podesta-emails

podesta_email_01163.txt

podesta-emails 7,707 words email
D6 P17 V11 P22 P18
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*[image: Inline image 1]* *Correct The Record Thursday July 24, 2014 Afternoon Roundup:* [Click Here to Watch conservative One America Network’s Segment on Correct The Record and the Need to Defend Against the Onslaught of Rightwing Attacks on Sec. Clinton] <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_TBjUBNr_M&feature=youtu.be> *Tweets:* *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: .@Bstrider on role of CTR "We keep the truth out there...if the record needs correcting we correct it" http://correctrecord.org/the-conservative-one-america-network-features-ctr-showcases-need-and-success-against-onslaught-of-rightwing-attacks-against-sec-clinton/ … <http://t.co/EGtg22Jy8T> [7/24/14, 1:08 p.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/492355704880398336>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: The conservative One America News Network features CTR and @BStrider <https://twitter.com/BStrider> re: defending@HillaryClinton <https://twitter.com/HillaryClinton> http://correctrecord.org/the-conservative-one-america-network-features-ctr-showcases-need-and-success-against-onslaught-of-rightwing-attacks-against-sec-clinton/ … <http://t.co/EGtg22Jy8T> [7/24/14, 11:46 a.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/492335080833290240>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: .@nytimesbooks review: #HardChoices is a “sober and substantive” memoir of @HillaryClinton’s time at State Dept: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/13/books/review/editors-choice.html … <http://t.co/pD9OZ4owgd>[7/24/14, 10:15 a.m. EDT <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/492312071590408192>] *Headlines:* *CNN: “Clinton polling well in key presidential battleground” <http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2014/07/24/clinton-polling-well-in-key-presidential-battleground/>* “A Quinnipiac University survey of Florida voters indicates the former secretary of state, who's seriously considering a second bid for the White House, with leads from seven to 21 percentage points over potential GOP presidential candidates in possible 2016 showdowns.” *MSNBC: “Hillary Clinton tops all potential 2016 GOPers in Florida” <http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/hillary-clinton-tops-all-potential-2016-gopers-florida>* “A Quinnipiac University poll released Thursday shows the former secretary of state easily beating all potential 2016 GOP opponents in the battleground state of Florida – including the state’s former Gov. Jeb Bush and current Sen. Marco Rubio – by a seven to 21 point margin.” *Politico: “Latest front in Clinton wars: Virginia suburbs” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/07/hillary-bill-clinton-wars-barbara-comstock-virginia-suburbs-109313.html>* “Brock is now leading Correct the Record, a group devoted to defending Hillary Clinton.” *CNN: “Hillary Clinton stands by 'Russian reset' in face of recent events” <http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2014/07/24/hillary-clinton-stands-by-russian-reset-in-face-of-recent-events/>* “It worked. That is the argument former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made during a Thursday interview about her much talked about 2009 reset of U.S.-Russia relations.” *Politico: “Hillary Clinton: I need to ‘work on’ press relations” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/07/hillary-clinton-media-relations-109332.html>* “Hillary Clinton, who has long had a tempestuous relationship with the media, on Thursday said she may need to ‘work on’ her ‘expectations’ of the press.” *The Economist: “Dreamy footsoldiers of the Left” <http://www.economist.com/news/united-states/21608759-some-democrats-havent-noticed-next-election-year-not-2016-dreamy>* “Over on the centre-ground, Ready for Hillary, a group working to rally a volunteer army for Mrs Clinton’s use (should she choose to run in 2016), will ‘amplify’ any 2014 endorsements made by their heroine, instantly urging supporters to lend a hand to that campaign.” *Slate blog: Weigel: “Where Have You Gone, Brian Schweitzer? A Nation Turns Its Lonely Eyes to You.” <http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2014/07/24/where_have_you_gone_brian_schweitzer_a_nation_turns_its_lonely_eyes_to_you.html>* “The only mention of Schweitzer on cable in the month of July came on Monday, when pollster Pat Caddell suggested Schweitzer would be a good candidate against Hillary Clinton.” *CBS News: “Is there room for Joe Manchin among Democrats in 2016?” <http://www.cbsnews.com/news/is-there-room-for-joe-manchin-among-democrats-in-2016/>* “On the spectrum of hypothetical 2016 presidential candidacies, the @DraftJoeManchin Twitter movement, if you can call it that, is the elephant in the room of dark horses.” *McClatchy DC: “Bernie Sanders for president 2016? It could happen” <http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2014/07/24/234335/bernie-sanders-for-president-2016.html>* “The fiesty liberal independent senator from Vermont says it could happen.” *RealClearPolitics: “Heitkamp: Addressing Abuse Issues Can Unite Lawmakers” <http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2014/07/24/heitkamp_addressing_abuse_issues_can_unite_lawmakers_123445.html>* “Rep. Donna Edwards and Sen. Heidi Heitkamp expressed a strong hope Thursday that the deeply divided U.S. Congress can come together to address the problem of domestic violence... And would electing a woman to the presidency help even more with passing legislation to protect vulnerable women? ‘No question about it!’ declared an enthusiastic Edwards, who lavished praise on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.” *Articles:* *CNN: “Clinton polling well in key presidential battleground” <http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2014/07/24/clinton-polling-well-in-key-presidential-battleground/>* [No Writer Mentioned] July 24, 2014, 10:19 a.m. EDT Hillary Clinton is the clear 2016 frontrunner in the nation's largest presidential battleground state, according to a new poll. A Quinnipiac University survey of Florida voters indicates the former secretary of state, who's seriously considering a second bid for the White House, with leads from seven to 21 percentage points over potential GOP presidential candidates in possible 2016 showdowns. "Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton may be taking some criticism recently in the news media and among some liberal Democratic precincts, but nothing has changed among average voters in Florida where she remains queen of the political prom," said Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University poll. According to the survey, which was released Thursday morning, Clinton also has an overwhelming lead in the hunt for the Democratic nomination, with former two-term Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and the state's junior U.S. senator, Marco Rubio, leading the pack of potential GOP contenders. Two-thirds of Sunshine State Democratic primary voters questioned in the survey say they'd back Clinton for their party's nomination, followed by Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts each at eight percent. Biden is mulling another presidential bid while Warren has said numerous times that she's not running in 2016. Other potential candidates registered at one percent or less. Twenty-one percent of Republicans say they'd back Bush in the primary, followed by Rubio at 18%. Bush was at 27% and Rubio at 11% among Florida Republicans in Quinnipiac's May poll. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas is at 10% in the new poll, with Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky standing at 8%, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee – who ran for the 2008 nomination – at 7%, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie at 6%. None of the other possible contenders top 5%. In hypothetical 2016 general election matchups, Sunshine State voters back Clinton over Bush 49%-42%. The poll indicates Clinton leads Ryan by 13 points, Rubio by 14 points, Paul by 16 points and Christie by 21 points. A Quinnipiac poll in Colorado released Wednesday in Colorado, another swing state, indicated much closer 2016 general election showdowns between Clinton and potential GOP candidates. As for the current occupant in the White House, the survey indicates President Barack Obama has a 44%-52% approval/disapproval rating among Florida votes, compared to 46%-50% in May. The Quinnipiac University poll was conducted July 17-21, with 1,251 registered voters in Florida questioned by telephone. The survey's overall sampling error is plus or minus 2.8 percentage points. *MSNBC: “Hillary Clinton tops all potential 2016 GOPers in Florida” <http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/hillary-clinton-tops-all-potential-2016-gopers-florida>* By Aliyah Frumin July 24, 2014, 9:33 a.m. EDT Hillary Clinton’s presidential prospects are looking bright in the Sunshine State. A Quinnipiac University poll released Thursday shows the former secretary of state easily beating all potential 2016 GOP opponents in the battleground state of Florida – including the state’s former Gov. Jeb Bush and current Sen. Marco Rubio – by a seven to 21 point margin. Among Democratic presidential primary voters, Clinton is the clear favorite, receiving 67% support compared to Vice President Joe Biden and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who each received 8%. Among Republican presidential primary voters in the state, Bush received the most support with 21%, followed by Rubio with 18%, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas garnered 10% followed by Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky with 8%, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee with 7%, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie with 6%. Even in hypothetical head-to-head match-ups, Clinton beats all the potential Republican competitors. That includes Clinton over Bush by a 49% to 42% margin and Clinton over Rubio by a 53% to 37% margin. “Inside the Beltway they may be talking about Mrs. Clinton’s potential weaknesses should she run in 2016. But at this point in Florida, the nation’s largest presidential swing state, her assets overwhelm any vulnerabilities,” said Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University poll. The former first lady is currently on a book tour for her memoir “Hard Choices,” which was released in June. The publicity campaign is being seen as part of a months-long rollout leading up to a decision on whether or not she’ll run for president. She has previously said that she’ll decide by the end of the year. Former President Bill Clinton claimed this week he doesn’t know whether his wife will make a bid for the nation’s highest office. *Politico: “Latest front in Clinton wars: Virginia suburbs” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/07/hillary-bill-clinton-wars-barbara-comstock-virginia-suburbs-109313.html>* By Alex Isenstadt July 24, 2014, 5:04 a.m. EDT Fifteen years later, the Clinton Wars are back. The backdrop this time isn’t the White House or Hillary Clinton’s likely presidential run. It’s the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., where a onetime congressional staffer who made her name digging up dirt on the Clintons, Barbara Comstock, is trying to win a seat in Congress herself. Lining up behind Comstock are some of the Clintons’ chief ’90s-era adversaries, including Ken Starr, Dan Burton and David Bossie. Determined to stop her is a host of Clinton loyalists led by Terry McAuliffe — who was once forced to testify before a congressional committee after Comstock unearthed his bombshell “Lincoln Bedroom Memo” — from his new perch as Virginia governor. Comstock’s bid against Democratic Fairfax County Supervisor John Foust has reopened the old wounds of Travelgate, Filegate, Monicagate and more. But the stakes go way beyond settling old scores. Clinton allies worry that if Comstock wins and Hillary Clinton returns to the White House as president, she’ll reprise her role as Clinton investigator-in-chief. “If she wins, she will no doubt practice the same politics of personal destruction she and her ilk practiced in the Clinton days,” said Paul Begala, a former political adviser to Bill Clinton who has assumed the role of Comstock attack dog. The Republican, he said, has a “really almost sick, sort of stalker-like obsession with President Clinton.” Comstock — a 55-year-old, Georgetown-educated lawyer widely regarded as one of the premier opposition researchers of her generation, with a “wonderfully devious mind,” in the words of one reporter who witnessed her at the peak of her sleuthing — declined to speak for this story. But she is already hinting publicly that she’s itching to take on the Clintons again. “We need to get to the bottom of the truth in Benghazi, and I will do that because I’ve done that before as a chief investigator in Congress,” she said at the Virginia state GOP convention recently, referring to the 2012 attacks that left four Americans dead and marred Clinton’s tenure as secretary of state. *The Barbarellas* Comstock’s history with the Clintons dates back to 1993. At the time, she was working as an aide to GOP Rep. Frank Wolf of Virginia when some of his constituents lost their jobs in the White House travel office. Wolf tasked Comstock with finding out why the firings happened and whether the Clintons were trying to make room in the office for their personal allies. Republicans won the House majority in 1994, and Comstock became the chief counsel on the Committee on Government Reform and Oversight. Much of the panel’s investigative work centered on Clinton’s fundraising practices and determining whether he had accepted funds from non-U.S. citizens ahead of the 1996 election. Comstock’s legal training prepared her to burrow through mounds of government documents, spotting patterns in discrete facts that eluded others. She deposed countless high-level White House officials and allies, including John Podesta and George Stephanopoulos. When Democratic fundraiser Johnny Chung appeared before the committee in 1999, Comstock did the grilling. The other trait Comstock’s admirers and critics consistently point to: a work ethic bordering on compulsive. “Late night calls from Barbara Comstock were not unusual,” David Brock, the onetime conservative opposition researcher and Comstock confidant, wrote in his 2002 book, “Blinded by the Right: The Conscience of an Ex-Conservative.” “She often telephoned with the latest tidbit she had dug up in the thousands and thousands of pages of administration records she pored through frantically, as if she were looking for a winning lottery ticket she had somehow mislaid.” Brock is now leading Correct the Record, a group devoted to defending Hillary Clinton. The late Barbara Olson, Comstock’s co-investigator on the committee, wrote in her own book that the two took extraordinary measures to prevent Clinton backers from sabotaging their work. “We changed our locks; not even the cleaning crews had access to our tiny room,” Olson wrote in “Hell to Pay: The Unfolding Story of Hillary Rodham Clinton,” published in 1999. “I generally arrived at 6:30 a.m. and tried to leave for home before 8:00 p.m. My colleague Barbara Comstock continued the vigil and wouldn’t leave until 4:00 a.m.” On the campaign trail, Comstock hasn’t shied away from discussing her time scrutinizing the Clintons. During a recent radio interview, she compared the Benghazi investigation to what transpired during the 1990s. “Previously, when I was on Capitol Hill in the ’90s, I served as chief counsel on the House Government Reform Committee, and we had similar investigations where we were just blocked at every turn, we had people take the Fifth Amendment, we had the administration refuse to turn over documents,” she said in a May 1 appearance on “The John Fredericks Show.” “And you just have to really go at it. We wrote contempt reports, we insisted on getting documents and then finally we were to break open these cases.” Comstock wasn’t a Clinton hater, people close to her insist. But she was, they say, convinced the first couple was involved in wrongdoing. Her best friend during those years was Olson, who became a high-profile Clinton critic. In Republican circles, the two became known as “The Barbarellas,” a reference to a racy 1968 Jane Fonda movie. In the White House, they were referred to as “The Barbaras.” Olson was a passenger on the American Airlines flight that struck the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001. “They were, of course, partisan,” Ted Olson, the former U.S. solicitor general who was married to Barbara Olson, said in an interview. “They believed in the things they were doing.” Had Barbara Olson been alive to watch her friend run for Congress, Ted Olson said, “She would have been ecstatic, thrilled beyond words. … She would have been cajoling, wheeling and dealing, twisting arms, whatever it took to help Barbara.” *From Middlebury to the RNC* Comstock tread a surprising path to the oversight panel. She graduated from Middlebury College, a prestigious liberal arts school in Vermont, in 1981 with a degree in political science. During her undergrad years, she interned for Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy. She would later say that while working for Kennedy, she was given a copy of the National Review, and there began her evolution to conservatism. “I’d be at hearings and think, ‘I agree with [Sen.] Orrin Hatch [R-Utah], not Ted Kennedy,” she told The Washington Post in 2001. People who worked with Comstock during the 1990s say they never pegged her as a future candidate. Unlike other Capitol Hill staffers at the time, she didn’t discuss running for office and didn’t seem to be preoccupied with doing so. Yet she took on an increasingly visible role. The Clinton investigations dovetailed with the rise of 24-hour cable news, and Comstock was a popular choice among TV bookers, who saw her as articulate and presentable. She was also skilled at delivering a sharp line. “Unfortunately for the president, the facts and the law are his enemy,” she said in one January 1999 CNN appearance. Comstock’s investigations into the Clintons ultimately yielded little, but her career in politics was just taking off. In 2000, she headed up opposition research for the Republican National Committee and continued to make mischief. During a Democratic primary debate, Bill Bradley attacked Al Gore for allegedly flip-flopping on abortion. Bradley, the Post reported, was relying on research assembled by Comstock and her team, which was looking to weaken Gore heading into the general election. Some believe that Comstock left a permanent imprint on how Republicans conduct opposition research, bringing a new level of legal precision to the work. Gary Maloney, a veteran GOP dirt-digger, said that the format the party’s campaign committees use to document their research is a replica of the style Comstock used in the 2000 race. “Comstock essentially built her own model of what to do,” he said. Following the 9/11 attacks, Comstock would become then-Attorney General John Ashcroft’s spokeswoman. Later she took a job at a lobbying shop and started a political consulting firm. In 2005, she spent time working on the defense team of Scooter Libby, the former Dick Cheney adviser who was convicted of leaking the identity of a CIA operative. All the while, Comstock was building a powerful circle of friends who would assist her in her next foray: a 2009 campaign for a seat in the state House of Delegates. She received donations from the likes of Karl Rove, Newt Gingrich and Haley Barbour. Comstock won narrowly, unseating a popular Democrat in a swing district. *A return to the warpath?* As she traverses the 10th Congressional District, Comstock, like many candidates this year, is pitching herself as a pragmatist who wants to serve her constituents and help the local economy. Many of Comstock’s friends believe her brass-knuckled political past is behind her. She’s more interested in the legislative nuts and bolts of public service, they say. Most political handicappers say she’s a slight favorite in a Northern Virginia-based district that narrowly broke for Mitt Romney in 2012. Clinton allies, however, are convinced that Comstock would quickly return to the warpath if she makes it to Congress — and are bent on stopping her. McAuliffe will soon host a fundraiser for Foust and “plans to do everything he can” to help the Democrat, an aide said. His brush with Comstock came in February 1997 when, working late one evening, she uncovered a McAuliffe memo that seemed to suggest that the president have donors over for White House sleepovers. The revelation sent the Clinton White House into damage control mode. Begala, meanwhile, has taken to Twitter to accuse Comstock of recently lifting a line from Bill Clinton’s first inaugural speech. (Clinton: “There is nothing wrong with America that cannot be cured with what is right with America.” Comstock: “There is nothing that is wrong with the country today that can’t be solved with what is right with America.”) In an interview, Begala bitterly recalled one time during the ’90s when Comstock approached him in the parking lot of the church they both attended and asked, with a straight face, “Have I deposed you yet?” Johanna Persing, a Comstock spokeswoman, declined to respond to Begala’s plagiarism accusation but said that “Virginians have no interest in divisive talking heads living in the past. This election is about the future.” Other Clinton White House figures are also making a move. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has hosted a fundraiser for Foust and is slated to hold another in August. Foust also recently received a $1,000 donation from Jamie Gorelick, who as Clinton’s deputy attorney general worked in a department that had a role in responding to many of the subpoenas that Comstock’s committee served. “She was the primary architect and energy behind Dan Burton’s investigations of the Clintons,” said Gorelick. “When you meet Barbara Comstock, she’s very personable and lovely. But the work of that committee was highly divisive, and it was not a constructive way of running a congressional committee.” Foust, a mild-mannered 62-year-old Fairfax County supervisor, says he doesn’t remember much about the Clinton wars; he was preoccupied starting a law practice and raising his kids. “I was very disappointed in Bill’s personal conduct,” he said in an interview at his campaign headquarters here, “but I thought it was a political witch hunt.” Foust said other Clinton allies would soon join his campaign. As for the former president and former first lady, Foust added, “No one knows Barbara Comstock better than the Clintons … and I’m confident they will step up and help us.” Comstock, for her part, has received checks and pledges of help from some of the most prominent Clinton antagonists from the ’90s. Ken Starr and his wife, Alice Starr, kicked in $1,000 to Comstock’s campaign. Burton, who chaired the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee and was Comstock’s boss, has also sent $1,000. “I’ll help any way I can,” he said in an interview. She’s also received help from David Bossie, the Citizens United president and high-profile Clinton critic who worked with her on the investigative panel. The group has endorsed Comstock and given her campaign $10,000. “Hillary Clinton,” Bossie said, “will have to stay on the straight and narrow to stay out of [Comstock’s] sights.” *CNN: “Hillary Clinton stands by 'Russian reset' in face of recent events” <http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2014/07/24/hillary-clinton-stands-by-russian-reset-in-face-of-recent-events/>* By Dan Merica July 24, 2014, 12:35 p.m. EDT It worked. That is the argument former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made during a Thursday interview about her much talked about 2009 reset of U.S.-Russia relations. The statement comes as Russia, under President Vladimir Putin, has distanced itself from the United States, and the country is widely seen by U.S. and European analysts as linked to the downing of a passenger airliner earlier this month in Ukraine. "What I think I demonstrate in the book, is that the reset worked," Clinton told guest host John Harwood on NPR's “On Point” on Thursday during a conversation about her new memoir, "Hard Choices." "It was an effort to try to obtain Russian cooperation on some key objectives while (Dmitry) Medvedev was president." Clinton later said the reset "succeeded" and was meant to be "a device to try to refocus attention on the transactional efforts that we needed to get done with the Russians." The former secretary of state – and frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016 – said the signing of the 2009 New START treaty, the increased sanctions on Iran and the securing of supply lines to American troops in Afghanistan were all successes that came from the reset. But hindsight has not favored Clinton. Russia has stepped up its aggressiveness on the world stage and the country's relations with the United States have suffered. The front cover of the latest issue of TIME Magazine even declares "Cold War II: The West is losing Putin's dangerous game." Putin now finds himself at the center of the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH 17 investigation. U.S. officials believe the plane was shot down over an area of eastern Ukraine that is now in control of Russian-backed separatists. The crash killed all 298 people on board, causing U.S. and European officials to step up rhetoric against Russia, with some blaming Putin directly for the deaths. Putin has not taken responsibility for the downing, but in a written statement said, "no one should and no one has the right to use this tragedy to pursue their own political goals. Rather than dividing us, tragedies of this sort should bring people together." The downing and the backing of separatists in Ukraine come after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine earlier this year. The move riled the international community and caused the United States and Europe to sanction important economic sectors of the country. Clinton argued during the interview that when Putin retook the Russian presidency in 2012 she recognized the need to treat the country differently. "When Putin announced in the fall of 2011 that he was coming back, I had no illusions," Clinton said. "I wrote a memo to the President, in fact I wrote two memos to the President, pointing out that we were going to have to change our thinking and approach. We had gotten all we could get from the reset." Clinton's dealings with Russia have also turned political. Republicans have seized on Clinton's reset in light of recent events and the Republican National Committee has made the reset a hallmark of most of their sweeping attacks on Clinton. The group has argued "as relations with Russia continue to deteriorate, Clinton may need to reset her own Russian legacy." During the interview with Harwood, Clinton acknowledged the number of foreign policy crises around the world but appeared to distance herself from decisions the Obama administration has made since she left in 2013. "Every administration, every party in the White House has the responsibility during the time it is there to do the best we can to lead and manage the many problems we face," Clinton said when asked if the Obama administration is to blame for a number of issues around the world. "And I think we did in the first term." On the topic of another international hotspot, Clinton strongly sided with Israel in the country's conflict with Hamas and the Gaza Strip. Clinton said that she has "no doubt" that the current conflict "was a deliberate provocation" by Hamas to "engender more sympathy for their cause and also to put Israel on the back heal." "I think the responsibility falls on Hamas," Clinton said. Clinton did say, however, that she supports Secretary of State John Kerry's efforts to secure a ceasefire in the region and hopes the agreement will bring an end to the fighting. *Politico: “Hillary Clinton: I need to ‘work on’ press relations” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/07/hillary-clinton-media-relations-109332.html>* By Katie Glueck July 24, 2014, 11:35 a.m .EDT Hillary Clinton, who has long had a tempestuous relationship with the media, on Thursday said she may need to “work on” her “expectations” of the press. Her comments, which came on NPR’s “On Point” program, follow criticism from former New York Times editor Jill Abramson that Clinton expects loyalty from journalists, especially female journalists. “I think maybe one of the points Jill was making is that I do sometimes expect perhaps more than I should,” the former secretary of state and possible Democratic presidential frontrunner said. “And I’ll have to work on my expectations, but I had an excellent relationship with the State Department press that followed me for four years, and enjoyed working with them and whatever I do in the future, I look forward to having the same kind of opportunities.” In a POLITICO magazine article last week by Gail Sheehy, Abramson was quoted saying that Clinton is “incredibly unrealistic about journalists. She expects you to be 100 percent in her corner, especially women journalists.” Asked whether Clinton feels “so scalded” by her history with the press that it might be difficult to communicate in a possible presidential bid, she said she didn’t think so. *The Economist: “Dreamy footsoldiers of the Left” <http://www.economist.com/news/united-states/21608759-some-democrats-havent-noticed-next-election-year-not-2016-dreamy>* [No Writer Mentioned] July 26, 2014 [Subtitle:] Some Democrats haven’t noticed that the next election is this year, not 2016 ELECTION fever grips the American Left. A mood of scrappy, let-us-at-’em impatience unites such gatherings as Netroots Nation, an annual shindig which this year drew thousands of activists, organisers, bloggers and candidates to Detroit from July 17th-19th. Unfortunately for the broader Democratic Party, the election that inspires the grassroots is the 2016 presidential race. The mid-term congressional elections, which will happen much sooner (in November this year), provoke a more muted response, even though there is a good chance that Republicans will seize the Senate and cripple the rest of Barack Obama’s presidency. The kind of people who attend Netroots Nation are passionately and uncompromisingly left wing. Their champion is Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, a former professor who crusades against “big banks”, “powerful corporations” and their enablers on the Right. “The game is rigged,” thundered Ms Warren, whose demands include more generous Social Security benefits (pensions) for the old (paid for with steep tax hikes), cheaper student loans, a higher minimum wage and other forms of redistribution. Not for her the business-friendly centrism of the Clinton clan. Hillary Clinton did not attend Netroots Nation, instead giving a TV interview in which she suggested that a bit of economic growth might make it easier to curb inequality. *Sweet dreams are made of this* Ms Warren’s warm-up act was Gary Peters, a local congressman who, unlike Ms Warren, is running for election this year. Mr Peters, a moderate ex-banker, is trying to win a Senate seat that Democrats desperately need to win but might not. He could use some grassroots support, but the crowd barely noticed him. They were too happy chanting “Run Liz, Run!” or waving “Elizabeth Warren for President” boater-style hats (“they’re fun, they’re old-timey,” said a hipster handing them out). Ms Warren says she is not running for the White House. No matter. Some 100 days from an election that could condemn Mr Obama to near-impotence, some progressives prefer to daydream about President Warren, “who won’t stand for all the Wall Street bullshit”, to quote a new (endearingly terrible) folk song by her supporters. The Democrats’ footsoldiers can ill afford to daydream in 2014. Even as digital technology transforms elections, recent research shows that flesh-and-blood volunteers tend to trump paid advertising. Candidates need supporters to sway their friends and neighbours. This “ground war” is most crucial, for both sides, in the half-dozen swing states where Senate races could go either way. The trouble is, these states are quite conservative. So the Democrats running for office there often have views on guns, coal or fracking that appal progressives, who are therefore reluctant to knock on doors for them. Like the Republicans with their Tea Party zealots, the Left must choose between purity and pragmatism. MoveOn, a lefty campaign behemoth which claims 8m members, has endorsed only nine Senate candidates so far in this election cycle, conspicuously excluding centrists in tight races in Georgia, Kentucky and Louisiana. The group will “sit out” some races; its members have drawn a “bright line” against endorsing senators who voted against increased background checks for gun-owners, for instance. In 2014 that rules out Mark Begich in Alaska and Mark Pryor in Arkansas. Another group, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC), whose members raised over $2.7m for 2012 candidates, calls itself “the Elizabeth Warren wing of the Democratic Party”. Its leaders can sound Tea Party-ish, declaring that “ideology” matters as much as finding candidates who can win. The PCCC has invested in such hopeless causes as the Senate race in South Dakota to demonstrate the power of “anti-corporate” messages delivered by the Democratic candidate there. Several leftish groups think the mid-terms are a chance to show that economic populism is the best way to woo unhappy voters, nationwide. Yet Tea Party parallels are imperfect. Flinty conservatives often scoff that moderate Republicans are no better than Democrats. Progressives are different: many think that Republicans are wicked. That pushes their leaders, at least, towards pragmatism. “We may have to compromise on some things [to beat the Republicans],” says a boss at Democracy For America (DFA), a group founded by Howard Dean, a former Vermont governor and presidential hopeful who claimed to represent “the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party”. Take Alaska’s embattled senator. To DFA, Mr Begich has been “terrible” on oil and gas and “not good” on guns. But he is “fantastic” on inequality. In Louisiana local DFA members are holding their noses and helping a pro-oil Democrat, Senator Mary Landrieu. Ultimately, DFA vows to be “all over” any race that might decide the fate of the Senate. Should Democrats lose in 2014, blame candidates “who didn’t run on expanding Social Security or [raising] the minimum wage,” insists Charles Chamberlain, DFA’s executive director. Both DFA and the PCCC plan to use digital wizardry to help members place campaign calls to districts across the country: a nifty trick in places where members despise their own party’s local candidates. MoveOn tells activists that saving the Senate is the “most important priority” of 2014, reminding them that Mr Obama’s ability to nominate judges is in the balance. Over on the centre-ground, Ready for Hillary, a group working to rally a volunteer army for Mrs Clinton’s use (should she choose to run in 2016), will “amplify” any 2014 endorsements made by their heroine, instantly urging supporters to lend a hand to that campaign. On current showing, many will ignore such calls to arms in 2014. Despair with Mr Obama and this Congress may be part of the explanation. Progressive footsoldiers are waiting for the scrap that really interests them: a fight to drag the Democratic Party leftwards to victory in 2016. Republicans, who have plenty of problems of their own, cannot believe their luck. *Slate blog: Weigel: “Where Have You Gone, Brian Schweitzer? A Nation Turns Its Lonely Eyes to You.” <http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2014/07/24/where_have_you_gone_brian_schweitzer_a_nation_turns_its_lonely_eyes_to_you.html>* By David Weigel July 24, 2014, 11:50 a.m. EDT A full month has passed since Marin Cogan published the definitive 2014 profile of the much-interviewed Brian Schweitzer. Covering Schweitzer, who governed Montana from 2005 to 2013, was irresistable -- he gave good quote, he was openly speculating about a 2016 presidential bid, and if your news organization had the ad revenue, he would usher you into the magical landscape of his state. (When Schweitzer was expected to run for Senate, one adviser told me to come up and ride a prop plane with the man himself. Needless to say, this isn't something you're offered if you're profiling Martin O'Malley.) Cogan blew up the reporter gravy train. Actually, she got Schweitzer to put down his own controlled demolition. In interviews for the piece, Schweitzer basically said that Rep. Eric Cantor seemed gay ("men in the South, they are a little effeminate") and that Sen. Dianne Feinstein was a slut for the national security state ("standing under the streetlight with her dress pulled all the way up over her knees"). This damaged Schweitzer in a way none of his other quotes had damaged him. Ruby Cramer is the first reporter to survey the rubble, emptying her notebook from the times Schweitzer gave her quotes that seemed newsy if said by a 2016er and just sort of sad if said by a has-been. Cramer's the first to point out just how bad Schweitzer's timing was. Days after his gaffes... “Hillary Clinton was quoted in a newspaper saying she and her husband are not among the ‘truly well off,’ and the political world rushed to wonder aloud how she could have ever said such a thing. Washington moved on. Schweitzer was suddenly laughable to the people who propped him up most — he had no place to show his skunk hide; no makeup artists to charm; no use, not at the moment, for the HD uplink, cell tower-powered, Israel-innovated, one-of-its-kind live-hit in-home studio at the end of his dirt road.” Has Schweitzer been that invisible? Yep. On June 17, he appeared on MSNBC's Ed Show, to talk about energy exploration and the Middle East. ("We keep tying economic interest to these unpredictable conflicts on the Middle East when we have all the power to do it here at home and we have all the people behind it.") On June 19, Cogan's profile went online. Schweitzer has not appeared on cable TV sense then. He's contracted to MSNBC, and the network simply isn't using him. He has not slipped free of the contract to appear on CNN or Fox News. Actually, the only mention of Schweitzer on cable in the month of July came on Monday, when pollster Pat Caddell suggested Schweitzer would be a good candidate against Hillary Clinton. Caddell is, of course, a shameless hack who is booked because he will say anything. He previously argued that Democrats needed to save their party by dumping Obama for Clinton. But the "booked because he will say anything" role belonged to Schweitzer just weeks ago. He's been silent as Clinton's been battered over her post-State speaking fees, and as ISIS swept into Iraq. Those are his issues! I left Schweitzer a message, to figure this out and to, you know, give him a chance to weigh in on policy like he used to. But I suddenly remembered how there was literally zero buzz about Schweitzer at last weekend's Netroots Nation conference. Schweitzer had spoken at NN in the past (in 2010) and had been touted for years by progressive bloggers. *CBS News: “Is there room for Joe Manchin among Democrats in 2016?” <http://www.cbsnews.com/news/is-there-room-for-joe-manchin-among-democrats-in-2016/>* By Jacqueline Alemany July 24, 2014, 11:02 a.m. EDT On the spectrum of hypothetical 2016 presidential candidacies, the @DraftJoeManchin Twitter movement, if you can call it that, is the elephant in the room of dark horses. "Fiscally responsible and socially compassionate", as he so often describes himself, Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., is about as centrist as a senator can get. A selling point in the 2016 general election, perhaps, but not exactly a great message in a Democratic primary contest in which candidates usually appeal to the passionate left wing of their party. Vocally pro-coal, anti-abortion rights, pro-gun and anti-Obamacare, Manchin hasn't exactly endeared himself to liberals during his political career. "My first response was to type in 'hahaha,'" Neil Sroka, the communications director at the liberal group Democracy for America, said when asked about the possibility of Manchin seeking the Democratic nomination. "Maybe in the early '90s he might have had a chance. Maybe, but you know, right now the Elizabeth Warren wing of the party is ascendant. And it's one where progressives are gathering more and more force. Manchin is no Elizabeth Warren." But at a time when Republicans and Democrats are more divided along ideological lines than at any other point in the last two decades, could there be room for a rifle-brandishing moderate in a Democratic primary? The received wisdom in Washington is that Hillary Clinton, if she decides to run, would clog the "moderate" lane -- and most lanes -- of the Democratic nomination contest. But Mike Weber sees an opening. "We've been deeply polarized as a nation," Weber, the New Mexico politico behind @DraftJoeManchin, told CBS News. "We can only be unified long-term as a nation again by a centrist president." Weber started the Twitter account and its correlating 26 state-based draft pages after listening to Clinton's NPR interview with Terry Gross, in which the notoriously cautious former secretary of state bristled under tough questioning about her evolving position on same-sex marriage. Weber called the interview "obnoxious." If Clinton takes a pass on 2016, however, Manchin might see that opening. Still, his centrist positions would glaringly contrast those of Warren, the liberal freshman senator from Massachusetts and the subject of her own presidential draft movement. Manchin's supporters, though, point to his ability to use his policy differences as a means to facilitate conversation. It's earned him the reputation for being a dealmaker and the Senate's closest thing to a gridlock breaker. In fact, in 2013, Manchin reached across the aisle more than any Senate Democrat: of the 168 bills he co-sponsored, 43.5 percent of them were introduced by Republicans. "Manchin would make a great president," said Mark McKinnon, the Republican media strategist who co-founded No Labels, an organization devoted to "problem solving and consensus building." "He's the model of what we need in leadership today." "Unfortunately, what makes him a great general election candidate would likely make it very difficult for him to survive a primary. Which of course is another problem in our politics today," McKinnon told CBS News. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., a frequent guest on Manchin's bipartisan evening cruises that he hosts on his boat, blames on the party primary system as one reason why the Congress is on track to be the least productive Congress in history; he paints the path of a centrist as a dead end. "The partisan primary system, which favors more ideologically pure candidates, has contributed to the election of more extreme officeholders and increased political polarization," Schumer wrote in a New York Times op-ed Tuesday. Recent Democratic presidential primary history isn't on Manchin's side: since 1972, with the exception of Bill Clinton, Democrats have generally shunned moderates when picking their nominees in a wide-open primary not involving an incumbent president or vice president. Candidates like Gary Hart, Joe Lieberman and Hillary Clinton are among the high-profile candidates who failed against an eventual nominee that leaned more to the left. But even in states that aren't traditionally liberal, Dick Harpootlian, the former South Carolina Democratic Party Chairman, argued that a centrist Democrat would have trouble. "The primary voter here is probably more moderate than anywhere else in the country," Harpootlian told CBS News. "We're not liberal down here, but I still think he'd have a tough time explaining his positions." "I think there are plenty of places that he would do well," Harpootlian said. "But his position on coal and guns is not moderate. Both extreme." So, with all the talk of a possible Manchin candidacy, what does Manchin think about the prospect? Well, he seems to be straddling the fence. "I feel like I'm in a unique position to help our country become a better place for all Americans," Manchin said in a statement emailed to CBS News. "We will have to see what the future holds." He was, however, more blunt in an interview with Charleston, W.V., CBS affiliate WOWK-TV last week. "I'm not serious about running." Manchin said, adding that while he was very flattered, "on a national ticket, it would be a pretty far reach probably for me." *McClatchy DC: “Bernie Sanders for president 2016? It could happen” <http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2014/07/24/234335/bernie-sanders-for-president-2016.html>* By William Douglas July 24, 2014 Bernie Sanders for President 2016? The fiesty liberal independent senator from Vermont says it could happen. In an interview to air Thursday on Ora.tv’s ‘PoliticKing with Larry King,’ Sanders says he’s weighing his options. He said he’s made no decision yet. ‘For me to do well, to win a presidential election, would mean that we would have to put together an unprecedented grassroots movement,’ he said in the Ora.tv interview. ‘I mean, you would need many, many hundreds of thousands of people knocking on doors, educating, organizing. That is not an easy thing to do.’ When King noted that independently wealthy Ross Perot was able to wage a somewhat impactful, though unsuccessful, presidential bid in 1992, Sanders replied that ‘the difference between Ross and me – and I like Ross – Ross has a few billion dollars in his bank account. I don’t, and that is a significant difference.’ Sanders expressed some frustration with President Barack Obama for trying to work with Republicans in the House of Representatives and the Senate early in his presidency when it was clear that they had no intention of cooperating with the Democratic-held White House. ‘I would say my main criticism of Barack Obama is that he seemed to think when he came in, the ensuing years, that he could negotiate with right-wing extremists who really had no intention of negotiating,’ Sanders told King. Sanders said ‘negotiation is part of what politics is all about’ but you cannot negotiate with people who refuse to negotiate, who really want to destroy you.’ ‘And I think it took him (Obama) a number of years to learn that lesson,’ Sanders added. *RealClearPolitics: “Heitkamp: Addressing Abuse Issues Can Unite Lawmakers” <http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2014/07/24/heitkamp_addressing_abuse_issues_can_unite_lawmakers_123445.html>* By Adam O’Neal July 24, 2014 Rep. Donna Edwards and Sen. Heidi Heitkamp expressed a strong hope Thursday that the deeply divided U.S. Congress can come together to address the problem of domestic violence. Speaking at a breakfast organized by RealClearPolitics and Allstate, the Maryland congresswoman and the North Dakota senator discussed the state of the Violence Against Women Act; the new frontiers in combating domestic violence; and whether an issue as important as women’s safety can bridge divides among polarized lawmakers. Asked by RCP Washington Bureau Chief Carl Cannon whether it was possible to get a bipartisan consensus on these issues, Heitkamp answered, “Absolutely,” adding that Sens. John Cornyn, Richard Blumenthal, and Amy Klobuchar see their work in the Senate as a continuation of progress they made as attorneys general and prosecutors in their home states. Heitkamp also noted that work on domestic violence legislation is a bright spot in the otherwise contentious relationship between the House and Senate. She predicted that the two chambers would be able to agree on a domestic safe harbor bill, “which we’re excited about.” Edwards noted that some impediments to significant reform lie in the details of legislation: The fight over reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act had broken down “over really partisan lines because of who would be covered under the new reauthorization. Were we going to cover people on tribal lands? Were we going to cover fully the LGBT community? And these tend to be really partisan kinds of fights.” Edwards added that sequester spending cuts have hurt women, in particular. She noted that funds for programs to protect women and children have not yet been restored to pre-sequester levels. “I think it’s really unfortunate,” she lamented, adding that investing in protecting women and children in their homes could turn “into an economic boon. It doesn’t really make sense to cut those programs.” The two agreed that one of the best ways to better address the problem of domestic violence and human trafficking is to elect more women to public office. And would electing a woman to the presidency help even more with passing legislation to protect vulnerable women? “No question about it!” declared an enthusiastic Edwards, who lavished praise on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Despite the hopeful signs both lawmakers cited, the problem of domestic violence remains widespread and serious. “We need to have a very strong law enforcement presence and we have to prosecute people who exploit human beings, who sell human beings. That has to be among the most heinous of all crimes in our country,” said Heitkamp. “But we also have to understand the dynamics and how we’re going prevent these crimes as we provide more empowerment on the front end.” Heidtkamp’s and Edwards’ remarks were followed by a panel discussion featuring leaders in the fight against domestic violence, including: National Network to End Domestic Violence President and CEO Kim Gandy; YWCA CEO Dara Richardson-Heron; Center for American Progress Crime and Firearms Policy Director Chelsea Parsons; and Rutgers University social work professor Judy L. Postmus.
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