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Alyssa

You Stay Classy, Daily Caller: Bashing Sarah Jessica Parker’s Looks and Job Are Not an Argument

The Daily Caller, in its efforts to discredit some of President Obama’s celebrity surrogates, has decided that the most effective way to push back against people like Sarah Jessica Parker is to imply they’re ugly and synonymous with their roles. In an item entitled “Sarah Jessica Parker sticks her nose into 2012 campaign,” Neil Munro apparently thinks it’s clever to play off a fact that some people don’t like Parker’s looks, calling her “the celebrity horse that Barack Obama’s 2012 campaign is betting on.” And he goes on to suggest that Parker is defined by the fact that “she played a single New York columnist who meets and sleeps with various men while living in the city. The role made her famous, and also won her a top place in New York City’s social circuit.” The Daily Caller might take a moment surfing over to IMDb for a reminder that Parker was a well-established actress long before she signed on for Sex and the City. And apparently this comes as news to folks, but Sarah Jessica Parker is not, in fact, the same person as Carrie Bradshaw.

The whole thing is an ugly, substanceless slam disguised as a piece of reporting about the fact that, shockingly, some conservatives don’t like the ad that Parker cut in support of the Obama campaign. Parker, by the text of this reasoning, is apparently incapable of supporting the Obama administration effectively because she is wealthy and is an actress. But the subtext is clear: Sarah Jessica Parker is ugly. And she was in that slutty television show, too. This kind of slagging of a successful woman is the last refuge of people with no legitimate arguments who are terrified they’re losing. It’s the rhetorical equivalent of shining a mirror in someone’s eyes so you can run away while they’re distracted.

I generally find the idea that people who work in Hollywood are flaky or somehow less entitled to their political opinions than the rest of the country bizarre. It’s not as if someone who makes a lot of money as an industrialist or an energy titan is uniquely more connected to middle class Americans than someone who works in Hollywood. If hedge funders get some sort of credit for interacting with white collar workers in their office or working on issues that end up affecting the rest of the American economy, there’s no reason actors and directors shouldn’t get equivalent credit for their contact with their crews or for working on projects that explore fantasies of American life. There are smart and thoughtful people and dumb and shallow people working and succeeding in every industry in America.

And beyond the basic intelligence of people who work in Hollywood, it’s not as if entertainment is a job detached from politics, or as if one’s employment is the sole determinant of what political issues one is invested in. Sarah Jessica Parker has a long record of involvement with UNICEF and has done work on behalf of anti-hunger programs in New York. Latina actresses like Eva Longoria and Rosario Dawson have backed the administration as parts of their efforts on voting access and women’s issues. Conservatives love treating Hollywood celebrities like they’re valuable and substantive when they voice conservative opinions, whether it’s Jon Lovitz critizing Obama or the prospect that Obama might lose Hollywood support during the SOPA fight. But when they back liberal politicians or causes they’re inherently dumb, vapid, substanceless. And apparently if they’re women, you can single out their noses as a reason to tell them to stay out of processes they don’t belong in.

President Obama Warns Congress Not To Block Middle Class Women From Equal Pay

A card from the White House's equal pay webpage.

President Obama considers equal pay for men and women an important way to strengthen the middle class, and believes that it’s important for Congress to pass such a measure in this economy.

On a call with reporters and advocates today, Obama encouraged Congress to consider the middle class when voting on the Paycheck Fairness Act, a bill that would help a woman fight for equal pay.

Currently, women on average make 77 cents to a man’s dollar. The Paycheck Fairness Act would create more transparency in pay scales, and protect women who sue because they’re being paid unfairly. Not supporting equal pay protection isn’t just a war on women, the President argued, it’s a war on the middle class:

OBAMA: At a time when we’re at a make or break moment for the middle class, Congress has to step up and do its job. If congress passes the paycheck fairness act, women are going to have access to more tools to claim equal pay for equal work. If they don’t, if congress doesn’t act, then women are still going to have difficulty enforcing and pressing for this basic principle. We’ve got to understand this is more than just about fairness. Women are the breadwinners for a lot of families, and if they’re making less than men do for the same work, families are going to have to get by with less money for childcare, tuition, and rent. Small businesses have fewer customers. Everybody suffers.

The Paycheck Fairness Act is due for a vote in the Senate tomorrow, and Republicans have already expressed dislike for the pay equity legislation. They claim that it creates too many bureaucratic regulations and is unneeded legislation that will only help trial lawyers. The same bill failed in the Senate once before; though it had the support of 58 senators, there were not enough votes to prevent a filibuster.

NEWS FLASH

GOP Staffer Who Suggested Hurling Acid At Female Democratic Senators Resigns | Jay Townsend, the GOP communications director for Rep. Nan Hayworth’s re-election campaign who said “let’s hurl some acid at those female Democratic senators” resigned today. According to The Hill, Hayworth released a statement saying, “Jay Townsend has offered, and I have accepted, his resignation from his position with my campaign. [...] Now let’s return to talking about issues that really matter to families: job creation, spending restraint and economic development.” This is a shift from Hayworth’s initial defense of Townsend’s right to speak freely as a private citizen.

STUDY: In Presidential Campaign, Romney And Allies Running Far More Negative Ads Than Obama

While it may be easy to dismiss negative attack ads as a pox on both houses during presidential elections, a new memo written by Kantar Media’s Elizabeth Wilder shows that Republicans are once again far out-spending Democrats on negative ads.

More than 63,000 general election ads were aired nationwide between April 10 and May 24, with just over half of them positive. But if you break down those numbers by party affiliation, the numbers tell another story. Democratic presidential advertisers, led by the Obama campaign itself, aired more than 25,000 positive ads compared to just 10,844 negative ones, good for a 70% positive ad rate. Meanwhile, Republican advertisers — the largest of which have been outside groups like Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS — have released just 7,584 positive ads compared to more than 20,000 negative ones. Take a look:

Perhaps Karl Rove isn’t on Kantar Media’s mailing list, because just this week, Rove’s SuperPAC American Crossroads released a negative ad attacking President Obama for his negative ads.

Economy

5 Facts About The Massachusetts Economy Under Mitt Romney

Republican Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign whipped out a new number over the weekend to dispute federal government data that ranked Massachusetts 47th in job creation during Romney’s time as governor there. Three campaign surrogates used the Sunday morning news circuit to claim that the state was actually 30th in job growth in Romney’s final year in office.

Of course, moving the state to 30th would still mean it was in the bottom half of the nation, a fact that would seem to fit assertions from local experts that the state’s economy was “below average and often near the bottom” while Romney was governor. Here are five facts about the Massachusetts economy from Romney’s 2003-2007 tenure:

1. Ranked 47th in job growth: Despite Romney’s professed expertise in creating jobs, Massachusetts ranked 47th in job growth during his time as governor. The state’s total job growth was just 0.9 percent, well behind other high-wage, high-skill economies in New York (2.7), California (4.7), and North Carolina (7.6). The national average, meanwhile, was better than 5 percent.

2. Suffered the second-largest labor force decline in the nation: Only Louisiana, which was ravaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, saw a bigger decline in its labor force than Massachusetts during Romney’s tenure as governor. The US Census Bureau estimated that between July 2002 and July 2006, 222,000 more residents left Massachusetts for other states than came to it. That decline largely explains the state’s decreasing unemployment rate (from 5.6 to 4.7 percent) while Romney was in office, according to Northeastern University economics professor Andrew Sum. At the same time, the nation as a whole added 8 million people to the labor force.

3. Lost 14 percent of its manufacturing jobs: Massachusetts lost 14 percent of its manufacturing jobs during Romney’s time in office, according to Sum. The loss was double the rate that the nation as a whole lost manufacturing jobs. In 2004, Romney vetoed legislation that would have banned companies doing business with the state from outsourcing jobs to other countries.

4. Experienced “below average” economic growth and was “often near the bottom”: “There was not one measure where the state did well under his term in office. We were below average and often near the bottom,” Sum told the Washington Post in February. As a result, the state was more comparable to Rust Belt states like Illinois, Michigan, and Ohio than it was to other high-tech economies it typically competes with.

5. Piled on more debt than any other state: Romney left Massachusetts residents with $10,504 in per capita bond debt, the highest of any state in the nation when he left office in 2007. The state ranked second in debt as a percentage of personal income. Romney regularly omits those statistics from his Massachusetts record, instead touting the fact that he balanced the state’s budget (he was constitutionally required to do so). He wouldn’t be much different as president: his proposed tax plan adds more than $10 trillion to the national debt.

Justice

Super PAC Trying To Buy NC Supreme Court Re-Election For Pro-Corporate Conservative Justice

NC Supreme Court Justice Paul Newby

NC Supreme Court Justice Paul Newby

In writing the opinion of the court for the 5-4 majority in the Citizens United v. FEC, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that “that independent expenditures, including those made by corporations, do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption.” But a new tax-exempt outside group, named the North Carolina Judicial Commission, may put Kennedy’s assertion to the test.

According to the News & Observer, the group aims to raise unlimited sums of money from conservative and pro-business donors to re-elect state Supreme Court Justice Paul M. Newby this November. Newby, who is part of a 4-3 right-leaning majority on the court, faces a challenge from Sam Ervin IV, a judge on the state’s court of appeals and the grandson of the late Sen. Sam Ervin Jr. (D-NC).

Newby generated controversy when in 2005, he attended a rally for a constitutional amendment to prevent same-sex marriage equality while a sitting appeals court judge and when he wrote a 4-3 majority opinion that said a Durham couple could not sue an out-of-state company for predatory lending.

The article notes:

The new super PAC – officially known as an independent expenditure committee – is comprised of Republican heavy-hitters. Wealthy businessman and charter school entrepreneur Bob Luddy is the committee’s chairman. Tom Fetzer, former chairman of the state Republican Party, and I. Beverly Lake, a former chief justice of the state Supreme Court, serve on its board of directors.

Fetzer told the paper “Heading into this election, which is largely publicly financed, candidates have a limited ability to get their message out. I thought it was a good idea to set up an independent expenditure for Paul.”

The idea behind public financing for elections — especially state judicial elections — is that jurists should not be beholden to moneyed interests. But thanks to the loophole created by Citizens United, special interest groups can circumvent those limits and spend as much money as they can afford to push for the election of judges friendly to their cause. And if their efforts succeed, it is hard to believe the will be no “appearance of corruption” should a state justice decide a case in favor of a company or individual who helped back his or her re-election through a group like the North Carolina Judicial Commission.

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