Tag: Recent Stories

  • Rahm Emanuel agrees to be chief of staff

    Fresh from his victory Tuesday, Sen. Barack Obama has tapped a fellow Chicagoan to be the White House enforcer.

    Rep. Rahm Emanuel, D-Ill., announced today that he had agreed to be the president-elect’s chief of staff.

    Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

    Click to activate this MucketyMap

    Click to activate interactive map
    (requires Java)
    MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.

    It may be a case of opposites attracting, the eloquent and ever-calm Obama signing up a blunt and combative fellow Chicagoan.

    “Obama wants a bad cop, so he can be good cop 90 percent of the time,” an unnamed Obama adviser told Politico.

    The fourth-ranking Democrat in the House of Representatives, Emanuel, 48, was first elected in 2002. He won re-election Tuesday with nearly 74 percent of the vote.

    In 2006, he was the driving force behind his party’s successful effort to take back the House in 2006.

    As the head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, he vetted potential challengers to Republican candidates, making sure they had the money or could raise the money to run a real race.

    His style, by all reports, did not include playing nice.

    “Emanuel is hard-wired to go for the jugular,” Nina Easton wrote in Fortune at the time. “Politics Chicago-style are part of his DNA.”

    Given that DNA, it’s not surprising that Emanuel has Democratic, as well as Republican, detractors.

    “I love Rahm, but that’s a small group of us,” Democratic operative Paul Begala told Easton. “He’s not a beloved figure like Tip O’Neill or Dick Gephardt. Rahm’s there (at the DCCC) because they want to
    win.”

    When Emanuel joins Obama, he will be returning to a familiar workplace, as he served as a senior adviser in the Clinton White House from 1993 to 1998.

    Before that, Emanuel was director of finance in Bill Clinton’s first presidential campaign.

    In January 1999, Emanuel left politics, joining the investment bank then known as Wasserstein Perella & Co. In four years, he made a reported $18 million before leaving banking to run for Congress.

    Given his connections to Bill and Hillary Clinton and his friendship with Barack and Michelle Obama, Emanuel has emerged as a link between two factions in the Democratic Party.

    “There are people that know the Obamas better than Rahm does, there are probably people who know the Clintons better than Rahm does,” Ryan Lizza of The New Yorker magazine said this spring in introducing Emanuel in a video interview.

    “But I don’t think there’s anyone in American politics that knows both the Clintons and the Obamas better than Rahm does.”

    This dual connection left Emanuel, a superdelegate to the Democratic National Convention, unwilling to choose between Obama and Hillary Clinton until the primary season was over.

    He endorsed Obama in June after Clinton conceded defeat and went on to work on Obama’s behalf.

    In May, Emanuel told Lizza that he believed Obama’s first few weeks in office, if he were elected, would focus on the passage of the children’s health bill that President Bush vetoed last year.

    “You want to show you can get something done,” Emanuel said.

    Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter


     Read related stories: Politics · Recent Stories  

    0 Comments

    • There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.

    Leave a Comment


    • Obama convenes economic advisers, calls for swift action on economy

      November 7, 2008 at 4:37pm

      In his first news conference as president-elect Barack Obama laid out the top priority of his first 100 days: A package of spending that he hopes will stimulate economic growth and aid a struggling middle class.

    • Catholic bishop: Obama supporters risk their ‘eternal salvation’

      Bad enough to experience earthly doubts about one’s choice for president.

      But Kansas City’s Bishop Robert W. Finn warned yesterday that supporting Barack Obama could jeopardize a Catholic’s eternal salvation, because of what he called the Democrat’s “fanatical” stance on abortion rights.

      Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

      Click to activate this MucketyMap

      Click to activate interactive map
      (requires Java)
      MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.

      “You make yourself a participant in the act of abortion” if you vote for Obama, Finn said in an interview with KCMO Talk Radio. “That’s gravely wrong. And you mustn’t do it because your eternal salvation is tied up with that important choice.”

      At a time when both parties are aggressively courting Catholic voters, Finn is among a group of at least 70 bishops of the Catholic Church’s 195 diocesan leaders who have urged Catholics to vote on the single issue of abortion, which the church deems a grave sin, according to church commentator Rocco Palmo.

      Others in that category include Cardinals Edward Egan of New York, Francis George of Chicago, Justin Rigali of Philadelphia and Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston.

      But none of those have expressed themselves in such fire-and-brimstone terms.

      A member of the conservative Opus Dei movement, Finn has become a standard-bearer of conservative orthodoxy since being elevated to head the Kansas City-Saint Joseph, MO diocese in May 2005.

      Before being elevated to bishop, he was a priest in St. Louis under Archbishop Raymond Burke, who made headlines himself in 2004 when he forbade Sen. John Kerry from taking communion in the area due to Kerry’s stance on abortion.

      Two weeks after Finn was installed as the head of the midwestern diocese, he demonstrated his take-no-prisoners attitude by dismissing the diocese’s longtime chancellor and vice chancellor, and canceling a nationally known lay education program, according to National Catholic Reporter.

      “Our goal is to get ourselves to heaven and take as many people with us as we can,” he said by explanation.

      Listen to an excerpt from Finn’s interview:

      Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter


       Read related stories: Politics · Recent Stories · Religion  

      2 Comments

      • #1.   curtastrophe 11.06.2008

        Only the Catholic Church could be so narrow minded and wrong about an issue. Obama is not pro abortion, he is pro rights and a womans right to choose. The whole abortion rights issue is not about abortion at all it’s about rights, and a womans right to privacy. Obama is only in favor of abortion if it becomes a health issue or in cases of rape or inscest.

      • #2.   Matt 11.09.2008

        I think what’s really wrong about his statement, has nothing to do with women’s rights or the rights of an unborn child. His view of salvation and what it takes to go to heaven is way out of wack. Even though I don’t support Obama or abortion, if you voted for Obama, it will not send you to hell. That’s as accurate as the doctrine the “Church Lady” had on SNL. Listen to what God says:

        Romans 10:9-10 (9)that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. (10) For with the heart one believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.

        God loves you, He did what had to be done as a Just Judge, he gave us what was necessary to pay the price for sin. For sin, any sin big or small, the penalty is eternal death, but like a judge paying your speeding ticket, He gave His Son Jesus to stand in for the sin of the world. That is what salvation is.

        Not trying to republish a bible here, but this is key…
        John 3:15-21
        15 that whoever believes in Him should not perish but[b] have eternal life. 16 For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. 17 For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.
        18 “He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For everyone practicing evil hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his deeds should be exposed. 21 But he who does the truth comes to the light, that his deeds may be clearly seen, that they have been done in God.”

      Leave a Comment


      • Bernard Madoff charged with multi-billion securities fraud

        December 11, 2008 at 6:33pm

        Bernard L. Madoff, the founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities and a former NASDAQ governor, was arrested Thursday morning by FBI agents and charged with a multi-billion-dollar criminal securities fraud.

      • Harvard won’t let Google scan copyrighted books

        Harvard University is dropping out of Google’s massive book-scanning project involving copyrighted books, citing concerns about reader access.

        The university was among Google’s early partners for the project, but expressed reservations about the $125-million settlement reached last week between Google and authors and publishers, setting up a framework for splitting the profits from digitally copied books between the Internet titan and the original writers and publishers.

        Harvard was not a party to the suits brought by the Authors Guild and five different publishers, which led to that settlement.

        “As we understand it, the settlement contains too many potential limitations on access to, and use of the books by members of the higher-education community and by patrons of public libraries,” wrote University Library Director Robert C. Darnton in a letter to staff.

        Darnton also said he was skeptical of the subscription pricing model laid out in the settlement.

        Harvard had been one of five academic libraries – along with Stanford, Oxford, Michigan, and the New York Public Library – who had agreed to partner with Google when the book scanning initiative was announced in October 2004.

        Harvard’s decision to bar copyrighted material from the project could have broader repercussions since Harvard maintains the largest academic library in the world, and its director, Darnton, also serves as a trustee of the New York Public Library.

        However, it does not affect an earlier agreement allowing Google to scan books with expired copyrights. Of the approximately seven million books Google has scanned since 2004, four to five million are out of print and not covered by copyright laws. Among those copied from Harvard’s collection are books by Henry James, Edith Wharton, Booker T. Washington, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Margaret Fuller.

        Under the settlement, which still must be approved by a judge, Google would publish up to 20-percent of a book’s text online at no charge to readers. The entire book would be available for a fee. Universities, libraries and other organizations would be able to buy subscriptions to make entire collections available to their users online.

        Google plans to take 37 percent of the revenue, leaving 63 percent for publishers and authors. If Google sells ads on pages where previews of scanned books appear, it will split the revenue on the same basis.

        Harvard officials said the university would reconsider its participation if the deal were restructured with more “reasonable terms.”

        Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter


         Read related stories: Business · Recent Stories  

        0 Comments

        • There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.

        Leave a Comment


        The relationship map to the left is interactive.
        • Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations.
        • Expand items with + signs by double-clicking or by selecting multiple items in the map and pressing the “e” key.
        • Move an item in the map by clicking and dragging.
        • You can also delete items, separate boxes and save maps. Right-click on the map or select Map Tools for these options.
        • Find out more about an item in the map by right-clicking on the item and choosing Information about…
        • View map color key.
        • This interactive map requires Flash player.