podesta-emails

​Correct The Record Tuesday January 6, 2015 Afternoon Roundup

podesta-emails 5,118 words email
D6 P17 V11 P22 V9
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*​**Correct The Record Tuesday January 6, 2015 Afternoon Roundup:* *Tweets* *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: .@HillaryClinton <https://twitter.com/HillaryClinton> started @TechGirls <https://twitter.com/TechGirls> classroom exchange to increase the number of girls in tech #HRC365 <https://twitter.com/hashtag/HRC365?src=hash> #STEM <https://twitter.com/hashtag/STEM?src=hash> http://correctrecord.org/hillary-clinton-education-for-girls-futures/ … <http://t.co/mSTfSxcOo6> [1/6/15, 12:44 p.m. EST <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/552521209712492547>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord:.@HillaryClinton <https://twitter.com/HillaryClinton> fought for the study of environmental factors that may cause breast cancer#HRC365 <https://twitter.com/hashtag/HRC365?src=hash> https://www.congress.gov/bill/109th-congress/senate-bill/757 … <https://t.co/YgcSfJNI4D> [1/5/15, 6:31 p.m. EST <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/552245932721332226>] *Headlines:* *FROM MEDIA MATTERS FOR AMERICA: Media Matters For America: “Clinton Camp Flatly Denies Anonymously-Sourced Report That They Circulated Attack On Jim Webb” <http://mediamatters.org/blog/2015/01/06/clinton-camp-flatly-denies-anonymously-sourced/202024>* "In a comment to Media Matters, Clinton spokesperson Nick Merrill flatly denied the claim: 'There is nothing true about this, it's pure fabrication, and if the reporter who wrote the story would have bothered to ask before printing it, we would have told him that.'" *Associated Press: “Gov. Cuomo: My Dad Was ‘Anything But A Typical Politician’” <http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MARIO_CUOMO_FUNERAL?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT>* “Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Attorney General Eric Holder, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, state Senate Republican leader Dean Skelos and Republican-turned-independent former Mayor Michael Bloomberg were among the dignitaries in St. Ignatius Loyola Church's 800 packed seats.” *MSNBC: “Can the 2015 Senate contain its 2016 ambitions?” <http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/the-2015-senate-staging-ground-2016>* “As Democratic discontent with Hillary Clinton festers on the left, Warren almost has carte blanche to force her party – and Clinton – to pay closer attention to what liberal base voters want.” *Washington Post: Style: “Rep. Steve Israel, finding the funny in Washington’s corridors of power” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/rep-steve-israel-finding-the-funny-in-washingtons-corridors-of-power/2015/01/06/56615ab8-937a-11e4-a900-9960214d4cd7_story.html>* “While presidents Bush and Obama remain mostly offstage, an unnamed New York senator, ‘perpetually pancaked’ and ‘psychologically incapable of declining any request that involved a camera,’ makes a late yet notable entrance. Israel claims that the character is ‘a composite of all senators.’ Uh, no, he isn’t. So far, Israel has heard no response from Sen. Charles E. Schumer. He has heard from Hillary Clinton, though. The former New York senator isn’t mentioned in the novel, but she told Israel that she’s reading it after listening to her husband’s abundant laughter.” *Fox News: “Jeb Bush filing paperwork Tuesday for new PAC, in big step toward 2016 bid” <http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/01/06/jeb-bush-filing-paperwork-tuesday-for-leadership-pac-in-big-step-toward-2016/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter>* “EXCLUSIVE: Jeb Bush plans to file paperwork on Tuesday to launch a new organization allowing him to raise and spend money for political activities, Fox News has learned, in the former Florida governor's most direct step yet toward a 2016 presidential bid.” *Articles:* *FROM MEDIA MATTERS FOR AMERICA: Media Matters For America: “Clinton Camp Flatly Denies Anonymously-Sourced Report That They Circulated Attack On Jim Webb” <http://mediamatters.org/blog/2015/01/06/clinton-camp-flatly-denies-anonymously-sourced/202024>* By Oliver Willis January 6, 2015 Conservative media outlets promoted an anonymously sourced claim published by U.S. News & World Report that an aide to Hillary Clinton circulated an attack on former Senator Jim Webb. Clinton spokesperson Nick Merrill flatly denied the report, telling Media Matters it was "pure fabrication." In a story discussing Webb's possible run for the presidency, U.S. News & World Report's David Catanese claimed that "Clinton loyalists are keeping an eye" on Webb as a potential rival for the Democratic nomination. As evidence, Catanese wrote that "the week before Thanksgiving, staffers of Philippe Reines, Clinton's longtime communications guru, pitched talk radio producers on the racy, sexually charged writings in Webb's novels, according to a source." In a comment to Media Matters, Clinton spokesperson Nick Merrill flatly denied the claim: "There is nothing true about this, it's pure fabrication, and if the reporter who wrote the story would have bothered to ask before printing it, we would have told him that." Catanese doubled down on his claim in a follow-up report, writing that "of course, the Clinton team is denying Reines' underlings floated the material in the first place" and publishing Merrill's statement that the claim was "an unmitigated lie," before adding, "Our source, granted anonymity, stands by the account." Several conservative media outlets ran with the anonymous U.S. News report, using it to attack Clinton's character. The Drudge Report's headline linking to the report said "Team Clinton Already Dishing Oppo on Jim Webb." New York Post columnist Michael Goodwin called the report evidence that Hillary Clinton was "trying to dirty up Jim Webb," and added, "Mud first, that's Hillary." National Review's Jim Geraghty asked, "Why on earth would the Hillary team go after Jim Webb this early?" adding, "What is this, some form of mudslinging pregame stretching?" At HotAir, conservative blogger Ed Morrisey said the story was evidence of "Clintonistas using a kitchen-sink strategy" which "sends a message to other Democrats who might dare to intrude on Coronation II: Hillary's Boogaloo." American Conservative's James Carden said that "Clinton's team is seemingly alive to the danger a Webb candidacy poses" because of the report that "longtime Clinton henchman Philippe Reines had been pitching talk radio producers unflattering stories about Webb." Carden wrote that the incident "should raise additional questions about the former Secretary's powers of discernment, particularly when it comes to the character of some of her closest advisers." *Associated Press: “Gov. Cuomo: My Dad Was ‘Anything But A Typical Politician’” <http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MARIO_CUOMO_FUNERAL?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT>* By David Klepper and Jonathan Lemire January 6, 2015, 1:05 p.m. EST Mario Cuomo's legacy as a powerful orator, three-term governor and immigrant's son whose humble upbringing in Queens inspired his approach to public service were championed at his funeral Tuesday by an inarguable heir to his politics - Gov. Andrew Cuomo, his son. "At his core, he was a philosopher. He was a poet. He was an advocate. He was a crusader. Mario Cuomo was the keynote speaker for our better angels," the younger Cuomo said in a eulogy that spanned from his father's biggest speeches to his fierce competitiveness on the basketball court. The former governor - who flirted with but never made a presidential run and turned down an opportunity to be nominated for a U.S. Supreme Court seat - was a leader whose politics were part-and-parcel of his beliefs, not strategies for pleasing people, the younger Cuomo said. He was, he said, "anything but a typical politician." Dignitaries from both sides of the political aisle gathered to mourn the Democratic Party icon. The 82-year-old died Thursday at 82, hours after his son was inaugurated for a second term. Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton, Attorney General Eric Holder, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, state Senate Republican leader Dean Skelos and Republican-turned-independent former Mayor Michael Bloomberg were among the dignitaries in St. Ignatius Loyola Church's 800 packed seats. Democratic State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver put off taking his seat before the funeral started, standing outside in the snow to await the hearse. "Mario Cuomo ever communicated a spirit of inclusivity and care, a spirit of decency and uprightness that inspired love and respect," said the Rev. George M. Witt, the pastor of St. Ignatius, where some of Cuomo's five children are parishioners and several of his grandchildren have gone to school. "In the end, it was not so much the eloquence of his words that spoke to us but the eloquence of his life." Scripture readings - some by Cuomo's daughters - included the Beatitudes, which were said to be among Cuomo's favorites, and a quote from the Book of Wisdom that begins, "The souls of the just are in the hands of God." The elder Cuomo was known for his oratorical skills, for powerful appeals for social justice that blended liberal ideals with his personal experience as the son of an Italian immigrant grocer, for an intellectual nature given to discoursing on Jesuit philosophy along with discussing public policy - and for his deliberations over running for president, which earned him the nickname "Hamlet on the Hudson." He came close to running in 1988 and 1992 but decided not to. Cuomo was most remembered for a speech at the 1984 Democratic National Convention in San Francisco, where he focused on an America divided between haves and have-nots and scolded Republican President Ronald Reagan for not working to close that gap. On Monday, hundreds waited in a line that stretched more than a block to pay their respects at Cuomo's wake. Vice President Joe Biden, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, actor Alan Alda and former state Comptroller Carl McCall were among those who paid tribute. Even after hours of greeting mourners, his widow, Matilda Cuomo still managed to smile as she spoke lovingly of her spouse. "He's up there, telling God what to do. He's working with God now," she said. Lynda Rufo, a banker lined up outside the funeral home, said her daughter was finishing law school because of Cuomo's encouragement. "He was a part of New York," Rufo said. "He always took the time to be there for everyone, no matter who you were or where you came from. He loved people." *MSNBC: “Can the 2015 Senate contain its 2016 ambitions?” <http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/the-2015-senate-staging-ground-2016>* By Kasie Hunt January 6, 2015, 12:39 p.m. EST Mitch McConnell has his hands full. Sure, he’s presiding over a new Republican majority in the Senate. He has an eye toward following in the footsteps of other great lawmakers who’ve gone before. But starting Tuesday, he’ll be in charge of a body chock full of ambitious senators who may be more focused on winning the White House for themselves in 2016 than they are on legislating over the course of the next two years. Republicans Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas, Marco Rubio of Florida and Rand Paul of Kentucky all want to move into the Oval Office – and this puts no small amount of pressure on the Senate’s leader. McConnell is powerful, sure, but the chamber rules mean a lone lawmaker can at stop a nomination, block a bill, shut down the government – or, in short, create a fuss. McConnell isn’t alone, though, as Democrats aren’t short on ambition in their ranks. Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren insists she’s not running for president, but she led the charge from the Senate against weakening restrictions on big banks that were included in the year-end spending bill that President Obama even supported. Then there’s Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who caucuses with Democrats – and who’s already made trips to early presidential states. Eight years ago, in 2007, the Capitol was also full of would-be presidents: eventual party nominees Obama and John McCain were both senators, as were Hillary Clinton and now-Vice President Joe Biden. There were lesser-known hopefuls, too, including Sens. Chris Dodd and Evan Bayh. On the House side, Reps. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and Ron Paul, R-Texas, also ran that year. This time around, the 2016 political context has important implications for Obama’s final two years in office and the next two years of Republican control of Congress. As the 114th convenes, here’s a look at the key Capitol Hill players in the upcoming 2016 presidential race–both potential candidates and those who will matter to them. Ted Cruz, R-Texas For the past two years, Cruz has made life difficult for his fellow Republicans–and given Democrats plenty to work with. He led the filibuster over health care that included a Senate floor reading of Dr. Seuss’s “Green Eggs and Ham” and ultimately resulted in a government shutdown. Most recently, shortly before Christmas, he held up voting on the so-called “cromnibus” spending package that forced others in the GOP to cancel holiday plans and let Democrats approve more of the president’s nominees than they would have had time for otherwise. Now, Cruz will be in a position to force Republicans (especially those running for president–or facing a Senate primary in 2016) to toe the conservative line on issues ranging from immigration to spending–or risk alienating base voters and handing Cruz an advantage. It’s a potential problem for McConnell’s push to govern. But it could also put pressure on establishment figures like Jeb Bush and Chris Christie who are also eyeing a run, especially if Cruz keeps his rhetoric at fever pitch. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky Of all the senators considering a presidential bid, Paul has likely laid the most groundwork. He’s used his perch in the Senate to take stands that have elevated his profile–particularly his filibuster of John Brennan’s nomination as CIA director as a protest against the Obama administration’s use of drone strikes. Cruz and Rubio, two potential competitors, even rushed down to the floor to join in. And Paul has an ally in McConnell, who won reelection in Kentucky after sticking very close to Paul through a tea party primary challenge. The question looming for the next two years: How active will Paul be as the Senate deals with foreign policy issues? They’re set to play a larger-than-usual role on the Hill in the coming months, with possible sanctions against Iran, funding to train Syrian rebels and the ongoing war against ISIS all coming up on the agenda. Broadly, it’s where Paul differs most from the party’s establishment and so could make the loudest noise–but Paul has also been working to close that rift as he prepares a bid. Marco Rubio, R-Florida When he arrived in Congress in 2010, Rubio was viewed as the establishment Republicans’ tea party guy. Young, photogenic and Hispanic, Rubio looked like what the party wanted its future to be. Since then, he helped lead the way on a comprehensive immigration reform bill that’s become toxic with the Republican base; and his political mentor, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, has announced he’s going to explore a bid. Still, aides privately say Rubio’s seriously considering a run for president regardless of what Bush might do. Rubio’s used his perch in the Senate to start crafting a message focused on the “American Dream” and to bolster his foreign policy bona fides, recently criticizing the Obama administration’s reconciliation with Cuba after five decades. Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky The Senate Majority Leader won’t be on the ballot in 2016. But more than almost any other Republican, he’ll be responsible for making sure his party is in the best possible position to win back the White House–and he knows it. “I don’t want the American people to think that if they add a Republican president to a Republican Congress, that’s going to be a scary outcome,” McConnell told The Washington Post in an interview published on Monday. “I want the American people to be comfortable with the fact that the Republican House and Senate is a responsible, right-of-center, governing majority.” McConnell will also have primary responsibility for managing the ambitions of those in his caucus – particularly Cruz, who many blame for the shutdown that soured Americans on the GOP brand. And McConnell has to carefully balance his already-announced support for Paul, his home state colleague. “I’m going to be supporting Rand Paul. But he knows that beyond that, I won’t be involved in presidential politics. I’ve got a big job here,” McConnell told the Post. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa She won’t be on the ballot herself, but as first woman ever elected to federal office from Iowa and the first female veteran to serve in the U.S. Senate, Ernst is already the forefront of GOP presidential primary in 2016. Her own Senate race was a preview, with Republican presidential aspirants flying in from all over the country to help her campaign against Democratic Rep. Bruce Braley. Christie, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Sens. Cruz, Rubio and Paul–among others–all paraded through Iowa on her behalf. She hasn’t said if she has an early favorite, though aides privately say that Rubio made a good impression when they met in 2014. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. A self-declared socialist, Sanders hasn’t drawn intense attention from the grassroots or financial backers he would need to mount a serious presidential bid. But he’s carved out a reputation as an advocate for veterans, and early trips to Iowa have made him popular with many of the liberal state activists who show up at the caucuses. It’s not clear how aggressive he’ll be in using his position to further his presidential ambitions, but aides privately say he’s not finished exploring the possibility of a bid. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. She says she’s not running for president. But Elizabeth Warren has already proved she can use her position in the Senate to force populist economic ideas into the national debate. When Senate Democrats picked their leaders, they elevated her into a specially created messaging role to work with liberal interest groups. When Republicans put a provision into last year’s spending bill to strip away regulations from big banks, Warren led the charge against it–and almost stalled the bill as a result. As Democratic discontent with Hillary Clinton festers on the left, Warren almost has carte blanche to force her party – and Clinton – to pay closer attention to what liberal base voters want. *Washington Post: Style: “Rep. Steve Israel, finding the funny in Washington’s corridors of power” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/rep-steve-israel-finding-the-funny-in-washingtons-corridors-of-power/2015/01/06/56615ab8-937a-11e4-a900-9960214d4cd7_story.html>* By Karen Heller January 6, 2015, 12:55 p.m. EST MELVILLE, N.Y. — Because, seriously, there aren’t enough caucuses cluttering Capitol Hill, Rep. Steve Israel plans to start a new one this month. It’s tentatively called the Congressional Writers Caucus, because there’s another critical shortage in this country: politicians publishing books. But in that crowded field, the Long Island politician and former two-term chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is surely an anomaly. Israel has authored neither a political tract/bid for higher office nor a memoir/bid for higher office. His offering is “The Global War on Morris,” a comic novel about Long Island and the war on terrorism that’s being released this week. In a Washington Post review, Book World editor Ron Charles called it “an unexpected delight,” written “in the full-tilt style of Carl Hiaasen.” “Morris” may also be the only comic novel written by a member of Congress that’s dedicated to Dick Cheney. (As well as Israel’s late father who, the dedication reads, “didn’t particularly care for” the former vice president.) Also, written entirely on a cellphone. Yes, truly. Israel, sitting in a choice booth at a popular diner in his district, takes out his iPhone to show an incredulous visitor the first few chapters, plus the epilogue, of a second novel. “Parodies, in particular, are a wonderful way of dealing with the insanity of Washington,” says Israel, 56. “Instead of screaming and yelling on the floor of the House, I like to work it out as parody.” He adds, “If you’re a member of Congress and can’t find the humor in yourself, then you need to find another job.” Which may help explain why so many members recently left. Writing satire may well have been an antidote to chairing the DCCC during Obama’s second term, as the president’s numbers sank southward and everyone anticipated major losses for his party in the midterms. “I was tempered by being able to sit with this and start writing,” says Israel, who will be reading from his novel at Washington’s Politics and Prose bookstore on Wednesday night. “Anybody who has an intense job has some sort of release. Some people have yoga, or go to the gym. My release was writing about everything I’d seen during the day.” Trim despite a lunch of a Hamburger Delight (french fries and onion rings), Israel seems to be able to do without the gym. He wrote the novel in the midst of his own challenging election. In 2012, “Obama barely won this district. This is not a slam-dunk Democratic district,” says Israel, first elected to the House in 2000. “This is a new district that became more Republican.” So he made sure to be home every weekend. The bunker-like Broad Hollow Diner is on Route 110 in Melville, down the road from Estelle’s Dressy Dresses and what arguably may be the discount furniture center of the Eastern seaboard. In the next booth, two women are speaking in what Israel calls pure “Lawn Guylish,” spraying a sewer of invective and obscenities, noteworthy in that they are apparently schoolteachers. “What can I say?” Israel says, beaming like a proud father.“These are my people!” Stranger than fiction A diner, along with much of Long Island, figures prominently in “Morris,” which takes place between 2004 and 2012. But it’s a fictional diner. During visits home to New York’s 3rd District, Israel makes sure to rotate meals so as to not play favorites. “You can’t spend too much time in one diner and pizza place. So it’s Diner Diplomacy, and Pizza Parity,” he says. Israel long dreamed of being a novelist. (Also a congressman and an outfielder for the Mets, so two out of three isn’t bad.) He began writing “Morris” in 2006, initially on a BlackBerry, before Washington underwent an iPhone conversion. “I would go to these meetings with senior members of the Bush administration, including President Bush, and hear the most absurd things,” Israel says. “I would be very frustrated because I knew if I reported these things in a congressional newsletter, no one would believe me.” So fiction became an outlet. “As chair of the DCCC, if I had to give three or four speeches during the day and had to raise a ton of money in Milwaukee, I would go back to the hotel and write. My balance was writing.” The spark for “Morris” came when Israel learned that the NSA had accidentally done surveillance on a group of Quakers, one of those Washington moments that transcends fiction. “If it’s happening to this group of elderly Quakers, it has to be happening to other people,” Israel recalls thinking. “That night I went home to my apartment in Washington and created Morris Feldstein,” a meek, Walter Mitty-like pharmaceutical salesman. “Because I don’t know about elderly Quakers, but I do know about Jewish guys on Long Island, whose whole philosophy is, don’t get into trouble.” Morris gets into trouble. During the course of the novel, he grapples with a terrorist towel attendant, an all-knowing government supercomputer with a mind of its own, a seedy Long Island motel (and possibly fiction’s shortest-lived affair) and the Guantanamo Bay prison, as well as being a pawn of Scooter Libby, Karl Rove and, Israel’s improbable muse, Dick Cheney. “Morris” quotes entire passages of Cheney’s 2004 national convention speech linking terrorism to politics — to comic effect. While presidents Bush and Obama remain mostly offstage, an unnamed New York senator, “perpetually pancaked” and “psychologically incapable of declining any request that involved a camera,” makes a late yet notable entrance. Israel claims that the character is “a composite of all senators.” Uh, no, he isn’t. So far, Israel has heard no response from Sen. Charles E. Schumer. He has heard from Hillary Clinton, though. The former New York senator isn’t mentioned in the novel, but she told Israel that she’s reading it after listening to her husband’s abundant laughter. During the last weeks of the midterm campaign, Bill Clinton phoned Israel, who assumed that it was to drill him on DCCC efforts. Instead, the congressman recalls, “he spent 10 minutes praising the characters in the book.” A balancing act Israel originally met with literary agent David Kuhn to pitch a book on America’s middle class. “If you don’t like my nonfiction,” Israel told Kuhn, “let me tell you about my novel.” After 90 seconds, Kuhn’s hands shot into the air. “Tell me about your novel,” he asked. Impressed with the manuscript, Kuhn sent a copy to Simon & Schuster’s Ben Loehnen. “I was worried that it would be flat-footed and a work of vanity,” Loehnen recalls. “Instead of writing a soporific and sycophantic memoir, he’s written a satire that’s critical and alive and intelligent.” Also, the editor notes, “any writer who can make a supercomputer into an unforgettable character deserves readers.” Lauren Sharp, Israel’s co-agent in Washington, says that the main prep work she did on the manuscript was paring back some of the jokes: “The original manuscript was so chock-a-block with humor, it was easy to get distracted. Mostly, we were trimming every fourth joke to let the other three shine through a little more.” Former representative Bob Mrazek, for whom Israel worked as an aide on the Hill, left Congress in 1993 to return to his first career as a writer. He has published seven works of fiction and nonfiction, as well as writing and co-directing the independent feature “The Congressman.” And he’s “absolutely astonished at what Steve’s done. It’s typical that most authors need a good deal of free time to think about characters. Being in Congress you’re at work all day, plus Steve was chair of the DCCC, which can mean an 18-hour day. I don’t know how he was able to focus all his creative forces.” Particularly on a satirical novel. “It’s too hard. It requires a very fine balance, a very fine calibration of the absurd and the believable.” Moreover, politics is noisy, while writing generally demands quiet. “Congress is very extroverted, and writing is a very introverted lifestyle,” Israel says. The father of two grown daughters who’s in the midst of a second divorce, he writes most mornings for an hour. He also writes on planes, trains and automobiles on the way to campaign events. Hence the iPhone as instrument of choice. It’s always there, “molded to my hand.” Just like Hollywood As a member of Congress, Israel is barred from accepting an advance, a rule put in place after Newt Gingrich’s original $4.5 million advance for two books in 1994 (talk about a contract with America!) was whittled to a token $1 after critics suggested that the incoming speaker was profiting from that year’s Republican congressional victory. Any money Israel makes from “Morris” will come from royalties, which are generally negligible for a first novel. Beyond the book, Israel has contributed a comic piece to the New Yorker and recently launched a twice-monthly column, Kings of the Hill, for the Huffington Post, for which, like so many contributors to that Web site, he will receive not a cent. His second novel, “Big Guns,” is about the gun lobby and has been accepted by Simon & Schuster, pending ethics committee approval. A conservative member of Congress features in the book. Israel says that he isn’t based on any real politician. Really? “Well, maybe a former member of Congress.” Over the years it took to produce, “Morris” remained Israel’s private endeavor. It came as a surprise even to Rep. Adam Schiff, Israel’s closest friend in Congress. “I was shocked,” says the California Democrat. “We are so close, and we never talked about it. I walk into his office one day and there’s a galley proof.” Schiff, whose district includes Hollywood, where of course everyone is working on a screenplay, is working on a screenplay. A thriller. He’s also writing a novelization of the screenplay. Israel and Schiff are cosponsors of the Congressional Writers Caucus, which will invite authors, agents and editors to address politicians working on novels and screenplays. Soon, Capitol Hill could resemble certain quarters of Brooklyn or Los Angeles. Instead of mentioning their latest bills, members of Congress will inquire, “Have you read my novel? Would you like to see my screenplay?” Hollywood, as it happens, is interested in “Morris.” Israel has taken meetings. He would love to see Larry David play his hero. This being the entertainment business, however, folks have other ideas. Oh, and they’d like to suggest a few changes. Whatever. Anything is fine with Israel. He’s a published author. “My best hope,” he says, smiling in his diner booth, “has actually, and blessedly, been realized, with the publisher accepting my second book.” *Fox News: “Jeb Bush filing paperwork Tuesday for new PAC, in big step toward 2016 bid” <http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/01/06/jeb-bush-filing-paperwork-tuesday-for-leadership-pac-in-big-step-toward-2016/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter>* By Serafin Gomez January 6, 2015 EXCLUSIVE: Jeb Bush plans to file paperwork on Tuesday to launch a new organization allowing him to raise and spend money for political activities, Fox News has learned, in the former Florida governor's most direct step yet toward a 2016 presidential bid. The new leadership political action committee will be called the Right to Rise PAC. "We will celebrate success and risk taking, protect liberty, cherish free enterprise, strengthen our national defense, embrace the energy revolution, fix our broken and obsolete immigration system, and give all children a better future by transforming our education system through choice, high standards and accountability," a source close to Bush said, describing the PAC's mission. In addition, the Right to Rise PAC likely would be used to pay the expenses of a burgeoning staff, as well as to finance polling and Bush's trips across the country as a possible 2016 contender. It would effectively serve as a prelude to a formal presidential campaign should he take that step. The formation of this leadership PAC -- as well as a separate super PAC by Bush supporters -- could be used to flush other Republican potential aspirants out of the 2016 field, by flexing the formidable financial strength of the former governor's donor network. Fundraising events already are being planned in Florida, the New York area, and Washington, D.C., in the next few weeks, and meetings with major donors are being organized. As reported Monday by Fox News' Carl Cameron, Bush is holding a private Greenwich, Conn., fundraiser on Wednesday with relatives. The money raised at this event will go to his Right to Rise PAC. A source close to Bush told Fox News the Right to Rise PAC also would support candidates across the country "who share our optimistic, conservative, positive vision for helping every American get ahead." "We support candidates who embrace policies that create strong economic growth for all and more opportunity for every American to create a better life for themselves and their loved ones," the source said. Bush announced last month in a Facebook post that he would "actively explore" a 2016 bid and eventually form a PAC. He has since stepped down from corporate boards and disentangled himself from other financial investments as he considers a run. By formally establishing the leadership PAC, Bush joins other potential GOP candidates who also have taken that step: including fellow Floridian Sen. Marco Rubio, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, outgoing Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul.
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