Posts Tagged ‘EFCA’

Broad Brush Issues

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Progressive Breakfast: Boom Lowered On Big Auto
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CAF STAFF
By
Bill Scher
March 30th, 2009 –

Boom Lowered on Big Auto

USA Today reports on new WH demands for an auto rescue plan:
President Obama will announce Monday that his auto task force does not believe the plans General Motors (GM) and Chrysler delivered in February can result in viable companies and that he is giving them more time, along with an aggressive set of conditions. One of the conditions was the resignation of GM CEO Rick Wagoner … While they’re working on improving their plans, the two car companies will receive just enough money to keep operations going.
Chrysler, which the task force does not believe can stand alone, has 30 days to work out its proposed partnership with Fiat or find a new partner. It could get an additional $6 billion to make the Fiat deal work, but it then would require them to build new engines and cars in the U.S. and to pay back taxpayers before Fiat could increase its initial 35% stake.
GM has 60 days to force greater concessions out of its debt holders and other parties and to find new ways to deal with its shrinking market share.
Fuel-efficency must be a priority, reports Bloomberg: “GM will also replace most of its board and must increase reliance on producing more fuel-efficient vehicles, under findings to be announced today at the White House by President Barack Obama.”
Though WSJ reports the WH task force not betting on the electric-powered Chevy Volt: “The government body also took aim squarely at the Chevy Volt – GM’s heavily hyped electric car of the future – saying it will likely be too expensive to be commercially successful in the short-term.”
NYT on the bankruptcy option: “two senior [WH] officials, offering a preview on condition of anonymity, made clear that some form of bankruptcy — a quick, court-supervised restructuring, as they described it — could still be an option for one or both companies … The plan Mr. Obama is to announce on Monday will also include government backing of warranties for G.M. and Chrysler cars and trucks, to give consumers enough confidence to buy them, even if one or both are forced into bankruptcy.”
W. Post on remaining points on contention:
Their plan has “got to be one that’s realistically designed to weather this storm and to emerge at the other end much more lean, mean, and competitive than it currently is,” [President Obama] said
He may have been alluding to the fact that the companies have yet to win required concessions from their creditors. Under the terms of the original $17.4 billion in federal loans, GM General Motors bondholders and the companies’ retiree health plans were supposed to give up their claims to billions in debt in exchange for an equity stake in the companies. But those concessions, which are due tomorrow, have not been announced. yet.
But Obama may also have been alluding to a disagreement over how much smaller GM General Motors and Chrysler should shrink. One of the key points of contention between the companies and the Obama administration is just how large the U.S. auto market will be in the future. General Motors has offered a more optimistic scenario and shaped its business plan accordingly.
Members of the president’s autos task force have questioned those projections, however, and some industry analysts argue that the companies may need to downsize their operations even more than planned.
AP reports WH expects more auto job losses, plans to deliver help to communities: “Obama’s aides, aware of the outrage the White House faces if thousands more Americans lose their jobs, appointed a former deputy labor secretary, Ed Montgomery, to lead assistance efforts to cities and towns that depend on the auto industry. The move signaled the White House already was looking to a time when assembly plants may need to operate with far smaller staffs or shut down completely.”
Naked Capitalism’s Yves Smith worries about bankruptcy: “…we are of the school that putting the big automakers into bankruptcy, despite its attractions (being able to restructure debt and dealer networks; the UAW contracts are far less significant economically than the media makes them out to be) misses out on one crucial element: you don’t have a business if you don’t have customers. And a GM bankruptcy would be a protracted affair. Even if consumers believe the company will make it, what about their local dealer? If they worry they might have to schlepp to get their car serviced, is it worth it?”
OurFuture.org’s David Sirota questions if there is a double standard: “…how is it that the White House is requesting the resignation of GM’s CEO while not doing the same of, say, Bank of America’s CEO? In fact, not only is the president not demanding the resignation of bank CEOs, he’s actually hosting them for photo ops at the White House. Sure, I know some bank CEOs resigned a few months ago under shareholder pressure, but the Obama administration has never publicly demanded such resignations of the current management that is making the problems worse, nor the resignation of management at the biggest firms (Goldman Sachs, BofA, etc.) that are still in place.”
Ian Welsh also concerned: “…long run the US needs its industrial sector healthy and strong more than it needs an overpriced, overpaid financial sector … Tough love isn’t necessarily a bad idea, but I hope Obama is playing chicken and isn’t entirely serious. Because if the Big 3 go under, well, this economic downturn will get a lot, lot worse.”
Talking Point Memo’s Josh Marshall asks why Wagoner not sacked sooner: “Why is Rick Wagoner getting the boot while the management of the big banks remains in place? Whatever resonance the question has on first blush, it gets more complicated on further inspection. Citi does not have the same CEO it did at the start of the crisis. And the government installed a new CEO at AIG after the initial bailout. … So perhaps we should be asking why it is that something like this hasn’t happened sooner. All that said, though, after that meeting of the major bank CEOs at the White House last week, it’s hard for me not to think that, for all that has happened, their clout in Washington is just on a scale where they are accepted as peers of the realm. And simply immune to certain sorts of treatment.”
TNR’s Jonathan Cohn suggests directing stimulus money to hard-hit areas: “What can the administration do to minimize the short-term pain? And what can it do to help displaced workers find well-paying, stable employment in the future? There’s still a lot of recovery money to be spent. Maybe that’s the place to start.”

President Prepares for G-20, And Vice-Versa
President Obama interviewed by Financial Times. FT reports: ‘In comments that appear to diverge from recent remarks by [German Chancellor Angela] Merkel, who has all but ruled out more deficit spending in Germany, Mr Obama said: ‘With respect to the stimulus, there is going to be an accord that G20 countries will do what is necessary to promote trade and growth.’ … However, Mr Obama hinted leaders would stop short of pledging to carry this year’s spending measures into 2010 – as the International Monetary Fund has urged. ‘There is legitimate concern that most countries already having initiated significant stimulus packages that we need to [first] see how they work,’ he said.”
And Merkel interviewed by NYT: “Mrs. Merkel made clear that she was not wavering in her response to the economic crisis, by loosening the German checkbook or encouraging the European Central Bank to follow the Federal Reserve in pumping money into the system. She also said she expected Mr. Obama to keep his word to gradually rein in imbalances that would cause American indebtedness to grow sharply as a result of his domestic stimulus plans.”
USA Today suggests a low bar is being set for global stimulus: “‘I think it highly unlikely that countries will press for or agree on a numerical figure for stimulus,’ says Dan Price, senior partner for global issues at Sidley Austin and former assistant to the president for international economic affairs in the Bush administration. Rather than risk being turned down, Obama won’t seek more stimulus now. ‘Nobody is asking any country to come to London to commit to do more right now,’ says Michael Froman, Price’s successor [in the Obama administration]. ‘There isn’t any single number that is sacrosanct.’ That could leave a boost in lending capacity for the International Monetary Fund as the summit’s most concrete achievement. An increase of as much as $500 billion, as suggested by the Obama administration, would be used to help developing nations.”
The Guardian (UK) more bluntly suggests European leaders are winning the argument and beating back stimulus:
European leaders, led by Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel [believe] they are winning or have won the argument about how to tackle casino capitalism. The case pushed by Merkel repeatedly in recent weeks, and echoed by France and the European commission, is that there is no point now in more tax cuts and deficit spending to boost demand since it is not yet clear whether the huge fiscal stimuli packages already launched are actually going to work. Rather, the Europeans argue, the focus should be on fixing a European and global system that is broke – through a new supervisory and regulatory regime…
…Michael Froman, a senior White House official dealing with the G20, continued to insist on fiscal stimulus, although the timing of countries’ spending plans was left vague. “First is putting in place significant stimulus to get growth going again,” he told journalists at the weekend. “Secondly, fixing each of our financial systems to get lending flowing; third, avoiding protectionism; and fourth, taking steps to minimise the spread of the crisis to emerging markets and developing countries.”
For the Europeans, the emphasis and the sequencing of policy moves here is troublesome, because there is a level of mistrust among the various leaders, and because the Europeans believe they will never have a better opportunity to get the sceptical US and Britain to deliver on tougher market rules.
W. Post on what US and Europe will agree on, new regulations and tax haven crackdown: “Nations, for instance, are set to agree on reforms to the global financial system. There is a growing consensus, officials say, for reforms laid out by Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner last week that would, among other things, impose new regulations on hedge funds. Nations are also set to create codes of conduct for offshore tax havens. The push toward establishing those codes this week led nations including Switzerland to pledge changes to their banking secrecy laws to avoid being blacklisted by others in the Group of 20. Administration officials said nations are also set to agree on coordinated oversight of the global financial sector, bringing regulators from major countries together to consult about the risk level of the world’s 25 largest banks. ‘This kind of coordination is a real achievement,’ a European diplomatic source said. “If you think it is easy to get 20 countries to agree to such changes, you are wrong.’”
IPS’ Lucy Komisar on whether there will really be a tax haven crackdown: “This could be the moment when a fatal blow is delivered to the world’s tax havens. Or it could be another largely cosmetic change that allows offshore financial centres such as Switzerland, the Cayman Islands and Liechtenstein to deflect attacks on the system by sacrificing the few tax miscreants that governments catch in their nets.”
Krugman chastises Europe: “…one thing that stands out from the history of the early 1930s is the extent to which the world’s response to crisis was crippled by the inability of the world’s major economies to cooperate. … President Obama got it exactly right last week when he declared: “All of us are going to have to take steps in order to lift the economy. We don’t want a situation in which some countries are making extraordinary efforts and other countries aren’t.” Yet that is exactly the situation we’re in. I don’t believe that even America’s economic efforts are adequate, but they’re far more than most other wealthy countries have been willing to undertake.”
Baseline Scenario’s Simon Johnson: “The draft G20 communique, as published on the FT’s website, is not encouraging … On the real substance, the G20 punts on most of the big issues – as predicted, the language on monetary policy and fiscal policy is completely vacuous (paragraphs 3 and 4; the Europeans won big and the US lost on these issues), and the “regulatory reform” initiative amounts to building more ornate structures (we’re to get a new Financial Stability Board?!?) on the same weak foundations that got us into trouble. There is simply nothing substantive here that would not have happened without the G20 process; under current dire circumstances, window dressing is not a good reason to hold a summit.”

Friction On Trade Remains
The Guardian sees Doha global trade talks stalled: “A commitment to free trade will feature strongly in Thursday’s communique. [But d]espite a call at the inaugural G20 summit, in Washington last November, for the WTO to conclude the Doha round of trade liberalisation talks by the end of 2008, it proved impossible to reconcile more than seven years of acrimonious negotiations. Differences between China and the US Congress were too acute. The G20 now accepts that an early end to the Doha round is not possible; it will be considered a success if Thursday’s summit agrees to measures that stop member states from exploiting existing WTO rules to increase trade barriers. Brown is also urging a $100bn fund that would provide export credit guarantees so that trade can be unblocked.”
President Obama attacks protectionism, defends recent US acts, to FT:
FT: You mentioned the risks and dangers of protectionism. 73 separate measures have been identified by the World Bank since the last G20 summit so what again in practical terms can your administration do at the G20 to stop this – and I’m thinking to whether there are real risks that people worry in Europe a lot about what is going on, on Capitol Hill, with “Buy American” provisions.
Obama: Well first of all I think it’s important to note that here in the United States, despite some protectionist rhetoric and very real economic frustration growing out of the collapse of the financial markets and the huge rise in unemployment that the “Buy American” provision that was in the stimulus package was specifically written that had to be consistent with WTO [World Trade Organization]. That the Mexican trucking provision is now subject to negotiations to ensure that we don’t see an escalating trade war.
I have sent a very clear signal that now is not that time to offer hints of protectionism and I will continue to discourage efforts to close off the US market. I think that in a democracy, there are always going to be some loose ends out there. That’s true here, that’s true around the world but overall I don’t think that we’ve seen a huge rush to protectionism that that isn’t the rhetoric that is emanating from the leaders that will be gathering in London.
And to the extent that the American people or Europeans or Asians, Africans, Latin Americans all feel confident that their leaders are doing everything that they can to encourage and promote economic [..] and that they have their populations interests at heart, I think we are going to be able to hold the line on any significant slippage.

Treasury Willing Put More In Banks
Bloomberg: “After allocating about 80 percent of $700 billion in aid approved by Congress, administration officials want to keep open the option of seeking more. Geithner said the Treasury has about $135 billion left in a financial-stability fund while declining to say whether he will request additional money. ‘If we get to that point, we’ll go to the Congress and make the strongest case possible and help them understand why this will be cheaper over the long run to move aggressively,’ he told ABC News.”
HuffPost’s Kuttner rips lack of transparency: “…the administration is now using the Federal Reserve as an unlegislated, all-purpose slush fund. Because the Fed’s operations are largely beyond the reach of Congressional appropriations or scrutiny, the Fed can do whatever it wishes with its money. The Geithner plan was negotiated behind closed doors, the main players being the Fed, the FDIC, the Treasury, and power-brokers on Wall Street. What we have is something perilously close to a dictatorship of the Fed and the Treasury, acting in the interests of Wall Street … before the Fed is turned into an even more potent all-purpose regulator, Congress should turn it into a true public institution–a reform project that has been deferred since Roosevelt’s day.”
WSJ reports banks know their compensation systems are awful: “Banks almost unanimously agree that their compensation packages contributed to the global financial crisis but still are struggling to correct some of the flaws in their pay structures, according to a survey of financial institutions due for publication Monday … The Institute of International Finance set out seven principles of conduct last July aimed at better aligning pay with shareholder interests and long-term profitability, discouraging excessive risk-taking and making sure pay wasn’t out of line with overall bank profitability … The survey said 60% of banks expected to be following these principles once all their plans had been implemented. But 83% said they were still working out how to phase compensation to make sure it reflected the risk being taken over a long period. Without that, bankers are encouraged to take big bets for short-term profits that entail significant long-term risks.”
NYT on banks walking away from foreclosed homes: “Banks are quietly declining to take possession of properties at the end of the foreclosure process, most often because the cost of the ordeal — from legal fees to maintenance — exceeds the diminishing value of the real estate. The so-called bank walkaways rarely mean relief for the property owners, caught unaware months after the fact, and often mean additional financial burdens and bureaucratic headaches.”

EFCA Efforts Don’t Stop, Despite Specter Flip-Flop
W. Post details attempts to draft compromise Employee Free Choice language:
[Labor professor Joel] Rogers supports card check but said there may be other ways to limit intimidation by employers, such as exceedingly high penalties. “The problem is not secret ballot versus card check, it’s the fear that workers have,” he said. But Robert Bruno, a labor relations professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, doubts reforms short of card check can work. It is unrealistic, he said, to create neutral, civic-style elections in workplaces dominated by employers. Employers “would have to agree to an environment where they give up a lot of control, a lot of prerogative,” he said.
An equivalent debate is underway on the business side. Although some warn against any compromise, others say that if Congress does not take up limited reforms, card check could get a second wind. Specter himself warned of this, saying in an interview that if he loses in his primary to his conservative rival, the Democrats will definitely win his seat and gain a 60th vote…
…Union leaders say they can still get 60 senators by amending the bill in committee but without undermining its fundamentals. Business groups warn against this and say the debate will not advance until union supporters scrap the bill and start over.
In These Times’ Art Levine reports AFL-CIO is stepping up grassroots campaign: “[AFL-CIO's Stewart] Acuff said in an interview, ‘We‘re going to escalate our grass-roots campaign, and there’s no doubt that our campaign has overwhelmed the [local grass-roots] campaign of Big Business. I think the number of contacts between workers and workers allies with members of the Senate far exceeds theirs.’”
How the Private Health Industry Rolls
Those health insurers oh-so-willing to accept new regulations? Miami Herald reports on how they “secretly blacklist those with certain ailments.”: “…material available on the Web shows that people who have specific illnesses or use certain drugs can’t buy coverage … A 50-year-old Broward County man, with two long-standing medical conditions, saw the harshness for himself when surfing the Web trying to learn why insurers kept denying him coverage. He was shocked to find several insurers’ instructions to sales personnel, usually called the Guide to Medical Underwriting and often marked `’confidential and proprietary’ … [Insurance seller Susan] Foertsch said she was surprised that any of the guides could be found on the Web. ‘I’d guess someone made a mistake.’ … The Miami Herald asked several other major Florida insurers — Aetna, Humana and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida — for copies of their underwriting guides. All refused, saying they contained propriety information and were confidential.” (via Jack and Jill Politics)
Prominent lobbying firm founded by former Clinton WH officials flacking for Big Pharma. W. Post: “One of Glover Park’s new clients is the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers Association, which over the years has struggled with an industry image of profiteering at the expense of consumer health. It hired Glover Park to do strategic counseling, including polling and research, so it knows before talking to lawmakers what seniors are thinking. ‘Not only do they help us with messaging, in some cases they help us deliver the message,’ said Ken Johnson, PhRMA’s senior vice president for communications. PhRMA is bracing for a momentous year, as health-care reform is high on Obama’s agenda.”

Enviro Update
Obama climate envoy backs global efforts but warns of hard work ahead as international differences remain. W. Post:
Todd Stern … said at a U.N. conference in Bonn, Germany, that despite high expectations, Obama did not have a magic solution for fashioning a global climate-change treaty by the end of the year. “We all have to do this together. We don’t have a magic wand,” he told reporters on the sidelines of the conference. “I don’t think anybody should be thinking that the U.S. can ride in on a white horse and make it all work.” …
… Many U.N. delegates are pushing for major cuts in greenhouse gas production — 25 to 40 percent below 1990 levels — by 2020. Those cuts would be deeper than Obama’s recently announced goal of reducing U.S. carbon dioxide emissions during that time frame by 16 percent from present levels. But Stern said more ambitious targets might not be politically or economically feasible. “Let me speak frankly here: It is in no one’s interest to repeat the experience of Kyoto by delivering an agreement that won’t gain sufficient support at home,” Stern told the delegates.
Stern also said that any global treaty would require deeper concessions from rising economic powers such as China, Brazil and India. … “If you do the math, you simply cannot be anywhere near where science tells us we need to be if you don’t have China involved, as well as other major developing countries,” Stern said. “How that is captured, understood, expressed and quantified is going to be extremely important.”
W. Post on the newly invigorated EPA: “Drawing on earlier spadework, the administration has issued a proposal to create a national greenhouse gas registry; filed a lawsuit accusing a coal-fired power plant in New Roads, La., of violating the Clean Air Act; and put electric utilities on notice that they may have to account for their greenhouse gas pollution. Political appointees have also asked career employees for background material on how to regulate pollution from cement kilns; whether refineries have done enough to curb their harmful emissions; and whether the federal government should grant California and more than a dozen other states the power to curb greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles.”

Breakfast Sides
UN Dispatch on staggering hunger numbers: “The World’s Hungry Exceed One Billion for the First Time”
CNN/Money.com finds conservative governors quietly accepting stimulus funds: “Several governors who initially voiced concerns about expanding state unemployment benefits to qualify for federal stimulus funds have decided to accept the money. Some were feeling the heat from jobless constituents, while others took comfort in learning recently from the federal Department of Labor that they could curtail eligibility later on.”

Broad Brush Issues

Progressive Breakfast:
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CAF STAFF
By
Bill Scher
March 30th, 2009 – 10:37am ET

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Boom Lowered on Big Auto

USA Today reports on new WH demands for an auto rescue plan:

President Obama will announce Monday that his auto task force does not believe the plans General Motors (GM) and Chrysler delivered in February can result in viable companies and that he is giving them more time, along with an aggressive set of conditions. One of the conditions was the resignation of GM CEO Rick Wagoner … While they’re working on improving their plans, the two car companies will receive just enough money to keep operations going.

Chrysler, which the task force does not believe can stand alone, has 30 days to work out its proposed partnership with Fiat or find a new partner. It could get an additional $6 billion to make the Fiat deal work, but it then would require them to build new engines and cars in the U.S. and to pay back taxpayers before Fiat could increase its initial 35% stake.

GM has 60 days to force greater concessions out of its debt holders and other parties and to find new ways to deal with its shrinking market share.

Fuel-efficency must be a priority, reports Bloomberg: “GM will also replace most of its board and must increase reliance on producing more fuel-efficient vehicles, under findings to be announced today at the White House by President Barack Obama.”

Though WSJ reports the WH task force not betting on the electric-powered Chevy Volt: “The government body also took aim squarely at the Chevy Volt – GM’s heavily hyped electric car of the future – saying it will likely be too expensive to be commercially successful in the short-term.”

NYT on the bankruptcy option: “two senior [WH] officials, offering a preview on condition of anonymity, made clear that some form of bankruptcy — a quick, court-supervised restructuring, as they described it — could still be an option for one or both companies … The plan Mr. Obama is to announce on Monday will also include government backing of warranties for G.M. and Chrysler cars and trucks, to give consumers enough confidence to buy them, even if one or both are forced into bankruptcy.”

W. Post on remaining points on contention:

Their plan has “got to be one that’s realistically designed to weather this storm and to emerge at the other end much more lean, mean, and competitive than it currently is,” [President Obama] said Continue reading »

Congress: Tell Them in Person April 4 – 19 – A list of ideas…

The listing below represents Dave Swanson’s position on a number of items, some of which I support. Whether you support them or not, let your representatives know where you stand on these issues.

Jim O’

david@davidswanson.org

Congress: Tell Them in Person April 4 – 19

A list of ideas…

It’s just spring, when the world is puddle-wonderful, and your representative and your two senators pack up their lingerie and come dancing from hop-scotch and toy soldiers to make the trek outside the Beltway for a well-earned vacation sponsored by corporations completely indifferent to legislative news and dedicated to appreciation of nature’s bounty in this season of new birth — er, I mean, to begin a District Work Period dedicated to discovering exactly how much you appreciate the good work they’ve done so far — er, that is to say, the last frazzled human threads that our democratic republic hangs by are coming home from April 4th to 19th and if you want to nudge them gently or forcefully in any direction you should call and ask for an appointment NOW.

This is something you have a right and a responsibility to do, either alone or with your friends and family, or with some like-minded neighbors, or with a coalition representing activist groups, labor unions, and other civic bodies. If your polite request for an appointment with your representative or one of your senators does not work, insist on it. Do not take no for an answer. If you cannot get an appointment or you can but cannot get a commitment to better represent your district or state, I highly recommend sitting down in your elected official’s district office, phoning the media, and picketing out front. All is not well in our nation, and while there is no point in turning a friendly meeting unnecessarily confrontational, in most districts and states that WILL be necessary.

Why? What are we asking for that they aren’t willing to provide? Well, peace, justice, the rule of law, and a fair break for working people, to name a few things. But, of course, every elected official on the planet will agree to those vague values, shake your hand, and blow you kisses out the door. What you want are specific hard commitments, and what they understand committing to are bills. So, where we have bills for them to cosponsor, ask them to cosponsor. Where we don’t, ask them to introduce a new bill. Where appropriate, ask them to sign or draft a letter, make a statement, or commit to voting yes or no. Each congress member or senator is unique, as are the needs of each district and state. Knowledge is power: know as much about the person you are meeting with as possible. You can’t discuss a dozen things in a meeting. But you can hand them a list of a dozen things and insist that they agree to at least one of them. You can choose to win their support on three minor matters rather than sitting-in at their office over one big one. You can use your judgment, but you should bear in mind that there is no conflict between respectful conversation and public pressure. Pressure is what the public is supposed to provide in a democracy. Disagreement need not and should not look like it does on television shoutfests.

You may want to make clear to your congress member and senators that you want them to have more power, not less, and that you want to help them get it. They’ve given up the power of war, the power of the purse, the power of treaty, the power to legislate without signing statements and secret laws and executive decrees, and even the power of subpoena. We want Congress to reclaim some powers and we want Congress members to think of themselves as powerful defenders of the first branch of our government, not members of political parties attending a royal court. We want them to envision what Congress could be if it resembled the body described in Article I of the Constitution. Here are steps they can take:

Cosponsor the State Secrets Protection Act

This is a bill to deny presidents the power to keep information secret from even a closed court of law by claiming “state secrets.” While this power was abused greatly by President Bush, this bill was reintroduced by leading Democrats because President Obama began abusing this power. This is a rare instance of Congress standing up for itself (er, for the courts, but walking begins with baby steps) despite the party membership of those involved. Your representative and senators should be willing to sign onto this regardless of their party or politics. The House version (HR 984) has 16 cosponsors. The Senate version (S 417) has 6. Learn more:

http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/39739

Impeach Jay Bybee

If Congress wanted all of its powers to start flowing back up Capitol Hill, it would reclaim the power of impeachment, and it has a perfect opportunity. John Yoo didn’t write those torture memos alone. His boss was Jay Bybee, and Bybee’s signature is on memos that amount to confessions to felonies. Meanwhile, Bybee is serving as a federal judge in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. That the people of San Francisco and their Congresswoman who serves as Speaker of the House tolerate this is a disgrace. Any member of Congress of any party and from any state can introduce an article of impeachment or a bill to initiate impeachment hearings. Learn more:

http://afterdowningstreet.org/bybee

Ask Eric Holder to Appoint a Special Prosecutor

In June 2008, 56 Democratic Congress members, led by Congressman John Conyers, wrote to Attorney General Mukasey asking for a Special Prosecutor. Conyers and Congressman Jerrold Nadler wrote to Mukasey again in December 2008. Please ask them to re-send these letters to the new Attorney General, Eric Holder. Nadler says he’s drafting a new letter. The demand for prosecution has been supported by many members of the House and Senate. Almost 200 organizations are calling for a special prosecutor, as are almost 50,000 Americans. Ask your representative and senators to work with Nadler or on their own to publicly ask Holder to do what the law requires. Learn more:

http://prosecutebushcheney.org

Co-sponsor the Employee Free Choice Act

This bill would enforce the basic human right to assemble and self-organize, to form a union in the workplace free of intimidation and retribution from employers. This is a bill to restore power beyond Congress, to the people. You don’t have to tell congress members that, but you do have to show it to them and compel them to back this. The House version (HR 1409) already has more than enough cosponsors to pass (224), but the Senate version (S 560) has only 39 and needs 50 (or 60 if the Senate leadership chooses to allow a filibuster to block it. If unions won’t pressure senators hard for this, that doesn’t mean future larger unions can’t be made to fight for justice. We know they won’t if they don’t exist. Learn more:

http://www.freechoiceact.org

End the Filibuster

Ask your senators to ask Senator Reid to support changing the filibuster rule (which can be done with a simple majority) to henceforth require only a simple majority to bring a bill to a vote. It is obscene to continue with a system in which senators representing 12 percent of the country can block all the efforts of the House and Senate. Learn more:

http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/39624

Cosponsor Single-Payer Healthcare

The United States National Health Care Act or the Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act, is a House bill, HR 676, that now has 72 cosponsors. Some members of the Senate supported this bill when they were in the House, but there is not yet any bill in the Senate. Your far-right elected officials will call this “socialized medicine” but it uses private doctors, private hospitals, complete freedom of choice (unlike the current system), saves businesses billions, and nets 2.6 million new jobs. Your moderate-right elected officials will tell you they want to just follow the president’s plan, but unless they do their jobs and represent you by pushing for single-payer there will not be even a partial solution to our healthcare disaster in the final compromise bill. You can’t compromise unless you have a starting position. And that requires putting your name on the line. Learn more:

http://guaranteedhealthcare4all.org

Cosponsor Resolution Rejecting Treaties Made Without Congress

Bush made a treaty with Iraq for three more years of war, without congressional approval, and President Obama has declared in a signing statement that he has the power to make treaties without congress “interfering,” despite the Constitution’s requirement that two-thirds of the Senate approve any treaty. Feel free to mention Bush or Obama depending on who you’re talking to. A House resolution (HRes 72) would express opposition to Bush’s Iraq treaty unless approved by Congress. It has 6 cosponsors. Many groups and individuals are urging Pelosi to support this. No Senate resolution or bill has yet been introduced. Learn more:

http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/39479

Oppose Escalation of War in Afghanistan

Even when Congress members won’t use their powers and choose to behave as advisors to the throne, it is possible for them to say the right thing and for that to help build the willingness to act. A bipartisan group of fourteen members of Congress recently wrote to the president asking him to reconsider his proposal to ship more troops to Afghanistan. Your representative and senators should send similar letters. Learn more:

http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/41050

Promise to Vote No Money for War Escalation, War Extension, Military Enlargement, or Bankers

Congress plans to vote on another supplemental spending bill for 2009 to continue the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan and expand the latter. This will be for $75.5 billion on top of the $68.5 billion already stolen from our children and forked over. We want commitments to vote no on appropriating or authorizing any such spending, unless amended to be used purely for withdrawal. Enough is enough. We have seen huge struggles over this in past years that should not be allowed to dissipate because the wars are rebranded with the face of a new commander in chief. We do not have another $75.5 billion to spend on death and destruction and the antagonizing of the Muslim world. That money must go to human needs.

Another $130 billion or so will be marked for war funding in the upcoming FY 2010 budget as well, on top of another $557 billion or so in military spending, not counting various pieces of Pentagon spending and the military spending scattered across various other departments. In other words, the plan is to increase the largest military budget in world history. More than half of every dollar of income tax now goes to killing rather than living, investment in weapons and only weapons is destroying our economy, we desperately need jobs, green energy, mass transportation, healthcare, infrastructure, and schools, our government has already put our grandchildren in deep debt to China, and the plan is to INCREASE this approach. It’s time to say No. We need a commitment to vote No on appropriating or authorizing any spending that extends illegal wars and fails to significantly decrease the wasteful spending of the Pentagon. If that means passing an amendment to the budget, so be it. If it means revising the budget until it will pass, so be it. We waste some $140 billion per year maintaining military bases around the world that damage our relations with the world. We dump billions and billions into weapons systems that do not work or are designed to combat enemies we do not have. Investing in non-military areas creates more and better-paying jobs, and without all the blowback. We need change, and we will not get it by voting, or by watching basketball. Change comes through organized public pressure. Learn more:

http://afterdowningstreet.org/warwaste

Cosponsor the Cluster Munitions Civilian Protection Act

Congress passed a law in March permanently banning exports of nearly all U.S.-made cluster bombs. But Congress has not banned the use of cluster bombs by the U.S. military. The Senate version of a bill to do so (S 416) has 23 cosponsors, and the House version (HR 981) has 24. Learn more: http://www.banclusterbombs.org

Let Wall Street Bankers Try Working for a Living

We need an understanding in congress that we will not tolerate any more bailouts for bankers, and we need leadership in efforts to undo what has been done, take our money back, allow fraudulent finance companies to fail, and fund the real economy. We want New Orleans rebuilt. We want a moratorium on foreclosures and evictions. We want a living wage minimum wage. And we want investment of the size traditionally reserved for weapons makers and now expanded for bankers to go, instead, into the creation of non-military non-Wall Street jobs. We want money for every useful local and state need and pet project any elected representative has in mind, and we want our representatives to begin seeing potential funding for human needs when they look at massive military and Wall Street waste. We want local groups that work on domestic issues to see the same thing, and we should use these visits to build such coalitions. Here are two more things we DO want:

Cosponsor the Universal Prekindergarten Act

This House bill (HR 555) would assist States in establishing a universal prekindergarten program to ensure that all children 3, 4, and 5 years old have access to a high-quality full-day, full-calendar-year prekindergarten education. It has 6 cosponsors.

Cosponsor a Department of Peace

This House bill (HR 808) has 65 cosponsors. Learn more:

http://www.thepeacealliance.org

You can read any bill and check the list of cosponsors at:

http://thomas.loc.gov

You can find your representative and senators at:

http://www.congress.org/congressorg/directory/congdir.tt

Getting Organized:

Don’t want to lobby Congress alone? You don’t have to. You can find people in your district by joining like-minded organizations.

Join After Downing Street.

Join Democrats.com.

Join the Progressive Democrats of America Issue Organizing Team on Accountability and Justice.

Join the National Accountability Network.

Join the United for Peace and Justice Working Group on Accountability and Prosecution.

Join the Peace Team.

Join World Can’t Wait.

Join CODE PINK: Women for Peace.

Join Veterans for Peace.

Join High Road for Human Rights.

Join American Freedom Campaign.

Join Center for Constitutional Rights.

Join National Lawyers Guild.

The Robert Jackson Steering Committee was formed at a September 2008 conference in Andover, Mass. Watch video.

Broad Brush Issues

Progressive Breakfast: Employee Free Choice Hits Congress

 EFCA Introduced Today

Bloomberg reports Sen. Tom Harkin and Rep. George Miller will introduce the Employee Free Choice Act today and that Dem Sens. Bayh, Bingaman, Landrieu, Lincoln, Nelson (Neb.) and Pryor remain uncommitted.

Media Matters: “USA Today, Politico repeated their previous falsehood that a secret ballot is currently required to form a union.” WSJ too.

HuffPost’s Art Levine: “The AFL-CIO has even started a “Chicken Little” contest for the most outrageously false and extreme claim made by opponents of the legislation, and the competition is fierce: Is it Newt Gingrich calling the bill a ‘mortal threat to American freedom’ or Home Depot’s Bernie Marcus saying it will cause the ‘demise of a civilization’?”

HuffPost’s Sam Stein on Warren Buffet’s opposition: “Labor representatives … noted that he misrepresented the crux of the legislation, claiming it would end the secret ballot when, in actuality, it would provide workers a choice between using a secret ballot or majority sign-up in their efforts to unionize.” Also from Stein: Chamber of Commerce head still won’t debate SEIU’s Andy Stern.

Bloomberg reports on huge business lobby money dedicated to stopping EFCA: “Opponents including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Federation of Independent Business have said they will spend about $200 million on advertising and lobbying to block the measure.”

New anti-EFCA advertisements are up reports The Plum Line.

MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow asks opponents “have you actually read the bill?” Plus, interview with Andy Stern.

More Stimulus: Door Open, Or Delay?

ABC’s George Stephanopoulos tracks Obama administration comments on additional stimulus, concludes, “No doors closed. Will news between now and G-20 [meeting in early April] raise or lower pressure?”

Obama econ adviser Christina Romer in speech says “We need to let the medicine work for a while” but also warns of underspending. USA Today: “…citing lessons from the Great Depression, she said the government must keep spending to sustain the economy until a recovery is well established … [In 1936,] though the unemployment rate remained stuck in double digits, President Franklin Roosevelt tightened spending and levied the first Social Security payroll taxes, which drained more purchasing power from private hands. The Federal Reserve, at the same time, doubled reserve requirements for banks. That one-two punch dealt the economy a blow that added two years to the Depression, Romer said.”

Economist’s View’s Tim Duy fears WH is too optimistic: “commentators are already calling for a fresh round of stimulus. But will these calls be heeded, or fall on deaf ears? For now, it looks like the Obama Administration is standing firm … Light at the end of the tunnel…what information exactly is flowing into the Oval Office? Did the White House get the same jobs report the rest of us saw last Friday?”

Time reports on rising consumer credit problems: “economic woes that have long plagued those at the lower fringes of the American middle class are now hitting people near the heart of it.”

How Weak Are The Banks?

McClatchy reports “5 biggest banks face huge losses”: “America’s five largest banks, which already have received $145 billion in taxpayer bailout dollars, still face potentially catastrophic losses from exotic investments if economic conditions substantially worsen, their latest financial reports show.”

Baseline Scenario’s Simon Johnson decodes World Bank statement: “In a document prepared for the G20 meeting, the World Bank hints at more dire outcomes: global GDP will decline this year for the first time since WWII, with growth “at least 5 percentage points below potential” (translation: roughly minus 1 percent). But they don’t give any supporting country-level detail and they are completely silent on the key question for the US banking stress test – what will happen in 2010 … their body language … says that this is going to stay bad for a while. But they can’t quite bring themselves to be explicit. The document is a series of dire warnings, couched in rather indirect language – although, to an official ear, the general downbeat tone is quite clear. Then you reach section VII, “Urgent Priorities” and the recommendation for the financial system is: “restoring confidence”. This is completely vague and unhelpful – which, of course, is the point.”

AIG told govt its failure would be “catastrophic” and could start a “run on the bank” in confidential memo, according to W. Post.

Meanhile, Citigroup CEO touts new profits, according to Bloomberg. “‘I am most encouraged with the strength of our business so far in 2009,’ [Vikram] Pandit wrote in an internal memorandum obtained today by Bloomberg. ‘In fact, we are profitable through the first two months of 2009 and are having our best quarter-to-date performance since the third quarter of 2007.’ … The bank has also conducted its own stress tests, using assumptions more pessimistic that the Federal Reserve’s, Pandit added. Citigroup is ‘confident’ about its capital strength.”

Naked Capitalism on Citi: “The double-speak in this Wall Street Journal piece, ‘U.S. Weighs Further Steps for Citi.’ is so thick that parsing it is like wading through mud. And I do mean to stress the attempts to obfuscate what is going on.”

FDIC pushes toxic assets plan. W. Post: “The government’s plan to strip banks of troubled assets could force some firms to record large losses, but the painful purge would help restore confidence in the banking system, according to Sheila C. Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Bair said yesterday that the effort might require more money than the $700 billion Congress has approved to aid the financial industry, but she added that taxpayers would probably reap an eventual profit on the asset purchases … Bair and other federal officials said discussions were ongoing about the appropriate extent of the federal subsidy. A larger government contribution would allow investors to pay higher prices, limiting the losses that banks would record but also exposing taxpayers to greater risk. The administration hopes to find the right balance and announce the details within the next two weeks, possibly as soon as next week, according to people familiar with the matter. “

Fortune looks at how unemployment complicates bank rescue: “rapidly increasing joblessness directly undercuts the massive efforts underway to stabilize the banking system … feeding the near-tidal wave of homes on the brink of foreclosure as well as delinquencies on auto loans and other types of consumer lending. This process inevitably expands the already dangerously high levels of toxic assets on bank balance sheets.” Bloomberg economist survey: “The U.S. jobless rate will reach 9.4 percent this year and remain elevated through at least 2011…”

Reuters on BofA bonuses: “New York state’s top legal officer and U.S. Rep. Barney Frank demanded Monday that Bank of America Corp provide more details on $6.9 billion in bonuses paid in 2008, including $3.6 billion at the former Merrill Lynch & Co.”

FireDogLake’s Jane Hamsher: “Bank Lobby Still Getting a Lot of Bang for Their Bucks”

Politico on Geithner meeting with House Dems:

“He knew what he was doing. He gave good solid answers, it was two hours of openness,” House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) said after the meeting. “Reality is not the best right now. He can’t wave a magic wand.” The administration has included a placeholder in its budget proposal for additional bailout funds, and President Barack Obama said flat out during his congressional address last month that more money would likely be needed. But Geithner did not say Monday night how much additional bailout money the administration may need to request in the future, sources in the room said.

He defended the administration’s response thus far, walking members week-by-week through the actions the administration and Congress have taken since Obama took office, attendees said. … “We’re doing in weeks what countries did in years,” Geithner told the assembled Democrats, according to a person present. “This will work. It will take some time. It will take patience. We will work with you. But it will work,” the attendee recalled Geithner saying…

…Rep. Brad Miller (D-N.C.), who stayed to the end of the session, said the administration’s plans to fix the banking system seem to continue to focus on more capital infusions and somehow buying the toxic assets from financial institutions, “but it was not clear what that would be.” He, for one, did not emerge from the lengthy session reassured. “There is almost nothing about our banking system right now that I find reassuring,” he said.

Trade Nominee Promises Changes

USTR nominee Ron Kirk gives harsh assessment to Korea deal in Senate Finance cmte testimony. AP:

Former Dallas mayor Ron Kirk, apparently on course to be the next U.S. trade representative, told senators Monday that his main objective as the nation’s top trade official will be enforcing existing law and insisting that U.S. trade partners play by the rules.

He made clear that trade policy under President Barack Obama would differ from that of the Bush administration, when the emphasis was on cementing new free trade agreements.

Kirk, generally supported by the business community as an advocate of expanded trade, said he did not come to the job with ”deal fever” and would make his top priority assuring that existing trade partners live up to the rules — in such areas as labor rights and environmental protection — that are already on the books.

He said that of the three pending bilateral free trade deals — with Panama, Colombia and South Korea — Panama was the closest to being sent to Congress. He said the agreement with South Korea offered ”one of the biggest opportunities we have” to expand U.S. sales abroad, but that the current accord ”just simply isn’t fair. ” He said that the administration ”will step away from that if we don’t get it right.”…

…Kirk said all three agreements would undergo a comprehensive review before they are presented to Congress…

…Kirk assured [GOP Sen. Chuck] Grassley that any efforts to ”strengthen” NAFTA would be collaborative and would not result in any of the participants raising tariffs, a concern to farmers in Grassley’s home state.

Eyes on Trade, after live-blogging the hearing: “Wow. That was the shortest and least substantive hearing on ANY matter I’ve ever heard.”

South Korea government responds. Bloomberg: “South Korea defended an economic accord with the U.S. that President Barack Obama’s nominee for U.S. trade representative vowed to alter on the grounds it ‘isn’t fair.’”

W. Post analyzes new trade strategy: “The Obama administration is aggressively reworking U.S. trade policy to more strongly emphasize domestic and social issues, from the displacement of American workers to climate change … the administration is preparing to take a harder line with America’s trading partners. It will seek new benchmarks before supporting already-written trade agreements with Colombia and South Korea and is suggesting that it will dig in its heels on global trade talks, demanding that other countries make broader concessions first … Yet the administration still appears to be toeing a line, saying it will move to address the concerns of American workers while also carefully avoiding words and deeds that directly smack of protectionism.”

Obama To Deliver Education Speech Today

WSJ gives a detailed preview:

President Barack Obama is laying out his “cradle to career” plan for education Tuesday, including a controversial plan to boost pay for teachers who excel. The White House plan also includes new incentives for states to boost quality in their preschool programs, to raise standards for student achievement and to reduce the high school drop-out rate. And the president is fleshing out his plan to increase financial aid for college students, senior administration officials said…

…He’ll also call for improved professional development, mentoring for new and underperforming teachers and “new processes to remove ineffective teachers.” He is also promoting better recruitment, including recruitment of mid-career professionals to enter teaching.

Additionally, he’ll call for more charter schools and challenge states to lift limits on the number in operation.

To reduce high-school drop-outs, the president wants to direct attention to the low-performing districts that account for a disproportionate share of the problem. According to the White House fact sheet, 2,000 low-performing high schools produce more than half the drop-outs, so the goal is to invest new money in these areas, including new attention to at-risk students still in middle school. The president’s 2010 budget includes funding for programs that deal with dropouts, such as transfer schools that combine education and job training for students that are far behind.

Reuters: [Officials] said he would challenge U.S. states to adopt more rigorous standards of education, especially in reading and math. … Obama, however, is not proposing to make it compulsory for states to raise education standards and will rely instead on boosting education spending in several areas, including early childhood education, to achieve the desired results.”

NY Daily News: “‘The most controversial thing here is the performance pay schemes,’ said a Democratic source with knowledge of Obama’s educational reforms. His push comes in the face of opposition from union allies who have long opposed the merit-pay system.”

NPR visits rural WV school to explore how ed stimulus money will be spent. “‘It could really be a big benefit to us to have that funding,” [Clay County Superintendent Larry Gillespie] says. Gillespie says it may help the school district not just get through the economic crisis, but jump-start some long-term improvements as well.”

Budget “Hawk” Protecting Wasteful Private Student Loan System

More colleges are offering government student loans, instead of subsidized private loans. USA Today: “The number of colleges and universities offering student loans through the government’s direct loan program rose sharply last year, a trend that could strengthen Obama administration efforts to end subsidies to lenders that provide student loans .. Obama’s budget calls for ending the government-subsidized loan program by 2010. The administration estimates that would save the government $4 billion a year.”

Yet conservative Dem Sen. Ben Nelson, who claims to be concerned about overspending, opposes the plan. W. Post: “one of the major corporate providers of student loans is NelNet, a company based in Lincoln, Neb., the home state of Sen. Ben Nelson … ‘I don’t support anything that could reduce those benefits,’ Nelson said.”

Budget Battle

W. Post and NYT review the myriad of fights Dem senators may wage on Obama’s budget.

Back From Detroit

NYT and W. Post report on WH auto task force visit to Detroit, with few details of meetings made public.

UAW employees ratify agreement with Ford allowing some retiree benefits to be paid in stocks, adding uncertainty to retirements.

Green Stimulus

CNN reports stimulus “could breathe new life into an emerging industry: small wind turbines … used to help power homes or small businesses.”

USA Today rounds up the stimulus tax credits you can take for making energy-efficient home improvements.

“Stimulus Dollars Energize Efforts To Smarten Up the Electric Power Grid” reports W. Post.

Breakfast Sides

Health Care for America NOW! rallies in protest of major insurance lobby conference in DC this morning.

“Van Jones is Tapped as Special Adviser to Obama … an emerging leader who happens to be black and who has also successfully promoted the concept that we can address climate change, save our economy and create good jobs (especially in struggling communities) all at the same time.”: Jack and Jill Politics

Washington Independent: “WSJ Cherry-Picks Data to Label Cap-and-Trade Scheme ‘Regressive’”

“A multi-national coalition of law firms is asking G-20 nations to form an international financial court for cases like the global scam allegedly run by Bernard Madoff,” reports USA Today.

OurFuture.org alum Rick Perlstein has classic book on the conservative movement “Before The Storm” back in print.

Morer Broad Brush Issues

ROBERT KUTTNER

Repairing Housing Policy

prospect.org — President Obama has three big tasks if he is to get the economy on a path to recovery. One is massive public spending. The second is getting a banking system functioning again. And third is stemming the cycle of home foreclosures.

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THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER

The Audacity to Reverse Reaganism

charlotteobserver.com — Goodbye — and good riddance — to “trickle-down,” the theory that more money for the rich eventually creates more money for the poor. It has “been discredited once and for all,” Obama’s budget plan states. Indeed, evidence shows that for 30 years, income inequality in America has grown.

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BOB HERBERT

Wars, Endless Wars

nytimes.com — The U.S. economy is in free fall, the banking system is in a state of complete collapse and Americans all across the country are downsizing their standards of living. The nation as we’ve known it is fading before our very eyes, but we’re still pouring billions of dollars into wars in Afghanistan and Iraq with missions we are still unable to define.

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NICHOLAS HOFFMAN

The Second Great Depression

thenation.com — Many are starting to say it looks as though we are heading into — or are already in — another Great Depression But what might a depression be? How will we know if and when we are in one?

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MATTHEW ROTHSCHILD

We Came an Inch from Martial Law

progressive.org — It turns out that some of our most paranoid fears about the Bush Administration had a basis in reality.

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PAUL CUMMINS

The Rebirth of Education

truthdig.com — Sometimes systems are so flawed that they need to be scrapped and replaced rather than fiddled with or fixed. Not all — but many — American schools and systems fall into this category. They are not just damaged; they are truly broken.

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SETH SANDRONSKY

Reforming Federal Labor Law: The Employee Free Choice Act

truthout.org — What does fairness and freedom mean on the job in the U.S.?

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TOM ENGELHARDT

A Farewell to Jobs

motherjones.com — A recent poll reveals many Americans aren’t afraid of losing their job. Are they crazy?

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