|
IMPORTANT READERS NOTE: The
Progress Report will be on "recess" over the next two weeks. (Just
don't call it a vacation!). Your
regularly scheduled report will return August 27. In the meantime,
check out our blog ThinkProgress.org for the latest-breaking news, analysis, and commentary.
UPDATE: The Progress Report will now be returning after Labor Day, on September 4.
CIVIL RIGHTS
Breaking Down Barriers
Yesterday, LogoOnline and Human Rights Campaign (HRC) hosted a Democratic presidential
candidate forum focusing specifically on the issue of gay rights.
The forum, moderated in part by HRC
President Joe Solmonese and lesbian singer Melissa Etheridge, "broke
new ground" on issues related to the GLBTQ community. Topics raised
included
same-sex marriage, HIV/AIDS funding, health care and partner benefits,
discrimination, and hate crimes, to
name a few. One key issue addressed was the controversial "Don't
Ask, Don't Tell"Â policy, which bans openly gay military
servicemembers. The issues and problems facing the gay
community as seen through last night's forum are increasingly
important for candidates to openly discuss
and embrace. "This
event was incredibly validating. Gays and Lesbians are a voting
bloc -- four percent or more and that can swing an election," noted
Logo head Brian Graydon. Last night, "we pulled the curtain back a
bit," said Solmonese.
CONSERVATIVES MOVE FORWARD: In
yesterday's forum, several candidates were asked about "Don't Ask, Don't Tell." Since the policy
was instituted, at
least 11,000
servicemembers, hundreds of whom had key specialty skills such as training in Arabic, have left the military. With our "broken" armed forces, the military could attract as many as 41,000 new recruits if gays could serve openly. Now, the divide on the issue is
increasingly breaking down, as key conservatives are embracing the
repeal of DADT. In June, former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA), argued that "the military is firing badly
needed, capable troops simply because they're gay." The
LA Times reports that Joint
Chiefs of Staff Chairman Navy Adm. Michael Mullen
stated he would "love to have Congress make its own decision" on the
repeal of DADT -- in contrast to the remarks of former Joint Chiefs
Chairman Colin Powell in
1993, who claimed the "presence of homosexuals in the force would
be detrimental
to good order." Now Powell, Sen. Susan
Collins (R-ME), Sen.
John Warner (R-VA), and Secretary
of State Bob Gates, have publicly recognized the contributions
of gays in the military. In a March op-ed entitled "Bigotry
That Hurts Our Military," former Sen. Alan Simpson (R-WY) called
for DADT's repeal. Nevertheless, all
conservative Presidential candidates support banning gays in the
military.
DISCRIMINATION STILL PREVALENT: Hate crimes and discrimination were also key
issues in yesterday's forum. Under current law,
the federal government "is not able to help
in cases where women, gay, transgender or disabled Americans are victims
of bias-motivated crimes for who they are." In 33
states, it is legal to fire someone based
on their sexual orientation. In 2005 alone, there were at
least 1,017 crimes based on sexual
orientation. Federal law
protecting gays from discrimination and hate crimes is imperative.
Faith-based groups are also seeing the need for such workplace and anti-violence protections. In April, more than "230 religious leaders representing
congregations from every state" gathered in Washington to talk with
lawmakers about hate violence.
More than 210 law
enforcement, civil rights, civic and religious organizations support
the passage of the Local
Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act (LLEHCPA).
CONGRESS STEPS UP: As of last
week, 131Â lawmakers signed onto the Military Readiness
Enhancement
Act, which would repeal DADT,
including Rep. Joe Sestak (D-PA), Congress' highest-ranking
veteran. In May, the House overwhelmingly
passed the hate crimes prevention act, which "seeks
to extend federal authority and
jurisdiction to allow the FBI and Department of Justice to work with
state and
local officials to investigate and prosecute hate
crimes." Currently, it awaits action in the Senate, but
President Bush has threatened
to veto the legislation. "The proposals they're talking about are
not sufficiently narrow," said White House spokesperson Tony Fratto, falsely claming the bill suppresses free speech. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D-CA), "considered one
of the strongest gay rights supporters in Congress," has pledged to
bring the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, "making it
illegal to fire, refuse to hire or refuse to promote employees simply
based on a person's sexual orientation or gender identity," to the floor this year. Congress, however, notably took
a step back
on gay rights when the Senate Judiciary Committee recently endorsed the
nomination
of Leslie Southwick, who once ordered the removal of an 8-year old
child
from her mother because of the mother's sexual orientation, to the U.S.
Court of Appeals.

RELIGION -- CONGRESSMAN SAYS
RELIGIOUS
DIVERSITY IN FEDERAL OFFICE WAS NOT ENVISIONED BY FOUNDING FATHERS: When
Idaho State Rep. Bill Sali was running for Congress in 2006,
Vice President Cheney visited his state and said, "Bill is ready
to
make a difference in Washington, and he's going to be the kind of
Congressman who
will make you proud." Now-Congressman Bill Sali (R-ID) is
demonstrating his worth by criticizing the new religious
diversity embodied in the 110th Congress. "We have not only a Hindu prayer being
offered in
the Senate, we have a Muslim member of the House of Representatives
now, Keith Ellison from Minnesota," he said. "They are not
what was envisioned by the Founding Fathers."Â Sali may
want to take a peek at Article
VI of the Constitution, which notes that there is no religious test
for public office: "[N]o religious test shall ever be required as a
qualification to any office or public trust under the United States."
Sali's not alone in his bigotry. In Dec. 2006, shortly after Rep.
Keith Ellison (D-MN) was elected as the first Muslim congressman, Rep.
Virgil Goode (R-VA) warned that "American citizens" need to "wake up"
or "there will likely be many more
Muslims elected to office." Last month, protesters belonging to the
Christian Right anti-abortion group Operation Save America loudly
interrupted the first
Hindu prayer delivered in the Senate. Sali said that when a Hindu
prayer is offered, it "creates problems for the longevity
of this country."
HUMAN RIGHTS -- BUSH ON TORTURE
REPORT: 'HAVEN'T SEEN IT, WE DON'T TORTURE': During President
Bush's press conference yesterday, The Washington Post's Peter Baker
asked him if he "had
read"
a highly confidential report by the International Committee of the Red
Cross that "has found an interrogation program in CIA detention
facilities, [that] used interrogation techniques that were 'tantamount
to torture.'" Details of the report were revealed recently in the
New Yorker. "Haven't
seen it; we don't torture,"
Bush bluntly responded before moving on to another question. Bush's
denial of torture is hardly convincing, considering he is apparently
unaware of the allegations coming from the Red Cross, "which is known
for its credibility
and caution." The report alleges "that American officials
responsible for the abusive treatment" at CIA "black sites" may have
committed "grave
breaches"
of the Geneva Conventions. Though Bush claims to have not "seen" the
report, others in his administration have, including Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, and CIA
director Michael Hayden. Given the
documented abuses at Abu Ghraib, Bush would be wise to actually
read reports like the Red Cross's before definitively declaring "we
don't torture."
HEALTH -- REPORT: TOBACCO TAXES
PRODUCED SHARP
DECREASE IN SMOKING: A USA Today report "finds that higher
state taxes on smokers have produced sharp declines in consumption. The amount
of decline in smoking is directly tied to the size of the tax
increase." Cigarette sales fell 18 percent in North Carolina last year
after the tax was raised to 35 cents from a nickel. In New Jersey,
smoking dropped by 35 percent after the state raised its taxes from 80
cents in 2002 to $2.40, and Connecticut saw a 37 percent drop in
consumption after it increased its tax to $1.51 from 50 cents a pack in
2002. Recently, Congress approved an increase in the federal tax on tobacco products to fund the expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program(SCHIP).
But President Bush has promised to veto the measure. According to
economists, "the nation may be about to experience one of
the biggest one-time declines in smoking." "I expect a bigger drop than
almost anything we've seen before,"
says Frank Chaloupka, a University of Illinois economist who has
studied the effect of taxes on smoking.
"He predicts that smoking will drop 6% if the 61-cent-per-pack tax hike
is passed."Â
|

U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker said yesterday there are
no "defining moments" in Iraq. "I don't think there is a date
on the calendar, whether
it’s in September or any other time in which you can say, 'This is the defining moment. It's all coming
together, or it's all falling apart.' It's an enormously complex
situation."
President Bush said he can't recall when he learned
that Army Ranger Pat Tillman died by friendly fire. Just days before
Bush delivered a 2004 speech that made reference to Tillman, a top
general had written a memo to Gen. John Abizaid, then head of Central
Command, warning that it was "highly possible" that Tillman was killed
by friendly fire and making clear that the information
should be conveyed to the president.
"The next decade will be a hot one, according to scientists
unveiling the first 10-year projection of global warming.
ï¿?? The significance of the new study is that over the last
century, global warming has contributed
to about a one-degree rise in average temperatures."
"Nearly half the people murdered in the U.S. each year are
black, part of a persistent pattern in which African
Americans are disproportionately victimized by violent crime,
according to a new Justice Department study released yesterday."
"I was at ground zero as often, if not more, than most of the workers,"
said former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani yesterday. "I was exposed to exactly the same things they were exposed
to. So in that sense, I'm one of them." Battalion Chief John McDonnell,
head of the Uniformed Fire Officers Association in New York, responded,
"I think he's really grasping and trying
to justify his previous attempts to portray himself as the hero of 9/11."
The Bush administration on Friday will announce plans to enlist state
and local law enforcement in cracking down on undocumented
workers, which
previously was largely a federal function.
The plans call for the administration to "train growing numbers of
state and local law enforcement officers to identify and detain
immigration offenders whom they encounter in the course of daily law
enforcement."
"A car bomb struck a market in a Kurdish area in
the northern city of Kirkuk on Friday, killing at least eight people
and wounding dozens, police said. South of Baghdad, the U.S. military
said a
helicopter was forced down, leaving two soldiers injured."
The State Department is enlisting baseball Hall of Famer
Cal Ripken for a new diplomatic role. Ripken will travel the world as a public
diplomacy envoy to increase young people’s understanding of the
United
States by sharing with them his "impressive
personal history and life experiences."
And finally: The Senate's #1 Batman fan gets an
appearance on the big screen. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) will have a
speaking part, though a "small
role,"
in the new flick The Dark Knight, out next year. Leahy, who "dabbles in
Batman culture purely for fun," had a cameo in the 1997 hit Batman
& Robin.
|
|
|

In "a bipartisan survey of likely Democratic and Republican New
Hampshire primary voters," a strong majority "agree that reducing
poverty, treating preventable diseases and
improving education in poor countries around the world will
help make
the world safer and the United States more secure."

MINNESOTA:
Minnesota National Guard pioneers Beyond
the Yellow Ribbon program "in hopes of changing how Soldiers and
Airmen are reintegrated back to their communities."
NEW
JERSEY: Appeals court strikes a blow to gay couples hoping
to file jointly for pre-civil union income.
ILLINOIS:
Legislature defies Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D) and passes budget that
hardly funds key health care programs.

THINK
PROGRESS: Conservative blogs and newspapers spin Sen. Dick Durbin
(D-IL)'s "very discouraging" Iraq assessment.
THINK
PROGRESS: In a three minute monologue, MSNBC's Chris Matthews
gushes over President Bush's "great neo-conservative mind."
ESCHATON:
Columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News says "another 9/11 would help
America."
SAVE
THE INTERNET: AT&T censors Pearl Jam lyrics critical of
President Bush.

"Significant changes [are] taking place."
-- Brookings analysts
Michael O'Hanlon and Kenneth Pollack on progress in Iraq, 7/30/07
VERSUS
"I did not see any dramatic change in our position in Iraq during this
trip."
-- Center for Strategic and International Studies military
analyst Anthony Cordesman, who visited Iraq with O'Hanlon and Pollack, 8/9/07
|