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DeMint Defiantly Leads GOP Delegation To Meet With Illegitimate Honduran Post-Coup Government

demint-confused-723-full-cropped-proto-custom_2Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) has announced that he will be visiting Honduras today to meet with the de facto regime of acting Honduran President Roberto Micheletti in sheer defiance of the position taken by the US government and international community. Not a single nation has recognized Micheletti’s government, but Washington Note’s Steve Clemons explains that DeMint is intent on taking Honduran matters into his own hands:

Jim DeMint is acting on behalf of, in cahoots with, and against the foreign policy of the United States of America in encouraging post-coup Honduran government officials defy the United States. He is encouraging a political leadership which has no legitimacy and which not recognized by other democracies in the region — while the ousted President makes cell phone UN General Assembly statements from a couch-bed in the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa.

The Logan Act forbids “unauthorized citizens” from negotiating with foreign governments. In a 1936 Supreme Court ruling, Justice Sutherland wrote that “the President alone has the power” and “the Senate cannot intrude, and Congress itself is powerless to invade it.”

Since former Honduran President Manuel Zelaya was seized by the military at gunpoint and exiled in his pajamas back in June, the Obama administration — together with the United Nations, European Nations, and the Organization of American States — has collectively addressed the delicate political situation in Honduras by putting pressure on Micheletti’s government to reach a peaceful and democratic solution. So far, the US has cut all non-humanitarian aid to the de facto government and revoked the visas of all civilian and military officials who backed the June 28 coup. The Obama administration is also making a deliberate effort to repair critical relations with Latin America by reversing Washington’s “historic tendency” of welcoming and backing coups waged against democratically-elected leaders, such as Zelaya, who are critical of the U.S.

Senate Foreign Relations Chairman John Kerry (D-MA) attempted to block approval of DeMint’s self-described “fact-finding trip,” citing the defiant role DeMint has taken in attempting to alter US policy on Honduras by brazenly blocking the confirmations of Arturo Valenzuela, Obama’s nominee to be assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, and Thomas A. Shannon Jr., the nominee to be ambassador to Brazil. However, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) interfered and appealed to the Defense Department to provide an airplane for DeMint and his delegation, which the Pentagon allowed. DeMint will be joined by US Reps. Aaron Schock (R-IL), Peter Roskam (R-IL), and Doug Lamborn (R-CO). Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) will be visiting Honduras on Monday. Ros-Lehtinen and the congressmen plan on meeting with Micheletti, members of the Honduran Supreme Court, election officials, and Honduran business and civic leaders. However, they are snubbing Zelaya who recently returned to Honduras and took refuge in the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa.

Perhaps the public relations firm Chlopak, Leonard, Schechter & Associates — which Micheletti’s regime hired to “bolster its image in Washington” — helped convince DeMint to overlook the fact that Micheletti has suspended constitutional guarantees to civil liberties, including freedom of assembly and freedom of the press. Meanwhile, the U.N. Human Rights Council has unanimously called for an immediate end to all human rights violations in Honduras on behalf of the de facto government.

Update

Wesley Denton, a spokesman for DeMint, told Talking Points Memo that the Senator is not attempting “to intervene in support of the military coup in Honduras.” Denton explained:

“Sen DeMint did not announce that to the New York Times, they did not get that from our office. They did not speak to staff members from our office that I know of — they certainly did not talk to me…He’s not in support of any particular politician. He supports democracy, the rule of law and the constitution of Honduras, and he wants to see a quick resolution to the crisis, one that allows the Honduran people to resolve it through a democratic and transparent process.”

Yglesias

The Idea of a Bargain

Blog_Olympic_Logos

Kevin Drum rounds up the latest in conservative humor:

Ponnuru: Chicago is out of contention….But I’m sure that Obama will be a lot more persuasive with the Iranians.

Miller: Wow, what an embarrassment for Obama. If he can’t work his personal magic with the Olympians, why does he expect it to work with the Iranians?

Lowry: We Can Take Some Comfort….in this distressing hour that the Iranians, Russians, Chinese et al. are push-overs compared to the International Olympic Committee. Right?

These are lame jokes, yes, but I also think they reveal the profound misunderstanding of how international relations works that exists on the right. The competition to host the 2016 Olympics is just that, a competition. It’s a friendly competition, yes, but it’s still a competition. It’s zero sum. If Rio wins, then Chicago and Sao Paulo and Tokyo lose. But the overall relationship between the United States and Iran is not a zero-sum competition. A world in which Iran accepts verifiable safeguards on its nuclear program in exchange for security guarantees and a relaxation of American sanctions is a world in which both the United States and Iran wind up better off. A world in which the US and Iran cooperate in Afghanistan is a world is which both the United States and Iran wind up better off. If we fight in Iran, we both wind up worse off.

That’s the idea, at any rate, and it’s just the same with US-Russia relations and all the rest. The idea isn’t that Obama is going to use his Mighty Death Stare and win concessions. The idea is that there are mutually beneficial deals to be struck.

Justice

Supreme Court Preview Part II, John Yoo’s Revenge?

john-yoo(The following is the second in a multi-part series on the upcoming Supreme Court Term)

Few names are more associated with the worst abuses of the Bush Administration — its callous disregard for human rights, its treatment of the Constitution as opinion, its belief that presidents, or at least conservative presidents, are really kings — than former Bush OLC deputy John Yoo.  Yet while Yoo is most famous for his at-best professionally incompetent claims that it’s legal for the United States to torture, Yoo’s first love was always limitless Presidential power.  Two cases this Term will reveal just how many of the justices share Yoo’s passion.

One of the bedrock principles of American criminal law is that a criminal statute cannot be written in such a vague manner that a “person of ordinary intelligence” can’t figure out what it prohibits.  Individuals shouldn’t have to guess whether or not they are breaking a law; and the Executive shouldn’t be empowered by ambiguously-worded statutes that allow them to claim that virtually anyone’s actions are worthy of prosecution.

Federal law, however, prohibits anyone from knowingly providing any “service,” “training” or “expert advice or assistance” to a group designated as a terrorist organization by the State Department. A law whose language raises serious vagueness concerns.  If a terrorist leader announces that he reads the New York Times website to keep track of US politics, must the Grey Lady find a way to deny him the “service” of its reporting?  Are attorneys who defend suspected terrorists in court providing illegal “expert advice or assistance?”  One government attorney even claimed that an attorney who files an amicus brief–a brief filed by a non-party to a lawsuit to help advise the judges in their decision-making–raising a legal argument that benefits a terrorist organization is a felon.

If the Court allows this statute to stand, it will not only give its approval to a law that appears to ban Constitutionally-protected activity, it will give the Executive a virtual blank check to bring prosecutions against individuals with tenuous connections to terrorism.  Worse, should the Court do so, it could take a giant bite out of the principle that people need to be able to figure out what the law is.

  • The “Unitary Executive,”Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board

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Politics

McCain strategist Schmidt: Palin nomination would be ‘catastrophic,’ GOP ‘bereft of ideas’ for health reform.

Today at The Atlantic’s First Draft of History conference, Steve Schmidt, who served as the top political strategist for both John McCain and Arnold Schwarzenegger, spoke candidly about the state of the Republican Party. On health care, Schmidt noted that some individual Republicans, like Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI), were “advancing ideas” on health care legislation, but that “the party holistically is bereft of ideas.” Asked about Sarah Palin’s future political prospects, Schmidt argued that she could conceivably win the GOP nomination because of her popularity with the base conservative electorate. However, if that were to happen, Schmidt said that such a turn of events would be “catastrophic” because Palin has alienated mainstream America:

SCHMIDT: I think that she has talents. But my honest view is that she would not be a winning candidate for the Republican Party in 2012, and in fact, were she the nominee, we could have a catastrophic election result.

Watch it:

Yglesias

Slussen

I’m staying on the island of Södermalm just south of Stockholm’s old city. At the north end of the island, right by the bridges to the old city, is Slussen a fairly interesting entry in the roadway interchange genre.

slussen

Its little spirals of road are noteworthy both for being somewhat tighter and smaller than you normally see, but also for what they tucked under and inside the interchange, namely a Metro station (Red and Green lines) plus a light rail stop, a stopping point for many buses, and even a ferry depot.

I think it’s about as good a job as you can do of this sort of thing and still you’re left with the fact that this kind of structure really has no place in a city. You should just do regular roads and a normal grid. This interchange is particularly odd since Stockholm is actually blessed with a lack of misguided urban freeway projects in its central core (it’s a different story on the outskirts) so it’s hard to see why this was even felt to be necessary.

Politics

Weekly Standard deletes reference to ‘Cheers’ in their office after Chicago lost Olympic bid.

Soon after news broke that the International Olympic Committee had rejected Chicago’s bid to host the 2016 Olympics, which President Obama had personally lobbied for, Weekly Standard blogger John McCormack published a celebratory post on the magazine’s blog, titled “Chicago Loses! Chicago Loses!.” McCormack wrote that “Cheers erupt at WEEKLY STANDARD world headquarters”:

Weekly Standard Post

But the post has now been changed. The reference to cheers have been removed and the title has been shortened to a non-exclamatory “Chicago Loses.” The current post neither acknowledges nor explains the changes that were made.

Update

The Weekly Standard promoted McCormack’s celebration on Twitter, saying “Chicago Loses! Chicago Loses!

Yglesias

Labor Market is Terrible

Unemployment is up, yes, but there’s more bad news where that came from:

septhoursworked

At this point there’s obviously not going to be another stimulus bill this year, but as appropriations bills get written and passed they should be done so as to try to have stimulative effect.

Climate Progress

The American Enterprise Institute compares EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson to Clint Eastwood and carbon polluters to criminals

http://web.tiscalinet.it/silviodr/Dirty%20Harry.gifIn a bizarre pop-culture flip-flop, Kenneth Green of the American Enterprise Institute has compared the mild-mannered EPA administrator to Dirty Harry:

You can just see Jackson standing there with a .44 magnum in her hand, and a steely glint in her eye, telling industry “You’ve got to ask yourself one question, ‘do I feel lucky?’ Well, do ya, punk?”

Seriously!

Let me get this straight, the right-wing is now saying it’s bad to be like Clint, the quintessential tough guy hero lionized by conservatives because he’ll do whatever is needed to save human life?  That means Green is directly equating U.S. industry with the psychopathic serial killer and criminals that Clint fights in the iconic 1971 movie.

Well, logic was never a priority of Denier-Industrial-Complex Kooks (DICKs) like Green, who regularly spouts nonsense like, “We’re back to the average temperatures that prevailed in 1978″¦.  No matter what you’ve been told, the technology to significantly reduce emissions is decades away and extremely costly” — from a 2008 speech AEI later removed from their website (excerpts here).

In fact, Green’s analogy makes no sense whatsoever since Jackson is simply obeying the command of the highest court in the land to regulate carbon pollution (see here).  Green entirely omits the fact that in 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases were pollutants and that the EPA would have to regulate them if they were found to endanger public health and welfare.

So the only part of the analogy that makes sense is that deniers and delayers like Green oppose the rule of law — while Jackson is trying to enforce it.

Ironically, in its zealous quest to kill climate action, AEI has done another flip-flop.  Jackson proposes to start regulating only  “large industrial facilities that emit at least 25,000 tons of GHGs a year.”  Jackson explained, “This is a common sense rule that is carefully tailored to apply to only the largest sources – those from sectors responsible for nearly 70 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions sources.”  She told the Governors Climate Summit in Los Angeles, “we can begin reducing emissions from the nation’s largest greenhouse gas emitting facilities without placing an undue burden on the businesses that make up the vast majority of our economy,” adding, “The corner coffee shop is not a meaningful place to look for carbon reductions.”

But Green doesn’t believe in common sense — he urges big polluters to sue to make sure small businesses and farmers are regulated also:

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Climate Progress

Energy and Global Warming News for October 2nd: Experts see Arctic warming decades faster than models predict; A plan to save rainforests gains momentum

http://media.komonews.com/images/070915_melting_arctic_ice.jpg

Experts see Arctic warming decades faster than models predict

When it comes to climate change, what happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic.

The latest science suggests that warming in the far northern region will affect ocean currents and weather patterns around the world, said Nal¢n Ko§, director of the Centre for Ice, Climate and Ecosystems at the Norwegian Polar Institute.

Ko§ is in Washington this week for a Capitol Hill briefing on the state of polar ice. But much of her attention right now is focused on upcoming U.N. climate talks in Copenhagen. She’s leading an international group of scientists writing a report on the state of Arctic ice. Norway’s foreign minister, Jonas Gahr St¸re, and former U.S. Vice President Al Gore will officially release the scientific update at the U.N. negotiations.

The scientists, many of whom participated in an April conference organized by St¸re and Gore, are still writing their report, which draws on science released since a 2007 U.N. Environment Programme report on the state of the world’s ice and snow.

But Ko§ said that some themes are emerging from recent observations of Arctic ecosystems and scientific studies.

“We’ve observing changes that are happening much faster than the climate models have predicted,” Ko§ said.

During the last four years, she said, the extent of Arctic summer sea ice has fallen below the average level recorded since 1979, when satellite measurements began. In fact, in 2007, sea ice hit a record low.

Climate models predicted a similar drop below the average, along with abrupt decreases like that seen in 2007 — but they projected that pattern wouldn’t emerge for decades.

“These events have happened 30 years ahead of time,” Ko§ said….

She cited a recent study by scientists at Rutgers University and the University of Delaware, which concluded that Arctic thaw has the potential to alter weather patterns throughout the Northern Hemisphere. Much of North America, including Alaska, and northern Europe would become drier than normal. The western and central Mediterranean and Japan would become wetter than normal.

“It’s all connected,” Ko§ said. “There are no walls on the Arctic.”

A plan to save rainforests gains international momentum

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