting system and electoral college
Haha, I laughed at first because it's true, but then I felt sad, because it's true.I bet we will have a amendment that will give us the Freedom from voting before we actually do something smart and helpful.
If the USA had mandatory voting, would it be liberal all the time? Australian seems to fluctuate, but they have more than two parties.
Kasich will probably be reelected because of the improving Economy alone. If Rick Scott squeaks by, Florida Dems will forever be a joke.
Kasich will probably be reelected because of the improving Economy alone. If Rick Scott squeaks by, Florida Dems will forever be a joke.
A majority of Obama's voting coalition was white.I'm confused. Even as whites diminish they'll still be the dominant group that shows up for mid term elections, at least for another 2-3 elections. Especially older white folks. 2010 isn't the last hurrah, but it will be the last "no show" from a demoralized based at least until the next recession.
There may not be an improving economy by the time the next election rolls around.
I'm pretty sure Obama's job-killing tax hikes would fall under that category.There will be. Nobody is proposing anything that will realistically cut spending enough to get to negative job growth and GDP growth.
If the USA had mandatory voting, would it be liberal all the time? Australia seems to fluctuate, but they have more than two parties.
Nope, I think the US would still be primarily conservative, but have a very vocal liberal minority.
There will be. Nobody is proposing anything that will realistically cut spending enough to get to negative job growth and GDP growth.
Nope, I think the US would still be primarily conservative, but have a very vocal liberal minority.
slate said:Unlike Paul Ryan, Patty Murray won't be trying to craft a budget that achieves balance. Instead, she's aiming for $1.85 trillion in deficit reduction to put the debt:GDP ratio on a falling path. More to the point, she's looking for a budget that sacrifices the interests of richer people rather than the poor and the middle class. It starts with $100 billion in targeted economic stimulus to address high unemployment, features $975 billion in rescinded tax expenditures, $275 billion in cuts to health care spending (likely structured as cuts in provider payments rather than in benefits or eligibility), $242 billion in reduced interest payments, $240 billion in military cuts, and $218 billion in other cuts.
People making less than $20k would have almost twice as much say as they do now, as a group. Blacks typically lag 5-8 points behind whites in voter turnout (2008 is obviously a special case). All these trends are worse in off years, I believe.