Tag: Barack Obama

  • Rev. Jeremiah Wright has more to say

    Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the fire-and-brimstone race-baiter and former “spiritual advisor” to President Barack Obama, struck a blow for anti-Semitism and against conventional grammar when he said he hasn’t spoken to Obama since he was elected because “them Jews ain’t going to let him talk to me.”

    Wright made the remarks in an interview with the Daily Press of Newport News, Va., after speaking Tuesday night at the 95th annual Hampton University Ministers’ Conference.

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    “I told my baby daughter that he’ll talk to me in five years when he’s a lame duck, or in eight years when he’s out of office,” added the former pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.

    “The Jewish vote, the AIPAC vote that’s controlling him, that will not let him send representation to the Darfur Review Conference, that’s talking this craziness on Israel because they’re Zionists, they will not let him talk to somebody who calls a spade what it is. Ethnic cleansing is going on in Gaza – the ethnic cleansing (by) the Zionists is a sin and a crime against humanity.”

    As reported by The Huffington Post, Wright tried Thursday to skin back his anti-Semitic bombast on the Sirius Radio program “Make It Plain with Mark Thompson,” saying, “Let me just say, like Hillary, I misspoke. Let me just say Zionists,” which he differentiated from “responsible Jewish persons.”

    The White House hasn’t commented on Wright’s remarks.

    This man of God’s original comments were made the same day white supremacist James von Brunn, 88, allegedly shot a security guard at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The guard, Stephen T. Johns, was killed.

    Yesterday von Brunn – who was critically wounded when other security guards returned fire – was charged with murder and killing in the course of possessing a firearm in a federal facility. The FBI is investigating whether the shooting was a hate crime or domestic terrorism, which could lead to additional charges.

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    • Manhattan DA Morgenthau helped boost Sotomayor’s career

      June 12, 2009 at 9:33am

      Upon gradation from Yale Law School in 1979, Sonia Sotomayor, President Obama’s pick to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court, made a surprising career choice.

    • Jon Huntsman Jr. nominated as U.S. ambassador to China

      President Obama seems to have pulled off a slick three-fer today in announcing his nomination of Republican Utah Gov. Jon M. Huntsman Jr. as U.S. ambassador to China.

      First, Huntsman, 49, has solid diplomatic credentials, having served as President George H.W. Bush’s ambassador to Singapore and U.S. trade ambassador for President George W. Bush. He learned to speak fluent Mandarin earlier in life as a Mormon missionary to China, and adopted his daughter from China.

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      Second, it was a high-profile display of Obama’s pledge of bipartisanship, albeit a choice that reflects many Democratic values in a moderate Republican who almost routinely rocks the ribs of the GOP’s never-say-die ultra-conservatives.

      Jon M. Huntsman Jr.
      Jon Huntsman Jr.

      Third, and most significant politically, if Huntsman is confirmed it will effectively remove him from contention in an Obama re-election bid in 2012, at the same time pulling the only moderate out of a field of potential GOP candidates who play insistently to the party’s supposed base.

      One significant example of Huntsman succeeding as a moderate among conservatives was the easing of Utah’s restrictive liquor laws to promote tourism, a move resisted by the state’s large Mormon population.

      He also has endorsed civil marriage for gays – although he supported a successful amendment to his state’s constitution banning them in 2004 – and is a strong voice for environmentalism – especially in joint efforts with the Chinese.

      If his appointment is accepted, Huntsman will replace Clark Randt as ambassador.

      He is the son of Jon M. Huntsman Sr., founder and chairman of Huntsman Corp., a global chemical manufacturer and marketer.

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      2 Comments

      • #1.   Max 05.16.2009

        Governor Huntsman learned Mandarin as a Mormon missionary to TAIWAN, not China.

      • #2.   TonyP4 05.17.2009

        Never use our yardstick on human right on a developing country like China.

        American contributes more pollution per capita than China esp. some pollution is caused by manufacturing for global consumers.

        We can build carriers powered by two nuclear generators and China cannot build helicopters. What a joke!

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      • Muck tracker – C. Robert Kidder to become Chrysler chairman

        May 20, 2009 at 5:14pm

        C. Robert Kidder, the former chairman of Duracell International, will lead a newly restructured Chrysler after it begins its alliance with Fiat, the New York Times reports.

      • The Obamas would (almost) blend in among Oak Bluffs’ black elite

        If Barack Obama and his family decide to summer in Oak Bluffs, as the Boston Globe reports they are considering, they would enjoy not just pristine beaches, but a social scene that includes some of the nation’s most successful black artists, thinkers and entrepreneurs.

        Obama’s longtime mentor, Harvard law professor Charles Ogletree, has a home in Oak Bluffs. So, too, do Washington power broker Vernon Jordan (the great uncle of Obama friend and adviser Valerie Jarrett), filmmaker Spike Lee and former HHS Secretary Dr. Louis Sullivan.

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        Located seven miles off the Cape Cod coastline, on the northeastern tip of Martha’s Vineyard, the town of Oak Bluffs has drawn African-Americans since the Civil War, first as domestic help for wealthy white families, and later, as second-home owners.

        Once a Methodist revival camp, it became known in the early 20th century as the only town on the Vineyard that welcomed black tourists. As a result, well-to-do African Americans from New York and Boston flocked there in search of a summer retreat by the ocean.

        Early homeowners included the late New York Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr., Harlem Renaissance writer Dorothy West and U.S. Sen. Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts, the first black senator elected in the post-Reconstruction era.

        Among the town’s most prominent residences was Overton Mansion on Narragansett Avenue, a large Victorian house that became a salon of sorts, hosting actor Paul Robeson, singer Ethel Waters and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

        ”I can still see Martin Luther King sitting on the porch and writing,” a neighbor, Mildred Henderson, told the New York Times six years ago.

        In more recent years, the community has become the summer home of journalist Charleyne Hunter Galt, scholar Henry Louis Gates and Harvard law professor Lani Guinier. Oprah Winfrey and Diana Ross are said to visit.

        “There was a time when the Vineyard was the only spot for successful black people,” Jordan reminisced to journalist and neighbor Jill Nelson, for her history of the community, Finding Martha’s Vineyard: African Americans at Home on an Island.

        While the White House has declined to confirm any vacation plans by the First Family, the Obamas’ friends say they stand ready to welcome them.

        Ogletree, who has owned a place in Oak Bluffs for 15 years, told the Globe he first hosted Obama there in August 2004, after the then-Illinois senator gave a rousing speech at the Democratic National Convention in Boston.

        “I asked him to just drop by [the Vineyard] and say hi and then, when he showed up there were all these really excited people there to meet him,” he recalled.

        Obama’s last visit, in August, 2007, was to attend a fund-raiser at the home of Ronald R. Davenport Sr., chairman of Sheridan Broadcasting Corporation, one of the nation’s largest African-American-owned communications companies.

        Not surprisingly, he drew a big crowd then, too.

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        • Fannie Mae chief Herb Allison in line to oversee TARP

          April 14, 2009 at 2:29pm

          Word is that Herb Allison, a longtime Wall Street executive with ties to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, will be tapped to head the government’s $700-billion financial rescue program.

        • Commerce Secy Gary Locke is longtime advocate of Boeing, Microsoft

          From the outset of his political career, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke was bullish about business.

          In 1993, when he ran for King County (WA) executive, he told voters he would do everything in his power to ensure that Boeing continued building jets in the area. “We need those kinds of jobs,” he said.

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          As governor a decade later, Locke could not dissuade Boeing from moving its corporate headquarters to Chicago. But he did push through an unprecedented package of tax breaks which convinced the aerospace maker to assemble its new 787 jetliner in Everett, WA.

          Gary F. Locke
          Gary F. Locke

          The $3.2 billion deal – the biggest public-private partnership in the state’s history – kept an estimated 800 to 1,200 Boeing jobs in Washington. Locke touts it as one of his proudest accomplishments, saying that without it, the company would have eventually moved out of state, taking 70,000 jobs and as many as 20,000 indirect jobs with it.

          Not everyone thought it was so great for the taxpayers, though. “That’s $4 million per worker,” complained Seattle Weekly writer Rick Anderson.

          Locke’s pro-business approach – whether promoting Boeing, or a publicly financed stadium for the Seattle Seahawks, owned by Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Paul Allen – earned him high marks from business. It’s the sort of background one has come to expect for a Commerce Secretary whose job, after all, is to promote U.S. business interests.

          In Locke’s case, those ties are extensive. Fortune 500 companies and other businesses in Washington gave at least $800,000 to the Democrat’s two campaigns for governor, including at least $500,000 for his easy 2000 re-election, according to an Associated Press review of his campaign finance reports.

          Microsoft Corp. and Boeing Co. and their top executives were among his most loyal donors. Several top officials of those companies found their way onto his staff – and visa versa. For instance, Locke’s chief of staff Fred Kiga became a Boeing vice president.

          Many of those relationships flourished even after Locke stepped down after his second term in 2005 to head the China Practice division of international law and consulting firm, Davis Wright Tremaine. There, he represented several major corporations doing business in China, including Microsoft.

          (He is also a longtime Microsoft investor and reported owning up to $250,000 worth of stock in a financial disclosure statement. An administration spokesman said he planned to divest and step away from matters to which Microsoft is a party.)

          Anderson, the Seattle Weekly writer, wondered in a recent column whether someone who had “at times opened the state’s pocketbook to corporations,” conformed to voters’ notion of the “change” Obama had promised during his campaign.

          An administration spokesman responded that Locke was chosen Commerce Secretary because of his success in creating jobs in Washington, among other things, by opening up foreign markets to American products and encouraging innovation.

          In fact, it is Locke’s experience working with China – one of the U.S. most important, but also difficult trading partners – that likely played the greatest role in Obama’s decision to tap him for the Commerce job.

          The first Chinese-American to become a U.S. governor and the first to be commerce secretary, Locke is known for his ties to China, particularly President Hu Jintao.

          In April, 2006, he helped arrange a trip by the Chinese president to the state of Washington – including a dinner stop at Bill Gates’ Medina mansion. The only other meetings occurred in the nation’s capitol.

          At Davis Wright Tremaine, Locke specialized in China trade and investment.

          In a 2006 interview with The Seattle Times, Locke said he flew to China five times a year for the law firm, helping U.S. companies make connections and develop strategies for the China market, as well as assisting Chinese clients establish themselves in the U.S.

          He boasted of meeting with China’s top banking regulator to help a “large, multi-national company” skirt China regulations.

          “I said we’d love to work with you in finding a creative way to achieve your objectives as well as help this company,” Locke said in the interview, adding, “If you just go to a mid-level bureaucrat, they’re just going to go by the letter of the law and say, ‘no, no, no.’ “

          Locke is also a member of the Committee of 100, a national organization of Chinese-Americans, including I.M. Pei and Yo-Yo Ma, founded in 1990 to strengthen the relationship between the U.S. and mainland China, and to encourage the participation of Chinese-Americans in U.S. life.

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          • Commerce Secy Gary Locke is longtime advocate of Boeing, Microsoft

            April 10, 2009 at 8:49am

            From the outset of his political career, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke was bullish about business.

          • We are all Keynesians now – but especially Paul Krugman

            Economist John Maynard Keynes, often described as the man who saved capitalism during the Great Depression, may have been the right man at the right time.

            Economist Paul Krugman, who describes Keynes as his “economic idol,” may also be the right man at the right time. But supporters of Barack Obama certainly hope not.

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            Krugman – Nobel laureate, Princeton professor and New York Times columnist, is following in his hero’s footsteps by becoming the most prominent critic of government recovery strategies during a severe economic crisis.

            Paul Krugman
            Paul Krugman

            Democrats who reveled in Krugman’s constant criticism of the Bush White House are now squirming under his attack on Obama’s economic policies. While Krugman agrees with Obama’s injecting massive amounts of capital into the system to help jumpstart the economy, he believes the administration is being timid and spending too little.

            The biggest fear among Obama backers is that history could be repeating itself. Here’s a passage from Liaquat Ahamed’s new book, Lords of Finance:

            “During every act of the drama so painfully being played out, he refused to keep quiet, insisting on at least one monologue even if it was from offstage. … He was not a decision maker. In those years, he was simply an independent observer, a commentator. But at every twist and turn of the plot, there he was holding forth from the wings, with his irreverent and playful wit, his luminous and constantly questioning intellect, and above his remarkable ability to be right.”

            Ahamed is describing Keynes’ role during the 1930s. Krugman has taken on similar prominence in the current crisis.

            This week’s edition of Newsweek features him on its cover, with the headline, “Obama is wrong.”

            The magazine describes Krugman as the president’s “loyal opposition,” cementing his rank as Obama’s most influential naysayer. Yet administration officials recognize that Krugman is too big to criticize.

            “The Obama White House is careful not to provoke the wrath of Krugman any more than necessary,” writes Newsweek’s Evan Thomas. “Treasury officials go out of their way to praise him by name (while also decrying the bank-rescue prescriptions of him and his ilk as “deeply impractical”).”

            White House bulldog Rahm Emanuel did take a sidelong swipe last month, saying that critics such as Krugman had never dealt with the legislative process. “How many bills has he passed?” Emanuel asked.

            Yet Krugman has been disturbingly prescient. His book, The Return of Depression Economics, which focused primarily on the crisis in Asia, was published in 2000. It has been reissued, with updates pointing up the similarities to the current crisis.

            “I believe not only that we’re living in a new era of depression economics,” he writes, “but also that John Maynard Keynes – the economist who made sense of the Great Depression – is now more relevant than ever.”

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            2 Comments

            • #1.   Donald Sutherton 04.03.2009

              The United States of America does not have the great democracy it thinks it has. What the US actually has is a plutocracy, which is corrupt and circumvents the very values it purports to believe in.
              Although I agreed with the premise of your article, it is yet another example of how party politics and jingoism in the US consumes the corporate media, and the vast majority of the population. When the right questions are asked, the commercial media and the two largest political parties ensure these questions never become part of the public discourse. Just consider how the public debates of candidates are co-opted in the US by the Republican and Democratic parties and the absolute complicity of the media. What a sham! Even Michael Moore shares in this blame when he publically begged an independent to withdraw from the presidential race while never acknowledging that not only was that independent blocked by both parties from participating in the debates, he was threatened with being charged with trespassing when he tried to attend the debates as a US citizen. Americans are so mired in this process and group think that as a nation few ask the right questions. George W. Bush is a war criminal and one of the worst in US history, but so are several other past presidents war criminals; both Republican and Democrat. As for the Obama administration, the world is hoping ( me included) the US will start living up to the values it claims to believe in. However, Obama has many of the wrong people in his cabinet. This is not a good sign for the future.
              Here are a couple of questions that should be on everyone’s mind.
              Why was the Bush administration’s approval ratings so high, and why was that administration elected to a second term? Yeah, we all know he lied, but why are so many so gullible when the rest of the world saw right through the propaganda?
              Why has Obama appointed so many to his administration that have directly contributed to this historical global socioeconomic crisis?

            • #2.   Laurie Bennett 04.04.2009

              What makes you think we’re part of “the corporate media”?

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            • We are all Keynesians now – but especially Paul Krugman

              April 3, 2009 at 11:20am

              Economist Paul Krugman, who describes John Maynard Keynes as his “economic idol,” may be the right man at the right time. But supporters of Barack Obama certainly hope not.

            • Edward Montgomery is the new go-to guy for recovery

              A Harley-riding economist has taken what may be the toughest job on President Obama’s auto task force – helping to rebuild the communities that will likely be devastated by the industry’s downsizing.

              Obama likened the mission of Edward B. Montgomery, the new Director of Recovery for Auto Communities and Workers, to someone who helps towns recover after a hurricane or other natural disaster.

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              The former deputy labor secretary, who traveled to Michigan today to meet with Gov. Jennifer Granholm, has the broad mission of working with the cities hardest hit by the restructurings and possible bankruptcies of General Motors Corp. and Chrysler.

              Edward Montgomery
              Edward Montgomery

              The challenge is huge. Since the economic downturn began, the auto industry has shed more than 400,000 jobs at automakers, suppliers and dealers, Obama said. And more cuts are inevitable.

              Obama said that Montgomery would help “create new manufacturing jobs and new businesses where they’re needed most – in your communities. And he will also lead an effort to identify new initiatives we may need to help support your communities going forward.”

              As a labor economist, Montgomery’s focus has been on people, rather than on systems. According to his profile on the Website of the University of Maryland, where he is dean of the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences:

              Dr. Montgomery has published numerous papers and articles on local economic development, youth unemployment, cross national comparisons of labor market performance, savings and pension policy, Medicaid and Social Security, labor unions and workplace smoking regulations.

              “He’s not the sort of economist who views these as abstract problems,” Robert Schwab, associate dean of the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, told the Washington Post. “This is a field that’s important because it plays such a key role in everyone’s life – not just an interesting abstraction. That permeates all of Ed’s research.”

              With unemployment in Michigan already at 12 percent and rising, “to pull this off you’d need a lot of skills,” Schwab said. “You’d best be able to listen, you’d best be able to make hard choices.”

              Schwab believes that Montgomery has those skills. “He’s a real problem solver, terrific at bringing people together who are at loggerheads, and working to get a solution.”

              But others were less impressed by Montgomery’s credentials.

              “I’m sure they didn’t mean this announcement to sound as condescending as it does: that the federal government is going to send an academic to help us poor provincials devise approaches” for recovery, Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels told the Wall Street Journal.

              Daniels, a Republican, said Indiana already “has a very clearly articulated economic strategy.”

              An administration official said the intention was simply “to have a high-level advocate who can really push and coordinate people to assure that things are being used as aggressively as possible.”

              Montgomery, who drives a 2000 Lincoln Town Car, received a doctorate in economics from Harvard University in 1982. He began his career as a professor at Carnegie Mellon University and worked for the Labor Department during the Clinton administration, rising to second in command before returning to academia at Maryland. Months after joining the department, he took part in negotiations that helped end the 10-day Teamsters strike.

              He became dean of the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences, the university’s largest college, in 2003. After Obama’s election, he headed his Labor Department transition team, and joined the Treasury Department’s auto task force last month.

              Because of Montgomery’s ties to the Obama administration and his broad mandate as director of recovery, some are already speculating that he will be a de facto car czar.

              Charles Craver, a labor relations expert at George Washington University, told the Baltimore Sun that he expects Montgomery to wield considerable influence.

              “I have the sense he’s going to have to oversee the restructuring of the companies,” Craver said.

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              • We are all Keynesians now – but especially Paul Krugman

                April 3, 2009 at 11:20am

                Economist Paul Krugman, who describes John Maynard Keynes as his “economic idol,” may be the right man at the right time. But supporters of Barack Obama certainly hope not.

              • Chas Freeman withdraws name for Intel chief

                Veteran diplomat Chas W. Freeman Jr. has removed himself from consideration to head the National Intelligence Council as a result of criticism of his remarks about Israel and his entanglements with Saudi Arabia and China.

                His withdrawal came hours after National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair had defended his qualifications to a Senate intelligence panel. Lawmakers have no power to reject him, but all seven Republicans on the panel had sent a letter to Blair expressing concerns about Freeman’s experience and objectivity.

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                “He has no intelligence experience,” said committee member Orrin Hatch (R-Utah).

                Sen. Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, released a statement late Tuesday that also seemed to take credit for getting the White House to “reject” Freeman’s appointment.

                “Charles Freeman was the wrong guy for this position,” Schumer said. “His statements against Israel were way over the top and severely out of step with the administration. I repeatedly urged the White House to reject him, and I am glad they did the right thing.”

                The chairman of the National Intelligence Council is responsible for producing the National Intelligence Estimate – the classified document given to the president and senior intelligence officials that analyzes threats to U.S. security.

                Freeman, 66, would have brought his experience as a former ambassador to Saudi Arabia, a former assistant defense secretary and a China expert who served as principal translator for the late Richard Nixon on his groundbreaking 1972 trip.

                Opposition to his appointment centered on his outspoken criticisms of Israel’s handling of the Palestinian conflict and his harsh analysis of the Bush administration’s foreign policy. He had also enraged human rights advocates with his defense of the Chinese government’s crackdown on dissidents in Tiananmen Square in 1989.

                Freeman has headed the Middle East Policy Council, which critics have called “a mouthpiece for Saudi Arabia” because of its funding from the Saudi royal family. His role on a board for the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporation, which has a $16-billion agreement to develop a gas field in Iran, also raised questions.

                The inspector general for the national intelligence director agreed last week to examine Freeman’s foreign ties. At the time, Blair said the inquiry would put questions about him to rest.

                Blair’s office said he had not sought White House approval for the appointment, which did not require Senate approval.

                Freeman put out his own statement last night, saying he made the decision to withdraw after concluding “the barrage of libelous distortions of my record would not cease upon my entry into office.”

                He also took a swipe at the Israel lobby which he blamed for the campaign against him.

                “The libels on me and their easily traceable email trails show conclusively that there is a powerful lobby determined to prevent any view other than its own from being aired, still less to factor in American understanding of trends and events in the Middle East,” he said. “The tactics of the Israel Lobby plumb the depths of dishonor and indecency and include character assassination, selective misquotation, the willful distortion of the record, the fabrication of falsehoods, and an utter disregard for the truth.”

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                • Harvard Law ensconced at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

                  March 12, 2009 at 11:55am

                  To save on travel expenses, the Harvard Law School Class of 1991 might as well have its reunion this year at the White House.

                • K Street woos Howard Dean, other Democrats

                  Only a few years ago, Democrats feared being frozen out of Washington’s lucrative lobby world.

                  Republicans, who controlled the White House and Congress, had launched the so-called ‘K Street Project’ to pressure companies, lobby firms and trade groups to hire only Republicans for top influence-peddling jobs.

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                  But times have changed: With Democrats ensconced in the White House and both houses of Congress, it is their operatives who are now being snapped up. And make no mistake: Bidding wars are occurring over folks with the right connections – people like former Democratic National Chairman Howard Dean, Obama campaign political director Matthew Nugen and Michael Paese, former deputy director of the House Financial Services Committee.

                  Howard Dean
                  Howard Dean

                  No matter Barack Obama’s promise to reduce the influence of lobbyists. No matter the tanking economy.

                  “Barack Obama campaigned on change. Well, change is good for the lobbying business,” Ed Rogers, a former aide to President Ronald Reagan and now chairman of BGR Group, formerly Barbour, Griffith & Rogers, told the Washington Post. “People will need the expertise and guidance more in the next year than they have in the last five.”

                  After all, corporate clients who will be affected by Obama’s plans on energy, health care or taxes need people who know what’s on the table and how to become part of the discussion. Others are eager to get a piece of the economic stimulus bill.

                  And in the words of one seasoned Hill player, access is the key to power in Washington. And to get it, you need people who know the people in charge.

                  Consider these recent hires:

                  • Dean, the former DNC chairman, Vermont governor and presidential candidate, who once disparaged John McCain as “a guy who is very close to the lobbyist community,” has signed on with law and lobbying mega-firm McKenna Long & Aldridge as a consultant.
                  • Nugen, Obama’s former political director and a veteran Democratic operative, is now a “strategic adviser” with Ogilvy Government Relations.
                  • Jeff Berman, who directed Obama’s national delegate operation, has joined Bryan Cave as “of counsel.”
                  • Brian Wolff, the executive director of the House Democratic campaign committee and longtime political director to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, accepted a top position at the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), an investor-owned utility trade group which fought climate-change regulation in the past.
                  • Paese, who had been an aide to Massachusetts Democrat Barney Frank, and the deputy director of the House Financial Services Committee, became executive vice president of the Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association, the trade group.
                  • Jaime R. Harrison, who helped mobilize voter turnout for Obama in South Carolina, and for the past two years directed floor operations for House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn (D-S.C.), now with the Podesta Group.
                  • Patrick Von Bargen, a former chief of staff to Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) and aide to William Donaldson, the former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, went to Quinn Gillespie.

                  The lure of big salaries goes a long way to explaining the divide between campaign rhetoric and actual practice. So does a title that sidesteps the dread ‘L’ word.

                  David Kirkpatrick of the New York Times actually put a pricetag on the partisan transformation of the capital: Three years ago, an assistant department secretary leaving the Bush administration – with Republicans in control of the House, Senate and White House – might have fetched as much $600,000 to $1 million a year as a lobbyist, he quoted recruiters. That same person might now expect less than half as much.

                  But for Democrats, the bidding is fierce. Three years ago, a Democratic staff director for an important House or Senate committee might have earned about $130,000 a year on Capitol Hill, and jumped to K Street for an annual salary of about $250,000. Now, the same person might command as much as $500,000 to $800,000 a year, several recruiters said.

                  … For an industry that prefers to talk about selling policy expertise and sophisticated arguments, the turnabout is a stark reminder that what clients want are personal connections. “People who need to get something done know what the price of a drink is,” said Peter Metzger, vice chairman of the recruiting firm CT Partners. “This may sound terribly Washington, but access trumps expertise.”

                  It certainly makes a difference that many of the issues Obama has zeroed in on, such as health-care policy, energy and taxes, have implications for some of the lobbying world’s most free-spending corporate clients.

                  Von Bargen told the Washington Post that he joined Quinn Gillespie with the expectation that his knowledge of clean energy issues would be a strong asset.

                  “People who have labored in Democratic vineyards for years are familiar with the people involved, but also with the substantive issues, and how Democrats approach those issues,” he said.

                  Laura Sheehan, who recently became vice president of marketing and communications for the American Gas Association, had been policy director at the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and a top aide to Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.).

                  “After the last election, when the House flipped, I got three to four serious job inquiries on election night just because of my party background,” she told the Post.

                  She did not take any of those positions then, but when the same thing happened again this year., decided to give it a shot.

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                  1 Comments

                  • #1.   Brittancus 03.11.2009

                    All spending bills in the Stimulus or Omnibus bill to assist jobless American Workers seem insignificant, when Democratic leaders left in a giant loophole so millions of ILLEGAL ALIENS can steal jobs? Of course Democrats are wooing K Street, because that where they fill their pockets with campaign contributions. Sen. Bingaman (D.NM) has joined the Democratic leaders in stripping E-Verify.

                    REMEMBER THESE NAMES..?

                    Sen.Harry Reid (D-NV) arch enemy of American workers, committed the ultimate sin today Reid and 49 Democrats blocked E-Verify in the Senate. Their disloyal actions shall be well remembered, when the grovel for re-election. They condemned hundreds of thousands in the construction industry, having to compete over jobs. Parasites are organisms that live of a host and that is what contractors will do, when they look for the cheapest labor they can find. Starting with the stimulus, then followed by the Omnibus spending plan this Senators blocked E-Verify.

                    Akaka (D-HI) Inouye (D-HI),Begich (D-AK),Bennet (D-CO) Udall (D-CO),Bingaman (D-NM) Udall(D-NM),Boxer (D-CA) Feinstein (D-CA),Brown (D-OH),Burris (D-IL) Durbin (D-IL),Byrd (D-WV) Rockefeller (D-WV),Cantwell (D-WA) Murray,(D-WA),Cardin (D-MD) Mikulski (D-MD),Carper (D-DE) Kaufman (D-DE),Casey (D-PA),Conrad (D-ND) Dorgan (D-ND),Dodd (D-CT) Lieberman.

                    Here’s more Senators who killed E-Verify Here’s more (ID-CT),Feingold (D-WI) Kohl (D-WI),Gillibrand (D-NY) Schumer (D-NY),Hagan (D-NC),Harkin (D-IA),Johnson (D-SD),Kerry (D-MA),Landrieu (D-LA),Shaheen (D-NH),Leahy (D-VT) Sanders (I-VT),Levin (D-MI) Stabenow (D-MI),Lincoln (D-AR) Pryor (D-AR),Menendez (D-NJ) Lautenberg (D-NJ),Merkley (D-OR) Wyden (D-OR),Nelson (D-FL),Reed (D-RI) Whitehouse (D-RI),Reid (D-NV) and Warner (D-VA).

                    They sold the American Worker out for campaign money from corporate lobbyists and open border fanatics. In this miserable time of unemployment and uncertainty from the janitor, to the computer programmer you will be REMEMBERED. You will not escape your insult to the American worker, who depends on your honesty to vote on their behalf. You have now proved the dimensions of how far you will go, to keep the illegal alien invasion crossing our borders, overstaying their ship or plane visa.

                    The corruption so deeply instilled in the Washington elite. ASK JUDICIALWATCH? The billions of tax dollars taken from every, man, woman and child, to support the welfare of illegal aliens. Like Pearl harbor we will not forget the traitors who swore to uphold their allegiance to THE PEOPLE.

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