podesta-emails

​Correct The Record Thursday November 13, 2014 Afternoon Roundup

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*​**Correct The Record Thursday November 13, 2014 Afternoon Roundup:* *Tweets:* *Pres. Bill Clinton* @billclinton: Received my copy of #41 by #43, George W. Bush. Touching tribute! #HowAreYouSTILLNotOnTwitter <https://twitter.com/hashtag/HowAreYouSTILLNotOnTwitter?src=hash> #PresidentialTweeters <https://twitter.com/hashtag/PresidentialTweeters?src=hash> [11/12/14, 5:59 p.m. EST <https://twitter.com/billclinton/status/532669062539931649>] *Pres. Bill Clinton* @billclinton: Great news last night on historic climate cooperation between the US and China #ActOnClimate http://go.wh.gov/HY5PRG [11/12/14, 4:12 p.m. EST <https://twitter.com/billclinton/status/532642059501703168>] *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: .@HillaryClinton <https://twitter.com/HillaryClinton> worked to increase youth suicide prevention & intervention services#HRC365 <https://twitter.com/hashtag/HRC365?src=hash> https://www.congress.gov/bill/108th-congress/senate-bill/2634?q=%7B%22search%22%3A%5B%22Garrett+Lee+Smith+Memorial+Act%22%5D%7D … <https://t.co/Jv6lnZb0wU> [11/13/14, 10:11 a.m. EST <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/532913626974519296>] *Headlines:* *New York Times: “Little Rock Celebration Draws Clinton Supporters, Faithful and Hopeful” <http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/14/us/politics/bill-hillary-clinton-presidential-center-little-rock.html?_r=0>* “Advisers said fondness for the Clinton years, particularly among the white working-class voters who have long identified with Mr. Clinton’s southern roots and centrist politics, can only help should Mrs. Clinton run.” *Politico: “Major Obama '08 backer hosting event for Clinton Foundation” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/11/orin-kramer-clinton-foundation-event-112863.html>* “Three people familiar with the event said invitations have started going out for a small gathering hosted by Boston Provident L.P. manager Orin Kramer that would take place before the end of the year.” *Wall Street Journal blog: Washington Wire: “David Axelrod: Democrats Need a Coherent Economic Message” <http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2014/11/13/david-axelrod-democrats-need-a-coherent-economic-message/?utm_content=bufferf1a2f&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer>* “Mr. Axelrod warned that Mrs. Clinton has to ‘get out of the cocoon of inevitability’ and must do a far better job articulating a strong economic message than she has to date. ‘I think the danger for Secretary Clinton is that, as was the case in 2007, her candidacy is out in front of the rationale for it,’ Mr. Axelrod said. ‘She should not rely too much on that we do have an electoral vote advantage and demographic advantages.’” *Washington Post blog: Post Politics: “David Axelrod: Hillary Clinton needs to ‘get out of the cocoon of inevitability’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/11/13/david-axelrod-hillary-clinton-needs-to-get-out-of-the-cocoon-of-inevitability/>* “David Axelrod, the chief strategist who guided President Obama into the White House, offered a blunt assessment Thursdayof Hillary Rodham Clinton's likely 2016 presidential campaign, saying she needs to ‘get out of the cocoon of inevitability.’” *Bloomberg: “Hillary Versus the Governors” <http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2014-11-13/hillary-versus-the-governors>* [Subtitle:] “Three post-election takes on who may be best poised to take on the Democratic frontrunner in 2016” *NBC News: “A Favor to Hillary? Obama's Political Pros and Cons for Immigration Action” <http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/first-read/favor-hillary-obamas-political-pros-cons-immigration-action-n247701>* “By now, we know that President Obama’s executive action on immigration is likely coming… Politically speaking, Obama taking the action could be the biggest favor he does for Hillary Clinton (if she ends up running).” *Politico: “George Bush: 'When Jeb beats Hillary …'” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/11/george-w-bush-jeb-bush-running-112860.html>* “They’ve come a long way since 1992, but former President George W. Bush says his friendship with his predecessor Bill Clinton will remain intact ‘when Jeb beats Hillary.’” *Washington Post blog: The Fix: “That time George W. Bush called Bill Clinton ‘#BrotherFromAnotherMother’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/11/13/that-time-george-w-bush-called-bill-clinton-brotherfromanothermother/>* “When Bill Clinton gets on Instagram, will his first photo be about Hillary Clinton or Too Many Cooks?” *Huffington Post: “Elizabeth Warren Gets Senate Democratic Leadership Spot” <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/13/elizabeth-warren-senate_n_6149454.html?&ncid=tweetlnkushpmg00000016>* “Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) gained a leadership position in the Senate Democratic caucus Thursday, giving the prominent progressive senator a seat at the table in shaping the party's policy priorities.” *Articles:* *New York Times: “Little Rock Celebration Draws Clinton Supporters, Faithful and Hopeful” <http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/14/us/politics/bill-hillary-clinton-presidential-center-little-rock.html?_r=0>* By Amy Chozick November 13, 2014 For the 10th anniversary of the William J. Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock, Ark., organizers have urged the guests to focus on Bill Clinton’s accomplishments, rather than his wife’s presidential ambitions. But, yes, they will also be starting to think about tomorrow. On Friday, Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton’s closest friends, aides and donors will convene here where Mr. Clinton’s path to the presidency began for a three-day, dual-purpose reunion to celebrate the Clinton Center, which includes a museum and library, and opened on Nov. 18, 2004. The events, including panel discussions about the Clinton administration, a picnic dinner for 1,300 guests (complete with vegan and beef barbecue), a community concert with Nick Jonas, exclusive after-parties and a private dinner with major donors, will inevitably amount to an unofficial pep rally ahead of Mrs. Clinton’s presumptive 2016 presidential campaign. With the midterm elections over, the political momentum has quickly shifted to Mrs. Clinton and her 2016 plans. In the coming months, Mrs. Clinton has a less hectic schedule, with a limited number of speeches and events, related to her charitable work. The Arkansas reunion will be one of her most public, and raucous, commitments. There are, after all, worse ways for Mrs. Clinton to ease into the long presidential campaign cycle than amid hundreds of friends and several days of talking up the robust economy and airbrushing the scandals of the 1990s. The program, titled, “The Work Continues: Celebrating 10 Years of the Clinton Presidential Center,” will focus on Mr. Clinton’s legacy, but the theme gives a nod to the future that will not be lost on the Clinton friends from around the country who plan to attend. “One of the great things about the Clintons is that they integrate all the people in their lives,” said Paul Begala, a Democratic strategist who worked on Mr. Clinton’s 1992 campaign. “But to be a Clintonite is to focus on the future,” he added. “So, in addition to reminiscing about the old days, we’ll talk about the days to come.” Among those expected to attend are former White House advisers like Cheryl D. Mills and Erskine B. Bowles, along with the celebrities Kevin Spacey, Barbra Streisand and Morgan Freeman. Gov. Terry McAuliffe of Virginia, a close friend and longtime fund-raiser to the Clintons, is also scheduled to attend. “There are a lot of emails flying around: ‘Are you going?’ ‘Who’s going?' ” said Michael Waldman, Mr. Clinton’s director of speechwriting from 1995 to 1999. “It’s like a high school reunion. I’m doing situps.” The 94 rooms at the grand Capital Hotel, with its wood-paneled bar and famous pimento cheese sandwiches, have been booked for months. And attendees are planning to go back to all their old 1992 campaign haunts, like Doe’s Eat Place, known for its steaks and tamales. “The Clinton Library is exciting, but Doe’s is really exciting,” Mr. Waldman said. Richard Socarides, a White House adviser to Mr. Clinton, has not been to Little Rock since the center’s inauguration. “It marked the end of the first Clinton presidency, which we’re returning to celebrate,” he said. But he added, “Let’s be real here. Most of us hope this marks the beginning of the campaign for the next.” While all of the 13 presidential libraries across the country highlight their subjects’ accomplishments and gloss over the setbacks, critics have said the Clinton Museum, which is owned by the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation and jointly run with the National Archives and Records Administration, has a particularly laudatory feel. “The dominant impression is of a grand party that was disrupted in 2000 but that might one day be resumed under other auspices,” the critic Edward Rothstein wrote in a review in The New York Times, as if foretelling Mrs. Clinton’s political ascent. Built on a once desolate stretch of abandoned warehouses in downtown Little Rock that a local journalist dubbed “Murky Bottoms,” the Clinton Center has had more than 3.3 million visitors and has brought more than $2.5 billion in economic development to the area. The downtown district is now lined with restaurants, bars, shops and apartment buildings. “It’s exceeded the expectations of the guy who walked around here in 1997, looked around this abandoned warehouse district and thought ‘Where do I start?' ” said James L. Rutherford, who led the project and is now dean of the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service, which is part of the Clinton Center. Mr. Clinton had such an active role in the establishment of his library that the exhibit designer Ralph Appelbaum called him “our curator in chief and even our art director at times.” The former president wanted the edifice to resemble the library at Trinity College in Dublin, though locals have said (affectionately) that the building looks more like a mobile home perched over the Arkansas River. Stephanie S. Streett, the executive director of the library and former director of scheduling in the White House, made an extra effort to encourage guests to attend the anniversary festivities, which officially span 10 days with discussions and events all over town, including a requisite screening of the 1993 documentary “The War Room” about the Clinton-Gore campaign. Three panel discussions on Friday will coincide with the release of an independent oral history of the Clinton White House put out by the Miller Center at the University of Virginia. The library’s more than 35,000 cubic feet of archival material, including 80 million documents, 20 million emails and two million photographs, have been particularly pored over given the possibility of Mrs. Clinton running. The Arkansas Travelers, a cohort of locals who traveled the country to campaign for Mr. Clinton in 1992, will join out-of-town supporters and are not shy about pledging their support again in 2016. (Though several of the self-described Arkansas Travelers said they would enlist their grandchildren to do the traveling this time around.) “There’s no question that Hillary is gonna generate a bunch of enthusiasm here among the faithful,” said Joe Purvis, a traveler who attended kindergarten in Hope, Ark., with Mr. Clinton. The nostalgia for the 1990s that will be on display in Little Rock may not be as valuable on the campaign trail in 2016. Many of the midterm candidates the Clintons campaigned for this year were defeated. Arkansas delivered particular disappointments to Mr. Clinton who campaigned frequently for the incumbent Democrat, Senator Mark Pryor, who lost to Representative Tom Cotton by 17 percentage points. Still, advisers said fondness for the Clinton years, particularly among the white working-class voters who have long identified with Mr. Clinton’s southern roots and centrist politics, can only help should Mrs. Clinton run. During the 2008 Democratic presidential primary, when her rivals accused her of relying too heavily on her husband’s record, Mrs. Clinton would often respond: “I always wonder what part of the 1990s they didn’t like: the peace or the prosperity?” Despite speculation about 2016, the official lineup for the weekend will be focused on the Clinton Center, the work of the Clinton Foundation and Mr. Clinton’s legacy. “There will be more nostalgia and talk of the good old days” than of what’s next, said Thomas F. McLarty III, a White House chief of staff to Mr. Clinton. “He’ll have created 28 million new jobs rather than 22 million by the time the weekend’s over.” *Politico: “Major Obama '08 backer hosting event for Clinton Foundation” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/11/orin-kramer-clinton-foundation-event-112863.html>* By Maggie Haberman November 13, 2014, 11:30 a.m. EST [Subtitle:] Three people familiar with the event say invitations have started going out for a small gathering. A major New York hedge fund executive and crucial early backer of Barack Obama in 2007 is hosting an event for Hillary Clinton’s family foundation in the coming weeks, just ahead of a potential presidential run by the former secretary of state, sources told POLITICO. Three people familiar with the event said invitations have started going out for a small gathering hosted by Boston Provident L.P. manager Orin Kramer that would take place before the end of the year. The event, which will be at the elite Core Club in Manhattan, is being coordinated through Dennis Cheng, who is in charge of fundraising at the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation, the sources said. Kramer was not available for comment, and a Clinton spokesman did not respond to emails. Kramer, a longtime Democratic bundler, was an early validator for Obama as the first-term senator began to put down a mark in the New York fundraising community, which had long backed Clinton, its own senator. The hedge fund executive’s event will put Clinton in front of his donor network at a time when she is preparing for a likely second presidential bid. She has said she’ll make up her mind about running after the first of the year, although there is a debate among her allies about whether she should declare earlier than that, or wait until several weeks into 2015. People familiar with the event said the foundation is working to complete an endowment that would avoid conflicts of interest in the midst of a Clinton campaign and would allow the group’s work to continue. *Wall Street Journal blog: Washington Wire: “David Axelrod: Democrats Need a Coherent Economic Message” <http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2014/11/13/david-axelrod-democrats-need-a-coherent-economic-message/?utm_content=bufferf1a2f&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer>* By Reid J. Epstein November 13, 2014, 8:59 a.m. EST Democrats must develop a coherent economic message ahead of the 2016 elections if they hope to retain the White House and win back the Senate, Democratic strategist David Axelrod warned at Thursday’s Capital Journal breakfast. Mr. Axelrod, the man who tended President Barack Obama’s political message through two successful presidential campaigns, said Democrats in 2014 leaned too heavily on their belief that they have a superior turnout and data operations and didn’t spend enough energy cultivating an economic message. “Tactics are not a substitute for a compelling message,” Mr. Axelrod said. “That’s a lesson that the Democratic Party should learn.” Of course the overwhelming favorite to be the Democrats’ 2016 presidential nominee is Hillary Clinton, whom Mr. Axelrod built Mr. Obama’s 2008 campaign to defeat. Mr. Axelrod warned that Mrs. Clinton has to “get out of the cocoon of inevitability” and must do a far better job articulating a strong economic message than she has to date. “I think the danger for Secretary Clinton is that, as was the case in 2007, her candidacy is out in front of the rationale for it,” Mr. Axelrod said. “She should not rely too much on that we do have an electoral vote advantage and demographic advantages.” *Washington Post blog: Post Politics: “David Axelrod: Hillary Clinton needs to ‘get out of the cocoon of inevitability’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/11/13/david-axelrod-hillary-clinton-needs-to-get-out-of-the-cocoon-of-inevitability/>* By Philip Rucker November 13, 2014, 10:51 a.m. EST David Axelrod, the chief strategist who guided President Obama into the White House, offered a blunt assessment Thursday of Hillary Rodham Clinton's likely 2016 presidential campaign, saying she needs to "get out of the cocoon of inevitability." Axelrod, appearing on a political panel in Washington sponsored by The Wall Street Journal, said Clinton needs to develop a strategy and message for her candidacy rather than rely on tactics and the Democratic Party's demographic advantages in presidential elections. "Tactics have to follow strategy," Axelrod said. "I think the danger for Secretary Clinton is that, as was the case in 2007, her candidacy is out in front of the rationale for it." Axelrod said Clinton became "a very effective candidate" late in the 2008 primary cycle. "She was much more visceral, she was closer to the ground, she was talking about people and their lives," he said. In 2016, Axelrod said, "she has to throw caution to the wind and essentially get out of the cocoon of inevitability and really compete for it." Some Democrats believe that after Obama built a powerful coalition of black, Latino, women and young voters in the 2008 and 2012 campaigns, demographics are destiny and ensure the party will keep hold of the White House for years to come. But Axelrod said Clinton would be foolish to believe this. "That should not give her solace that the job is done," Axelrod said. "I think the candidate who's going to win in 2016 is the candidate who aggressively and in a forward-thinking way deals with this fundamental issue of the stagnancy of wages, the problems of the middle class, the lack of economic mobility that are central to who we are as a country." Axelrod noted that running away from Obama and his record did not work for Democratic senators in 2014 and cautioned Clinton against repeating that strategy. Instead, he said, Clinton should develop a message that builds on his legacy, especially on economic issues, without simply running for a repeat term. "People seek the remedy and not the replica," Axelrod said. "I think that in 2016, people will want someone who is a little less nuanced, someone who projects more of a sense of black and white certainty.... I actually think that is an environment that favors Hillary Clinton more than the 2008 environment because she tends to be someone that speaks in simple, declarative sentences and with great certainty." *Bloomberg: “Hillary Versus the Governors” <http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2014-11-13/hillary-versus-the-governors>* By Margaret Talev November 13, 2014, 9:49 a.m. EST [Subtitle:] Three post-election takes on who may be best poised to take on the Democratic frontrunner in 2016. What are Hillary Clinton's odds of being elected president in 2016, and what kind of Republican would be best poised to beat her? Political strategists and pollsters weighed in at a Wall Street Journal breakfast in Washington on Thursday and here's what they concluded. Bush 'formidable' Clinton “should not rely too much” on apparent electoral and demographic advantages for Democrats, said Democratic strategist and former Obama adviser David Axelrod. Whoever wins must “aggressively” tackle the economic stagnation and problems of the middle class. “She has to throw caution to the wind” and get out of the “cocoon of inevitability.” For Republicans, “if you don't stand up to the base somewhere,” he said, “I don't think you can win the general election.” Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, if he runs, would be a “very formidable” candidate if he stood by his stances on immigration and education and survived the primary process. Look outside the bubble The ideal Republican presidential candidate would be a governor from a “blue or purple state,” said Republican pollster Bill McInturff. Republicans in states are “out there crafting right-of-center policy” and implementing it. “Someone outside of Washington who's a governor” is probably better poised than a senator, he said, in part because they “also get to run against Washington.” Midwest bench Republican governors from the Midwest are well-poised, said U.S. Chamber of Commerce senior political strategist Scott Reed (read: Wisconsin's Scott Walker, Indiana's Mike Pence, Ohio's John Kasich and Michigan's Rick Snyder). Lots of prospective candidates are waiting to see what Bush and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie will do, he said, while one “can't underestimate [Kentucky Senator] Rand Paul's ability” to do “nontraditional” things. *NBC News: “A Favor to Hillary? Obama's Political Pros and Cons for Immigration Action” <http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/first-read/favor-hillary-obamas-political-pros-cons-immigration-action-n247701>* By Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Carrie Dann November 13, 2014 By now, we know that President Obama’s executive action on immigration is likely coming. (Fox News says it could come as early as next Friday, but the White House says that President Obama still hasn’t made up his mind.) Politically, the question is whether such action would be a smart move -- or a dumb one. MSNBC’s Benjy Sarlin has a good look at the political pros and cons here. The pros: It’s the best chance for Obama to reform the system in the short term (especially since House Republicans are unwilling to pass their own legislation), and it will fire up Latino voters, who will be a critical bloc to Democrats’ success in 2016. The cons: It would spark a policy fight with Republicans (the outcome of which is impossible to predict), and it could alienate the white voters Democrats lost in 2014. But maybe the biggest political reason to undertake executive action is that it would ensure the action becomes a key part of the 2016 race. Every Republican running for president would have to denounce the move. And then the GOP contest then would turn into who’s tougher against the action: Do they promise to deport the undocumented immigrants (if Obama’s ultimate executive action entails allowing them to stay in the country)? Like we saw in 2008 and 2012, that would push the eventual GOP nominee farther to the right than he or she might want to go -- and make it harder for the nominee to return to the middle in the general election. Politically speaking, Obama taking the action could be the biggest favor he does for Hillary Clinton (if she ends up running). Is that expected executive action already dividing Republicans? And there’s the question of whether Obama’s expected executive action could splinter the Republican even before the 114th Congress begins next year. The Wall Street Journal: “A bloc of Republican lawmakers is seeking to use must-pass spending legislation in the final weeks of the year to place limits on President Barack Obama’s ability to loosen immigration rules, threatening to split the party in Congress… Now, some Republicans are pushing for Congress to make a move before Mr. Obama does. More than 50 House lawmakers have signed a letter saying that language barring the president from acting alone should be attached to legislation needed to keep the government operating after Dec. 11, when its current funding expires.” More from the WSJ: “The result is that barely a week after their broad election victories, party leaders will have to decide whether to override conservatives’ demands in favor of a more pragmatic approach. Party leaders also will have to decide when and how hard to fight the president over immigration.” House and Senate Republicans hold their leadership elections today With Congress back to work for the lame-duck session, the House and Senate will begin holding elections today to pick the leaders of each party in each chamber, NBC’s Frank Thorp and Alex Moe report. Senate Republicans -- including new members elected last Tuesday -- will vote for six leadership positions for their new majority, including Senate majority leader, majority whip, and the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee. On the other side of the Capitol, House Republicans will make their picks for top positions, including for speaker, House majority leader, House Republican conference chair and House Republican policy chairman. The secret-ballot elections are held behind closed doors. Democrats, Thorp and Moe add, are expected to hold their side’s elections next week. The Keystone XL pipeline and next month’s Louisiana Senate runoff Next month’s Senate runoff in Louisiana between Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA) and GOP challenger Bill Cassidy is already spurring lawmakers to push forward legislation green-lighting the Keystone XL pipeline project. Per NBC’s Frank Thorp and one of us: “Landrieu … pushed aggressively for a vote Wednesday, speaking on the Senate floor and at a press conference on Capitol Hill. That vote, now scheduled for as early as next Tuesday, will need 60 votes to move forward. Within an hour of Landrieu’s push on the Senate floor, House leaders announced plans to hold a vote Thursday on a Keystone XL pipeline measure authored by Cassidy.” But folks, if you think the runoff will be decided over a contest of who’s the bigger Keystone champion, well, you might want to think again. That runoff is going to be determined if Landrieu can find enough Democrats to come to the polls, and if Republicans continue to be as enthusiastic after winning control of the Senate last week. The Gruber Tapes Conservatives have jumped all over comments by MIT economist Jonathan Gruber -- who played a role in drafting both the federal health-care law and the earlier Massachusetts health law -- made about Affordable Care Act during a 2013 academic panel. "This bill was written in a tortured way to make sure CBO did not score the mandate as taxes," he said, per the Washington Post. "Lack of transparency is a huge political advantage. And basically, call it the 'stupidity of the American voter' or whatever, but basically that was really, really critical to getting the thing to pass.” And those comments are spurring Republicans to launch new hearings. But the New York Times’ Neil Irwin makes the point is that this is how Congress -- whether controlled by Democrats or Republicans -- always plays the game. “Mr. Gruber was exposing something sordid yet completely commonplace about how Congress makes policy of all types: Legislators frequently game policy to fit the sometimes arbitrary conventions by which the Congressional Budget Office evaluates laws and the public debates them. In the case of the Affordable Care Act, that meant structuring the law so that the money Americans must pay the Internal Revenue Service if they fail to obtain health insurance under the law’s mandate is a penalty, not a tax.” Of course, remember that the Supreme Court upheld the law precisely because it saw the mandate as a tax. Huckabee is definitely dipping his toes into the 2016 waters Turning to 2016 news, it’s now time for all of us to start viewing former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee -- who won the Iowa caucuses in 2008 -- as a possible, if not likely, presidential candidate. As one of reported yesterday, Huckabee on Wednesdaydeparted on a 10-day trip to Poland, England, and California with more than 100 pastors and leaders from Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, and Nevada. (Gee, what do those states all have in common?) The trip is billed as the “Mike Huckabee’s Reagan, Thatcher, Pope John Paul II Tour.” The Washington Post, which first reported on Huckabee's travel, also reports that the former GOP governor is set to meet with deep-walleted Republican donors later this month. And in January, the Post adds, Huckabee is set to release a new book, "God, Guns, Grits, and Gravy." We assume this all means that Fox News will be suspending his contract with the news channel, right? McCain is planning to run for re-election Per MSNBC’s Kasie Hunt, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) says he’s “absolutely” leaning toward running for re-election in 2016, and that he’s begun preparing for another bid. More from Hunt: “McCain, who will be 80 years old in 2016, told a small group of reporters that he expects that he’ll get a challenge from a Tea Party candidate – as he did during his 2010 re-election race – but that he’s already marshaling support from business and defense groups to help him. “You have to hope for the best and prepare for the worst,” McCain said. “I definitely think that I would have to absolutely anticipate a Tea Party candidate or two or three… Everybody tells me that I'm the No. 1 target of the Tea Partiers, so I hope that's not the case.” Updates on the undecided races In California, it looks like Julia Brownley (D-CA) hung onto her seat in the tight race against Jeff Gorrell. And per the Sacramento Bee, “Freshman Democratic Rep. Ami Bera has captured the lead over Republican Doug Ose in the expensive and closely watched race for suburban Sacramento’s 7th Congressional District.”… In Arizona, the Ron Barber (D)-vs.-Martha McSally-race is headed to a recount.... And in New York, Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) is the winner in her re-election bid against Republican Mark Assini. *Politico: “George Bush: 'When Jeb beats Hillary …'” <http://www.politico.com/story/2014/11/george-w-bush-jeb-bush-running-112860.html>* By Lucy McCalmont November 13, 2014, 10:15 a.m. EST They’ve come a long way since 1992, but former President George W. Bush says his friendship with his predecessor Bill Clinton will remain intact “when Jeb beats Hillary.” “Look, I’ll still like him [Bill Clinton], if Jeb—when Jeb beats Hillary,” a smiling Bush told Fox News’ Sean Hannity in a clip of an interview that aired Thursday on the network. “Are you betting on that?” Hannity asked. “If Jeb runs, I think, yeah—Look, I don’t know if he’s going to run, I really don’t. I hope he does because he’d be a great president,” Bush said in the interview, which will air in full Thursday evening on “Hannity.” Jeb Bush is currently weighing a bid for the White House but has yet to reach a final decision. George W. Bush has said he thinks the chances of his younger brother running are “50-50.” Bush has been making numerous media appearances recently to promote his recently released book, “41: A Portrait of My Father.” *Washington Post blog: The Fix: “That time George W. Bush called Bill Clinton ‘#BrotherFromAnotherMother’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/11/13/that-time-george-w-bush-called-bill-clinton-brotherfromanothermother/>* By Jaime Fuller November 13, 2014, 10:02 a.m. EST [PRES. GEORGE W. BUSH INSTAGRAM] Questions raised by this Instagram photo: 1. Is George W. Bush the first president to ever call another president a brother from another mother? 2. Is George W. Bush the first man over the age of 50 to call another person a brother from another mother? 3. What would Teddy Roosevelt and William Howard Taft have talked about if one of them was on Instagram and the other was on Twitter? 4. Did Teddy Roosevelt call his one-legged rooster a presidential tweeter? Did Calvin Coolidge call his canaries, Nip and Tuck, presidential tweeters? Why not? 5. Who took the photo of Bill Clinton reading George W. Bush's book on George H.W. Bush? 6. How many days until Bill Clinton gets on Instagram? 7. When Bill Clinton gets on Instagram, will his first photo be about Hillary Clinton or Too Many Cooks? [PRES. CLINTON’S TWEET] *Huffington Post: “Elizabeth Warren Gets Senate Democratic Leadership Spot” <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/13/elizabeth-warren-senate_n_6149454.html?&ncid=tweetlnkushpmg00000016>* By Amanda Terkel November 13, 2014, 10:51 a.m. EST WASHINGTON -- Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) gained a leadership position in the Senate Democratic caucus Thursday, giving the prominent progressive senator a seat at the table in shaping the party's policy priorities. Warren's role, which is a new position created specifically for her, will be in crafting the party's messaging and policy. She will also serve as a liaison to progressive groups. The progressive senator was elevated to the role Thursday morning, when Senate Democrats held their leadership elections in the Capitol. Sources told The Huffington Post that Warren had the strong support of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), who wanted her as part of his team. Warren's presence in the weekly leadership meetings and her role helping to shape the caucus' policies are significant for progressives. Reid's support for Warren also underscores his desire to push progressive policies in the next Congress, a priority his office has confirmed. After the midterm elections, Warren wrote an op-ed in The Washington Post that called on Congress and the administration to move forward with progressive proposals instead of cutting deals with Republicans simply for the sake of doing so. "Yes, we need action," she wrote. "But action must be focused in the right place: on ending tax laws riddled with loopholes that favor giant corporations, on breaking up the financial institutions that continue to threaten our economy, and on giving people struggling with high-interest student loans the same chance to refinance their debt that every Wall Street corporation enjoys."
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