[lbo-talk] Could the Professional Left on this list please stand up? ; -)

c b cb31450 at gmail.com
Wed Aug 11 10:46:40 PDT 2010


Max Sawicky

---------------------- No small amount of their time is devoted to bashing the GOP and the teabaggers and reveling in the crazy stuff on the right, but I would say when they do talk about the White House they are pretty good.

^^^^^^^ CB: Max is right . They are pretty good :>). The overall tone of the shows is pro-Democrat, including pro-White House.:>)

Lou Pro probably hates these shows. ^^^^^^^


> So in general their overall tone is usually critical of the Obama admin?
>
>
> SA

^^^^^ CB: No the overall tone is pro-Obama and pro-Democrat. They give critical _support_. ( See Trotsky :>))

They are carrying the burden of countering the Tea Party and Republicans that this list is failing to help with.

Of course, Obama hasn't gone on the campaign trail for Congressional Dems yet. Get ready for a really big counter-attack on the Rightwing/Tea Party/Republicans. O will explain it really good in Iowa and Peoria.

Hey, at first, the Confederacy was winning the Civil War , too.

Federal aid bill saves 4,700 teachers' jobs in Michigan State gets $698M for education, Medicaid

Nathan Hurst / Detroit News Washington Bureau Washington -- Michigan school districts will see an infusion of federal funds to save 4,700 teachers' jobs in time for classes next month after the U.S. House on Tuesday approved $26 billion that also covers Medicaid payments to states.

The vote, 247-161, during a rare session that brought representatives back to the Capitol during their August recess means the state will get $698 million: $380 million for the Medicaid fund and $318 million to pay teachers, according to estimates provided by the independent Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

To gain enough votes to pass the bill, Democrats had to schedule a cut in food assistance funds for 2014, which could reduce by an average of $50 the monthly benefits for a family of three. That provision would offset $12 billion of the bill's cost, but some Democrats have vowed to rescind those cuts before they take effect.

Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who warned of cuts in mental health services and payments to doctors if the measure didn't pass, said Congress "passed legislation that will keep Michigan teachers educating our children and ensure that our citizens have access to health care services."

Tiffany Brown, Granholm's spokeswoman, said the state should start receiving the money within 30 to 45 days. About 4,700 teacher jobs were in jeopardy despite roughly 17,000 teachers agreeing to take early retirement. Some districts still had to cut jobs beyond the retirements to balance budgets.

Without the Medicaid money, Michigan faced a $560 million gap in benefits payments. With it, the state still has to find another $180 million in revenue or cuts.

President Barack Obama signed the bill within hours of the House's vote at the White House, where earlier Tuesday he was joined by teachers in a Rose Garden ceremony.

"We can't stand by and do nothing while pink slips are given to the men and women who educate our children or keep our communities safe," Obama said.

The vote was largely along party lines. Democratic leaders argued the bill would provide much-needed aid to states and would prevent ballooning class sizes and severe cuts in health care for the poor. Republicans countered the bill was wasteful and constituted a "bailout" for the states.

The Senate narrowly passed the measure Thursday, after the House had begun its summer break, necessitating the special session.

All 15 of Michigan's House members returned to the nation's capital for the vote, including Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, D-Detroit, who was defeated in the primary last week by Hansen Clarke, and retiring Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Holland, who lost out on the GOP gubernatorial nomination. Kilpatrick voted yes on the bill, while Hoekstra voted no.

"Further increasing taxes on employers to pay for bailouts in the public sector is not helping to create jobs and grow the economy," Hoekstra said in a statement. "Government needs to step on the brakes and stop creating new mandates that require additional taxpayer dollars to pay for them."

In supporting the bill, Rep. John Dingell, D-Dearborn, said its Medicaid funding would create or save 158,000 firefighter and rescue jobs nationally.

Rep. Sander Levin, D-Royal Oak, said the bill is "fully funded" by the closure of a tax loophole for multinational corporations.

"It is closing a tax loophole used by some ... to ship jobs overseas," the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee said in floor debate.

Levin and his committee helped craft the corporate tax change, hoping it will discourage American companies from shifting employment out of the United States.

Rep. Dave Camp, R-Midland, the committee's ranking Republican member, argued the bill "will do nothing to reduce the unemployment rate in this country," and expressed concern state governments haven't cut spending enough during the recession.

The House also Tuesday passed a $600 million measure to boost security on the U.S.-Mexico border by hiring more enforcement officers and making greater use of unmanned surveillance drones. That bill still has to go back to the Senate.

nhurst at detnews.com (202) 662-8738 The Associated Press contributed.


>From The Detroit News:
http://www.detnews.com/article/20100811/METRO/8110372/Federal-aid-bill-saves-4-700-teachers--jobs-in-Michigan#ixzz0wIYwLLrQ



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