What kind of world are we living in where the Susan G. Komen Foundation has to do damage control for pulling funding from an organization that is under federal investigation for potentially using taxpayer money for abortions, financial abuses, and ignoring state and local reporting requirements, often regarding minors? Witness the Politico’s headline: Susan G.

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It’s Come To This: Komen Foundation Has To Do Damage Control

On Wednesday, the Republican-led House of Representatives took a major swipe at President Obama’s health care law, as it voted to repeal the Community Living Assistance Services and Support program (known as the CLASS Act). CLASS is, by all accounts, a financially-troubled and complex portion of the controversial overhaul; it deals with providing affordable, long-term care insurance to Americans in need. This provision in the health care law has been troublesome for some time now. Back in October, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said she wasn’t able to find a way to make the voluntary program financially solvent. But the White House, despite these challenges, hasn’t yet been supportive of repealing it. Under the program, workers would pay a monthly premium during their careers and collect a daily cash benefit if they become disabled later in life. The White House describes the program as follows: The Act provides Americans with a new option to finance long-term services and care in the event of a disability. It is a self-funded and voluntary long-term care insurance choice. Workers will pay in premiums in order to receive a daily cash benefit if they develop a disability. Need will be based on difficulty in performing basic activities such as bathing or dressing.  The benefit is flexible: it could be used for a range of community support services, from respite care to home care. No taxpayer funds will be used to pay benefits under this provision. The program will actually reduce Medicaid spending, as people are able to continue working and living in their homes and not enter nursing homes. Safeguards will be put in place to ensure its premiums are enough to cover its costs. The Associated Press further explains the plan: The CLASS Act was supposed to address the crisis in long-term care coverage. Currently some 10 million Americans need long-term care, and that number is expected to hit 15 million by 2020. But only about 8 percent of people buy private long-term care insurance. …monthly premiums would be used to finance benefits of at least $50 a day for those needing long-term care. The money would go for services at home or to help with nursing home bills. But government actuaries determined that unless a large number of healthy people signed up, premiums would have to soar to unaffordable levels to meet the growing needs of the disabled. “House Republicans voted to repeal the entire Affordable Care Act last year, but Democrats stood behind the president in defense of their landmark bill. Now, Republicans are trying to take it apart, piece by piece,” ABC News reported . The vote to strike down the act ended with 267 for and 159 against, as 28 Democrats joined in favor and all 239 voting Republicans showed their support for it. Republicans have targeted the program as part of their overall goal of dismantling the health care overhaul law. Action on the bill in the Democratic-controlled Senate is uncertain. One of the few changes Congress has been able to bring about concerned a requirement for small businesses to file more health care paperwork. “Republicans are committed to repealing and defunding it, piece by piece if necessary,” House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said of the health care bill after the CLASS Act vote. Experts have concluded, said Rep. Phil Gingrey, R-Ga., that “the CLASS program can’t be operated without mandatory participation so as to ensure its solvency.” Unless it is terminated, he said, “it poses a clear danger to the fiscal health of our budget and to the American taxpayer.” The administration finally has come to the conclusion “that we knew even before the bill passed, that this was unsustainable, it was unworkable, it was fatally flawed,” said the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Charles Boustany, R-La. But Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said the Republican goal was to “tear down and dismantle programs that provide health care in the United States.” He said “the solution is to amend the program to make it work, not just repeal it and leave nothing in its place.” Waxman isn’t alone in his criticism. Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) penned an op-ed for Politico that railed against the Republican action : In the past, lawmakers would have worked together to amend existing law to address a serious national crisis like long-term care. But in our charged partisan environment, too many people would rather score political points than solve problems. They view repealing CLASS as a tactical step toward undermining health care reform – without putting forward any real alternatives for families who have nowhere to turn. Repealing CLASS won’t do anything to solve our nation’s long-term care crisis. Legislation rarely starts out perfectly – indeed, the Republicans’ own Medicare prescription drug bill left a huge coverage gap, forcing seniors to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket. It is only because Democrats rejected the “throw out the baby with the bathwater” approach to legislating, and figured out a solution, that this gap will finally be closed and seniors can save millions on prescription drugs. More evidence that the battle over the American health care system is far from over. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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This Is the Portion of Obamacare That the House Voted to Repeal

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Six Takeaways From Florida

On February 3, 2012, in Uncategorized, by arlenschumer

And the results from Florida are (Fox News) Romney received 46 percent of the Florida vote. Gingrich had 32 percent, followed by Rick Santorum with 13 percent and Ron Paul with 7 percent. Romney won all 50 of Florida’s convention delegates. The Politico’s Maggie Haberman, who has done a pretty good job in covering the GOP

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Six Takeaways From Florida

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The Politico’s Kenneth P. Vogel and Alexander Burns are surely going to earn an expletive laden call from the White House for publishing this story (Politico) Democrats have seized on Republicans as the party of unlimited secret money. The only problem: so are Democrats. In recent days, Obama released an ad blasting “secretive oil billionaires” for attacks on

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Surprise! Democrats Take Secret Cash After Bashing GOP For Same

President Barack Obama is, of course, smarter than an 8th grader. He went to Harvard. But maybe he doesn’t think the people who watched his State of the Union address are. His speech rated at an 8th grade reading comprehension level for the third year in a row. More from Politico : The University of Minnesota’s Smart Politics conducted an analysis on the last 70 State of the Union addresses and found that President Obama’s three addresses have the lowest grade average of any modern president. “Obama’s average grade-level score of 8.4 is more than two grades lower than the 10.7 grade average for the other 67 addresses written by his 12 predecessors,” they conclude.

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Are you smarter than an 8th grader?

Surging Gingrich Is A Master Of Disguise Or Something

On January 23, 2012, in Uncategorized, by TwilaManozca764

So says The Politico The surging Newt Gingrich has mastered debates — and disguise. The debate part is clear: The former Speaker of the House comes to play and owns the stage with an uncanny capacity to connect with the grievances of conservative voters. The disguise part is clear, too. Gingrich has used his debate skills — and

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Surging Gingrich Is A Master Of Disguise Or Something

Another Republican debate showdown. Fox News Channel hosts the final five GOP in Myrtle Beach, S.C. starting at 9pm Eastern. The hosts: Bret Baier of Fox News’ ‘Special Report’ and Gerald Seib of the Wall Street Journal. You can watch live online here . Twitter users can play “#dodge” or “#answer” . Seven more GOP debates from now through March 19. Have we reached an over-saturation point? January 19, 2012 8pm ET on CNN Location: Charleston, SC Sponsor: CNN and the Southern Republican Leadership Conference Participants: Romney, Gingrich, Santorum, Paul, Perry* January 23, 2012 9pm ET on NBC Location:University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida Sponsor: The Tampa Bay Times, NBC News, the National Journal and the Florida Council of 100 Participants: TBD January 26, 2012 Air time TBD on CNN Location: Jacksonville, FL Sponsor: CNN, CNN en Español, The Hispanic Leadership Network and The Republican Party of Florida Participants: TBD February 22, 2012 8pm ET on CNN (Originally Dec 1, then Nov 30) Location: Mesa Arts Center in Mesa, Arizona Sponsor: CNN and the Republican Party of Arizona Participants: TBD March 1, 2012 8pm ET on CNN Location: Georgia Sponsor: CNN and the Georgia Republican Party Participants: TBD March 5, 2012 Air time TBD on NBC Location: Reagan Library in Simi Valley, CA Sponsor: Reagan Library, NBC News and Politico Participants: TBD March 19, 2012 9pm ET on PBS Location: Portland, OR Sponsor: Oregon Public Broadcasting, NPR, PBS, The Washington Times and the Oregon Republican Party Participants: TBD The silver lining? No more smarmy Huntsman. *** Update: The Non-Romneys tried to recover from their utter incompetence last week. They backed away from the most extreme Occupier rhetoric on Bain Capital, and instead carped about SuperPAC ads. (Newt learned from last debate not to hide behind NYTimes. Invoked Wall Street Journal instead.) Santorum curiously made his stand in favor of ex-felons voting and complained about a SuperPAC ad that mentioned his Senate record on that issue. Perry dodged a question about his “vulture capitalism” rhetoric by calling on Romney to release his income tax returns. Rick Santorum tried to rationalize voting against right-to-work by explaining it’s because he was representing Pennsylvania. Not exactly the kind of “bold leadership” skills he accuses his opponents of lacking. Perry’s best moment: Taking on Obama over voter/photo ID fight with South Carolina. Gov. Nikki Haley, Romney supporter, applauded. Romney stutters on question about his vote for assault weapons ban, whether he has hunted since 2007. Skipped Ron Paul foreign policy screed. Gingrich whines about SuperPACs. Romney complains about SuperPACs. Romney admits: “McCain Feingold was a disaster.” (But hey, he’s proud of his BigGovRepub McCain endorsement!) Gingrich and Perry supporters on Twitter are over the moon. (Vid of Gingrich vs. Juan Williams on welfare and standing ovation from crowd here. ) Exit question: Too little, too late? Inconvenient reminder of core incompetencies. Good debate nights can’t fix those. *** Washington Times, Joseph Curl: Goodbye, Newt, and good riddance *** Romney endorser Nikki Haley tweeted tonight: “Great debate tonight in South Carolina! The energy of the people in the state is electric!” FNC’s Sean Hannity agreed. Transcript of the debate via @FoxNewsInsider here .

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South Carolina: The final five; Update: Non-Romneys attack, Romney deflects, stumbles

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Like good lapdogs they will get over it. Via Politico: President Obama again left the White House without some of the reporters assigned to travel everywhere with him. The White House abruptly changed the call time for media to assemble to 8:15 AM this morning, and informed them of this change at 8:16 AM. As

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Media “Steaming” After White House Ditches Press Pool, Changes Call Time To 8:15 AM, Notifies Them At 8:16 AM…

Wait, There Was a Debate Sunday, Too?

On January 10, 2012, in Uncategorized, by old dog

Was anyone else aware of this, other than The Politico’s Maggie Haberman, or, were we all focused on the NFL Playoffs? Fortunately, Maggie was there to provide 6 takeaways 1) For the most part, the attacks on Mitt Romney didn’t stick Romney was under much more forceful attack in Sunday morning’s debate than he was in the

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Wait, There Was a Debate Sunday, Too?

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Just when I was missing Herman Cain , he launches a new project: “Cain’s Solutions Revolution.” It’s a bus tour, according to Politico and he plans on promoting his “9-9-9″ tax plan some more and there’s a website for it. But few more details are known. It’s as weird as it sounds. The promotional video for the project is even weirder. “It’s time for history to repeat itself,” he says in the video. I hope he’s wrong. For his sake. The best part is when the camera shows Cain in deep concentration as he writes something at his desk. Then an image of the paper is shown and written on it in jumbo writing… “9-9-9.” Watch (h/t Gawker ):

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The Cain Train is now just a bus tour