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Politics

Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation Donates Again To The Republican Governors Association: $250,000

In June, Fox News’ parent company News Corporation gave a $1 million donation to the Republican Governors Association. This evening, IRS disclosures reveal that News Corporation gave another check, time for $250,000, bringing his total donation amount to $1,250,000. Other donors include Bill Koch, who donated $100,000, Swift Boat-funder Bob Perry, who gave $3.5 million, and right-wing casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson, who gave $1 million to the Republican campaign group.

News Corporation chief Rupert Murdoch recently stated that he directed his company’s donation in order to help his friend John Kasich, the Republican nominee for governor in Ohio. As ThinkProgress’ Ian Millhiser noted, there actually are laws against corporate managers treating a publicly-traded corporation as if it were their own personal bank account. Although News Corporation was founded in Australia, it was recently reincorporated in Delaware and thus must comply with key Delaware court decisions. Significantly, the Delaware Supreme Court determined over 70 years ago that “[c]orporate officers and directors are not permitted to use their position of trust and confidence to further their private interests.”

Media

Glenn Beck Brings ExxonMobil-Linked Religious Front Group To Tell Christians Not To Believe In Climate Change

In June, ThinkProgress published an exclusive investigation into the Cornwall Alliance — a corporate front designed to deceive evangelicals into doubting the science underpinning climate change. Today, Fox News hate-talker Glenn Beck brought on a representative from the group to tout Cornwall’s new DVD, “Resisting the Green Dragon,” which claims the climate change movement is a “false religion,” and a nefarious conspiracy to empower eugenicists and create a “global government.” The DVD, which Cornwall is distributing to evangelical churches around the country, seems to be designed perfectly for Beck’s world view, and unsurprisingly, the Cornwall guest and Beck exchanged bizarre conspiracy theories. Watch it:

The Cornwall Alliance appears to be a creation of a group called the James Partnership, a nonprofit run by Chris Rogers and Peter Stein, according to documents filed with the Virginia State Corporation Commission. Rogers, who heads a media and public relations firm called CDR Communications, collaborates with longtime oil front group operative David Rothbard, the founder and President of the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT) and Jacques Villarreal, a lower level staffer at CFACT, for his James Partnership group. In the past, Rogers’ firm has worked for the Bush administration and for the secretive conservative planning group, the Council for National Policy.

According to public records, the following entities are all registered to the same address, 9302-C Old Keene Mill Road Burke, VA 22015, an office park in suburban Virginia:

– Rogers’ consulting firm, CDR Communications
– Rogers’ nonprofit hub, the James Partnership
– The Cornwall Alliance
– The new “Resisting the Green Dragon” website

In late 2005, evangelical leaders like Rick Warren joined a drive to back a major initiative to fight global warming, saying “millions of people could die in this century because of climate change, most of them our poorest global neighbors.” To counter this historic shift in the evangelical community, a group called the “Interfaith Stewardship Alliance” (ISA) was launched to oppose action on carbon emissions and to deny the existence of climate change. One of the men guiding this group was Paul Driessen, a consultant for ExxonMobil, the mining industry, and for CFACT.

For “stream lining” reasons, ISA relaunched as the Cornwall Alliance in 2006. With the new name came a redesigned website, highly produced web videos, and an organized network of churches to distribute climate change denying propaganda to hundreds of pastors around the country. The branding for the Cornwall Alliance is derived from the “Cornwall Declaration,” a 1999 document pushing back against the creation-care movement in the evangelical community. The Declaration “stressed a free-market environmental stewardship and emphasized that individuals and private organizations should be trusted to care for their own property without government intervention.” CFACT President Rothbard has been hailed as the “driving force” behind the Cornwall Declaration public relations effort.

CFACT is a gimmicky right-wing organization that does everything it can to try to discredit the science underpinning climate change. For instance, staffers from the group traveled to the Copenhagen conference on climate change to stage silly press conferences with Rush Limbaugh’s former producer and stunts aimed at mocking Greenpeace.

Read more

Economy

Whitman’s Plan To Balance California’s Budget Wouldn’t Come Close To Balancing The Budget

I pointed out yesterday that California gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman’s (R) job creation plan is based on a tax cut that economists don’t believe will create jobs or boost investment. Rather, it would amount to nothing more than a giveaway to California’s wealthy.

But Whitman’s plan to balance the state budget also leaves a lot to be desired. As UC Berkley economic Michael Reich noted, Whitman’s promise to cut $15 billion from the budget “necessarily implies significant reductions in spending on education, health, and social service programs on top of the deep cuts already made in the past two years.” But you won’t hear that from her, if her interview today with the New York Times’ John Harwood is any indication:

HARWOOD: Every single, at the national level, big deficit reduction package…has involved tax increases, revenue, as well as spending cuts. Is the better part of honesty and candor with the voters of California to say that’s what you’re going to have to do as well?

WHITMAN: I don’t believe we are going to have to do that. I am against increasing taxes on Californians.

HARWOOD: You can close a $19 billion budget deficit just by cutting spending?

WHITMAN: And growing the economy.

Watch it:

In the interview, Whitman named four things that she would do to supposedly save $15 billion (which still wouldn’t eliminate California’s $19 billion deficit). Here’s a look at why they amount to little more than hot air: Read more

Health

GOP May Seek To Undermine ACA By Weakening The Exchanges

Yesterday, Scott Gottlieb and Tom Miller of the conservative American Enterprise Institute wrote a piece for the Wall Street Journal in which they conceded that even if Republicans can’t repeal the Affordable Care Act, they can at least undermine its key feature: the state-based health insurance Exchanges that are designed to serve as new marketplaces for comprehensive insurance coverage beginning in 2014. Under the legislation, states are encouraged to act as prudent purchasers, only allowing plans that can deliver quality care efficiently into the Exchanges. In fact, California just recently passed a law that would allow the California Health Benefits Exchange to “bargain with insurance companies on behalf of consumers and create a relatively easy method for insurance customers to compare the benefits, costs and exclusions in policies offered by competing firms.” State lawmakers hope that by negotiating prices “for a large volume of individuals – getting group discounts the same way that large employers do” beneficiaries will see a “downward pressure on prices.”

Gottlieb and Miller are proposing something very different. They’re urging the states to adopt the Utah Exchanges:

The more promising option is for governors to perform as much radical surgery as possible on the exchanges until a new Congress working with a different president can do something better. By offering their own market-friendly versions of exchanges, they will establish an alternative to ObamaCare and its one-size-fits-all health plans….ObamaCare intends health-care exchanges to be a regulatory dragnet to trap insurers into offering a single government-prescribed set of health benefits. State-designed exchanges could, and should, do the opposite. [...]

Any willing insurers already licensed to operate in a state should be able to offer plans. Their operating rules would focus on providing better information to consumers, rather than limiting the types of plans available. Exchanges should also enable easier allocation of private payments and public subsidies, simplify enrollment, and reduce transaction costs. [...]

But other states, particularly Utah, are moving in the opposite direction with their own version of market-based exchanges before ObamaCare’s regulations can catch up. The Utah Health Exchange is an Internet-based information portal that connects consumers to the information they need to make informed choices. In many cases, it allows them to buy insurance electronically.

It’s unclear that this kind of structure — in which any insurer can join and offer almost any policy it wants — will meet the new minimum benefit requirements, but what’s fairly certain is that this model has been tried before and failed.

In Utah, where lawmakers recently re-launched a pilot program which had recently closed down due to limited participation and very high prices — Judi Hilman, director of the Utah Health Policy Project, tells me that the exchange operates “more like a flee market.” The plans have to meet a minimum acceptable deductible, but pay little regard to “affordability or benefit standards.” “What they’ve done is they’re only looking out for the employer’s concern, not thinking very carefully about what consumers or empoyees can accept from the coverage they obtain,” Hilman said. “The one advantage that might be there for some employees is to be able to have a choice of plans.” But the governor is holding “Utah as a model on Exchanges when they are far from that.”

Jon Kingsdale, the former director of the Massachusetts Connector Authority also points out that Exchanges that merely offer customers many different options are virtually useless. It “would be like telling your grocery store they have to offer every single kind of bread baked by every single bakery. … The Exchanges would be nothing more than an automated Yellow Pages,” he’s said. And Massachusetts residents agree. For instance, focus groups conducted by the Massachusetts Connector revealed that consumers felt that too much choice was “confusing” and “overwhelming.” “Participants expressed a desire for a manageable numbers of plans (e.g. three to four) offered by four to six carriers. In addition, consumers expressed difficulty making plan comparisons under the existing model.” “Instead, consumers preferred for information to be presented in a simple and standardized format that clearly distinguished between different benefit design options,” the Connector’s Fiscal Year 2009 report concluded.

The bottom line is that the Exchanges are one of the only ways states can protect consumers from plans that do not offer good value and cost-effectiveness and states should take that obligation seriously. As Kingsdale explained to me during our interview in October of 2009, “We estimate that we’ve done about 6 percent reduction in premiums and saved about $140 million a year on subsidized care for about 180,000 people. Because we’ve been able to a) be aggressive in selecting and setting rules for health plans and b) set up an Exchange that translates the various costliness of their networks into a price that the consumer understands,” Kingsdale said. “The consumer doesn’t understand the price of a visit or the price of a procedure, or the price of an x-ray and can’t shop on that basis, but can shop annually for a premium, or monthly. And the trick with the Exchange is to translate the generators of cost and value and quality into a package called a health plan from which consumers have a choice and they have both funding but they are the price differences. And so with that program, we’ve been able to do it and have substantial impact.”

Yglesias

Endgame

We just take a rental:

— This is best read as a Staussian argument for caring less about income inequality.

— Monetary policy doom.

— The smaller-than-expected deficit is part of the problem.

— Responding to neocons’ calls for higher defense spending.

— It’s NIMBY vs NIMBY in my local ANC race.

— Tragic story but I enjoy the innovative methods at work in reporting the story, complete with raw video footage of a witness interview.

— Public opinion is not friendly to the war in Afghanistan.

Ten years of iPod.

New Belle & Sebastian, “I Didn’t See It Coming”.

Yglesias

The Party of Medicare

George Zornick’s post on the “US” Chamber of Commerce’s ads bashing Tom Perriello focus on Chamber-centric issues, but there’s a broader point to be made:

In Virginia’s fifth Congressional district, Democratic incumbent Tom Perriello has faced an onslaught of attack ads funded by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. One such ad implored voters: “Government run health care. Medicare cuts. Have you had enough? Tell Congressman Perriello, stop hurting Virginia families.” As ThinkProgress reported, it’s possible that the Chamber’s attack ads are being funded by foreign money; the Chamber has yet to disclose who, exactly, funds its attack ads.

All’s fair in politics, so if the party of small government wants to win a midterm election by bashing Democrats for cutting Medicare they’re welcome to do so. But insofar as the issue at hand is ideology rather than partisan politics, one is going to be hard-pressed to see a campaign won in this manner as a thundering endorsement of a libertarian approach to health care or spending. Indeed, it mostly serves as an indication of how difficult it will be to ever repeal the Affordable Care Act once its benefits are locked into place.

Politics

Vitter And Angle Ads Featuring Race-Baiting Image Removed From YouTube, Photographer Speaks Out

vitterangle

Last week, ThinkProgress broke the news that both senatorial candidates Sharron Angle (R-NV) and Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) used the same racially-tinged image in separate attack ads against their opponents and described the subjects in the photo as “illegal aliens.” Besides invoking offensive anti-Latino stereotypes, the photographer of the photo, Chris Floyd, later informed the Washington Post that the “illegal aliens” in the picture were actually Mexicans still in Mexico.

Now it appears both ads have been removed from YouTube. Vitter’s is marked as “private,” and Angle’s video has been pulled down due to a “copyright claim by Getty Images, Inc.”

In a phone interview with ThinkProgress, Floyd indicated that he’s still waiting to hear himself what, if any, legal actions Getty Images is pursuing. Floyd explained that he has a contract with Getty which means that they have the “first right to pursue legal action in the event of a copyright violation.”

However, Floyd did seem confident that the Angle and Vitter campaigns are at the very least morally, if not legally, culpable:

I think this is a question of principle. The only legal place they could’ve obtained that image [on the Getty Images website] clearly printed out that the people in the photo were not illegal aliens, but Mexicans in Mexico. That means they either purposefully deceived their audience or they stole the photo from somewhere else.

Whether it was done intentionally or not, Floyd maintains that “they [the Vitter and Angle campaigns] completely distorted the reality of my photo.”

Floyd also expressed concern over how the improper use of the photo could reflect on him. “Someone might see my photo and say ‘that guy [Floyd] is clearly not an impartial and informed photojournalist, he’s just trying to further his own extremist agenda.’” However, that is certainly not the case. “I just want to be able to do my work in a way that’s fair and balanced,” said Floyd.

Getty Images did not immediately respond to ThinkProgress’ request for comment. However, the company’s editorial policy, as printed on their website, reads, “We believe that photographs are the visual communication of a story and should be held to an equal level of accountability, responsibility and integrity as the written word in journalism. Images illustrate and reflect the events of our world today and therefore have a responsibility to be delivered to the customer with accuracy and impartiality.”

Education

House Education Committee’s Ranking Member Threatens To Cut Off Funding For Race To The Top

Back in July, the Obama administration requested $1.4 billion to continue its Race to the Top program — which provides competitive grants to states to implement education reform — but the Senate and the House both refused to play along, with the former chopping funding for the program down to just $675 million. However, the full 2011 appropriations process has not been completed yet, so there is still time to fully fund another year of the program.

But if Rep. John Kline (R-MN) — the ranking member on the House Education and Labor Committee, who will take the gavel if the GOP gains a House majority — has anything to say about it, Race to the Top might not receive any more funding, period, as he told Dropout Nation:

I think it was irresponsible of Congress to give [Secretary of Education Arne Duncan] $5 billion with no strings attached. Race to the Top did some pretty bold things and some of them were in line with the Republican agenda like expanding charter schools. Other parts can be problematic. When you begin moving to a common assessment, if you’re only going reward states for adopting common standards, then you are moving into creating a common curriculum. Many of us are afraid that with common curriculum, are moving to a national curriculum. If you look at the second tranche of Race to the Top, only the states that adopted common standards would get Race to the Top money.

This year, President Obama asked for $1.3 billion more for Race to the Top this budget year. Why should Congress give more money to a program that hasn’t proven itself? Race to the Top money is just one-time money. A lot of states didn’t get it. And the states who got the money, I’m not sure that they would have done [undertaken the required reforms] if they didn’t need the money.

First, Kline seems willing to write off the program before giving it a chance to prove itself. And it’s undeniable that program has driven reforms, even in states that weren’t ultimately awarded grants. In all, 28 states put reform measures in place to compete in the program.

For instance, Delaware, a RTTT winner, passed a new law on teacher and principal effectiveness, along with financial incentives for teachers, with 100 percent support from the state’s teachers union. Colorado, which didn’t end up winning, put in place a new law raising the standards for teacher tenure and introducing meaningful teacher evaluations. As the New Teacher Project put it, “Race to the Top has already accelerated education reform by decades in some states.”

Kline’s fears about the common curriculum are also unfounded, as the effort was driven by the National Governor’s Association, under Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue (GA). Though supported by the Obama administration, it is a state-led initiative that sets a floor — not a ceiling — for academic standards and has the support of the American Federation of Teachers. “Imagine in football if one team made a first down in 7 yards and the other in 10 yards. That’s not fair,” said AFT President Randi Weingarten said. “Once the states adopt this, that’s when the preparation really begins to take this from ‘should’ to ‘will.’”

As the New York Times editorial board put it, “the Race to the Top initiative won’t solve this country’s education problems by itself, but it is focusing attention on the right issues and moving them up the national agenda.” Kline and his allies in Congress seem to be ready to pull the plug on an effort that is making a difference and could pay big dividends if given the right amount of time and resources.

Politics

Toomey Blames Country’s Economic Woes On Progressive Legislation That Hasn’t Even Passed Yet

GOP U.S. Senate candidate Pat Toomey (PA) attended a rally at the Middletown Grange Fairgrounds Wednesday, joining Republicans running for many other local offices to speak about his views on a wide range of issues.

At one point, Toomey explained what he thinks ails the economy. He claims his Democratic Party opponents have done “serious damage” to the U.S. economy, and then asks the audience to “think of what we’ve witnessed in the last 18 months or so.” Toomey then listed off a series of legislative actions, including “serial bailouts of failing companies” and “spending money on a scale we’ve never seen before.” At the end of his list, he concluded, “You add in cap and trade, card check, government-run health care, is it any wonder we haven’t had an economic recovery? Is it any wonder we haven’t had growth? How hard is this to figure out?”:

TOOMEY: But they’re doing some serious damage. If you think of what we’ve witnessed in just the last 18 months or so, serial bailouts of failing companies, nationalizing whole industries, spending money on a scale we’ve never seen before, deficits and debts that are completely unsustainable, you add in cap and trade, card check, government-run health care, is it any wonder we haven’t had an economic recovery? Is it any wonder we don’t have job growth? How hard is this to figure out?

Watch it:

The problem with Toomey’s list is that it includes bills that haven’t even been legisated into law yet. “Government-run health care” presumably refers to the health law passed this past spring by Congress, but the legislation that Toomey is referring to as “cap and trade” and “card check” haven’t even gotten close to getting the votes they need to be made into law. “Cap and trade” refers to the American Clean Energy and Security Act, which, while narrowly passing the House of Representatives in 2009, is widely considered to be dead in the U.S. Senate. “Card check” refers to a provision in the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) that would allow workers to form a union if they could get half the workers to sign a card stating their intention to organize. Despite being a top priority of the country’s labor movement, EFCA has been in limbo for years, and the card check provision is widely considered to be unable to garner enough votes to pass, and is likely dead.

If Toomey is resorting to blaming the lack of job growth on legislation that hasn’t even passed yet, economics and basic political facts must indeed by very “hard” for him to “figure out.”

Yglesias

Would Bombing Iran Even Delay It’s Acquisition of a Nuclear Weapon?

Via Jeffrey Goldberg a very good Barry Gewen article makes the case that “The real policy question, then, should not be whether to bomb in order to forestall a nuclear Iran but whether to bomb to delay a nuclear Iran, and in any cost-benefit analysis, the latter calculation carries a very different weight.”

His article is excellent, but I think it’s worth underscoring the fact that launching a war with Iran seems just as likely to speed its acquisition of nuclear weapons as to delay it. Iran, like all countries, faces tradeoffs between different national priorities. You could spend more money on the nuclear weapons program, but that would mean less money for Teheran schools or salaries for secret policemen. Alternatively, you could bolster the secret police and cut funding on schools or the nuclear program. And it seems to me that becoming the victim of foreign military strikes is the kind of think likely to persuade Iran’s leaders that its existing deterrent capabilities are inadequate to deter aggression and the nuclear program should be advanced relative to other national priorities.

One also has to wonder what the impact of an attack on Iran will be on foreign countries’ disposition to sanction Iran. Perhaps it will increase the sympathy of non-weapons states for Iran’s situation, and create a more permissive international arena for them. Perhaps the pressure on China and Russia to restrain Iran will evaporate. Perhaps Pakistan will just sell Iran a nuclear weapon.

This whole landscape is, in my view, much murkier than the conventional discussion suggests.

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