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The Austere Life of Uruguay’s President

January 7, 2013 at 1:25 pm EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

New York Times: “Some world leaders live in palaces. Some enjoy perks like having a discreet butler, a fleet of yachts or a wine cellar with vintage Champagnes. Then there is José Mujica, the former guerrilla who is Uruguay’s president. He lives in a run-down house on Montevideo’s outskirts with no servants at all. His security detail: two plainclothes officers parked on a dirt road.”

“His net worth upon taking office in 2010 amounted to about $1,800 — the value of the 1987 Volkswagen Beetle parked in his garage. He never wears a tie and donates about 90 percent of his salary, largely to a program for expanding housing for the poor.”

Bonus Quote of the Day

January 7, 2013 at 12:00 pm EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“I want to give him the space to make his own decision. I’ve announced my intention to run, but the reality is – is we’ve got a good Senator. He’s been loyal. He’s been there for a long time. And I think that he’s got a decision to make.”

— Newark Mayor Cory Booker (D), in an interview with CNN, on Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ), whose seat he wants to run for in 2014.

How Much Does Barney Frank Want to be a Senator?

January 7, 2013 at 11:31 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

The Boston Globe reports former Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) “is dialing back his opposition to the pending nomination of former senator Chuck Hagel as secretary of defense, saying he is willing to look past the Nebraska Republican’s comments about gays because it is more important that his views prevail on drawing down the war in Afghanistan and reducing wasteful defense spending.”

Frank is angling for the appointment to Sen. John Kerry’s (D-MA) seat should he resign to become secretary of state. The confirmation of Hagel could be one of the first votes for the new interim senator.


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Why the Hagel Nomination is a Big Deal

January 7, 2013 at 11:24 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Peter Beinhart: “What makes Hagel so important, and so threatening to the Republican
foreign-policy elite, is that he is one of the few prominent
Republican-aligned politicians and commentators (George Will and Francis
Fukuyama are others, but such voices are rare) who was intellectually
changed by Iraq. And Hagel was changed, in large measure, because he
bore within him intellectual (and physical) scar tissue from Vietnam…. the Iraq War sparked something visceral in Hagel, as the former Vietnam
rifleman realized that, once again, detached and self-interested elites
were sending working-class kids like himself to die in a war they
couldn’t honestly defend.”

Andrew Sullivan: “To my mind, this is his core qualification. Unlike so many of the
lemmings and partisans of Washington DC, Hagel actually called out the
catastrophe of the Iraq War as it happened. The neocons cannot forgive
him for exposing what they wrought on the nation and the world.”

Wonk Wire: Hagel would give Obama policy cover.

Lawmaker Who Voted Against Hurricane Relief Once Sought It

January 7, 2013 at 10:32 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Rep. Steven Palazzo (R-MS) voted against relief for victims of Hurricane Sandy last week, TPM reports, “despite representing coastal Mississippi, one of the regions hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina and a top beneficiary of Katrina disaster aid.”

In fact, Palazzo “was deeply involved in pressing for federal dollars in the fall of 2005. Then acting in his role as a local government official, Palazzo repeatedly appealed for federal funding to help rebuild his battered coastal Mississippi community in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.”

Could the Voting Rights Act be Struck Down?

January 7, 2013 at 10:30 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Jeffrey Toobin writes that “after the 2010 midterm elections, nineteen states passed laws that put up barriers to voting, including new photo-I.D. and proof-of-citizenship requirements, and restrictions on early and absentee voting. In most of those states, Republicans controlled the governorship and the legislature. The purported justification for the changes was to limit in-person voter fraud, but that claim was fraudulent itself, since voter fraud is essentially nonexistent.”

“It is against this backdrop that, next month, the Supreme Court will take up a challenge to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the most effective law of its kind in the history of the United States. A century after the Civil War, the act, in abolishing many forms of discrimination employed by the Southern states, such as poll taxes and literacy tests, finally turned the legal right for African-Americans in those states to vote into an actual right to vote. Bipartisan congressional majorities have reauthorized the law four times, most recently in 2006. (It passed the House overwhelmingly and the Senate unanimously, and was signed into law by George W. Bush.) The question now is whether the Supreme Court will strike down the Voting Rights Act as a violation of states’ rights.”

Can Hagel Be Confirmed?

January 7, 2013 at 10:00 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

President Obama will nominate former Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) to be the next secretary of defense, but many predict a tough confirmation fight as he has vocal critics on both the left and the right.

The Week has a good summary of the issues.

Jon Karl: “Senate Democrats tell me there is no guarantee Hagel will win confirmation and that, as of right now, there are enough Democratic Senators with serious concerns about Hagel to put him below 50 votes. The bottom line:  He may ultimately win confirmation, but not before a bloody fight in the Senate.”

Mark Halperin: “If Hagel has a good confirmation sherpa and performs well in his courtesy calls and at his hearings, he will likely be confirmed. But/and at a pretty high cost. Expect a LOT of people to want to testify against him. And don’t rule out a filibuster of this nomination, which would, obviously, change the math.”

First Read: “What message would it send if Hagel — a decorated war hero, a Vietnam
vet, a two-term senator who served in office without scandal — doesn’t
get confirmed?”

Quote of the Day

January 7, 2013 at 9:54 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“It’s typical of Congress, it’s typical of unions, it’s typical of companies, I guess, where a small group is really carrying the ball and the others aren’t necessarily in agreement. The NRA is another place where the membership, if you do the polling, doesn’t agree with the leadership.”

— New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, quoted by the New York Times, comparing teachers’ unions to the National Rifle Association.

Boehner’s Bomb Squad

January 7, 2013 at 9:07 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Ross Douthat says House Speaker John Boehner “has done his country a more important service over the last two years than almost any other politician in Washington.”

“That service hasn’t been the achievement of a grand bargain with the White House, which he has at times assiduously sought. Nor has it been the sweeping triumph over liberalism that certain right-wing activists expect him to somehow gain. Rather, it’s been a kind of disaster management — a sequence of bomb-defusal operations that have prevented our dysfunctional government from tipping into outright crisis.”

Team of Mentors

January 7, 2013 at 9:04 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

National Journal: “During the 2008 campaign, then-candidate Barack Obama spoke of his admiration for President Lincoln’s Team of Rivals approach to picking his Cabinet, referring to the book by Doris Kearns Goodwin. Obama later selected his No. 1 Democratic rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton, as his secretary of State. But what Obama is now assembling is more of a Team of Mentors, a group of old lions of the Senate who, along with Biden, helped to shape Obama’s worldview during his brief stint as a freshman senator before he ran for president.”

Battle Lines Drawn Over Taxes Again

January 7, 2013 at 8:58 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“Republicans won’t accept further tax increases in coming budget and debt negotiations, the party’s Senate leader said Sunday, putting GOP lawmakers on a collision course with Democrats over raising the government’s borrowing limit,” the Wall Street Journal reports.

Democrats are signalling they want “to raise as much as $1 trillion in new revenues through tax reform later this year to balance Republican demands to slash mandatory spending,” The HIll reports.

The Cloakroom: When everything is off the table.

McChrystal Explains Why He Resigned

January 7, 2013 at 7:17 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

Out today: My Share of the Task: A Memoir by retired Gen. Stanley McChrystal.

Reuters reports the book “offers McChrystal’s first assessment of the events that led to his resignation. It depicts a U.S. military in Afghanistan struggling to find a strategy for success at a time of Taliban resurgence and an inexperienced White House skeptical of the war and sensitive to criticism.”

“The general portrays himself as well-meaning but slow to understand the administration’s political sensitivities and undercut by his failure to grasp the dynamics of the situation. He wrote that he wanted to operate as independently as possible of political or even policy pressures.”

Obama to Announce Hagel, Brennan Picks

January 7, 2013 at 7:10 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

President Obama will nominate former Sen. Chuck Hagel as his next defense secretary and counterterrorism adviser John Brennan to lead the Central Intelligence Agency, “two potentially controversial picks for his second-term national security team,” the AP reports.

“Hagel, even before being nominated, has faced tough criticism from congressional Republicans who say the former GOP senator is anti-Israel and soft on Iran. And Brennan, a 25-year CIA veteran, withdrew from consideration for the spy agency’s top job in 2008 amid questions about his connection to enhanced interrogation techniques during the George W. Bush administration.”

Obama will announce the picks at a White House event Monday afternoon.

Senator’s Son Arrested

January 7, 2013 at 6:20 am EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

The 19-year-old son of Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) “was charged with underage drinking and disorderly conduct after being arrested over the weekend at North Carolina’s Charlotte Douglas International Airport,” CNN reports.

Extra Bonus Quote of the Day

January 6, 2013 at 8:40 pm EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“I need this job like I need a hole in the head.”

— House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), in an interview with the Wall Street Journal.

Boehner Coup Attempt Larger Than Previously Known

January 6, 2013 at 8:15 pm EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

A concerted effort to oust House Speaker John Boehner “was under way the day of his re-election to the position, but participants called it off 30 minutes before the House floor vote,” Roll Call reports.

“A group of disaffected conservatives had agreed to vote against the Ohio lawmaker if they could get at least 25 members to join the effort. But one member, whose identity could not be verified, rescinded his or her participation the morning of the vote, leaving the group one person short of its self-imposed 25-member threshold. Only 17 votes against Boehner were required to force a second ballot, but the group wanted to have insurance.”

“Even with 24 members, the group would easily have been able to force a
second ballot round, but the effort was aborted in frenetic discussions
on the House floor.”

It’s the Backdrop, Stupid

January 6, 2013 at 7:33 pm EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

The Cloakroom: When politicians forget what’s behind them.

GOP Dissension Over Debt-Ceiling Strategy

January 6, 2013 at 2:32 pm EST By Taegan Goddard Leave a Comment

“There are early signs of division within the Republican Party over how to approach the upcoming debate over raising the federal debt ceiling,” the Washington Post reports.

“On Friday, a top Senate Republican signaled that members of his party should be prepared to play hardball and be willing to accept the kind of consequences in each previous fight they’ve threatened but managed to avoid… But other Republicans counseled caution, warning that pressure from the business community and the public to raise the $16.4 trillion federal borrowing limit renders untenable any threats not to do so and will weaken the GOP’s hand if their stance is perceived to be a bluff.”

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Freedom Riders: Freedom riders were northerners who took interstate buses down to the south in order to protest Jim Crow and segregation policies.

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About Political Wire

goddard-bw-snapshotTaegan 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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