THINK PROGRESS
The Progress Report
RADICAL RIGHT
The Biggest Loser
As the 2008 campaign heats up, conservative talk radio is ratcheting up
its radical right-wing rhetoric. Last year, hate radio successfully
convinced conservative lawmakers to vote
against comprehensive immigration reform. Indeed, these right-wing
hosts have been welcome figures in the White House for the past seven
years, invited
to exclusive gatherings with President Bush and granted
coveted interviews with high-ranking officials. But all that good
fortune might be changing. In recent weeks, these talkers have launched
a
campaign
against Republican presidential candidates and any position perceived
to be too progressive. But as yesterday's Super Tuesday
results showed, hate radio has begun to lose its effectiveness. The
American public voted against the wishes of the radical right wing and
rejected a third term
of the Bush administration.
ON IMMIGRATION: Keeping
undocumented -- and sometimes even legal -- immigrants out of the
United States is the top issue for hate radio. Last June, Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D-CA) said that "hate
radio" had hijacked the political discourse on immigration with
"xenophobic, anti-immigrant" rhetoric. That same month, then-Republican
senator Trent Lott charged, "Talk
radio is ruining America." An adviser to former Arkansas governor
Mike Huckabee piled on late last year, stating, "Rush
[Limbaugh] doesn't think for himself." Limbaugh, in
particular, has aggressively
gone after comprehensive immigration reform, blasting the failed bipartisan
McCain-Kennedy bill. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) "has stabbed
his own party in the back I can't tell you how many times," said
Limbaugh. Yet as
conservative pundit Bill Kristol noted last night on Fox News,
right-wing radio has been unable to convince the public that
immigration is the paramount issue. Voters are instead more
concerned about an
economy teetering on recession. "Can we please stop
pretending that immigration is a good issue for Republicans?" wrote
New York Times columnist David Brooks last week. "The restrictionist
side can't even produce a victory for their man in a Republican
primary." Similarly, in last month's Florida primary, 58
percent of Republican voters said they preferred either a path to
citizenship or a temporary worker program.
ON GLOBAL WARMING: Hate radio
is still resisting the scientific consensus that manmade global warming
is a
real and urgent danger. CNN's right-wing pundit Glenn Beck
continues to attack former vice president Al Gore, airing a documentary
last year entitled, Exposed: The
Climate of Fear. "Al Gore's
version of climate change has no longer become science," he said.
"It's dogma. And if you question it, you are a heretic." He has
repeatedly hosted discredited
climate change skeptics to pretend that there are still questions
about
the cause of global warming. In recent days, Limbaugh has gone
after the McCain-Lieberman bill, a modest
proposal that sought to limit
greenhouse gas emissions. But again, hate radio is on the losing
side of this issue. According to a Jan. 2007 Environmental Defense
poll, "81 percent of South Carolina's Republican voters believe the
United States should
reduce carbon dioxide emissions." GOP pollster Frank Luntz has
called climate change "the
single biggest vulnerability" for conservatives.
ON THE ECONOMY: The number one
issue for Republicans yesterday was the economy, with four
in 10 ranking it first. Although 52 percent of Republicans "say the
economy is doing well," that number is down from 66 percent last month
and 82 percent last June. Hate radio, however, continues to cling to
Bush's failed economic policies. "Frankly, folks, I don't find it very
conservative -- I
don't even find it Republican -- to start talking about wealthy
people or hardworking entrepreneurs as somehow the problem, as the
enemy that need to be punished," Limbaugh said earlier this week. In
particular, he has taken aim at McCain, who voted
against Bush's tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 because he said they
overwhelmingly benefited the wealthy. (McCain now supports making
them permanent.) But as NPR correspondent Juan Williams noted this
morning, GOP voters appeared dissatisfied with the Bush
administration's policies yesterday, and overwhelmingly voted against
the wishes of hate radio.
RIGHT-WING S.O.S.: Some members
of right-wing radio recognize that they need to change their tactics in
order to stay relevant. Michael Medved, who started
out by hosting Limbaugh's show, recently wrote, "The big loser in
South Carolina was, in fact, talk radio: a medium that has unmistakably
collapsed in terms of impact, influence and credibility because of
its hysterical and one-dimensional involvement in the GOP nomination
fight." The Washington Post wrote this morning that the more moderate
positions of some of the GOP candidates will hopefully be able to "save
the party from some of its worst
and most self-destructive instincts." Harold Meyerson, a Washington
Post columnist, called the success of many of the GOP candidates a
"direct affront to the Republican
strategy devised by Karl Rove."
Under the Radar
TORTURE -- CIA DIRECTOR ADMITS TO
WATERBOARDING: In
congressional testimony yesterday, CIA director Michael Hayden gave the
first public admission that his agency had used the
harsh interrogation technique of waterboarding on three Al Qaeda
suspects. Appearing before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
Hayden testified that "only"
three detainees were ever subjected to the method: "Khalid
Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks; Abu
Zubaydah, an Al Qaeda operative tied to the Sept. 11 plot; and Abd al
Rahim al Nashiri, a Saudi suspected of playing a key role in the
bombing of the U.S. Navy destroyer Cole in Yemen in 2000." Hayden
claimed that the CIA has not used
waterboarding in the last five years, and that the "circumstances
under which we are operating...are frankly, different
than they were in late 2001 and early 2002." In response to
Hayden's testimony, advocacy group Human Rights Watch issued a
statement saying, "Waterboarding
is torture, and torture is a crime." Also yesterday, Sen. Richard
Durbin (D-IL) demanded a
criminal investigation, calling on the Justice Department to look
into whether past use of waterboarding violated any
law.
ADMINISTRATION -- BUSH TO PASS
ECONOMIC WOES ONTO SUCCESSOR: Just before his 2004
re-election, President Bush asserted that "the job of a President is to
confront problems, not
to
pass them on to future Presidents and future generations." Yet with
Bush's $3.1
trillion budget proposal, "the
next president will inherit a deficit
of about $400 billion, and
maybe more." While the projected deficits "will push the cumulative
federal debt past $12 trillion in the next five years," Bush's
successor "will need to spend far more" for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan than the new budget allows. Bush included $70 billion for
both
wars in his budget, but that money is "designed to last [only] until
Jan. 20, when he leaves office." As Washington Post columnist Dan
Froomkin noted, Bush "will have created problems that he then
passed on to his successors
unresolved. Exhibit A is, of course, Iraq. But Exhibit B may well
be
the budget."
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS -- BUSH CUTS
FUNDING TO KEY FOREIGN ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: In 2002, President
Bush
announced the creation of the Millennium
Challenge Account to "expand
our fight against AIDS" and aid democracy in developing nations. He
promised that the program would receive $5
billion a year beginning in FY 2006 and beyond. However, in his
budget proposal for FY 2006,
President Bush failed to meet his pledge of $5 billion a year to the
Millennium Challenge Account, budgeting only $3 billion.
The same amount was budgeted for FY 2007
and again for FY 2008.
The Wall
Street Journal reported
in Jan. 2007 that "President Bush's
signature foreign-assistance program
is likely to run out of money this year, leaving in the lurch several
poor countries that have labored to meet its strict eligibility
standards." Although Congress has repeatedly
underfunded the program, Bush's requests for the program have
never come close to $5 billion. Funding levels for FY 2009, however,
fall to a new low of $2.225
billion. Twenty-four countries are eligible
for Millennium
Challenge Account compact funding, but the
President's budget allocates only "enough
to provide packages to Ukraine,
Moldova, Jordan, Timor-Leste and Malawi.
Think Fast
In the "biggest day of U.S. presidential voting before the November 4 election to succeed President George W. Bush," Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) won 13 states and Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) took eight. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) "won nine contests, including victories in California and the Northeast, to take a commanding lead in the Republican race." See the results here.
Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell testified yesterday that a failure to provide legal immunity in FISA legislation to telecom companies "will have far-reaching consequences" and "severely degrade the capabilities" of intelligence agencies to protect the country.
Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell said yesterday that "Al Qaeda is gaining in strength from its refuge in Pakistan and is steadily improving its ability to recruit, train and position operatives capable of carrying out attacks inside the United States."
In prepared testimony, Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, "says U.S. forces are "significantly stressed' by fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan." "The pace of ongoing operations," says Mullen, "impacts our ability to be ready to counter future threats."
Facing a "draconian" budget that would "cut in half the $400 million allocated in advance by Congress for fiscal year 2009 and cut $220 million from the $420 million already planned for 2010," public broadcasters are "scrambling" to secure federal funding for their programs.
The subprime crisis has brought "boarded-up homes and broken dreams to thousands of minority families inner cities." Reuters reports that urban renewal will need to be at the top of the next president's "to do" list.
Cases of racial harassment filed with the EEOC increased 24 percent last year, "a time of racial turmoil that included the Jena Six controversy and an outbreak of noose displays." The number of filings increased from 5,646 in 2006 to 6,977 in 2007 while "the annual figure has more than doubled since 1991."
The AFL-CIO has filed a lawsuit against Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, claiming that new Labor Department disclosure rules "should be held unlawful and set aside." In a report last year, Center for American Progress Senior Fellow Scott Lilly described how the new rules are part of an effort "to undermine the reputation of the labor union movement."
Republican leaders continue to squabble about how to deal with earmarks. The Hill notes that Reps. John Boehner (R-OH), Adam Putnam (R-FL) and Eric Cantor (R-VA) are "the only Republican leaders who have voted for more than half of the anti-earmark amendments offered on the House floor since the 2006 election."
And finally: Right-wing pundit Glenn Beck took a shot at Keith Olbermann, stating, "If I saw Olbermann standing on the subway [platform], I might think for a moment about pushing him, but I wouldn't." Olbermann responded: "The subway remark summarizes who Glenn is. If he (or anybody else) fell in front of a train, I hope I'd have the courage to emulate Wesley Autry and try to save him."
Good News
"Ethiopia and Bangladesh have offered to jump-start the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Darfur by loaning it helicopters to fly troops and supplies around the vast region in western Sudan, officials said Tuesday."
State Watch
KANSAS:
"Kansas Supreme Court temporarily blocked a grand jury Tuesday from
obtaining patient records from a physician who is one of the nation's
few providers of late-term abortions."
NEW
YORK: "Gov. Eliot Spitzer (D)
has relaxed the rules for receiving
food stamps so more working families can enroll."
PENNSYLVANIA:
Conservatives are blocking Gov. Ed Rendell's (D) economic stimulus
plan.
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: VIDEO: the
conservative agenda for 2008 -- a third Bush
term.
MOJO
BLOG:
Blackwater CEO Erik Prince lands a book deal with a
conservative publisher.
A
TINY
REVOLUTION: A line-by-line
debunk of Colin Powell's speech to the
United Nations five years ago on Iraq's WMDs.
EDITOR
& PUBLISHER: How the
press helped Colin Powell sell the Iraq
war five years ago.
Daily Grill
"I would say the security situation is good."
-- Defense Secretary Robert Gates, 1/30/08, on Afghanistan
VERSUS
Afghanistan is facing "a growing insurgency, increasing violence and a burgeoning drug trade fueled by widespread poppy cultivation."
-- Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Mike McMullen, 2/6/08
Unsubscribe from The Progress Report:
http://www.americanprogressaction.org/newsletters/unpr.html