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GOOD NEWS
On Sunday, Major League Baseball players used symbolic pink bats for
Mother's Day. The bats will be auctioned off, and the funds will be
earmarked for breast
cancer research as well as treatment and public-awareness
initiatives.
STATE WATCH
IRAQ: Sens. Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) and Ted Kennedy (D-MA) launch an effort
showing how local communities and everyday Americans are impacted by
the war.
FLORIDA:
A new poll reveals that 71 percent of Floridians "support immediate
legislative action to cut green house gas emissions."
MICHIGAN:
A state investigation finds "evidence of racism and a culture of
oppression and fear" in Michigan's Department of Natural Resources.
TEXAS: A
Dallas suburb becomes the first in the nation to prohibit landlords
from renting to undocumented immigrants.
BLOG WATCH
THINK
PROGRESS: House conservatives: "There is no liberal-conservative
divide over Iraq."
EZRA
KLEIN: "As measured by coalition deaths per day, we are now in the
most violent twelve-month stretch of the four year occupation of Iraq."
THE
NEWSHOGGERS: "Death squad tolls in Baghdad rising again."
RISING
HEGEMON: Reality proves pro-war pundit Kimberly Kagan wrong
on Iraq.
DAILY GRILL
"I never said...Iraq was
responsible for Sept. 11."
-- Richard Perle, 5/11/07
VERSUS
"We do know, for example,
that Saddam Hussein has ties to Osama bin Laden."
-- Perle, 9/16/01
ARCHIVES
Progress Report
STUDENTS
Politics with an Attitude: Everyone from Barack Obama to Stephen Colbert talks to Campus Progress. Right-wingers seem scared of us. Find out why here. |
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by Faiz Shakir, Nico Pitney, Amanda Terkel,
Satyam Khanna, and Matt Corley
IMMIGRATION No More Delay
"I
am optimistic
we can pass a comprehensive immigration bill and get
this problem solved for the American people this year," President Bush
said last week, putting "pressure
on senators as
they prepare to hold a vote on the issue this week." The need for
comprehensive immigration reform is greater than ever, as our current
system is
broken. Between 1990 and 2005, the number of undocumented immigrants doubled to 12
million while the size of the U.S. Border Patrol tripled in the same period. To address the growing number of undocumented
immigrants in the U.S., comprehensive immigration reform gained
momentum in
Congress last year but ultimately was
stonewalled by the right wing. "To save what could be his last
hope for a major second-term domestic achievement," Bush is
continuing to call for
comprehensive reform this year, but his shift to more restrictive
measures on immigration is stalling
prospects of a fair reform package passing in Congress.
Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell (D) said Bush has compromised
his "basic principles" in his new plan, which would "restrict
workers'
ability to bring family members to the U.S. and [impose] a large
fee to seek citizenship."
BREAKING APART IMMIGRANT FAMILIES: "The Bush
administration has proposed managing the future flow of legal
immigration by stressing
job skills and education over family ties," a departure from the current system where "more
than 60 percent of all legal immigrants enter under family
preferences." "Our
immigration policy has long
respected the stability that family
ties bring. Relatives help set up family businesses; they pitch in
to
pay for children's education. ... Good immigration policy doesn't
simply
fill jobs; it reunites families as well." But under the White House's plan, "legal
immigrants would lose the right to petition to
bring adult children and siblings to the U.S. ... The proposal would limit or
end preferences for people who
had family members living legally in the U.S., and award many more
visas based on employability criteria, such as education and skills." Bush's plan would also require undocumented immigrants to pay thousands
in fines for a three-year work visa, and these visa
holders "also wouldn't be able to
bring family members to the U.S." This hard-line approach is being
brought to the negotiating table
by Sen. John Kyl (R-AZ) and other Senate conservatives. "Kyl wants a
temporary program --
workers would have to return to
their home country after three years and could
not bring family members unless their incomes exceed 150 percent of the poverty level and they
have health insurance." "Temporary means temporary," Kyl stated.
HARD-LINERS STALLING COMPREHENSIVE REFORM: Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) agreed last week to wait
until Wednesday to vote on whether to proceed with debate on
immigration legislation. Reid will "bring last
year's broad overhaul of immigration laws back to the floor of the
Senate," using it as "the instrument to build new [legislation]."
But Senate conservatives "have
threatened to block that motion" requesting even
more time to reach an agreement. Despite it passing with
overwhelming support last year, conservatives claim last year's
comprehensive reform legislation "is
not strict enough," reflecting their desire to take a "tougher
stand" on immigration. Such obstructionism is partly due to the
appointment of immigration hard-liners to the negotiating table and an
exodus of former comprehensive reform allies. "Republicans such as
John McCain and Sam Brownback have backed
away from last year's bill as they pursued presidential
campaigns. Sen.
Jon Kyl of Arizona, a foe of comprehensive reform in the past, is now
the leading negotiator for Senate Republicans, and is driving a hard
bargain." Subsequently, Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) said this year's
conservative proposal was "a
huge step backwards," citing concerns with the
"workability and fairness" of the plan. "If the Republicans hang
together in opposing cloture on the motion to
proceed, Reid will
not get the 60 votes he needs to move forward with
the bill. Many lawmakers have said failure at this point would likely
mean the bill would be dead for the year."
AMERICANS
WANT IMMIGRATION REFORM: "The American people have waited
long enough for immigration reform. The time is right, and the
result is up to us," said Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA). The attempts
of the White House to focus on more restrictive
measures, such as beefing up border security and breaking apart
families, are untenable. Instead,
"[w]e need
a comprehensive approach to immigration that will more
intelligently provide the skilled and unskilled labor that our country
needs through legal means, enable those living and working within the
United States to be better integrated into society, and allow the
Department of Homeland Security to focus its resources on actual
security threats at America’s borders and other ports of entry,"
states Center for American Progress fellow Dan Restrepo. Such a reform
package is supported by the vast majority of Americans. Seventy-six
percent of Americans want a comprehensive reform package and 59
percent believe undocumented immigrants who have been in America for
several years should gain
legal working status and the possibility of citizenship in the
future.
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Under the Radar
ENVIRONMENT -- U.S. ATTEMPTS TO WEAKEN G8 CLIMATE CHANGE STATEMENTS: Negotiators
from the United States are trying
to weaken the language of a climate change declaration set to be
unveiled at next month's G-8 summit. Germany has made global warming a
top priority for the summit. The Washington Post reports, "A draft
proposal dated April 2007 that is being debated in Bonn, Germany...by
senior officials of the Group of Eight includes a
pledge to limit the global temperature rise this century to 3.6 degrees
Fahrenheit, as well as an agreement to reduce worldwide greenhouse gas
emissions to 50 percent below 1990 levels by 2050. The United States is seeking
to strike that section, the documents show." The BBC adds that a
clause saying "climate change is speeding up and will
seriously damage our common natural environment and severely weaken
(the) global economy... resolute action is urgently needed in order to
reduce global greenhouse gas emissions" has been struck
out. So have a statement that "we are deeply concerned about
the latest findings confirmed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC)", and a commitment to send a "clear message" on
international efforts to combat global warming at the next round of UN
climate talks in December. U.S. negotiators also want to remove from
the draft firm
targets for improving energy efficiency in buildings and transport, and
a call for the establishment of a global carbon market. The White House
has a long
record of doctoring the findings of scientific experts on climate change. A report
presented to the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee by the Union of Concerned Scientists and
the Government Accountability
Project earlier this year revealed that half of
government scientists have felt pressured to downplay global
warming.
IRAQ -- ACTIVE DUTY GENERALS
WILL "REVOLT" AGAINST BUSH IF HE MAINTAINS ESCALATION INTO 2008: Appearing on NBC's Chris Matthews Show yesterday, Atlanta
Journal-Constitution editorial page editor Cynthia Tucker reveals that
sources within the military
are warning of "a revolt
from active-duty generals if September rolls around and the president
is sticking with the surge into '08.'" Noting that retired generals
such as Gen.
John Baptiste have already begun voicing their discontent with the
President's strategy in Iraq, Tucker added that the generals "don't
want
to fall by the wayside like the generals in Vietnam did, kept pushing a
war that they knew was lost." When President Bush vetoed the Iraq
timeline legislation earlier this month, he claimed that "the measure
would 'impose impossible conditions on our commanders in combat' by
forcing them to 'take
fighting directions from politicians 6,000 miles away in Washington, DC."
But despite past claims that "the right force level" will be determined
by "the
sober judgment of our military leaders," the Bush administration
has a
proven track record of disregarding the advice of military leaders.
As recently as last December, when the White House was first pushing
its escalation plan, the administration explicitly ignored "the
unanimous disagreement of the Joint Chiefs of Staff." If Tucker's
sources are correct, it appears the commanders on the ground in Iraq
are getting tired of "taking fighting directions" from the politician
"6,000 miles away" in the White House. And they might not stay quiet
for long.
ADMINISTRATION -- JUSTICE OFFICIALS
DETAIL MONICA GOODLING'S PARTISAN WITCH HUNT: Monica Goodling,
former counsel to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and former Justice
Department liaison to the White House, is viewed as an increasingly
pivotal figure in the U.S. Attorney scandal. In his recent testimony to Congress, former Deputy Attorney General Philip Comey said he
had "heard
rumors"
that Goodling was using
political criteria in making personnel decisions among non-political,
career staff. According to the New York Times, Goodling has let
partisanship pervade much of her job as White House liaison. "You
have a Monica problem,"
said a career Justice Department official. "She believes you’re a
Democrat and doesn't feel you can be trusted." With this
partisanship, Goodling has questioned applicants for civil service jobs
in
the Justice Department with questions ranging from who was their
favorite president and Supreme Court justice to "Have you ever cheated
on your wife?" "The people who spoke about Ms. Goodling’s role at
the
department, including eight current Justice Department lawyers and
staff, did so only on condition of anonymity for fear
of retribution.
Several added that they found her activities objectionable and damaging
to the integrity of the department." Goodling's testimony to Congress
is considered key in uncovering more details about the U.S. attorney
scandal, as she was given "extraordinary
authority over the hiring and firing of most non-civil-service employees of the
Justice Department" by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. "There's one big
wild card that's yet to be thrown into play, and that's Monica
Goodling." She is currently under
investigation by the DoJ for whether she "improperly assessed the
political loyalties of applicants for career assistant U.S. attorney
posts."
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Think Fast
“More than 50 Iraqis died Sunday in bombings, mortar
blasts and gunfire. Two U.S. soldiers also were killed, while 4,000
troops scoured an area southwest of Baghdad in search of three
soldiers apparently captured after an ambush Saturday that left
four U.S. soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter dead.”
Popular conservative blog RedState.org “will step
up its efforts this week to force Republican leaders to pull
Rep. Ken Calvert (R-CA) from the powerful Appropriations Committee.”
“The Senate launches a major debate on immigration
this week,
with shaky prospects for a comprehensive overhaul” that can
overcome a
conservative filibuster. “Republicans are insisting on rules
tougher
than those in last year’s Senate bill. They want longer
waits, bigger fines and a trip home to the country of origin.”
1: The number of Iraqi refugees resettled in the
United States in April. “The total since the fiscal year started
Oct. 1
is 69. At this rate, far from resettling 7,000, the State Department
will be lucky
to match last year’s total of 202.”
“The White House confirmed yesterday that the U.S. ambassador
in Baghdad is likely to meet in the next several weeks with
Iranian officials about stabilizing Iraq, as the
administration embraces
a tactic outsiders have long recommended as essential to reducing
sectarian violence in Iraq.”
New documents” suggest that World Bank president Paul
Wolfowitz “understood that his role in ordering a pay increase and
promotion for
his companion in 2005 might be seen as a conflict of interest but
insisted on proceeding anyway.”
“Nearly half the U.S. attorneys slated for removal by the
administration last year were targets of Republican complaints
that they were lax on voter fraud, including efforts
by presidential adviser Karl Rove to encourage more prosecutions of
election-law violations.”
“A Depression-era program to bring electricity to rural areas
is
using taxpayer money to provide billions of dollars in low-interest
loans to build coal plants even as Congress seeks ways to
limit greenhouse gas emissions. That government support is a major force behind the
rush to coal plants, which spew carbon dioxide that scientists
blame for global warming.”
And finally: “Expanding on his reason for saying at a debate
that an employer should be allowed to fire someone for being gay, Tommy
Thompson on Saturday blamed a dead hearing aid and his need to use the
bathroom.” “I was very sick the day of the debate. …
I could not wait
until the debate got off so I
could go to the bathroom,” he said.
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