Interests: Politics, Government, Media, Transportation, Space, Social Media, Civic Engagement, Washington, DC Following: The Obama Presidency, Decision 2012, The 112th Congress Work: myImpact.org- a non-profit working at the intersection of social media & citizen engagement

 

4 Days To Go…Romney’s Commanding Lead, Paul Attacks Santorum, New Book Damaging for Obama White House, New Job Numbers Show Improving Economy, Justin Bieber’s Tattoo: The Evening Report for Friday January 06 2012

4 DAYS UNTIL NEW HAMPSHIRE (12 delegates)
15 DAYS UNTIL SOUTH CAROLINA (25 delegates)
18 DAYS UNTIL THE STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS
25 DAYS UNTIL FLORIDA (50 delegates)

FRIDAY’S EARLY EDITION

TOP STORY: The Labor Department reported this morning that the US economy gained 200,000 jobs last month, which dropped the unemployment rate to 8.5%.

It is the lowest level of unemployment since February 2009, the month that President Obama took office. It is also the sixth consecutive month of private sector job growth.

Still, 5.6 million Americans have been out of work for six months or longer, chronically unemployed and the unemployment rate does not reflect the millions of Americans who are no longer counted as part of the labor pool because they have dropped out and stopped looking for work.

PRESIDENT OBAMA, for whom the economy holds the key to re-election, trumpeted today’s news as he took a political victory lap of sorts at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in Washington, where he visited the newly appointed Commissioner, Richard Cordray. 

“This morning we learned that American businesses added another 212,000 jobs last month. All together more private-sector jobs were created in 2011 than any year since 2005,” he said.

“There are a lot of people that are still hurting out there, after losing more than 8 million jobs in the recession. Obviously, we have a lot more work to do. But it is important for the American people to recognize we added 3.2 million new private-sector jobs in the last 22 months, nearly 2 million new jobs last year alone….

“One of reasons is the tax cut we put in place last year.When Congress returns, they should extend the payroll tax cut all year. There should not be delay, there should not be a lot of drama.”

COMING ATTRACTION: The debate over extending the payroll tax cut through the end of the year will resume when Congress returns to town at the end of the month. Some believe that it is the only significant piece of legislation that Congress may move this year.

WALL STREET: for all the seemingly good economic news this week, the Dow managed to end the day slightly lower.

  • DOW down 56
  • NASDAQ down 3
  • S&P 500 up 4

CAMPAIGN 2012

Just four days to go before New Hampshire votes and the politics of debate-prep and expectations setting drove the day today

ANOTHER SERIAL HYPOCRITE- and the latest in a theme of Ron Paul’s attack ads against fellow Republicans in the race. Today, the Paul campaign announced a $250,000 ad buy in South Carolina- home to Saturday January 21st primary- attacking Rick Santorum and calling his a “record of betrayal”  

WASHINGTON POST HEADLINE TONIGHT AND THE SUNDAY SHOWS THIS WEEKEND- Romney Looking To Wrap Things Up By End of Month- from Philip Rucker in Tilton, NH

“Buoyed by a narrow win in the Iowa caucuses and his commanding lead in the New Hampshire polls, Romney has turned his attention to South Carolina, where he is dispatching a slew of high-profile surrogates and relocating his staff ahead of the Jan. 21 primary. Looking further ahead, Romney has begun a massive advertising blitz in Florida and launched an aggressive outreach program to early voters in the state.

Romney campaign advisers insist they are taking the race one state at a time and not taking any contest for granted. Yet Republican observers see Romney executing an ambitious strategy that would quickly maximize his momentum and try to quash any further surges by his rivals.

“If Romney wins the first four states, he’ll be the de facto nominee of the party,” said Steve Schmidt, a senior strategist on Sen. John McCain’s 2008 campaign who is unaffiliated in the current race. Ed Rogers, another unaffiliated Republican strategist, said the notion that Romney may wrap up the nomination by Jan. 31 is “perfectly plausible.”

NEW POLLS OUT TODAY PROVIDE A SNAPSHOT OF THE RACE

ROMNEY UP BY 24 IN WMUR NH PRIMARY POLL: Romney 44%, Paul 20%, Santorum 8%, Gingrich 8%, HUNTSMAN 7%, Perry 1%

AND BY THE SAME MARGIN IN RASMUSSEN’S NH SURVEY: Romney 42%, Paul 18%, Santorum 13%, Huntsman 12%, Gingrich 8%, Perry 1%

IN SOUTH CAROLINA, CNN HAS HIM LEADING SANTORUM BY 18: Romney 37%, Santorum 19%, Gingrich 18%, Paul 12%, Perry 5%, Huntsman 1%

BUT RASMUSSEN SAYS ITS CLOSER, WITH ROMNEY ONLY LEADING BY 3: Romney 27%,Santorum 24%, Gingrich 18% , Paul 11%, Perry 5%, Huntsman 2%

DRIVING THE POLITICAL WORLD- The New York Times’ Jodi Kantor is out with a new book- which paints an unflattering view of the Obama Administration, with sources deep inside The West Wing. President and Mrs. Obama were not interviewed for the book.

WHAT WE’RE LEARNING- Former Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel offered his resignation to the President in the winter of 2010 at the end of the divisive health care debate. Kantor also exposes a rife between Emanual and First Lady Michelle Obama. From the Huffington Post’s White House Correspondent Sam Stein, reporting on the book:

“Once the administration began, the frictions only escalated. Emanuel rejected Michelle Obama’s efforts to be part of his 7:30 a.m. staff meeting. The administration did not outfit her with a speechwriter for some time. And the first lady’s office grew so isolated from the rest of the presidential orbit that aides there began, as Kantor writes, “referring to the East Wing as ‘Guam’ — pleasant but powerless.

Michelle and Rahm Emanuel had almost no bond; their relationship was distant and awkward from the beginning. She had been skeptical of him when he was selected, and now he returned the favor; he was uneasy about first ladies in general, several aides close to him said, based on clashes with Hillary Clinton in the 1990s that became so severe that she had tried to fire him from her husband’s administration,” writes Kantor. “Now Emanuel was chief of staff, a position that almost never included an easy relationship with the first lady. They were the president’s two spouses, in a sense, one public and official and one private and informal.”

AND MORE ABOUT THE FIRST LADY “Michelle Obama, who came to politics skeptically but saw her husband as someone capable of lofty achievements, lashed out against her isolation. She sent emails to [Obama Counselor Valarie] Jarrett when she had complaints about news coverage, which Jarrett would forward to others after removing the first lady’s name from them. When she couldn’t wedge herself into her husband’s schedule, she would send her missives to Alyssa Mastromonaco, the president’s director of scheduling. The emails, Kantor writes, “were so stern that Mastromonaco showed them around to colleagues, unsure of how to respond to her boss’s wife’s displeasure.”

THIS BOOK has the power to drive the White House off its new, revived, 2012 message, if the Administration allows it to do so. Watch to see over the next week how the White House officially responds, and what unofficial message they send as they play damage control.

AND FINALLY…The Bieb’s Got The Ink. NBC Entertainment reports:

“If you ever questioned the Biebs’ religious beliefs, this oughta clear it up for you.

In addition to his dove and Hebrew script of Jesus’ name on his rib cage ( matching with pops…awww), Justin Bieber showed off his new ink on the back of his calf while going to Shakey’s Pizza with his dad and some friends today.

The 17-year-old got a portrait of Jesus Christ’s face. Is it shocking?

To some it may seem that way, but Bieber has never been shy when it comes to religion. His movie, “Never Say Never,” even has some Christian reflection.

“People will walk away (from the movie) knowing faith is very important to him,” Scooter Braun, Bieber’s manager and one of the film’s producers told USA Today. “As a Christian, he’s someone to look up to…When [fans] are getting the real person is when they can connect to that person.”

“I believe that Jesus died on a cross for my sins,” Bieber told Billboard last November. “He’s the reason that I’m here.”

Inside the White House’s Payroll Tax Strategy

Via Mike Allen’s Friday Playbok

PFEIFFER’S WORKSHOP - HOW THE WHITE HOUSE POUNDED ITS MESSAGE:

“—Monday: WH Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer did an hour of satellite TV time into the following markets: Palm Beach, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Portland and Seattle. … The regional communications team did a press call with their top regional reporters with Josh Earnest and Brian Deese … Administration Officials were on national and regional TV and radio throughout the day … Administration Officials held a call with Hispanic media … Administration Officials were on African American and Hispanic radio and TV …

“—Tuesday: Office of Digital Strategy launched What 40 Dollars Means to You, an online effort to get the American people to lend their voice to this debate. We launched #40dollars on twitter, the webpage www.whitehouse.gov/40dollars and sent an email from David Plouffe to the White House list … Deese and Earnest convened a conference call with regional political reporters. … Administration Officials were on national and regional TV and radio [and] African American and Hispanic radio and TV …

“—Wednesday: The White House featured responses that we received from Americans who’ve written to the White House to say what $40 means for them. These responses will be featured on whitehouse.gov , White House Twitter and Facebook accounts … [Council of Economic Advisers] Chair Alan Krueger delivered a speech on the economy and economic certainty in Charlotte, NC, in which he made … economic case for the payroll tax cut. … Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett, [Labor] Secretary [Hilda] Solis and [Domestic Policy Council] Director Melody Barnes participated in interviews on African American radio to amplify our payroll tax cut message. Senior Admin officials also did Hispanic media outlets including radio … Barnes hosted a roundtable with African American reporters. … Gene Sperling and Secretary Solis hosted a conference call on the importance of extending UI benefits for regional and specialty outlets … The President tweeted on [@WhiteHouse] Twitter feed … Deese convened a conference call with Americans who Tweeted on #40dollars … Administration Officials were on national and regional TV and radio [and] African American and Hispanic radio and TV …

“Thursday: The President delivered a statement payroll tax cut … joined on-stage and in the audience by people who [would] be impacted by the tax increase … The White House released a map on WhiteHouse.gov … with over 10,000 points throughout the U.S. of citizens responding to the question: ‘What does $40 dollars mean to you?’ … Administration Officials were on national and regional TV and radio [and ]African American and Hispanic radio and TV.”

The Evening Report for Thursday December 22 2011

12 DAYS UNTIL IOWA
19 DAYS UNTIL NEW HAMPSHIRE

BREAKING: A magnitude 5.9 earthquake has struck near Christchurch, New Zealand, the US Geological Survey reports

TOP STORY: A deal.

Late this afternoon, Speaker of the House John Boehner, looking weary and defeated after a week of intense negotiations, came to the microphones to announce that he had reached a deal with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to have the House pass the Senate bill extending the payroll tax cut for two months, adding a provision that seeks to accommodate the burden that some businesses may face from having to adjust their payroll filings as a result of the legislation.

He expected that the House and Senate would both act before Christmas- meaning tomorrow- to pass the bill by unanimous consent. That is, unless one member objects which, while entirely possible, is considered unlikely.

THE LATEST- from The Hill- “House Republican Leaders Cave- Agree To Pass Two-Month Bill”

“Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) announced the agreement with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) Thursday evening after briefing rank-and-file House Republicans on a conference call. The House has agreed to pass a version of the Senate’s two-month payroll tax cut legislation, with a fix demanded by Republicans to make implementation easier.

According to a lawmaker who participated in the House GOP conference call, Boehner told the rank-and-file members that a deal was struck and the deed had been done. Unlike an extended phone call on Saturday, where members voiced extreme opposition to a Senate compromise, the Thursday conference call was one-way, and members were only allowed to listen in.

The agreement capped a disastrous week for Boehner, who was first forced into a fight with Senate Republicans by his own angry members and then was abandoned by senior Republicans, including Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the 2008 presidential nominee, and Karl Rove, the chief strategist for the last Republican president.

“I don’t think this is any time for celebration,” Boehner said as he announced the agreement in the basement of a nearly empty Capitol.

Asked if he caved on the issue, the Speaker replied: “You know, sometimes it’s hard to do the right thing, and sometimes it’s politically difficult to do the right thing.”

STATEMENT FROM SPEAKER BOEHNER announcing the deal:

“Senator Reid and I have reached an agreement that will ensure taxes do not increase for working families on January 1 while ensuring that a complex new reporting burden is not unintentionally imposed on small business job creators.  Under the terms of our agreement, a new bill will be approved by the House that reflects the bipartisan agreement in the Senate along with new language that allows job creators to process and withhold payroll taxation under the same accounting structure that is currently in place.  The Senate will join the House in immediately appointing conferees, with instructions to reach agreement in the weeks ahead on a full-year payroll tax extension.  We will ask the House and Senate to approve this agreement by unanimous consent before Christmas.  I thank our Members – particularly those who have remained here in the Capitol with the holidays approaching – for their efforts to enact a full-year extension of the payroll tax cut for working families.”

STATEMENT FROM MAJORITY LEADER REID affirming the deal-

“I am grateful that the voices of reason have prevailed and Speaker Boehner has agreed to pass the Senate’s bipartisan compromise. Year-long extensions of the payroll tax cut, unemployment insurance and Medicare payments for physicians has always been our goal, and Democrats will not rest until we have passed them. But there remain important differences between the parties on how to implement these policies, and it is critical that we protect middle-class families from a tax increase while we work them out.

“I look forward to appointing members of my caucus to continue negotiations towards a year-long agreement. Two months is not a long time, and I expect the negotiators to work expeditiously to forge year-long extensions of these critical policies.”

STATEMENT FROM PRESIDENT OBAMA trumpeting what has been a very good week for his presidency-

“For the past several weeks, I’ve stated consistently that it was critical that Congress not go home without preventing a tax increase on 160 million working Americans. Today, I congratulate members of Congress for ending the partisan stalemate by reaching an agreement that meets that test.

Because of this agreement, every working American will keep his or her tax cut – about $1,000 for the average family. That’s about $40 in every paycheck. Vital unemployment insurance will continue for millions of Americans who are looking for work.  And when Congress returns, I urge them to keep working to reach an agreement that will extend this tax cut and unemployment insurance for all of 2012 without drama or delay.

This is good news, just in time for the holidays. This is the right thing to do to strengthen our families, grow our economy, and create new jobs.  This is real money that will make a real difference in people’s lives. And I want to thank every American who raised your voice to remind folks in this town what this debate was all about. It was about you. And today, your voices made all the difference.”

TONIGHT, THE PRESIDENT TWEETED FROM @WHITEHOUSE:

Thanks to all who shared #40dollars stories. Today’s victory is yours. Keep making your voices heard – it makes all the difference. –bo

PAYROLL TAKEAWAYS:

1/ This debate was a big deal. The question is how big a deal it remains weeks and months from now. Will it be seen as a defining moment in the relationship between President Obama and Congress, between Democrats and Republicans, between Republicans and the Tea Party- or will this debate, similar to the others we have seen this year over federal funding and the debt ceiling, be eclipsed by the next big battle?

2/ The White House found its voice. After a year of trying, and often coming up short, in its negotiations with Congress and after continued difficulty messaging and communicating with the public, the White House’s operation has seemingly come together over the last week. The #40Dollars campaign was really the first time the formal White House has successfully leveraged the social media tools they mastered in the 2008 election to help them win both a policy and a political debate, in a way that related to the average American.

3/ The Speaker is severely weakened. What we don’t know is if he is damaged beyond repair or, quite possibly and alternatively, if the Tea Party Republicans who forced a change in control in the House in 2010 have finally been shunned by enough of the traditional Republican establishment. Many believe that this group of freshman representatives revolted in the summer and prevented Speaker Boehner from agreeing to a grand bargain with President Obama. This time, the Speaker was at first ready to give in to their demands but then essentially said “not this time.”

WALL STREET- from CNBC-

“Stocks pushed into the close to finish around their highest levels for the second day in a row, as banks surged and Wall Street shrugged off fears of a global economic slowdown.

Financials, energy and technology — the market’s principal weak spot recently — led gainers, while commodities, particularly mining-related stocks, showed weakness. Consumer staples was the worst of the 10 Standard & Poor’s 500 sectors during a day in which the market traded in a tight range throughout the session.”

  • DOW up 62
  • NASDAQ up 21
  • S&P 500 up 10

CAMPAIGN 2012:

Former President George H. W. Bush endorsed Gov. Mitt Romney today.

(Earlier this year, Romney was the only one of the current presidential candidates to attend a tribute event for Pres. Bush at the Kennedy Center in Washington organized by the Points of Light Institute. THE EVENING REPORT was there that night and met President Bush and Governor Romney)

RON PAUL is surging in Iowa, although his campaign is coming under new questions about documents that have surfaced (similar- maybe even identical- to ones that surfaced with allegations of racism in 2008). Yesterday, Paul even walked out of an interview with CNN’s Glorida Borger.

And as NBC’s Domenico Montanaro reports, there may be more skeletons in the closet set to come out in these final days before the Caucus:

  • No federal regulations for car safety, medicines, even air traffic control
  • Don’t regulate raw milk:
  • Heroin, marijuana, cocaine, prostitution OK if states allow them
  • - No air conditioning for troops (as a way to bring them home)
  • Against the Americans with Disabilities Act
  • No FEMA
  • Believes Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are unconstitutional

The question is how many of these past statements and positions, many which are quintessentially Ron Paul, will have staying power.

GINGRICH HAS A NEW NICKNAME FOR ROMNEY- via National Journal-

“When a Massachusetts moderate says I’m not conservative, it makes me want to laugh when he goes down that road,” Gingrich told radio host Tony Powers, responding to the former Bay State governor’s frequent charge. “When a Massachusetts moderate says Newt Gingrich is not conservative enough, other than break up laughing I don’t know what the correct response would be.”

Gingrich also criticized another rival, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, who also has run ads critical of the former House speaker. “Paul’s case is different because he believes in legalizing drugs … thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a nuclear weapon and believes Americans are responsible for 9/11, which makes no sense.”

GALLUP TRACKING POLL: Gingrich 27, Romney 21, Paul 12, Perry 7, Bachmann 6, Santorum 4, Huntsman 1, Cain

GINGRICH averages a 3.8% lead in an average of national polls for the Republican nomination

RON PAUL leads an average of recent polls in IOWA, topping Romney by 3.5%

In NEW HAMPSHIREMITT ROMNEY has a 13 point average lead over Newt Gingrich

The near-reverse is the case in SOUTH CAROLINA, where GINGRICH has a 16 point lead over Romney

And in FLORIDA, the last of the early primary states (at the end of January), GINGRICH retains a 18 point lead over Mitt Romney.

FINALLY…Matt Damon still has some beef with President Obama. Actually, a lot of beef. And he told Elle Magazine that the President should think about leaving after one term. From the Huffington Post-

“I’ve talked to a lot of people who worked for Obama at the grassroots level. One of them said to me, ‘Never again. I will never be fooled again by a politician,’” Damon tells the magazine. “You know, a one-term president with some balls who actually got stuff done would have been, in the long run of the country, much better.”

Referring to the Occupy Wall Street movement, Damon continued: “If the Democrats think that they didn’t have a mandate — people are literally without any focus or leadership, just wandering out into the streets to yell right now because they are so pissed off … Imagine if they had a leader.”

The slam follows in the same vein as a number of other criticisms Damon has made of the President and the Democrats, including in March, when he criticized Obama’s education policy.

“I really think he misinterpreted his mandate. A friend of mine said to me the other day, I thought it was a great line, ‘I no longer hope for audacity,’” Damon told CNN host Piers Morgan. “He’s doubled down on a lot of things, going back to education… the idea that we’re testing kids and we’re tying teachers salaries to how kids are performing on tests, that kind of mechanized thinking has nothing to do with higher order. We’re training them, not teaching them.”

HAPPY HANUKKAH!

FOLLOW THE EVENING REPORT ON TWITTER: @EVENING_REPORT


LIKE THE EVENING REPORT ON FACEBOOK: FACEBOOK.COM/EVENINGREPORT


SUBSCRIBE TO THE EVENING REPORT: EVENINGEMAIL.COM

The Evening Report for Sunday December 18

16 DAYS UNTIL IOWA

BREAKING: North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jon-Il has died.

The news broke just after 10pm Eastern Time and is developing at this hour. The death of one of the world’s most notorious and mysterious dictators becomes one of the largest news stories of the year 2011, a year that has also seen the death of Osama bin Laden, and Muhammar Kadaffi.

THE LATEST- via @BreakingNews’ @MPoppel

North Korean Gov’t says Kim Jong-il died ‘from a great mental and physical strain’ at 8.30 a.m. on Saturday

South Korean military declared emergency alert, says Yonhap News Agency

North Korean Gov’t says Kim Jong-il died on a train during a field guidance tour

Gov’t confirms Kim Jong-il had received medical treatment for ‘his cardiac and cerebrovascular diseases’ for a long period

North Korean gov’t says Kim Jong-il suffered from an ‘advanced acute myocardial infarction, complicated with serious heart shock’ on Saturday

North Korea says Kim Jong-il was given every possible first-aid measure, but died at 8.30 a.m. An autopsy took place on Sunday.

Yonhap: SKorea’s Cheong Wa Dae convenes emergency meeting of National Security Council over Kim’s death

FIRST THOUGHTS

The region is extremely unstable right now and it will take days or weeks to assess if a transfer of power is able to occur in North Korea, what this means for the known nuclear program in the country, relations with other nations and the United States, etc.

The death of Kim Jon Il apparently occurred nearly 48 hours ago. Did US intelligence have a heads-up as to Kim Jon Il’s death or are they first learning of the death through North Korean state news, with the rest of the world, tonight?

How smooth is a transition (Kim Jon Il’s successor is thought to be his youngest son)? Is one able to take place? Will South Korea, China, or the United States seek to intervene in any way?

In 2003, then President George W. Bush declared three nations in the world to be part of an AXIS OF EVIL- Iraq, Iran and North Korea. On this day, Sunday December 18, 2011, the final US troops withdrew from Iraq and we learned of the death of North Korean dictator Kim Jon Il.

THE MARKETS- Asian stock markets are significantly lower- between 1 and 2 percent- in the first hour after this news broke. South Korea stock markets are lower by about five percent.

TOP US STORY: Negotiations over the payroll tax cut extension, passed by the Senate Saturday morning, have apparently broken down in the House.

FROM THE WASHINGTON POST:

“In an appearance on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Boehner said the short-term package, which was negotiated by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), should be re-worked by a conference committee in order to reach a longer deal that is acceptable to House Republicans.

Boehner’s comments came a day after the Senate agreed to a two-month extension in a payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits that will expire Jan. 1, top priorities for President Obama and congressional Democrats.

The White House and congressional Democrats responded that if the House does not proceed on the compromise that overwhelmingly passed the Senate, Republicans will be to blame.”

WHAT TO WATCH:

The House is back in session tomorrow, as negotiations will continue behind closed doors. They will only bring a bill to the floor if the House Republican majority believes they have the vote to pass it.

Will the House demand a conference with the Senate? Will Harry Reid go along? Today Reid indicated that he was not inclined to bring the Senate back into session this week.

Will the President step into negotiations? What is the White House position? [Very unclear at this point]

Will the entire negotiations break down and Congress recesses early to mid week without a deal, allowing a tax increase in two weeks?

CAMPAIGN 2012

BIG ENDORSEMENT- Illinois Sen. Mark Kirk will endorse Gov. Mitt Romney tomorrow

THE CANDIDATES- Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum participated in a tele-forum tonight sponsored by an Iowa tea party group.

TIGHTENING RACE- Latest Gallup National GOP Poll: Gingrich 28, Romney 24, Paul 10, Bachmann 7, Perry 6, Santorum 4, Huntsman 2

RECAPPING- the latest-from the New York Times (11:00pm ET)

SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Jong-il, the reclusive North Korean leader who has been battling ill health following a reported stroke in 2008, has died, the North’s official news media reported on Monday.

“Our great leader Comrade Kim Jong-il passed away at 8:30 a.m. on Dec. 17,” Korean Central TV reported.

Mr. Kim was 69 years old. Since he reportedly suffered a stroke in 2008, he has been grooming his third son, Kim Jong-un, believed to be in his late 20s, to be his successor, as his country struggled to fight widespread food shortages and international sanctions imposed for its nuclear weapons development.”


FOLLOW THE EVENING REPORT ON TWITTER: @EVENING_REPORT


LIKE THE EVENING REPORT ON FACEBOOK: FACEBOOK.COM/EVENINGREPORT


SUBSCRIBE TO THE EVENING REPORT: EVENINGEMAIL.COM

The Evening Report for Friday December 16

FRIDAY’S EARLY EDITION

18 DAYS UNTIL IOWA

TOP STORY: Shutdown Averted- The latest from The Hill-

“The House easily approved a $1 trillion omnibus Friday, sending the bill to a Senate for a likely weekend vote.

Senate passage would send the bill to the White House and avert a government shutdown, but won’t end Congress’s business for the year. Lawmakers are expected to return to Washington next week to complete work on an extension of a payroll tax cut.

Despite the frictions between the two parties throughout the week, the bill was approved in an overwhelming 296-121 vote. Thirty-five Democrats and 86 Republicans voted against it. More Democrats (149) voted for the package than Republicans (147).

The bill, H.R. 2055, covers spending for Defense, Energy and Water, Financial Services and General Government, Homeland Security, Interior, Labor/Health and Human Services, Legislative Branch, Military Construction/VA, and State/Foreign Operations.”

THE ISSUE still being negotiated that is holding up passage of a payroll tax cut extension: the Keystone XL Pipeline.

CAMPAIGN 2012

After a debate performance in which the general political consensus is he won, MITT ROMNEY ended the week with continued political momentum, today announcing the endorsement of South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley- from The Washington Post’s Aaron Blake-

“Neither South Carolina nor the nation can afford four more years of President Obama, and Mitt Romney is the right person to take him on and get America back on track,” Haley said.

Haley also backed Romney in the 2008 presidential campaign, when she was in the state legislature, and Romney returned the favor by backing her governor bid in 2010 (and sending $60,000 to her campaign through his various state-level political action committees). She had long promised to endorse in the 2012 race, but it wasn’t clear that she would line up behind Romney again.

In Haley, Romney gets the support of one of the rising young (39 years old) stars in GOP politics. Haley is the first female governor of the Palmetto State and the second Indian-American governor in United States history. With camera-friendly looks and an attractive personal style, she could quickly become a popular surrogate for the Romney campaign”

COMING UP: Tomorrow night at 8pm- the DES MOINES REGISTER announces their endorsement. This is always seen as a pivotal moment in the race for Iowa.

THE WEEK ON THE STREET- From CNBC- “Stocks End Bad Week with Mixed Trading”-

“Wall Street limped to the closing bell Friday, closing out a rough week with modest gains in technology and little movement in the Dow.

Traders had to contend with yet another ratings agency warning on debt, while the quadruple witching scenario, in which four key options and futures contract expire, brought more volume to the market but little in the way of gains.

Energy stocks helped keep the market afloat while health care and utilities were among the weakest performers. The market rallied in the morning, but gains soon evaporated after the close of the European markets and the Fitch warning cast a pall and ruined the chances for a second straight day of gains.”

  • DOW down 2
  • NASDAQ up 14
  • S&P 500 up 4

FOR THE WEEK the DOW was down almost 3 percent

ZEITGEIST 2011 was released by GOOGLE this morning- delving into the troves of data collected this year by the Internet’s leading search engine. http://www.googlezeitgeist.com/en

TOP TEN SEARCHES OF 2011:

1/ Rebecca Black
2/ Google+
3/ Ryan Dunn
4/ Casey Anthony
5/ Battlefield 3
6/ iPhone 5
7/ Adele
8/ 東京 電力 (The Fukushima I Plant damaged from a March earthquake in Japan that the government ordered closed)
9/ Steve Jobs
10/ iPad 2

FINALLY... In last night’s GOP debate, the 6 Republican presidential candidates name-dropped 12 former presidents 33 times, according to a review of the debate transcript by the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota

“Historian Newt Gingrich led the charge by name-dropping eight former U.S. presidents a total of 22 times: Ronald Reagan (6), Bill Clinton (4), Thomas Jefferson (3), Jimmy Carter (3), Abraham Lincoln (2), Franklin Roosevelt (2), Andrew Jackson (1), and Herbert Hoover (1).

It was the first time FDR, Jackson, and Hoover had been mentioned across the 13 debates conducted since the initial gathering in Greenville, South Carolina on May 5th.

In addition to Gingrich, each of the other six candidates also got into the presidential name game Thursday:

· Michele Bachmann (3): Reagan (2), Carter (1)
· Rick Santorum (2): George W. Bush (2)
· Rick Perry (2): Reagan (1), Monroe (1)
· Mitt Romney (2): George H.W. Bush (1), Reagan (1)
· Jon Huntsman (1): Reagan (1)
· Ron Paul (1): Kennedy (1)

Gingrich has woven references to ex-presidents into the debates like no other - tallying a whopping 63 references to date - nearly three times more than his closest name-dropper, Rick Santorum at 22.”


FOLLOW THE EVENING REPORT ON TWITTER: @EVENING_REPORT


LIKE THE EVENING REPORT ON FACEBOOK: FACEBOOK.COM/EVENINGREPORT


SUBSCRIBE TO THE EVENING REPORT: EVENINGEMAIL.COM

The Evening Report for Thursday December 08

26 DAYS UNTIL IOWA

TOP STORY: Shooting at Virginia Tech- A VT campus police officer on a routine traffic stop was shot dead today by a gunmen, who police believe later shot himself on the campus of the Blacksburg, Virginia university that is the site of the worst school shooting in American history, on April 16, 2007.

JUST IN: Police have identifed the slain police officer as 39-year old Deriek Crouse. He is survived by his wife and five children.

From The Washington Post:

“A routine traffic stop at Virginia Tech turned violent Thursday, leaving a police officer and his assailant dead and the campus on lockdown, a scenario reminiscent of the 2007 massacre that claimed 33 lives and redefined how universities respond to emergencies.

The mayhem began about 12:15 p.m., when a Virginia Tech patrol officer stopped a driver at the university’s coliseum parking lot. Someone — not the person who was pulled over — walked up to the officer and shot him. The shooter then ran.

The officer’s body was found in a sprawling parking lot near the Virginia Tech stadium. The gunman’s body, along with a weapon, were found in another parking lot nearby, law enforcement and government officials said. Authorities say they think he killed himself as police closed in. They would not say whether he was a student.”

TONIGHT normal operations have resumed on the Virginia Tech with the most recent message from the University reading:

“Virginia Tech Police, in conjunction with other law enforcement agencies, have determined that there is no longer an active threat or a need to secure in place. Resume normal activities.”

SENATE BLOCKS CORDRAY NOMINATION: Voting 53-47 and failing to reach the 60 votes necessary to overcome a Republican-led filibuster, the Senate today refused to move forward with the nomination of Richard Cordray to be the first commissioner of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The vote, while expected, was used as leverage by the President, who went into the Press Briefing Room of The White House at 11:30am- minutes after the vote- to lambast Senate Republicans. Many expect that the President may move to nominate Cordray via recess appointment over the holidays, if the Senate adjourns.

FROM THE PRESIDENTS REMARKS:

“This morning, Senate Republicans blocked his nomination, refusing to let the Senate even go forward with an up or down vote on Mr. Cordray.  This makes absolutely no sense.

There is no reason why Mr. Cordray should not be nominated, and should not be confirmed by the Senate, and should not be doing his job right away in order to carry out his mandate and his mission.

So I just want to send a message to the Senate:  We are not giving up on this.  We’re going to keep on going at it.  We are not going to allow politics as usual on Capitol Hill to stand in the way of American consumers being protected by unscrupulous financial operators.  And we’re going to keep on pushing on this issue.”

ON TAX CUTS

The President also continued his pitch for Congress to pass an extension of the payroll tax cut, an issue that many political analysts say he has a leading position on.

“And I just want to make clear:  This is not about me.  They shouldn’t extend the payroll tax cut for me.  They shouldn’t extend unemployment insurance for me.  This is for 160 million people who, in 23 days, are going to see their taxes go up if Congress doesn’t act.  This is for 5 million individuals who are out there looking for a job and can’t find a job right now in a tough economy who could end up not being able to pay their bills or keep their house if Congress doesn’t act.

So rather than trying to figure out what can they extract politically from me in order to get this thing done, what they need to do is be focused on what’s good for the economy, what’s good for jobs and what’s good for the American people.

And I made very clear I do not expect Congress to go home unless the payroll tax cut is extended and unless unemployment insurance is extended.  It would be wrong for families, but it would also be wrong for the economy as a whole”

ON KEEPING CONGRESS IN SESSION THROUGH CHRISTMAS

“With respect to my vacation, I would not ask anybody to do something I’m not willing to do myself.  So I know some of you might have been looking forward to a little sun and sand — but the bottom line is, is that we are going to stay here as long as it takes to make sure that the American people’s taxes don’t go up on January 1st, and to make sure that folks who desperately need unemployment insurance get that help. And there’s absolutely no excuse for us not getting it done.”

ON PLAN B

In his press conference, the President also affirmed support for Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and her decision yesterday to overrule a FDA recommendation and restrict access to the Morning After Pill, also known as “Plan B”

THE OSAMA CARD

But this morning’s press conference might be remembered most because the President responded to his Republican rivals who have questioned his foreign policy credentials by referencing his Administration’s successful killing of Osama bin Laden. The President has only referenced the killing a few times, and never so explicitly in this political context.

“Ask Osama bin Laden, and the 22 out of 30 top Al Qaeda leaders who have been taken off the field whether I engage in appeasement — or whoever is left out there, ask them about that.”

WALL STREET:

  • DOW down 198
  • NASDAQ down 53
  • S&P 500 down 27

CAMPAIGN 2012:

SANTORUM NABS BIG ENDORSEMENT- Iowa Secretary of State Matt Schultz is set to endorse Santorum on Friday

RICK PERRY is beginning a bus tour on Saturday across the state of Iowa, leading up to the January 3rd caucuses

As MITT ROMNEY sharpens his attack against frontrunner NEWT GINGRICH, Gingrich is trying to stay above the fray, telling reporters in South Carolina today, “We’re gonna stay positive. All I’m gonna say is, we’re gonna stay positive. We’re gonna stay solution-oriented and talk about what America needs to do. And the only opponent I have is Barack Obama.”

THE NEXT DEBATE is Saturday, 9pm ET, nationally televised on ABC News and sponsored by the Iowa Republican Party.

In next week’s edition, TIME Magazine goes behind the scenes of the Obama Campaign’s war room, including this passage:

“Obama’s guerrilla war on Republicans is being waged on three fronts. At the White House, senior aides including David Plouffe oversee a master strategy and communicate most often with the President, while the growing Chicago operation focuses on rapid responses to candidate attacks on Obama.

The Dems’ attacks come from the second floor of the DNC headquarters, a few blocks south of the Capitol, where communications director Brad Woodhouse oversees a daily flood of biting e-mails, ads and Web videos.

A sign of his instincts: his glass-walled office is plastered with a half-dozen images of kittens in fields, kittens purring for the camera, kittens pawing each other. Look closely and one of the images stands out: a Photo­shopped picture of George W. Bush biting into a kitten like a cob of corn, a clear sign that this is not the workplace for the faint of heart. It is an oft repeated maxim of Obamaland’s that the country is closely divided and the final count next November is likely to be so too. “

FINALLY...HOW TO GET FIRED, QUICKLY…From the Hill’s Justin Sink

“Three staffers for Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.) were fired Thursday after a series of tweets in which they insulted the congressman, complained about their work and described drinking on the job.

“We became aware of the issue through a tweet referencing an article about the incident. Congressman Larsen immediately decided to fire the three staff members involved in the incident,” Larsen spokesman Bryan Thomas said in a statement.

“Congressman Larsen is disappointed by their actions and takes this very seriously. He has made it clear that he will not tolerate this kind of behavior.”

The tweets — which belonged to legislative assistants Seth Burroughs and Elizabeth Robbee and legislative correspondent Ben Byers — repeatedly referenced “December to Remember,” a campaign devised by the staffers to spend the final month of the legislative session in what the Daily Marker called “a state of perpetual debauchery.”

According to the tweets, the “December to Remember” began with a round of shots on the steps of the Cannon House Office building. From there, staffers  sneaked drinks throughout the workday, watched music videos on YouTube, and lobbed insults at their bosses.

Burroughs, in tweets that spanned multiple months, referred to Larsen as an “idiot” and a “selfish a———.” He also described sneaking shots of Jack Daniels in his coffee and destroying his work Blackberry.”

FOLLOW THE EVENING REPORT ON TWITTER: @EVENING_REPORT


LIKE THE EVENING REPORT ON FACEBOOK: FACEBOOK.COM/EVENINGREPORT


SUBSCRIBE TO THE EVENING REPORT: EVENINGEMAIL.COM

The Evening Report for Wednesday November 30, 2011

34 DAYS UNTIL IOWA

JUST IN: Virginia Attorney Governor Ken Cuccinelli will announce that he is running for governor in 2013, the Washington Post reports tonight.

Cuccinelli was elected Attorney General in 2009 and has become a hero among tea party conservatives for his positions on health care, immigration and gay rights.

Incumbent Republican Governor Bob McDonnell is not eligible to run for re-election in 2013 due to term limits. Cuccinelli is expected to face Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling in a primary.

On the Democratic side, former DNC Chair Terry McAuliffe is reportedly considering a second attempt at the Democratic gubernatorial nomination.

CAMPAIGN 2012:

NEWT GINGRICH ON FOX NEWS TONIGHT: “And it’s clear that across the country, people are saying, you know, I think we need Newt Gingrich,” he said. “Whereas I would have thought originally it was going to be Mitt and not-Mitt, I think it’s going to — it may turn out to be Newt and not-Newt.”

RON PAUL ATTACKS GINGRICH: In a new web video out today (that only has 301 views), the Ron Paul campaign attacks Gingrich for what they call “serial hypocrisy” and applies the same flip-flopping charge that is more often leveled against Mitt Romney, to Gingrich.

HERMAN CAIN ON FOX NEWS THIS AFTERNOON: “I can only conjecture that maybe I am the Democrats’ worst nightmare if I win the nomination … Maybe the Democrats want Newt Gingrich to win the nomination, so they can then go after his personal life.” Officially, Cain is still “reassessing” his candidacy.

AND THEN, Cain said this, via POLITICO, “On the many, many phone calls between him and the woman accusing him of having a 13-year affair Ginger White, Cain said: “I talked to a lot of people 61 times.”

STILL TONIGHT, Cain had more to say, in a 9pm news conference, he said he could not guarantee that more allegations could come forward.”I can’t say that someone won’t drum up another accusation. It just comes with the territory, he siad.

MITT ROMNEY UP WITH NH AD: The second ad of the campaign cycle put up by the Romney Campaign. Their first, last week, was widely criticized for a misleading quote from President Obama during the 2008 campaign. The ad is straightforward and attacks the President’s economic policy.

PRESIDENT OBAMA is in New York City tonight, attending four campaign fundraisers. Earlier today, the President was in Scranton, Pennsylvania, the birthplace of Vice President Joe Biden (who is in Baghdad today) urging Congress to extend & expand the payroll tax cut passed last year for in 2012. He is due back at The White House at 12:30am Thursday.

ON CAPITOL HILL, there is some movement on extending the payroll tax cut, with GOP leadership emerging generally in favor of doing so, resisting the opposition of some more conservative members.

In a closed-door House Republican caucus meeting today, The Hill reports that Majority Leader Eric Cantor laid down the gauntlet, saying, “taxes are a Republican issue and you aren’t a Republican if you want to raise taxes on struggling families to fund bigger government.”

THE REPUBLICAN PLAN as it is currently being floated, would freeze pay for federal workers an additional year (it has already been frozen for two years), trim the federal workforce by roughly 10% and introduce some means-testing for federal programs such as Medicare and unemployment insurance.

Ordinarily, these proposals would be dismissed out of hand by Democrats (much like their proposal, to pay for the tax extension by charging a surtax on millionaire taxes, is being by Republicans), however, the proposals in the Republican plan are taken from the bi-partisan Simpson/Bowles Committee recommendations that many Democrats see as the basis for long-term deficit reduction.

COORDINATED ACTION BY THE FED and other central banks around the world this morning was designed to increase the amount of US dollars in circulation around the world and act as a buffer to continued anxiety over the European debt crisis.

As the New York Times reports:

“The banks announced that they would reduce by roughly half the cost of an existing program under which banks in foreign countries can borrow dollars from their own central banks, which in turn get those dollars from the Fed.  The banks also said that loans will be available until February 2013, extending a previous endpoint of August 2012.”

“The purpose of these actions is to ease strains in financial markets and thereby mitigate the effects of such strains on the supply of credit to households and businesses and so help foster economic activity,” the banks said in a statement. The participants in addition to the Fed were the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of Canada and the Swiss National Bank.”

WALL STREET reported its best day of 2011 as a result of the Fed’s announcement:

  • DOW up 490 to 12,045
  • NASDAQ up 105 to 2,620
  • S&P 500 up 52 to 1,247

BILLY GRAHAM was admitted to a hospital today in North Carolina, reportedly suffering from pneumonia-like symptoms. The iconic Evangelical minister is 93-years old and has been in declining health in recent years.

$9 GAS? it looks like that’s a possibility this winter in NOME, ALASKA. A historic winter storm earlier this month prevented a barge from reaching the Alaskan city best known the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, and now officials are coming up with a plan to fly small quantities of gasoline into the community of 3,500 residents, at an extraordinarily high cost.

The Associated Press reports on the predicament:

“A gallon of gas was selling for $5.98 and jet fuel $6.77 a gallon on Wednesday. The next barge delivery wouldn’t be until next June. In the meantime, flying fuel to the city could increase the cost per gallon by $3 to $4, officials said.”

“We are going to have to have fuel drivers picking up fuel 24 hours a day as flights are available to fly into Nome,” said Jason Evans, board chairman of Sitnasuak Native Corp., which provides services to the region.”

“Sitnasuak arranged in May with petroleum distributor Delta Western Inc. to have three barges deliver fuel to Nome, but only one arrived early in the summer, Evans said. That barge carried home heating fuel.”

“The storm that barreled into Alaska’s western coastline in mid-November, zeroing in on Nome, prevented the arrival of a barge carrying 1.6-million gallons of gasoline and diesel.”

FINALLY...the 2011 Rockefeller Christmas Tree is lit! This year’s tree is a 74-foot tall Norweigan Spruce from Miffinville, Pa. Over 34,00 lights- stretching some five miles- illuminate the tree.

The first Christmas Tree was placed in Rockefeller Plaza in 1931 and the first tree lighting ceremony was held in 1933. The 2011 tree will be illuminated each evening- and all day Christmas Day- until January 07, 2012.

FOLLOW THE EVENING REPORT ON TWITTER: @EVENING_REPORT


LIKE THE EVENING REPORT ON FACEBOOK: FACEBOOK.COM/EVENINGREPORT


SUBSCRIBE TO THE EVENING REPORT: EVENINGEMAIL.COM