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55
39
Research 2000. 11/16-11/19
MoE 2%.
More poll results here.
FL-Sen 11/19
VA-Gov 10/29
NJ-Gov 10/29
NY-23 10/29
NY-23 10/23
IA-Sen 10/16
IA-Gov 10/16
(More...)

Legislative committee to consider Sanford impeachment

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 07:42:04 PM PST

The South Carolina House Judiciary Committee is convening next week to hear arguments on whether whether Gov. Mark Sanford needs to take a permanent hike from the Governor's office:

State lawmakers have considered impeachment for months, but this announcement is the first formal consideration of such a move. It came two days after the State Ethics Commission said it had found probable cause to hear ethics complaints against Mr. Sanford, also a Republican.

The commission, whose nine members were appointed by the governor, did not say what charges it would pursue, but it reviewed several accusations against Mr. Sanford: that he had used state airplanes for personal or political reasons, bought high-priced plane tickets in violation of policy, failed to disclose trips on private planes and misspent campaign contributions.

...

Mr. Harrison has appointed a committee of four Republicans and three Democrats to meet next Tuesday. A majority vote of the full 25-member Judiciary Committee would be required to bring the matter up for a House vote when it convenes in January. If the House votes to impeach, Mr. Sanford would be suspended from duty immediately.

The Senate would then conduct an impeachment hearing. It is not clear what would happen if the Senate failed to take up the impeachment resolution, but it is possible the governor could remain suspended indefinitely as state business proceeds.

Couldn't happen to a nicer guy.

Race tracker wiki: SC-GOV


Chris Matthews gets that tingly feeling up his right leg

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 06:52:05 PM PST

This is what counts as a liberal these days?

Steve Benen pretty much nailed it with these observations:

Obama isn't "leading with his chin"; he's tackling the issues in front of him. That's what presidents do. Obama bowed to the Japanese emperor as a matter of protocol, and no one cares except the media establishment. Obama isn't "dithering" -- though it's good to know Chris Matthews is willing to read directly from Dick Cheney's script -- he's crafting a forward-thinking U.S. policy, which is what Bush/Cheney should have done a long time ago.

Purely from a business point of view, doesn't MSNBC realize that between this sort of nonsense and Glenn Beck, it shouldn't be a mystery why ratings for The Ed Show are regularly beating Hardball's live broadcast.

Open Thread

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 06:06:02 PM PST

Jibber jabber.

The Schumer/Landrieu/Carper Compromise Plot Thickens

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 05:58:07 PM PST

Earlier today, Landrieu talked about working with Schumer and Carper on yet another iteration of a public option compromise, along the lines of his state-based triggered co-ops.

Schumer's spokesman flatly denied this, sending this statement:

"Since Leader Reid announced the opt-out public option would be included in the Senate bill, Senator Schumer has not approached anyone about compromises. He is fully behind the level playing field opt-out, which he himself helped advance."

--Schumer spokesman Brian Fallon

Just now, in the press availability following the vote, here's Harry Reid:

Q: Senator Lincoln today made it very clear that she's not going to support any kind of public option. Senator Lieberman has said the same. What do you see as the chances it will be in the final bill.

Reid: First of all, I support a strong public option. I welcome Senator Schumer, Landrieu and Carper, who Senator Landrieu said are working together to find a public option that is acceptable to all Democrats....

Q: Did you just say that you've tasked Senator Schumer, Carper and Landrieu or ...

Reid: No. It's my understanding that Senator Landrieu said today that she's working with Senator Schumer and Carper to come up with an alternative.

Interesting. Either someone is not being entirely truthful, or we have a major miscommunication in leadership. I've asked leadership staff for clarification and will report back when I've heard anything.

Update: Leadership staff declines to comment, but one Senate Democratic aide e-mails "As far as I know it's absolutely true that Senator Schumer has been having these conversations about a public option compromise well before we had this vote tonight."

Update 2: And Schumer's spokesperson, Brian Fallon, adds

Leading up to tonight's vote, some senators expressed a desire to discuss the public option currently in the Senate bill. Of course, Senator Schumer did not rule that out. But no such talks have yet taken place, and there is not any compromise at hand beyond what Leader Reid has already inserted into the bill. Senator Schumer remains a strong proponent of the opt-out, level playing field public option.

So both Reid and Schumer are strong proponents of the opt-out, but talks on further compromise continue. Meaning triggers are headed our way, unless the progressives take a very strong stand in committing to voting against them.

Senate Votes to Move Forward to Talk More about Voting on HCR

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 04:56:42 PM PST

With all of the Democrats, and Lieberman, having already agreed to vote in favor of tonight's vote to allow the healthcare reform legislation come to the floor for debate, the actual voting is pretty much a foregone conclusion, unless Olympia Snowe goes on a wild hare and decides to get all bipartisany on us.

Nonetheless, this is a rather historic event, since we haven't gotten this far on healthcare reform in the Senate, well, ever. Sen. Dodd is in the chair for the vote, in the place where Senator Kennedy would have been.

Watch:

Update: Sen. Dodd makes the call. 60 vote yea, 39 nay. The motion is agreed to.

Update 2: Voinovich was the Republican who didn't vote.

Nice little moment between Reid and Dodd just now at their presser on Kennedy--Reid had just spoken with Mrs. Kennedy, who was very pleased and told him that she was sure the Senator was there with them in spirit.

Update 3: E-mailed statement from the White House, here's Gibbs:

"The President is gratified that the Senate has acted to begin consideration of health insurance reform legislation. Tonight’s  historic vote brings us one step closer to ending insurance company abuses, reining in spiraling health care costs, providing stability and security to those with health insurance, and extending quality health coverage to those who lack it. The President looks forward to a thorough and productive debate."

Late afternoon/early evening open thread

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 04:18:04 PM PST

What's coming up on Sunday Kos ....

  • Behind the scenes, United States and Russian negotiators have been hard at work hammering out a new START, or Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. The Treaty expires on December 5, 2009, and it looks like neither of the legislative bodies in either country will ratify it in time. Plutonium Page will explain what the obstacles are, and how the two countries will handle the gap between the missed deadline and actual treaty ratification.
  • DarkSyde will introduce a few glitches in the incredible human immune system and exposes some aberrations of our dysfunctional healthcare system in "Resistance is Futile."
  • When we think and talk politics and strategy, there are distinctions that too easily get blurred. Laura Clawson will highlight some of the fault lines.
  • DemFromCT will review how the breast cancer screening panel misaligned the science, the politics and the commmunication... and why it matters.
  • Last month, Germany, France, the United States, Russia, Britain, and China met with Iranian nuclear negotiators to discuss a deal in which Iran would send most of its low-enriched uranium out of the country to be further enriched and fabricated into fuel for the Tehran Research Reactor. Since then, a lot has happened, including Iran's official rejection of the deal as well as a new, troubling report from the International Atomic Energy Agency on Iran's nuclear facilities. Plutonium Page will discuss all of this in detail, and what it means for the future.

Alexander: Dems want to dump Americans in "medical ghetto"

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 03:30:04 PM PST

What would a health care debate be without some good ol' fashioned race-baiting from the G.O.P.?

Transcript:

   Dumping of 15 million low-income Americans into a medical ghetto called Medicaid that none of us or any of our families would ever want to be a part of for our health care...

   ..Moving 15 million Americans into this medical ghetto...

   ...Moving 15 million low-income Americans into a program called Medicaid which is a medical ghetto is not health care reform.

Way to stay classy, GOP.

GOP health care derangement syndrome: Stop me if you've heard this one.

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 02:46:03 PM PST

Government takeover! Destroying America! The end of the world as we know it!

Yes, we've heard it all before. But did you know how many times, and for how long?

The fact is that the Republican Party told teabaggers' grandmas (of "death panel" fame) that Social Security was going to be the end of America. And today you can't swing a euthanized cat without hitting a Republican at a microphone insisting he's Social Security's greatest champion.

Republicans likewise told teabaggers' dads that Medicare would be the end of America. And today you can't swing a... oh yeah, you've heard that one.

Today, of course, Republicans will spend the entire day telling teabaggers themselves that the health insurance reform bill will be the end of America.

Gosh, poor America! That's a lotta ends!

Not sure you remember just how sure Republicans were about all those ends? Remind yourself with this trip down Fevered Nightmare Lane.

Consulting Generals Shape Policy

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 02:02:04 PM PST

The Department of Defense told the watchdog Project on Government Oversight Thursday that it won't let the public see a congressionally mandated revolving-door database of Pentagon employees.

POGO wonders what the harm is in seeing a list of former government officials who are now working for defense contractors. We have campaign finance and lobbying disclosure – why not expose those circulating between the public and private sectors who might be a driving force behind government decisions and policies?

"Public access to the revolving door database represents the kind of open government that the public wants and deserves. If this Administration is serious about open government, it needs to provide public access to the database about the well-oiled DoD revolving door," said POGO's General Counsel, Scott Amey.

Indeed. But exposing bits of the interlocking directorate of the military-industrial complex can be, at the very least, embarrassing to the uniformed powers-that-be.

In a Wednesday story that Thomas Ricks says should get a Pulitzer, Tom Vanden Brook, Ken Dilanian and Ray Locker of USA Today reported:

Six months after Marine Lt. Gen. Gary McKissock retired in 2002, he did what many other ex-military leaders do: He joined the board of directors of a defense contractor, a company doing business with his former service.

McKissock also had a second job. The Marines brought him back as an adviser, at double the rate of pay he made on active duty. Since 2005, the Marines have awarded McKissock contracts worth $1.2 million, in addition to his military pension of about $119,000 a year.

McKissock is one of at least 158 retired admirals and generals the Pentagon has hired to offer advice under an unusual arrangement. Most of the retired officers, one to four stars in rank, have been paid hundreds of dollars an hour by the military even as they worked for companies seeking Defense Department contracts, a USA TODAY investigation found. That's in addition to pensions of $100,000 to $200,000 a year for officers with 30 or more years of service. ...

Of the 158 retired generals and admirals identified as having worked for the military as senior mentors, 80% had financial ties to defense contractors, including 29 who were full-time executives of defense companies. Those with industry ties have earned salaries, fees or stock options as consultants, board members or full-time employees of defense firms.

Nothing illegal in any of that. And good arguments can be made for its beneficial effects.

Those benefits are outweighed by the steep downside, however. Bad enough when retired officers now working for defense contractors show up to lobby among their previous subordinates - men and women who took orders from them not so long ago. It's no easy matter to break the entrenched habit of saying "yessir." This revolving-door practice has been going on since before Dwight Eisenhower delivered his farewell address nearly half a century ago.  

But when the Pentagon and a contractor are both paying these former officers, the line becomes even more blurred.

In some cases, mentors also work for weapons-makers who have an interest in the military planning the mentors are assisting. A Marines exercise last year, which explored how to launch operations from ships, employed mentors who also had financial relationships with companies that sell products designed to aid those operations.

"This setup invites abuse," says Janine Wedel, a George Mason University public policy professor and author of a forthcoming book on government contracting. "Everyone in this story is fat and happy. Everyone, of course, except the public, which has virtually no way of knowing what's going on, much less holding these guys to account."

If retired generals advising the Pentagon also are "being paid by somebody who wants to make money off the government, I think it's important the public know that," says Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., who chairs the subcommittee on contracting oversight. "The reason ... is so the people have confidence that the decisions are being made based on merit, and not based on inside baseball."

 
That ought to qualify for the understatement of the year. At its least damaging outcome, seeking to please former commanders who now hold jobs with defense companies is bound to be on the minds of those officers who someday hope to retire and bring in the big bucks from those companies themselves.

Far worse is the effect such "mentoring" may have not merely on weapons and software acquisitions but also on the shaping of war planning itself. Combine that with retired generals and admirals being specially briefed by the Pentagon for their appearances on Foxaganda and other media masquerading as "independent experts" and you've got a noxious brew.

Despite the shrieks of alarm that will emanate from the armchair patriots over any call for monitoring, much less ending, these relationships, a reform injecting a smidgen of accountability and transparency would amount to barely a baby-step toward curtailing the military-industrial complex. But at least it might demonstrate to the still unaware just how deeply rooted the MIC has become.    

   

Reminder to Senate Dems: Carper's Triggered Co-Ops Aren't a Public Option

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 01:16:04 PM PST

So Landrieu and Lincoln say they'll vote to allow debate to continue so that the Senate can eventually vote on whether they want to vote to reform the nation's healthcare system. Lest you get too excited by their radicalism, here's the cold water on our collective enthusiasm.

After announcing her intent to support a health care debate this afternoon, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA) told reporters she thinks Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will soon have to choose between a triggered public option and no health care bill. She also says Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY)--the third-ranking Democrat in the Senate one of its most fierce and vocal public option advocates--has been tasked as a point man on the issue.

"I believe it's going to be very clear at some point very soon that there are not 60 votes for the current provision in the bill, and that the leader and the leadership are going to have to make a decision and I trust that they will figure out how to do that," Landrieu told reporters.

Blanche Lincoln raised the stakes on this on the Senate floor today, saying "I've already alerted the Leader and I'm promising my colleagues that I'm prepared to vote against moving to the next stage of consideration as long as a government run public option is included." She continues to argue falsely, just like Joe Lieberman, that the public option will cost the federal government too much, proving that not only Republicans can pick and choose what they like from CBO reports.

We're veering ever closer to the point where this bill is not going to do a whole lot more than force people to buy crappy insurance. The public option, as limited as it is, is the foot in the door to providing more and better options to more people. Without it, even as constricted as it has become, this bill isn't reform. It's telling the insurance companies they really shouldn't cherry-pick customers and leave people without care, and erecting a few more barriers for them to get around while they continue to do just that.

Triggered co-ops, the Carper plan that Schumer is apparently pushing, isn't a compromise. It's no kind of public option and should not be supported by anyone calling themselves a progressive. It's a capitulation. So Senators Brown, et al., it's your call. You said no more compromise. It's time to prove that you mean it.

Update: Schumer's staff e-mails to refute Landrieu's suggestion that he's been tasked with a compromise, or has been free-lancing on the issue, as another Democratic aide suggested. Schumer's spokesman Brian Fallon e-mails this statement:

"Since Leader Reid announced the opt-out public option would be included in the Senate bill, Senator Schumer has not approached anyone about compromises. He is fully behind the level playing field opt-out, which he himself helped advance."

--Schumer spokesman Brian Fallon

Ah, palace chamber intrigue. All I can say is stay tuned.

Reid Gets His 60 Votes, For Now

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 12:30:04 PM PST

At least for continuing debate. Nelson, Lincoln, Landrieu, they're all in.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has secured the vital 60th vote he needs to advance healthcare reform legislation with the announcement by Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) that she will vote with her party Saturday evening.

"I have concluded that it is more important to begin this debate rather than just simply drop the issue and walk away," Lincoln said on the Senate floor. "I'm not afraid of that debate."

Of course, Lieberman could pull a Lieberman, and change his mind on this one just for the hell of it (and because he hasn't been in the headlines very often lately), but for now there's no drama left in today's vote.

Now the real fight for a real public option. In agreeing today to continue debate on this bill, Lincoln vowed essentially to join a Republican filibuster.

I've already alerted the Leader and I'm promising my colleagues that I'm prepared to vote against moving to the next stage of consideration as long as a government run public option is included.

Midday open thread

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 12:16:03 PM PST

  • James Fallows, in a post entitled Manufactured Failure, hits the Washington press hard on how purely awful its coverage was of President Obama's trip to Asia, how uniformly negative it was compared with the actual reporting in China.
  • Matt Taibbi deconstructs Sarah Palin:

    Palin — and there’s just no way to deny this — is a supremely gifted politician. She has staked out, as her own personal political turf, the entire landscape of incoherent white American resentment. In this area she leaves even Rush Limbaugh in the dust.

    The reason for that is that poor Rush is an anachronism, in the sense that his whole schtick revolves around talking about real political issues. And real political issues are boring.

    Listen to Rush any day of the week and you’ll hear him playing the old-fashioned pundit game: he goes about the dreary business of picking through the policies and positions and public statements of Democrats and poking holes in them, arguing with them, attacking them with numbers and facts and pseudo-facts and non-facts and whatever else he can get his hands on, honest or not, but at least he tries. ...

    Sarah Palin’s battlefield, on the other hand, is whatever is happening five feet in front of her face. She is building a political career around the little interpersonal wars in the immediate airspace surrounding her sawdust-filled head. And in the process she connects with pissed-off, frightened, put-upon America on a plane that’s far more elemental than the mega-ditto schtick.

  • The Justice Department drops charges against one of the Blackwater guards accused of manslaughter for the shooting deaths of 17 Iraqis in a public square in 2007.
  • The small Illinois Michigan town that wants the Gitmo detainees tells Liz Cheney they're not liking her fear-mongering.
  • Levi Johnston's mother gets sentenced to three years in prison for drug dealing.
  • With friends like these....
  • Rainn Wilson:

    People who don't believe in evolution really shouldn't be allowed to get flu shots.

  • Now it seems that some economists are giving the stimulus package a thumbs up.
  • The White House blog offers a head start on reading the Senate health care bill:

    On page 78 you’ll learn that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ends discrimination based on pre-existing conditions. On page 17, it makes preventive care completely free, with no cost-sharing.  (This might be of particular interest to those who have chosen to seize on concerns about the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force Recommendations on mammograms to spread baseless myths and advance their own political agenda.) Flipping back to page 16, you’ll find that insurance companies are prohibited from dropping your coverage or watering it down when you get sick and need it most. Also on page 16, you might notice that it puts an end to lifetime caps on coverage. Page 18 is where the bill extends family coverage eligibility for young Americans through the age of 26. On page 83 it requires insurance companies to renew any policy as long as the policyholder pays their premium in full – that means they can’t refuse to renew your coverage just because you get sick. Page 307 is home to tax credits for small businesses to help them afford insurance for their employees. And folks looking to scare our senior citizens about what reform means for them might be interested to check out page 923 and learn that it provides a 50% discount on drugs for seniors in the so-called donut hole.

David Broder Brings A Rare Moment of Reid Levity to the HCR Debate

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 11:30:04 AM PST

Ah, Village math. David Broder says that bringing in more federal revenue by increasing tax would bust the budget.

While the CBO said that both the House-passed bill and the one Reid has drafted meet Obama's test by being budget-neutral, every expert I have talked to says [. . . t]hese bills, as they stand, are budget-busters. Here, for example, is what Robert Bixby, the executive director of the Concord Coalition, a bipartisan group of budget watchdogs, told me: "The Senate bill is better than the House version, but there's not much reform in this bill. As of now, it's basically a big entitlement expansion, plus tax increases."

And, as we know, in the Village the only entitlements they like are the ones that get them invitations to the best cocktail parties and their kids into the best colleges. Those big ol' CBO liars.

At any rate, this led to the most interesting exchange thus far in today's debate (although I'm still kind of fond of Thune's argument that the Chinese should be dictating our health policy).

"In tomorrow's Washington Post, David Broder, their distinguished senior columnist, certainly not a political conservative, expresses his reservation as a citizen about the steps that we could be about to take," McConnell said.

Reid couldn't have been less impressed. "To focus on a man who has been retired for many years and writes a column once in a while is not where we should be."

No more cocktail weenies for Harry.

Saturday hate mail-apalooza

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 10:32:03 AM PST

You know where to find the goods.

Joe Lieberman, liar

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 09:40:03 AM PST

Joe Lieberman is accusing President Obama of executing a bait and switch when it comes to the public option:

"It’s classic politics of our time that if you look at the campaign last year, presidential, you can’t find a mention of public option," Lieberman said. "It was added after the election as a part of what we normally consider health insurance reform — insurance market reforms, cover people, cover people who are not covered.

Nice line, Joe, except it's based on a flat-out lie. President Obama backed the public option during the campaign. For example, the Obama-Biden health care plan proposed a new public plan (emphasis added):

   NEW AFFORDABLE, ACCESSIBLE HEALTH INSURANCE OPTIONS. The Obama-Biden plan will create a National Health Insurance Exchange to help individuals purchase new affordable health care options if they are uninsured or want new health insurance. Through the Exchange, any American will have the opportunity to enroll in the new public plan or an approved private plan, and income-based sliding scale tax credits will be provided for people and families who need it. Insurers would have to issue every applicant a policy and charge fair and stable premiums that will not depend upon health status. The Exchange will require that all the plans offered are at least as generous as the new public plan and meet the same standards for quality and efficiency. ...

   The Obama-Biden plan provides new affordable health insurance options by...requiring all large employers to contribute towards health coverage for their employees or towards the cost of the public plan.

In May, 2007, the New York Times reported that President Obama had proposed a public option (emphasis added):

   Mr. Obama would create a public plan for individuals who cannot obtain group coverage through their employers or the existing government programs ... He would also create a National Health Insurance Exchange, a regulated marketplace of competing private health plans intended to give individuals other, more affordable options for coverage. The public plan would compete in that Insurance Exchange, advisers said.

And here's a Washington Post candidate profile, President Obama said:

My plan builds on and improves our current insurance system, which most Americans continue to rely upon, and creates a new public health plan for those currently without coverage.

So, Joe, you're wrong. President Obama has supported a public option from the very beginning. He ran for President on it, he won the election, and now he's doing what he promised. That's a hell of a lot more than anybody can say about you, Joe.

Despite your sanctimony, you've done nothing but lie since you squeaked out that victory in 2006: just lie after lie after lie. And you're lying again now.

Senate HCR Debate Chugs Along

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 08:52:58 AM PST

Update: Reports are, including a tweet from the DemWarRoom (Senate Dem caucus staff) that Landrieu will vote to proceed. As a reminder, this vote is just the vote that says that the Senate will be able to continue to debate, which will then eventually lead to vote on whether they will vote on the final bill. Gotta love the Senate.

Wow, Republicans love Medicare now. Why just yesterday, it seems that they were all set to privatize it. Well, maybe not yesterday, but in April. Today, what we're learning from the Republicans in the debate is that the CBO lies when they score a Democratic plan well, and that Medicare is sacred when they want it to be.

Oh, and Thune agrees with Liz Cheney that the Chinese should be dictating American domestic policy on healthcare reform.

Help document the atrocities. We'll be at it all day, with the vote coming by about 9:00 tonight, EST. Update: Don't forget there's always going to be a liveblog available in the diaries throughout the day.

This Week in Science

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 07:30:03 AM PST

The righties are abuzz with a recent hack stealing thousands of emails from climate and other scientists over the last 15 years. Needless to say the usual suspects have combed through the material looking for anything that can be misconstrued. This is an example of about the best they've come up with via Realclimate:

No doubt, instances of cherry-picked and poorly-worded "gotcha" phrases will be pulled out of context. One example is worth mentioning quickly. Phil Jones in discussing the presentation of temperature reconstructions stated that "I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (ie from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline." ... Scientists often use the term "trick" to refer to a "a good way to deal with a problem", rather than something that is "secret" ...

In short, no orders from shadowy X-files climate conspirators to perpetuate the 'hoax,' no liberal/commie schemes or scams infiltrating NASA's GISS database, nothing about how to fake photos showing glaciers in retreat, just a bunch of science, journalist, and academic types arguing, explaining, and agreeing with each other over one subtle point or another.

  • Who are the biggest techno-venture capitalists in the world? According to John Wasik, it's literally Barack Obama and Energy Secretary Chu.
  • Three cheers for the Brits: Evolution now mandatory in UK primary-public schools.
  • Presented for your approval, two very different sides of the same coin, a company caught in the age old human struggle between right and wrong: Genentech the good; Genentech the not so good. Quick, the suited figure by the sign post up ahead, it's the Lobbying Zone!
  • What killed of Ice Age megafauna? Could be a combination of things including overkill. But one of the results was a big change in the landscape after they disappeared.

Obama: What the world needs now is jobs, sweet jobs

Sat Nov 21, 2009 at 06:00:03 AM PST

This recession has taught us that we can’t return to a situation where America’s economic growth is fueled by consumers who take on more and more debt.  In order to keep growing, we need to spend less, save more, and get our federal deficit under control.  We also need to place a greater emphasis on exports that we can build, produce, and sell to other nations – exports that can help create new jobs at home and raise living standards throughout the world.

Using last week's swing through Asia as the backdrop to talk about numerous issues, President Obama in his weekly address this morning discussed nuclear arms, climate change, commerce, clean energy and democratic ideals, characterizing his diplomatic trip as intended to "open a new era of American engagement."

But the major focus of his address--and, by extension, his trip to Asia--was on turning around the economy.

For Americans, he says, even relatively small increases in number of exports will create hundreds of thousands of jobs, but relying on exports clearly is not enough to spur the economy back to health. What we need is ... the White House job forum planned for next month.

Increasing our exports is one way to create new jobs and new prosperity. But as we emerge from a recession that has left millions without work, we have an obligation to consider every additional, responsible step we can take to encourage and accelerate job creation in this country. That’s why I’ve announced that in the next few weeks, we’ll be holding a forum at the White House on jobs and economic growth. I want to hear from CEOs and small business owners, economists and financial experts, as well as representatives from labor unions and nonprofit groups, about what they think we can do to spur hiring and get this economy moving again.

It is important that we do not make any ill-considered decisions – even with the best of intentions – particularly at a time when our resources are so limited. But it is just as important that we are open to any demonstrably good idea to supplement the steps we’ve already taken to put America back to work. That’s what I hope to achieve in this forum.

The full address can be found beneath the fold or on the White House website.


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H.R. 3961 - The "doc fix" bill