“You didn’t mess up.”
— Sasha Obama, quoted by NBC News, whispering to her father after he took the oath of office yesterday.
“You didn’t mess up.”
— Sasha Obama, quoted by NBC News, whispering to her father after he took the oath of office yesterday.
White House adviser David Plouffe told ABC News that despite
Republican warnings that the tax debate is over, President Obama would
not accept a budget deal without additional revenue.
Said Plouffe: “We are goiing to require some more revenues. John Boehner himself said he thought there was $800 billion in revenue from closing loopholes. We’ve dealt with the tax rate issue. Now it’s about loopholes.”
Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) had the same message on Meet the Press: “We’re going to do a
budget this year, and it’s going to have revenues in it. And our
Republican colleagues better get used to that fact.”
President Obama’s public swearing-in ceremony begins at 11:30 am ET today. He officially started his second term yesterday with a private ceremony.
First Read: “Looking back at some of the most recent second inaugural addresses, they’ve typically been a continuation of that president’s first-term message (and re-election theme). For Bill Clinton, it was preparing the country for the 21st Century. For George W. Bush, it was security and freedom. And if that continuation theme is any guide, expect Obama to talk A LOT about rebuilding the middle class. After all, it was the central theme of his re-election campaign.”
Associated Press: “Inaugural addresses are not typically partisan, and White House aides
say Obama doesn’t intend to call out his political opponents. But they
say he will stand up for his values and vision that were supported by
the majority of voters in the November election. Obama’s prepared text
notes that spirited debate is a hallmark of a vibrant democracy, aides
say, but that the country’s leaders can’t let disagreement prevent them
from finding common ground to move the country forward. The president
also plans to encourage Americans to continue making their voices heard
to shape the debate as policy is made, aides said.”
Carrie Dann: “From drunken speeches to dead canaries, a guide to our quirky inaugural history.”
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The New York Times notes that New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan (D) was among the people to join Vice President Joe Biden, his family and close
political associates at the vice president’s residence for his official
swearing-in ceremony yesterday. And the night before, Biden attended a
pre-inaugural party of Democrats from Iowa.
Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal notes Biden “is expected to visit a Latino inaugural ball on Sunday
night at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, reaching
out to a fast-growing constituency that helped the Obama-Biden ticket
win in 2008 and again last year. For his swearing-in earlier in the day,
Mr. Biden selected Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who is of Hispanic
heritage, to administer the oath of office.”
First Read: “The governor of New Hampshire? Partying with Iowa Democrats? Hmmmmmm….
In all seriousness, he’s been carefully laying the groundwork with Iowa
and New Hampshire Democrats for months. Throughout the re-election, he
was keeping tabs on those key early states, congratulating winners
there, etc. Sitting VPs may be Jay Leno punching bags, but they are
familiar to activists.”
Though Obama re-election campaign manager Jim Messina will stay on as the unpaid national chair of “Organizing for Action” — the campaign-turned-advocacy group — he won’t be involved in the operation’s nuts and bolts, BuzzFeed reports.
“Messina’s next big move — after
managing the biggest presidential campaign in the history of politics —
seems as much a mystery to him as it does to his friends and political
observers. He says that what he told the Montanan in 2009 — that
he’d die running campaigns — still stands, but yet he readily admits
that can’t see himself managing a congressional or gubernatorial race,
or even another presidential race. Not in the near future, at least. And
the most political of political staffers say he hasn’t quite figured
out that next move.”
David Maraniss:
“Even now, on Day 1,460 of his presidency, the question persists: Who
is he, really? There is a common refrain that Obama seems elusive, if
not mysterious; less easily categorized and understood than the last
Democratic president. Bill Clinton’s traits were so extra-large and
variegated, for better and worse, that something in him seemed to
connect to almost anybody and anything. No doubt Obama is a different
breed of cat. Aspects of his political personality are less vivid than
Clinton’s. But he is not overly elusive. His mystery is hiding in plain
sight. There is a pattern to his behavior, just as there was with
Clinton. Where Clinton was protean, Obama is more slowly evolving.
People tend to forget, or underestimate, that he had scant executive
experience before becoming president. Behind his veneer of ultra-cool
control he was struggling to figure things out. Now, after four years,
his presidential identity has started to approach its full shape, which
will become clearer from now to 2016.”
Nevada assemblyman Steven Brooks (D) is in jail, arrested for threatening Speaker-elect Marilyn Kirkpatrick (D), the Las Vegas Sun reports.
“A source said he was arrested with a loaded gun after threatening to shoot Kirkpatrick… Another Democratic source with knowledge of the situation said Brooks publicly threatened to harm Kirkpatrick because he was unhappy with the committee assignments given to him by Kirkpatrick.”
“Democratic sources with knowledge of the caucus said that Brooks’
behavior in caucus meetings had been ‘erratic’ and leadership had begun
documenting his behavior.”
“We’ve talked a lot about this. We have spent a lot of time trying to figure out both what to pursue but also these issues of making sure you’re bringing the same sort of energy and same sort of focus as the first term. If you stay in that zone, I think you avoid a lot of those potential dangers.”
— White House adviser David Plouffe, quoted by the New York Times, on avoiding second term pitfalls.
“President Obama will be quietly sworn into office for a second term just before noon on Sunday in a brief White House ceremony, a day before Monday’s far showier public inaugural events, adhering to a long tradition of doing so out of the public eye when Jan. 20 falls on a Sunday,” the New York Times reports.
“The oath is to be administered by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. in the Blue Room, an elegant, gilded space with a sweeping view of the South Lawn. The bare-bones ceremony, typically lasting no more than three minutes, will satisfy the constitutional requirement that the president’s swearing-in take place by noon on the Jan. 20 after an election.”
Washington Post: “The day began with a morning swearing-in ceremony for Vice President Joe Biden, committing him to four more years as the nation’s second in command. Biden then joined the president at Arlington National Cemetery for a wreath-laying ceremony on a crisp, sun-splashed January day.”
Associated Press: “Presidential terms are measured by sweeping laws and stirring events, but legacies are about enduring ideas. The one Barack Obama has in mind will drive most everything he tries to do in the next four years: assuring that America is a place where anyone can make it.”
“This is the playbook of a Democrat who thinks the basic compact between a nation and its people has been broken, who sees government as more of an aggressive force for good than a bureaucratic menace to society.”
A terrifying video shows a Bulgarian politician surviving an assassination attempt early today when a man stormed the stage and held a gun to his head as he was giving a speech. The gun misfires and the suspect was tackled the ground by bystanders before he could get off another shot.
The Daily Mail has pictures from the scene.
“They are used to defend our property and our families and our faith and our freedom, and they are absolutely essential to living the way God intended for us to live.”
— California Rep. Tim Donnelly (R), talking about guns on The Bottom Line.
“House Republicans appeared to be coming to grips with a stark realization as they returned to Washington from a three-day retreat here — they have a majority in name only,” The Hill reports.
“The party begins the 113th Congress with reduced numbers and confronting a popular president and an increased Democratic majority in the Senate. Preparing for a cascade of fiscal battles and a presidential push on guns and immigration, the House GOP is adopting a minority posture, hoping to achieve modest goals incrementally while serving as a check on Obama’s ambitious second-term agenda.”
Bolivian lawmaker Domingo Alcibia Rivera “was caught on camera allegedly raping a colleague on the Parliament floor on December 20th after an alcohol-fueled holiday luncheon. But until the video was leaked this week, the story was hushed up,” Jezebel reports.
“The video shows several people placing an unconscious woman in a chair as Rivera approaches. Everyone leaves but Rivera remains and, once the lights are out, he appears to rape her. He is interrupted when the lights go back on and people re-enter the room. They then proceed to prop the woman back up in her chair.”
Gallup will no longer be conducting polls for USA Today, the Washington Post reports.
“It’s not clear at this point which side broke off the arrangement or what the reason was” but USA Today says it “is in the final stages of negotiating an arrangement with another polling organization.”
Stephen Colbert’s sister is going to run for Congress, BuzzFeed reports.
Elizabeth Colbert-Busch will run in the special election for appointed Sen. Tim Scott’s (R-SC) old House seat.
She will file officially on Tuesday, the Washington Post notes.
A federal grand jury charged former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin (D) with 21 counts of corruption, bribery, conspiracy, money laundering, wire fraud and filing false tax returns, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reports.
Nagin’s long-expected indictment arrived more than two and a half years after he left City Hall and relocated to Dallas.
“Backing down from their hard-line stance, House Republicans said Friday that they would agree to lift the federal government’s statutory borrowing limit for three months, with a requirement that both chambers of Congress pass a budget in that time to clear the way for negotiations on long-term deficit reduction,” the New York Times reports.
But the Washington Post notes the strategy “faces an uncertain future with Democrats, who fear that dragging out the debt ceiling fight into the spring would inject new and harmful uncertainty into the economy.”
Mark Halperin: “Right now, the most important dynamic in the fiscal cliff fight is the advantages the Democrats have: the President is more popular than congressional Republicans; Democrats are more united than Republicans on strategy and tactics; and the President is about to have unmatchable platforms with the inauguration and State of the Union.”
Taegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.
Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.
Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.
Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.
Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.
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