Pat Toomey

Meet the Senate's New Freshman Class!

by: mblue

Fri Nov 05, 2010 at 17:24

A new video from People For the American Way:

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Weekly Mulch: Climate Deniers Set to Freeze Progress in Congress

by: The Media Consortium

Fri Nov 05, 2010 at 10:57

by Sarah Laskow, Media Consortium blogger

A chill is coming to Washington. A wave of climate change deniers were elected to office this week, and come January, we can  expect a freeze in all reasonable and productive discussion about the  fate of the planet.

Last year, the political discussion about climate change and carbon regulation was complicated and bogged down, but at least it was happening.

Who are the deniers?

Grist has pulled together a list of the climate deniers headed into power in the Senate. "Overall, the Senate next year will be more hostile to climate action than ever before," the site's staff says.

If these climate-denying legislators came from deeply red states, Tuesday's results might not be so shocking. But many of them represent swing states, or states that might be red in presidential contests, but that have previously elected Democrats to Congress.

Farewell, moderation

These latter states include North Dakota, whose new senator, John Hoeven, made Grist's list, and Indiana. Also on the list are Marco Rubio, from Florida, Kelly Ayotte, from New Hampshire, and Pat Toomey, from Pennsylvania.

Perhaps most disheartening is the replacement of Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) with Senator-Elect Ron Johnson. Johnson is to the right of the independent-minded Feingold on a host of issues, but as Mother Jones' Andy Kroll writes, "What landed Johnson in headlines earlier this year was his claim that  climate change wasn't created by humans but instead was the result of 'sunspot activity.'"

The new climate "science"

Sunspot activity is just one explanation that newly elected Republicans have grabbed onto to explain the very real phenomenon of climate change. Care2's Beth Buczynski has rounded up a few choice quotes from these new leaders:

"With the possible exception of Tiger Woods, nothing has had a worse  year than global warming. We have discovered that a good portion of the  science used to justify "climate change" was a hoax perpetrated by  leftist ideologues with an agenda." -Todd Young, new congressperson from Indiana

"There isn't any real science to say we are altering the climate path of the earth." -Roy Blunt, new senator from Missouri

There are more where these came from.

In denial

What does this shift mean? In short, that the United States and our environmental policies will be limping forward and falling behind the rest of the world as international communities try to deal with climate change. As Brian Merchant writes at AlterNet:

...the current crop of GOP politicians have adopted a   somewhat united ideological front opposing not only climate legislation,   but the general notion of climate science itself. Nowhere else in the   world has a leading political party availed itself of a position so   directly in opposition to science -- indeed, today's GOP is the only party in the world that incorporates climate change denial as part of its political platform.

On the domestic front, writes The Washington Independent's Andrew Restuccia, that means that even unambitious legislation, like the renewable energy standard, stands little chance of passing. As it's currently written, the renewable energy standard would require a certain percentage of the country's electricity to come from renewable sources. In reality, it would not even push clean energy production to grow faster than market forces alone would. The main purpose of passing a standard would be to signal to clean energy investors that the government supports their work.

In other words, in the current legislative climate, our leaders wouldn't even get behind legislation that is just a sign of support for clean energy and the jobs it would create.

Zombie Climategate

Instead, the House's leadership plans on spending its time staging a show trial of climate science. The chief executor of this strategy will be Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), who is set to become chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Change.org's Jess Leber explains:

From his new position, the former car-alarm company owner plans to raise  false alarm about climate conspiracy theories. As Nikki Gloudeman  wrote, just a few weeks ago Issa vowed to make investigating "Climategate"-the climate pseudo-scandal that's already died 1,000 deaths-a top oversight priority should he win the committee.

In theory, Issa would be investigating a series of emails, sent by British climate scientists. Climate skeptics argue the emails prove that scientists are falsifying evidence of climate change. Extensive investigations have already debunked those claims.

In short, environmental leader Bill McKibben had the right idea back in September. Anyone who's interested in advocating for climate change action in this country would do well to stop trying to convince Congress to do its job. Our leaders won't be listening.

The best path forward may be to start convincing the American people, in the hope that, t

by Sarah Laskow, Media Consortium blogger

A chill is coming to Washington. A wave of climate change deniers were elected to office this week, and come January, we can  expect a freeze in all reasonable and productive discussion about the  fate of the planet.

Last year, the political discussion about climate change and carbon regulation was complicated and bogged down, but at least it was happening.

Who are the deniers?

Grist has pulled together a list of the climate deniers headed into power in the Senate. "Overall, the Senate next year will be more hostile to climate action than ever before," the site's staff says.

If these climate-denying legislators came from deeply red states, Tuesday's results might not be so shocking. But many of them represent swing states, or states that might be red in presidential contests, but that have previously elected Democrats to Congress.

Farewell, moderation

These latter states include North Dakota, whose new senator, John Hoeven, made Grist's list, and Indiana. Also on the list are Marco Rubio, from Florida, Kelly Ayotte, from New Hampshire, and Pat Toomey, from Pennsylvania.

Perhaps most disheartening is the replacement of Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) with Senator-Elect Ron Johnson. Johnson is to the right of the independent-minded Feingold on a host of issues, but as Mother Jones' Andy Kroll writes, "What landed Johnson in headlines earlier this year was his claim that  climate change wasn't created by humans but instead was the result of 'sunspot activity.'"

The new climate "science"

Sunspot activity is just one explanation that newly elected Republicans have grabbed onto to explain the very real phenomenon of climate change. Care2's Beth Buczynski has rounded up a few choice quotes from these new leaders:

"With the possible exception of Tiger Woods, nothing has had a worse  year than global warming. We have discovered that a good portion of the  science used to justify "climate change" was a hoax perpetrated by  leftist ideologues with an agenda." -Todd Young, new congressperson from Indiana

"There isn't any real science to say we are altering the climate path of the earth." -Roy Blunt, new senator from Missouri

There are more where these came from.

In denial

What does this shift mean? In short, that the United States and our environmental policies will be limping forward and falling behind the rest of the world as international communities try to deal with climate change. As Brian Merchant writes at AlterNet:

...the current crop of GOP politicians have adopted a   somewhat united ideological front opposing not only climate legislation,   but the general notion of climate science itself. Nowhere else in the   world has a leading political party availed itself of a position so   directly in opposition to science -- indeed, today's GOP is the only party in the world that incorporates climate change denial as part of its political platform.

On the domestic front, writes The Washington Independent's Andrew Restuccia, that means that even unambitious legislation, like the renewable energy standard, stands little chance of passing. As it's currently written, the renewable energy standard would require a certain percentage of the country's electricity to come from renewable sources. In reality, it would not even push clean energy production to grow faster than market forces alone would. The main purpose of passing a standard would be to signal to clean energy investors that the government supports their work.

In other words, in the current legislative climate, our leaders wouldn't even get behind legislation that is just a sign of support for clean energy and the jobs it would create.

Zombie Climategate

Instead, the House's leadership plans on spending its time staging a show trial of climate science. The chief executor of this strategy will be Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), who is set to become chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Change.org's Jess Leber explains:

From his new position, the former car-alarm company owner plans to raise  false alarm about climate conspiracy theories. As Nikki Gloudeman  wrote, just a few weeks ago Issa vowed to make investigating "Climategate"-the climate pseudo-scandal that's already died 1,000 deaths-a top oversight priority should he win the committee.

In theory, Issa would be investigating a series of emails, sent by British climate scientists. Climate skeptics argue the emails prove that scientists are falsifying evidence of climate change. Extensive investigations have already debunked those claims.

In short, environmental leader Bill McKibben had the right idea back in September. Anyone who's interested in advocating for climate change action in this country would do well to stop trying to convince Congress to do its job. Our leaders won't be listening.

The best path forward may be to start convincing the American people, in the hope that, two years from now, they'll vote for candidates who have a clue.

This post features links to the best independent, progressive   reporting about the environment by members of   The Media  Consortium.   It is free to reprint. Visit the Mulch for a complete list of  articles on environmental issues, or follow us   on  Twitter. And for the best   progressive reporting on critical economy, health care and immigration   issues, check out The Audit,   The Pulse,   and The   Diaspora. This is a project  of The Media Consortium, a network  of   leading independent media  outlets.

wo years from now, they'll vote for candidates who have a clue.

This post features links to the best independent, progressive   reporting about the environment by members of   The Media  Consortium.   It is free to reprint. Visit the Mulch for a complete list of  articles on environmental issues, or follow us   on  Twitter. And for the best   progressive reporting on critical economy, health care and immigration   issues, check out The Audit,   The Pulse,   and The   Diaspora. This is a project  of The Media Consortium, a network  of   leading independent media  outlets.

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Pat Toomey's Extremism

by: mblue

Mon Oct 25, 2010 at 15:20

Last week, Pennsylvania Senate candidate Pat Toomey said that his opponent, Joe Sestak, is an "extreme candidate."

People For the American Way put together a video of some other things Toomey has said.

So, who's the extremist?

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Enthusiasm gap only factor keeping Toomey in Pennsylvania Senate campaign

by: Chris Bowers

Tue Jun 22, 2010 at 14:09

Public Policy Polling has a new survey out on the Pennsylvania Senate campaign between Pat Toomey and Joe Sestak.  The poll shows the campaign knotted up at 415 for each candidate.

First, and less interestingly, this poll shows the White House job "scandal" has had no negative impact on Sestak.  The Admiral up 6% on Toomey from the previous PPP poll of Pennsylvania.  It was never clear what type of voter pays close enough attention to political news to not only have actually heard about the "scandal," but also to think less of Sestak because of it.  The way the political media acted as though the American public were all neophyte, wide-eyed children about politics on this story was embarrassing.

Second, and more interestingly, this poll suggests that the only reason Toomey is in this campaign at all is because of a massive enthusiasm gap between Democrats and Republicans.  According to the poll, Sestak is holding Obama voters just as well as Toomey is holding McCain voters, but McCain voters actually outnumber Obama voters in Pennsylvania by 1%.  This is even though Obama won the state by over 10%:

This race is a vintage example of where the enthusiasm gap is giving Democrats problems. Sestak is winning 74% of the vote from people who supported Barack Obama in 2008. That's actually a tad higher than the 73% Toomey is getting from McCain voters. This is not a race where the Democratic candidate is struggling because folks who voted for Obama last election are supporting the GOP in droves. But the poll's respondents went for John McCain by a point in 2008 when Barack Obama actually took the state by 10. The only reason Sestak's not ahead in this race is that Republican voters are much more motivated to go out and vote in the fall than Democrats are.

Now, this is just one poll result, so it should not be taken as an article of faith.  There is no doubt voter turnout patterns mean Democrats face a more difficult electorate in 2010 than they did in 2008, but for there to be a 10% swing due entirely to voter enthusiasm seems quite extreme.  There will be at least a 2-3% swing due to age differences in the Democratic and Republican coalitions, but 10% would be mind-blowing.

Also, before people chime in with claims that a 10% swing is actually entirely understandable given how terribly disappointed and upset the base is with Obama, keep in mind this finding from PPP last month:

On our last national poll among the people who said they were only 'somewhat excited' about voting or 'not very excited' about voting Obama's approval was a 58/35 spread, much better than his overall numbers. Those folks also said they supported the health care bill by a 50/38 margin, again much better than we're seeing among all voters.

There is no singular explanation for the voter turnout problem Democrats face in the fall.  Undoubtedly, there are a decent number of ideologically left voters, who usually break Democratic, who feel frustrated enough with the lack of progressive accomplishments by the Obama administration that they will not be active this cycle.  However, available polling does not support that thesis as the majority cause for struggles in voter turnout.

The majority of unlikely voters approve of the health care bill and of President Obama.  As such, the primary motivating factor in the lack of engagement among unlikely voters is not disgust with the administration or its accomplishments.  The former fact disproves the latter thesis.  There are certainly some progressives who have dropped out of voting or electoral activism, or who have perhaps even shifted their efforts to third-party candidates, but they are not the majority of 2008 Obama voters who are unlikely to vote this time around.  And this PPP poll is not the first poll offering such evidence, either.

Democrats face a real voter turnout problem.  However, its exact size, and exact causes, remains relatively unexplored by public pollsters.

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Sestak--Toomey Debate Thread

by: Chris Bowers

Wed Sep 02, 2009 at 18:29

Joe Sestak and Pat Toomey are debating health care tonight in Allentown.  The debate takes place from 6:30 p.m. eastern, until 8:00 p.m. eastern.

You can watch it live at JoeSestak.com. Also, PA Progressive will be liveblogging.

This is an open thread.

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Monday Night Sestak!

by: Chris Bowers

Mon Aug 31, 2009 at 19:00

I work for Joe Sestak's campaign--come join up!

Are you ready for some Sestak?

  1. Pennsylvania is the primary challenge everyone can agree with! In an email leaked from Journolist, Joe Klein endorses Joe Sestak even while attacking the concept of progressive primary challenges in general:

    Joe Klein on Journolist
    (in reverse chronological sequence)

    From: Joe Kelin
    Date: Aug 29, 6:03 pm
    Subject: A letter from Mr. Billy Ralph Bierbaum of Waxahachie, Texas
    re: condensed journalism
    To: Journolist

    Luke--i think primary challenges are valid in some cases. I'd vote for Sestak over Specter in a heartbeat. They are much more tricky in the House...As for Greenwald, he knows little about politics, less about journalism and cares not a whit about the national security of the United States. I find the Limbaugh-like, knee-jerk devotion of his flock depressing.

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: journolist@googlegroups.com
    Sent: Sat Aug 29 16:54:11 2009
    Subject: [ JournoList] Re: A letter from Mr. Billy Ralph Bierbaum of
    Waxahachie, Texas re: condensed journalism

    Joe
    You are arguing with a straw man. No one here is "more interested in whacking moderates than in making sure that moderate districts are represented by Democrats rather than Republicans." No one is calling for a Naderite heightening of the contradictions.

    Why do you insist on characterizing people who disagree with your tactical assessments as "self-righteous political naifs" hellbent on achieving some sort of solipsistic emotional release by way of "purges" and "litmus tests"? That hardly seems civil.

    In any case, the question before us is: Are primary challenges a useful means of achieving liberal policy goals? I think they are, based not only on basic human logic and my personal preference for more rather than less democracy, but also on the concrete example of Arlen Specter's recent and pleasing ideological evolution.

    You seem to think they are not. Other than suggesting that a theoretical victory by a theoretical liberal in a theoretically conservative district could, theoretically, throw a Democratic seat to Republicans, what is the actual evidence from cases that is causing you to reject the validity of one half of the entire democratic process?

    The whole exchange is amusing, even if the leak isn't.

  2. Above Average Jane writes up a detailed report from a town hall on women's health care that Congressman Sestak held with Lynn Yeakel in Bryn Mawr. Congressman Sestak also held health care townhalls over the past week in Philadelphia, Harrisburg, and Lancaster.

  3. Arlen Specter is having difficulty selling tickets to his fundraiser with President Obama in two weeks. So, according to PA Progressive, Pennsylvania State chair TJ Rooney is giving away $1,000 tickets to hundreds of state committee members for free:

    Senator Specter promised the county Chairs free tickets to his upcoming $1000/person event in Philadelphia with President Obama.  TJ Rooney then announced the Senator will pay for every state committee person to attend.  This makes me thing the Senator is having trouble selling tickets if he has to begin tickets away at $1000 apiece.  It'll remain to be seen if he can buy off committee people for a thousand bucks a pop.  This hits me as trying to buy votes.

  4. PA Progressive also got a video of Congressman Sestak talking at the Pennsylvania State Democratic Committee meeting over the weekend:

  5. As the number of people in danger of losing their homes continuing to increase, Congressman Sestak has been keeping his office open seven days a week and designating two staff members to help out constituents. From the Delco Times:

    For the Mignognas, Strohl, Bettcher and the Fuciles, their journey brought them to Sestak's door.

    "Your office did more for me in two weeks than two attorneys that I had hired in a year and a half," Strohl said.

    Bettcher said she was unsuccessful trying to refinance until she called Sestak.

    "Two days later, I got a response," she said. "I've probably talked more to (Sestak's office) than my family members in the past few months to keep me from becoming a statistic."

    Partly because of this, Sestak has kept his office open seven days a week.

    In 2007, his office fielded 49 housing-related calls. Last year, it jumped to 224. This year, he expects to take more than 500.

    "A lot of these are just conforming loans, 30 years," Sestak said. "People had it and all of a sudden, something happened."

    The congressman has designated two staff members, Sean Kelly and Bill Walsh, to handle the cases.

    The above excerpt is a small part of a longer story about how an effective member of Congress can make a real difference in the lives of local residents. Check it out.

  6. As Republican Gubernatorial candidate Chris Christie continues to face questions around the politically motivated firing of US Attorneys, Blue Jersey asks, 'What does Arlen Specter know about the U.S. Attorneys Scandal?

    Another thing we learned years ago was that the entire scheme was made possible by Senator Arlen Specter, who quietly changed the law allowing US Attorneys to be replaced.  Without this change, President Bush could have threatened to fire Christie and the other USA's, but he would not have been able to easily replace them with political hacks. Apparently, Specter inserted the changes to benefit Bush and the Republican party--and after all, it's easy to guess at his motives since Bush and Rove saved in him in his 2004 primary contest, and Republican control of the Senate rested on the upcoming 2006 elections.

  7. The biggest campaign even of the week will take place on Wednesday from 6-8 pm when Congressman Sestak debates Republican frontrunner Pat Toomey. It will be broadcast live on JoeSestak.com, and takes place in Allentown at Muhlenberg For ticket requests call (610) 891-8956 or send an email to townhall@joesestak.com.
Does anyone else find it impossible to to not start singing the Bill Joel song of the same name whenever  they hear about Allentown?
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Sestak to Debate Toomey

by: Adam Bink

Fri Aug 21, 2009 at 15:30

Update: Sestak will be on Hardball today at 5:10 PM EST.

This should be interesting. Will Snarlin' Arlen show up?

Allentown, PA - Today, U.S. Senate candidate Pat Toomey accepted an invitation issued by Rep. Joe Sestak to participate in a town hall meeting on health care on September 2, 2009 at Muhlenberg College in Allentown.  The invitation was issued after Mr. Toomey engaged the Congressman in an exchange over health care several days ago.  Mr. Toomey also suggested that the two campaigns invite Muhlenberg College's Dr. Christopher Borick to moderate the meeting.

"I eagerly accept Congressman Sestak's gracious invitation, and look forward to our respective campaigns working out the logistics over the next couple of days," Mr. Toomey said.  "I'm happy to welcome Joe to the great city of Allentown and I'd extend to him an invitation to share a beer with me at one of our fine local establishments after the town hall meeting."

"Our health care system desperately needs reform, and Joe and I agree that a thoughtful and constructive policy discussion is a good way to move the ball forward."

"While I look forward to a substantive debate about honest differences with Congressman Sestak, I wish such an exchange was possible with Arlen Specter.  Unfortunately, with Senator Specter, one never knows which Arlen Specter will show up-the May 2009 version who opposed a public health care option, or the August 2009 version who ardently supports it.  Either way, I would be interested in having a similar discussion with Senator Specter and hereby extend to him an invitation to participate with me in a separate town hall meeting on health care."

Sestak's response:


"Pat, I look forward to such an exchange; how about a great town hall on health care?  Does the evening of September 2nd, in your home town of Allentown at Muhlenberg College, work for you?   We'll have a great discussion of the health care reform effort.  I want to show you the light on the public health care option! What do you say?"

Also, pretty cool that Toomey accepted what was an initial challenge via Twitter:

I challenge @ToomeyForSenate to a health care town hall in his home town: http://bit.ly/IUhex #sestak #toomey #publicoption

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Specter Takes Hit From Protests?

by: Chris Bowers

Thu Aug 13, 2009 at 12:00

Disclaimer: I am working for Joe Sestak's campaign. Follow the campaign on the official website, on Twitter and on Facebook. Contribute at Act Blue

Arlen Specter has received more press for having right-wing protesters yell at him than any other Senator. According too a new Rasmussen poll, it doesn't seem to be helping him electorally:

Rasmussen, 8/11, 1,000 LVs (6/16 numbers in parenthesis)
Pennsylvania Senate general election

Toomey: 48 (39)
Specter: 36 (50)

Toomey: 43 (35)
Sestak: 35 (41)

Pennsylvania Senate primary election
Specter: 47 (51)
Sestak: 34 (32)

Here are my thoughts on this poll (they do not necessarily reflect the thoughts of Joe Sestak):

  1. Rasmussen may ask pro-Republican questions on issue polls and commentary, but I have never seen a reason to discount their election polls.

  2. It is just one poll, and needs confirmation from other sources before being taken as an overall trend.

  3. Both Specter and Sestak have lost ground in the general election, reflecting a deteriorating political environment for Democrats in general.

  4. Specter, who has received massive press attention for the negative reaction at his town halls, dropped 7% more against Toomey than Sestak. He also lost 6% against Sestak in the primary.

  5. Given all of this, it is hard to see how the "extreme protesters vs. Democratic politicians: media narrative is helping Democrats right now. No politician has received more attention in this narrative than Arlen Specter, and a poll taken after his town hall in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, shows him losing substantial ground.
While it may be easy to dismiss the vague, abstract Gallup poll released on the protests yesterday, polling on Specter is far, far more difficult to dismiss. The extensive attention he has received makes him the perfect test case, really.

As I argued earlier this week, we want a people vs. the powerful debate on health care, and it seems like we are getting one. Unfortunately, the version we are getting is wingnut protesters versus Democratic politicians, instead of average Americans versus a broken, for-profit health care system. No matter how crazy those protesters may seem, it is still going to come off as individual Americans versus politicians. Many Americans will be sympathetic with anyone standing up to politicians, purely out of spite.

The "wingnut protesters are crazy" narrative doesn't seem to be working. Certainly, it hasn't been helpful for politicians like Specter to video of protesters yelling at them spread all over the airwaves and internets. I think that we in progressive media have gone overboard in focusing on right-wing protesters.

Follow the Sestak campaign on the official website, on Twitter and on Facebook. Contribute at Act Blue

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Darrell Issa Hates 9/11 Heroes, Who Loves Darrell Issa's Money?

by: Lucas O'Connor

Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 13:21

Cross posted at Calitics

So as we've established by now, Darrell Issa thinks very little of 9/11 rescue workers and would prefer that the federal government not concern itself with their welfare.  Cause according to him, 9/11 is not and presumably was not a national issue.  We've also established that he has no qualms about throwing federal money around on local pork as long as it benefits him directly.  So the next logical question for me is "oh hey, are there any familiar names that don't mind taking Darrell Issa's money?"  As you may or may not know, Darrell Issa is filthy rich.  So he's spread a lot of money around on Republicans and conservative causes.  So as it turns out, there are quite a lot of Republicans currently running around the Capitol funded in part by Darrell Issa (partial list):

There's More... :: (2 Comments, 461 words in story)
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