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Lot of potential drama here. twitter.com/RealTimers/sta…
Lot of potential drama here. twitter.com/RealTimers/sta…
No fair raising expectations to where they actually are. twitter.com/ByronYork/stat…
Attn: @ScottWalker — Jeb!, Rubio, Hillary can’t run a DPP style populist campaign. You can. #nobrainer on.ft.com/1BrbQZZ
Populist immigration-control party surges in Denmark election, unseats government, outpolls its coalition partner on.ft.com/1BrbQZZ
“New York Times Almost Gets It Right on H-1Bs” cis.org/miano/new-york…
Vox: 1) “Obamas trade bill died last week. There’s no Plan B” vox.com/2015/6/16/8791… Take 2) Here is Plan B vox.com/2015/6/16/8793…
Is it possible to hit the Hey-I’m-Bicultural Latino theme too hard? Jeb seems determined to find out theatlantic.com/politics/archi…
What Jeb left out — @davidfrum seems to have him pegged theatlantic.com/politics/archi…
Upshot: Walker has to do something to get social conservative/evangelical vote. I guess everyone knew that? … bloombergview.com/articles/2015-…
Shorter @politico: They don’t have the votes to pass Senate trade bill politico.com/story/2015/06/…
“Our challenge now is less to increase globalization than to make the globalization we have work for our citizens.” wpo.st/EsnL0
.@ezraklein‘s right-this is odd piece. Says not passing TPP would be “catastrophic” then gives reasons not to pass it wpo.st/EsnL0
Summers says concerns that TPP may undermine US law on immigration & financial regulation “must be taken seriously” wpo.st/BrnL0
Key point–Combined Senate-like TAA & TPP bill “would not pass the chamber.” No wonder there’s a “procedural snafu” politico.com/story/2015/06/…
Reihan Salam: Welcome to the race, Jeb—now drop out. slate.com/articles/news_…
Rubio’s position seems clear enough: He flipped on Gang of 8 when he discovered he’d been lying about it to con GOPs dailycaller.com/2013/04/22/did…
It’s time for Poynter to apologize to Romenesko wp.me/p2G7FK-481
So @GroverNorquist‘s no-tax pledge is going to stop GOPs from saving TAA and the trade deal? breitbart.com/big-government… I doubt it
Hillary’s Relaunch: @davidfrum must have seen a different speech than the one I didn’t see kausfiles.com/2015/06/14/hil…
Five things that *weren’t* in Hillary’s speech (as long as it was) kausfiles.com/2015/06/14/hil…
Hillary’s big speech: The Dogma That Didn’t Bark! kausfiles.com/2015/06/14/hil…
Hillary’s re-launch speech: It’s here. (I didn’t see it, I read it later.)
1) It’s a pretty good speech if you ignore the middle 40%, which is the Power Point of a SOTU address she may never get to give. That was sort of like the drum solo in the middle of an Iron Butterfly concert. At least the typical SOTU address has an impressively pointillist level of detail (“We will negotiate the third round of the Law of the Sea…”). This didn’t even have that.
2) The opening passages, about how Hillary is going to “make our economy work for you and for every American,” hit the key point. But a) didn’t her husband promise that if we re-elected Obama, we would “feel it” — it being the recovery? I think he did! Guess that didn’t happen. Why? b) Hillary offers astonishingly little in the way of policies that might reverse the “powerful currents” moving in the direction of greater money inequality. At least Obama had a concrete vision — labor unions, empowered by “card check” legislation, were going to win for workers a greater share of productivity gains. That was deeply misguided, but it was something to latch onto. Hillary has nothing similar. She’s going to fight so you can “receive your work schedule with enough notice to arrange child care.” That’s not reversing the inequality tide! That’s trying to help a few people stay afloat in the inequality tide. Maybe its enough.
3) Come to think of it, there was zero mention of the role unionism would play in Hillary’s economic plan. Maybe that is because they have no role? The word “union” only gets mentioned twice, in boilerplate lists of American institutions (“in our families, in our businesses, unions, houses of worship, schools”). The omission’s especially striking in a speech that’s supposed to fire up the Democratic base — rivalling Hillary’s failure to mention Social Security and Medicare.
4) David Frum offers a provocative interpretation of the speech as a rejection of Obama’s lofty 2008 pitch for unity and leadership — in favor of a non-naive, fight-back vision of Dem groups taking from GOP groups:
Hillary Clinton’s speech had to be long because the coalition she seeks to assemble is made up of so many different sub-units, each of which needed to be assured that its claim would be included in the total: unauthorized immigrants, indebted college students, working mothers … schoolteachers …Obamacare enrollees …: a coalition of interest groups who may not always recognize each other as allies and who cannot automatically be relied upon to show up on voting day.
The Coalition of the Dependent! That’s a slightly nightmarish, if not inaccurate, vision of politics of a modern campaign. But it’s not the speech that I’m reading here on the Web. Hillary’s actual text has plenty of appeals to “unity” and descriptions of how her leadership will bring both sides of the class divide together. She trumpets hidden “allies for change” in business and finance. She denounces “extreme partisanship,” while posing as the problem-solving middlewoman. (A few hours after the speech she triangulated on trade.) She’ll fight back — not against rich, white married GOPs, but “against those who would drive us apart.” Hard to believe youthful Daily Kossacks will be satisfied with this version of 2004’s Fight Club progressivism. But then they are older now.
5) Nor did I see much of Brian Beutler’s anti-triangluation — the taking of aggressive “progressive issue positions” that expose half-hearted Republican moves to the center. Hillary hardly mentions the biggest of those aggressive positions (on immigration) and certainly doesn’t announce any new ones, whether on social insurance or general income redistribution. Not even an attack on the carried interest loophole. As predicted, Beutler’s lucky he wrote his piece before Hillary proved him wrong.
6) Worst sign of speeches to come: “Using additional fees and royalties from fossil fuel extraction to … ease the transition for distressed communities to a more diverse and sustainable economic future …” That was during the drum solo.
Don’t tell the Dem Fight Club, but at 1:52 into this Hillary … triangulates. youtube.com/watch?v=ZP6T_8… #nothtattheresanythingwrongwithit