ThirdPartyTalk: Setting the Board
I don't know if anyone pays attention to the generic ballot for Congress, but things are looking up lately for Republicans. The aggregate on Pollster.com shows a generic Republican polling only two points behind a generic Democrat; at several polling outfits, notably Rasmussen Reports, Republicans are ahead substantially in the generic ballot. Coupled with the losses Democrats suffered in the New Jersey and Virginia governors' races this month, you could argue that 2010 is shaping up to be a bad year for the Democratic Party.
Getting Cousin Marriage on the Legislative Agenda
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Crossposted at ZBlogs, Firedoglake and TPMCafe
How can we get repealing bans on first cousin marriage on the US legislative agenda?
I think it would clearly help in getting started to consider why it has not already been raised as an issue, given facts like that no other Western country prohibits it and that the genetic arguments have been shown to be hollow.
I can see at least two big reasons why it's been neglected:
Six senators who want to cut social security and medicare
Via Avedon Carol, this little item from Caltics:
Now it looks like they're moving to up the Hooverite ante, and two of California's powerful federal politicians are at the center of the debate. Sen. Dianne Feinstein is joining 6 other Senators to demand that Speaker Nancy Pelosi approve a commission to recommend cuts to Medicare and Social Security - or else they'll refuse to vote to increase the US government's debt ceiling: ...
Dems to throw elders under the bus
Look, I'm totally sure that paying to bail out the insurance companies by cutting Medicare won't have any real effects on old people who are going to die soon anyhow. Especially given this great news:
Senators from both parties on Tuesday put new pressure on Speaker Nancy Pelosi to turn the power to trim entitlement benefits over to an independent commission.
Sens. Conrad, Gregg, Evan Bayh (D-Ind.), Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Mark Warner (D-Va.), Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), George Voinovich (R-Ohio) and Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) publicly vowed to vote against raising the debt ceiling if a budget reform commission bill doesn't come along with it.
Six others had previously made such threats, bringing the total to 13 senators drawing a hard line on the committee legislation.
“You rarely do have the leverage to make a fundamental change,” [shock doctrine!] said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), who said he hasn’t ruled out offering the independent commission legislation as an amendment to the healthcare reform bill.
Yay!
Anger
nycweboy, who I obviously should read more often, has a post that captures the zeitgeist perfectly:
Off year election season is just kind of weird; in the "24 hour news" age, there's a whole political evaluation machine sitting around, little to do... and there's always a "trend report" needed for the next year.
And of course, there's the off chance that something real is actually happening.
[I]t seems clear that the real hurdle for candidates right now is incumbency. Voters are mad, they're especially mad about the economy, and they'd love to take it out on the nearest politician. ...
I think the left would do well to pay more attention and be less cheerfully dismissive of what's happening - the anger that [upstate NY Republican DCOW
] Doug Hoffman and his supporters are counting on to drag him into a weak three way plurality is clearly real, and it can work. ...
And it would matter more, really, if there was more to it than simply frustration; nothing about Hoffman, or other current right darlings, including McDonnell, suggests that Republicans, or conservatives have really solved the fundamental problem of a dearth of good, new ideas to offer as alternatives to our current problems. ...
Ok, hope and change, how about this one?
Via McClatchy, this story on surface coal mining. The Feds (more power to them) are considering rescinding the regulation that lets the companies bury streams and valleys under the dirt and rock produced by "mountaintop removal". If you've never seen the aftermath of one of these mining operations, you may have a hard time imagining the terrifying scale of the destruction.
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