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Israel’s Hi-Tech Iranian Strike, Amnesty Push Paused, Pentagon’s Shame

September 20, 2021 by GregC

Listen to “Israel’s Hi-Tech Iranian Strike, Amnesty Push Paused, Pentagon’s Shame” on Spreaker.

Join Jim and Greg as they marvel at the new hi-tech details surrounding Israel’s successful targeting of an Iranian nuclear scientist back in November. They also welcome the perfectly logical conclusion of the Senate parliamentarian that amnesty for illegal immigrants does not belong in a budget reconciliation bill. And they vent as the Pentagon actually admits its ISIS-K drone strike actually killed a bunch of innocent people but top officials somehow stand by the intelligence behind the strike.

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Filed Under: Afghanistan, Big Tech, congress, Constitution, Economy, Foreign Policy, History, Humor, Immigration, Iran, Islamic Terrorism, Israel, Military, News & Politics, Taliban Tagged With: Afghanistan, amnesty, intelligence, Iran, Israel, Milley, National Review, nuclear, parliamentarian, reconciliation, Senate, Three Martini Lunch

Sinema’s Sanity, Playing Politics with Students, GOP Helps Bloated Infrastructure Bill

July 29, 2021 by GregC

Listen to “Sinema’s Sanity, Playing Politics with Students, GOP Helps Bloated Infrastructure Bill” on Spreaker.

Join Jim and Greg as they credit Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema for tapping the brakes on the effort of Senate Dems to ram through $3.5 trillion in lefty spending priorities without any GOP votes. They also shake their heads as American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten says she will try to get schools open in the fall while adding the new CDC mask guidelines still make her concerned about teacher safety in the classroom. And they throw up their hands as a lot of Senate Republicans vote to advance an infrastructure bill that spends less than a tenth of the price tag on roads and bridges.

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Filed Under: Climate, congress, Constitution, COVID-19, Debt & Deficits, Economy, Education, Elections, Energy, Health Care, History, Humor, Inflation, News & Politics, Spending Tagged With: AFT, CDC, debt, infrastructure, Kyrsten Sinema, National Review, Randi Weingarten, reconciliation, Republicans, schools, Senate, Three Martini Lunch

Senate Dem Setback, Iran’s New Biggest Ship, Masks Gone & COVID Cases Fall

June 2, 2021 by GregC

Listen to “Senate Dem Setback, Iran’s New Biggest Ship, Masks Gone & COVID Cases Fall” on Spreaker.

It’s all good martinis today! Jim and Greg welcome the Senate parliamentarian making life much tougher for Senate Democrats and the Biden agenda. They also cheer the mysterious sinking of one of Iran’s largest naval ships. And they are glad to see COVID number continue to drop weeks after the CDC ended mask mandates for vaccinated people.

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Filed Under: congress, COVID-19, Economy, Foreign Policy, Health Care, History, Humor, Iran, Islamic Terrorism, Journalism, Middle East, Military, News & Politics, Spending Tagged With: COVID, democrats, Iran, masks, National Review, Navy, parliamentarian, reconciliation, Senate, ship, Three Martini Lunch

Biden’s Border Wall? Infrastructure Bill Gets Big Boost, Biden’s MLB Walkback

April 6, 2021 by GregC

Listen to “Biden’s Border Wall? Infrastructure Bill Gets Big Boost, Biden’s MLB Walkback” on Spreaker.

Join Jim and Greg as they welcome the Biden administration’s grudging concession that there needs to be upgrades to our physical barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border. They also groan as the Senate parliamentarian, as expected, will allow the Democrats to pursue one more bill by a simple majority during this fiscal year. That means the $2 trillion “infrastructure” bill can become law without a single GOP vote in Congress. And they get a kick out of President Biden trying to pretend he wasn’t a major catalyst in getting the all-star game moved out of Atlanta.

 

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Filed Under: congress, Economy, Elections, History, Immigration, Journalism, News & Politics, Sports Tagged With: Biden, border, georgia, infrastructure, Mayorkas, MLB, National Review, reconciliation, Three Martini Lunch, wall

Letlow Wins Big, Dems Plan to Dodge Filibuster, Sluggish Vaccine Pace

March 22, 2021 by GregC

Listen to “Letlow Wins Big, Dems Plan to Dodge Filibuster, Sluggish Vaccine Pace” on Spreaker.

Join Jim and Greg as they cheer the special congressional election win for Julia Letlow in Louisiana, as this impressive woman wins the seat her late husband won last year. They also cringe as Democrats plan to pass every agenda item possible through reconciliation, which would also render the Senate filibuster irrelevant. And Jim unloads on federal and state officials as barely half of the Johnson & Johnson vaccines have been administered three weeks after FDA approval.

 

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Filed Under: congress, Constitution, Elections, Health Care, History, News & Politics Tagged With: democrats, filibuster, J&J, Julia Letlow, National Review, reconciliation, Three Martini Lunch, vaccines

GOP Targeting Obamacare Again

March 27, 2018 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/3-27-turner-blog.mp3

Reports of Republicans giving up on repealing and replacing Obamacare are greatly exaggerated, according to Galen Institute President Grace-Marie Turner, who is not only confident the GOP will address the issue again this year but is part of the team trying to make it happen.

Republicans have achieved a few wins on the health care front over the past year, namely the repeal of the individual mandate in the tax legislation, the repeal of the Independent Payment Advisory Board in a spending bill, and the end of cost-sharing reduction payments to insurance companies through executive action from President Trump.

When Republicans tried but failed to restore funding for the cost-sharing reduction payments in exchange for removing burdensome regulations from the individual health insurance market in the recent omnibus bill, many feared the GOP was giving up on addressing health care in a meaningful way this year.

Turner says that’s not the case.  First of all, she says the failure of Republicans to restore the subsidies to insurers was a major blessing.

“The measures that they were considering as part of the omnibus spending bill were really just papering over the problems.  And with Obamacare, they were ready to throw tens of billions more dollars into this black hole of Obamacare.  It was not going to fix anything,” said Turner.

But Turner also insists Republicans are ramping up for another legislative push to dismantle Obamacare this year.

“Congress is going to have to come back to a full repeal and replace measure and we have been working every week since October to refine this legislation at the behest of the Senate.  (Former) Sen. Rick Santorum has really been the energy behind this effort,” said Turner, who also explained the other players in the effort.

“Heritage Foundation, Ethics and Public Policy Center, the American Enterprise Institute, a lot of state-based think tanks and a lot of experts from around the country have been putting together a proposal that we believe cannot only get majority support in the Congress but majority support of the American people to fix  this for good,” said Turner.

In 2017, the House of Representatives passed reform legislation but the Senate failed on several different bills.  Republican Sens. Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, and John McCain voted down all GOP bills.  Since then, Republicans lost a Senate seat in Alabama and McCain has been home battling cancer.  On most days, the GOP holds a 50-49 voting majority.

Turner says the focal point of this effort will look less like the bills that tanked last summer and more like the Graham-Cassidy bill that failed to advance in September.  the sponsors were Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-Louisiana.  Cassidy is a longtime physician.

“That bill was based upon a different approach, a federalist approach to return money and power to the states to ultimately empower individuals to have more choice and more control over their health insurance,” said Turner.

“We’ve got to devolve power to the states and they need resources in addition to new flexibility to be able to provide people with the kind of policies they actually want  to buy instead of what they’re forced to purchase.  They would use the money to make sure that they purchase private coverage and that they have many more choices and that the coverage is more affordable,” said Turner.

She says Obamacare is a proven disaster and is only getting worse because more people are getting out of the system and leaving older and sicker people to deal with soaring premiums.

“Obamacare is becoming one big high risk pool.  That means millions, probably tens of millions of people, are being shut out of health insurance.  They need a different place to go.  That’s what states can do.  States can figure out how they can revive their individual and small group health insurance markets,” said Turner.

But Republicans have a problem besides finding a majority to support any legislation.  The budget reconciliation rules that allowed them to attempt passage with a simple majority expired in September.  Right now, they would need 60 votes to get anything done.

Turner is confident the Senate GOP leaders could ramp up support for another budget reconciliation rule, and she believes this time they would do it right.  Turner says a big problem with the process last summer is how the rules were structured.

“They did it backwards last time.  This time we’re going to do it the right way, starting with good policy and then create a vehicle to get that enacted,” she said.

So what happened last time?

“What they did is pass budget reconciliation instructions to create the pathway for the repeal and replace legislation they wanted to pass.  And they had to fit it in to that channel and it didn’t really fit,” said Turner.

“As one of my colleagues said, they just kept having to pull limbs off of it until it would fit through that process.  At the end, nobody really liked the product.  We’re doing this differently.  We’re starting out by creating a product that we believe can work and that people will like and then they’ll write the budget reconciliation instructions around that,” said Turner.

Turner says the polls consistently show health care is the number one concern of voters and the GOP must make another push this summer.

“How can they go back to their voters and say, ‘Oh, sorry.  We know we told you for four election cycles we were going to repeal and replace Obamacare but it was just too hard.’  They can’t do that,” said Turner.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: news, Obamacare, reconciliation, reform, repeal, states

Good Family Leave Plan, GOP’s Reconciliation Surrender, GOP Mad Paul Tells Truth

February 9, 2018 by GregC


Alexandra DeSanctis of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America cheer the family leave plan pushed by Sen. Marco Rubio and Ivanka Trump to allow parents to tap their future Social Security checks to cover the weeks surrounding the birth of a new baby in exchange for waiting extra weeks when they reach retirement.  In addition, Alexandra rebuts the liberal insistence that family leave must be a whole new entitlement.  They also slam Republicans for effectively surrendering the option to use budget reconciliation for the next two years as part of the horrific budget deal with Democrats.  And they fire back at Republican lawmakers who spent Thursday trashing Sen. Rand Paul’s filibuster as a waste of time, when those GOP members are really just mad that Sen. Paul called them out for their blatant hypocrisy on deficit spending and not wanting to take a vote on restoring budget caps.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: budget bill, budget caps, deficits, entitlement, family leave, fiscal discipline, hypocrisy, Ivanka Trump, Marco Rubio, National Review, Rand Paul, reconciliation, Republicans, Three Martini Lunch

Brat: Senate ‘Scared of Shadow’ on Spending

February 8, 2018 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/2-8-brat-blog.mp3

Rep. Dave Brat, R-Virginia, is slamming Republican congressional leaders for caving to spending demands by Democrats in a two-year budget bill that he anticipates will spark trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see while Republicans unilaterally surrender their greatest weapon for passing meaningful entitlement, welfare, or health care reforms.

On Wednesday, just one day before another government funding deadline, the Republican and Democratic leaders in the House and Senate announced an agreement to keep operations running for two years, but with a hefty price tag for the American taxpayers.

Republicans who favor the bill are celebrating the lifting of sequester spending caps on national defense.  They also included language to repeal the Independent Payment Advisory Board, often referred to as “death panels” in the Affordable Care Act.  And they contend there is money well spent on veterans programs, infrastructure, disaster relief, and opioid addition programs.

But Brat says everything is getting more money and the media’s estimate of $300 billion in new spending is actually low.

“It’s actually $400 billion now and wait til you see what policies get plowed into that $400 billion,” said Brat.

The congressman says the House of Representatives addressed appropriations last year, passing a budget that cut spending as well as 12 separate departmental spending bills.  He says things fell apart once those bills got sent to the U.S. Senate.

“They failed.  They failed on Obamacare.  They failed on keeping their word to the American people on being fiscally responsible,” said Brat.

Earlier this week, the House passed a continuing resolution that boosted defense spending but left other levels unchanged.

“The House Freedom Caucus plussed up defense spending.  The entire Republican Conference was in favor, plus up the military but nothing else.  We were going to stay as a team on that call.

“Then leadership got together and went to the Senate.  They need nine Democrats and it morphed into a Democrat bill in five minutes.  They plussed it up to $300 billion.  When you add in contingency funding, it’s $400 billion,” said Brat.

“When you’ve got (Senate Minority Leader Chuck) Schumer saying this is a great bipartisan bill, and Republicans are in charge of the House, the Senate, and the White House, you might have a problem on your hands,” said Brat, who points out the two-year deal allows the Senate to wash its hands of the issue until late next year.

“The Senate basically doesn’t even want to vote on a budget next year.  They’re scared of their shadow,” he said.

Brat is generally positive on Speaker Paul Ryan’s leadership but is not impressed with his actions on this bill.

“We got backed into a trap, but still [Ryan’s] got to take the boxing gloves and put them on and go over their to (Senate Majority Leader) Mitch McConnell and say no,” said Brat.

Brat says there’s only one reason why a bill like this gets passed in the GOP-run Congress.

“None of this has to d with rational policy.  No one’s in favor of a trillion dollar deficit and so it’s all politics.  It’s people protecting their hide and their slot up here .  Taking the ‘yes’ vote is the easy vote.  Sure, yes, yes, yes to everything.  Put it on the credit card and the kids will pay it off.  You know, were $21 trillion in debt right now,” said Brat.

And that’s about to get much worse.

“We’re going to have over trillion dollar deficits as far as they eye can see.  If you’re a Republican and you’re fine with that, then I don’t get it,” said Brat.

Not only that, the required payments on the interest for the national debt were tamped down in recent years since interest rates were next to nothing.  Brat says the markets are facing volatility now because of inflation fears brought on by rising wages.  He says the tab to preserve the government’s solvency will also be on the rise.

“That wage inflation set off a signal.  Markets are rational and they say, ‘Oh oh, interest rates are going to bump up once wages bump up,'” said Brat.

“We’re going to have inflation, interest rates going up, and then we’ve got to pay off $21 trillion in debt at normal interest rates like three, four, five percent,  That’s going to be hugely costly and the market has properly recognized that,” said Brat.

In addition to being awash in red ink, Brat is aghast that GOP leaders effectively handcuffed themselves from getting any major reforms done in the next two years.

“They deemed the budget and gave up our ability to do budget reconciliation again this year in the budget.  It’s a huge deal.  That’s how we tried to get rid of Obamacare and that’s how we passed the very successful tax cut.

“This year, we were going to work on welfare reform and maybe some mandatory spending programs because they’re a $100 trillion unfunded (liability).  Now for some reason e just unilaterally disarmed and gave away our power,” said Brat.

The reconciliation tool allows legislation to pass with a simple majority rather than having to meet the 60-vote threshold to cut off debate.  Republicans will now have to keep their entire conference together and pick up nine Democrats to pass any legislation.

Brat, who calls this bill “a Christmas tree on steroids,” is getting some blowback from critics who want to know why he is so upset at a bill boosting federal spending by $400 billion when he just voted in favor of a tax bill that adds $1.5 trillion to the debt over 10 years.

Brat says the explanation is simple.

“I did my Ph.d on economic growth and you’ve got to compete with the mainstream media that doesn’t know anything about economics.  All you need is an additional 0.75 percent economic growth to pay for our tax cut,

So when you put together the regulatory relief we have and the tax cut bill itself.  The bill itself won’t pay for all of it, but the economy is more than compensating for it.  We’re only at one-and-a-half or two (percent growth), so if you get to 2.75 you’ve paid for it and the Fed of Atlanta has us growing at 5.4 next quarter,” said Brat.

He says this line of attack is proof positive that liberals are clueless on fiscal policy.

“The tax cut does pay or itself but government spending does not pay for itself.  That’s Econ 101 and unfortunately I don’t think the Democrats took the class,” said Brat.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: debt, deficits, democrats, inflation, military, news, reconciliation, spending

GOP Health Care Battle Heads to the Wire

March 22, 2017 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/3-22-jacobs-blog.mp3 http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/3-22-MCCLINTOCK-blog.mp3

President Trump and GOP leaders are furiously trying to find the votes necessary to pass the American Health Care Act, and while some news ‘yes’ votes are trickling in, the conservative pushback is also intensifying.

By most vote counts, Republicans are still a handful of votes away from being able to send the AHCA on to the Senate.  With all Democrats expected to oppose the bill, GOP leaders can only afford to lose 21 members on the final tally.  Unofficial whip counts in recent hours show 25-26 Republicans as firm or likely ‘no’ votes.  Sen. Rand Paul expects at least 35 Republicans to oppose it and predicts leaders will scratch the vote.

But Trump and GOP leaders have been able to sway a few more Republican votes to the ‘yes’ column, including Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif.

“We have to ask ourselves, if that’s all we get, does that give us a better system than the one we have right now?” said McClintock.  “It’s far, far from perfect, but it does move us in the right direction.  I am satisfied that, overall, it does give us a better system than the one we’ve got right now.”

McClintock believes Republican leaders made a mistake in insisting on moving a bill that does not address all needed solutions through the reconciliation process.

“The biggest problem is they’re using this convoluted process called reconciliation that doesn’t allow them to repeal the entire act, doesn’t allow them to replace the entire act and requires a lot of additional administrative regulations, which are going to be restricted by what the most liberal court in the country allows them to do, and by follow-up legislation whose future in the Senate is highly dubious,” said McClintock.

McClintock says Republicans and Democrats are responsible for the “convoluted” approach.

“Leadership chose that path precisely because of Democratic obstruction in the Senate.  The reconciliation process allows us to bypass that 60-vote cloture threshold and pass the bill with a simple 51 votes,” said McClintock.

However, he believes that a full repeal with all the market based reforms could pass the House and Senate if GOP leaders were willing to play hardball.

“I think the pressure on those eight Democratic holdouts would have been irresistible, particularly if (Senate Majority Leader) Mitch McConnell said, ‘If you want to filibuster this one, you’re going to have to actually go down there and filibuster it.  You’re going to have to stand by your desks and talk until you drop.  The record is 58 days.  Good luck breaking that.  When you’re done, we’re all going to vote,'” said McClintock.

However, McClintock says that option is off the table and he’s comfortable voting for the current bill.

“Those were arguments I made months ago and lost months ago.  We now have this bill in front of us and I think it more than merits an ‘aye’ vote,” he said.

McClintock wishes there were provisions in the bill allowing purchase of health insurance across state lines and that yanked out the Obamacare insurance regulations that are considered key drivers of premium and deductible increases.

But he says there is a lot to like in the bill as well.

“It ends the individual mandate that forces people to buy products they don’t want.  It ens the employer mandate that’s trapped a lot of low-income workers in part-time jobs.  It begins to restore consumers’ freedom of choice, which I think is the best guarantee of quality and value in any market,” said McClintock.

“It allows people to meet more of their health care needs with pre-tax dollars.  It relieves the premium base of the enormous cost of pre-existing conditions by moving those expenses to a block-granted assigned risk pool,” he added.

But while there are some notable improvements in the AHCA, for conservatives who have pushed “repeal and replace” since Obamacare became law seven years ago, the House bill simply fails to deliver on that promise.

“It’s good entitlement reforms in terms of some of the Medicaid reforms that are in the bill,” said Chris Jacobs, a former aide to Mike Pence and former Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who is now senior health policy analyst at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and CEO of the Juniper Research Group.

“But I think it’s far short of a full repeal.  It leaves Obamacare’s architecture in place when it comes to all the mandates and the insurance regulations that are driving up premiums.  We need to repeal those mandates and go back to respecting state sovereignty and the states’ role in regulating health care and health insurance,” said Jacobs.

GOP leaders have characterized the AHCA as a binary choice for their colleagues: either support the bill or support the existing health care system by default.  Jacobs is not buying that argument.

“That’s a false choice, the idea that we must do something, that this is something therefore we must do this has a flaw in that logic,” said Jacobs.

Sponsors of the AHCA say getting rid of the insurance regulations or “Obamacare architecture” is outside the bounds of what can be moved through reconciliation.  Jacobs says the handling of this very bill proves that is not true.

“I understand the limitations of the reconciliation process, but you have to at least try to repeal the major insurance regulations that are in there.  The bill amends some of them, repeals some of them and leaves others in place.  It’s an ideologically inconsistent position,” said Jacobs.

“If your position is we can’t do any of this because of Senate procedures, then why are we repealing some of them and modifying some of them.  If you can modify them, you can repeal them,” he said.

McClintock finally got on board with the AHCA after successfully sponsoring an amendment in the House Budget Committee that would provide an additional $75 billion  to help people afford health insurance as they transition from Obamacare subsidies to tax credits if the new bill becomes law.  He is also confident that within a few years, Americans will start to see noticeable price decreases in health coverage.

But that same manager’s amendment that satisfied McClintock also contains language that could threaten benefits for up to seven million veterans.  Jacobs says the technical glitch in the language shows the need to slow down the rush to pass the legislation and avoid ugly surprises after it becomes law, similar to what occurred with Obamacare.

As the furious battle for votes plays out, Jacobs hopes leaders pull back and rework the bill to honor the original campaign promises.

“There are folks negotiating now as we speak in the Freedom Caucus to repeal some of the insurance regulations and the mandates.  Hopefully that succeeds and we get to a better bill that conservatives can support,” said Jacobs.

McClintock says Republicans should not let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

“When you pull together a group of people to benefit from their combined wisdom, unfortunately you’re also going to get their combined follies, prejudices and misjudgments.  You can never get a perfect product out of this process.  What you can get is the product that is the most acceptable and moves us forward,” said McClintock.

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/3-22-jacobs-blog.mp3 [ 11:34 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: AHCA, care, costs, filibuster, health, news, Obamacare, reconciliation

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