Plenty of people are annoyed by the antics of Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn. And what he does is limited to the Senate -- imagine if he were going around blocking everything anyone ever tried to do in real life? Well, the same folks who brought you a look at Michael Steele's outreach to "urban-suburban hip-hop settings" have come up with a video showing what that might be like. You can watch it below. (My favorite part: "We could try to reason with him, but, uh, that usually makes things worse.)
With liberals getting progressively more upset with President Obama, it was only a matter of time before someone started running ads about it. One group, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, is doing just that, hitting him for earlier statements he'd made about healthcare reform: Specifically, promising a public option and opposing a mandate that would force people to buy insurance.
The ad's going to be running in Washington, D.C., as well as in Wisconsin -- the latter is an attempt to change liberal Sen. Russ Feingold's vote, Sam Stein reports. Notably, it goes right at the heart of Obama's appeal during the presidential campaign, saying at the end, "A bill without a public option is not change we can believe in."
The Senate will, as Majority Leader Harry Reid wanted it to, vote to pass a healthcare reform bill before leaving for Christmas. But that doesn't mean the whole drawn-out process is over; we may still have a couple months left to go.
Politico's Mike Allen reported Wednesday that the House and Senate may not be done working out the differences between their versions of the legislation in time for President Obama to give the State of the Union. They are trying to speed that along, however.
"Everyone seems committed to getting a bill to the president’s desk as soon as possible, but there are huge issues -- notably abortion language -- that have to be worked out between the House and the Senate. Officials at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue hope to avoid a FORMAL CONFERENCE -- appointing conferees requires a series of votes," Allen wrote. "Some House members want the formal process, but the differences are more likely to be hashed out among Speaker Pelosi, Leader Reid and the White House, with some personal involvement by the president."
As a freshman Democrat, Rep. Parker Griffith looked to be in trouble next year. Sure, his district hadn't ever elected a Republican to the House, but it was trending red -- it consistently gave 60 percent or more of its vote to the Republican presidential candidate -- and in a year in which Democrats are bound to take some losses, especially in the South, he seemed very vulnerable. So his fellow Democrats, including most of the party's leaders in the House, opened their wallets.
Now that Griffith has announced that he's becoming a Republican, however, some of them want their money back.
"House Democratic Members and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee took Parker Griffith at his word and, as a result, invested a great deal in working with Alabamans to bring Mr. Griffith to Congress. We were committed to helping Mr. Griffith deliver for his constituents and successfully helped Mr. Griffith fend off the personal attacks against him from the far right," Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., the chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said in a statement.
"Mr. Griffith, failing to honor our commitment to him, has a duty and responsibility to return to Democratic Members and the DCCC the financial resources that were invested in him. His constituents will hold him accountable for failing to keep his commitments."
Griffith will reportedly be giving money back to any donors who ask; if all of the political action committees and campaigns affiliated with elected Democrats want a refund, he could be giving back about $80,000 of the $600,000 or so that he currently has in the bank.
This week, and last, the Senate had been facing the rather unpleasant prospect of having to hold its final vote on Senate Democrats' healthcare reform bill at 7 p.m. EST -- maybe even later -- on Christmas Eve. And though no one really wanted that to happen, due to the combined force of Republican stalling tactics and Majority Leader Harry Reid's determination to get the bill passed before Christmas, it looked inevitable.
On Tuesday afternoon, though, Reid announced that his chamber has gotten a reprieve. Senate Republicans, who know that the result is bound to go against them no matter what at this point, have agreed to give up some of the time the body's rules allow them for debate, thus speeding up the process appreciably.
The vote will still be held on Dec. 24, but is now scheduled for 8 a.m. EST, hopefully allowing members and their staffs -- not to mention everyone else who makes the Capitol run, plus the reporters who have to cover the vote -- time enough to travel, if need be, in order to join their families for the holiday.
In an interview with the Washington Post that hit the Internet Tuesday afternoon, President Obama sought to defend himself from the criticism he's faced from the left over the way the healthcare reform debate has ended up. While doing so, though, he may have only succeeded in further alienating and angering liberals.
"Nowhere has there been a bigger gap between the perceptions of compromise and the realities of compromise than in the health-care bill," Obama told the Post. "Every single criteria for reform I put forward is in this bill."
By itself, that's basically true, though it's not what many progressives want to hear right now. But Obama may have really stepped in it when he went to the real sticking point for a fair number of liberals right now, the lack of a public option in the Senate bill and the perception that the White House did little, if anything, to fight for it.
The idea has "become a source of ideological contention between the left," Obama said, adding, "I didn't campaign on the public option."
The president's claim that he "didn't campaign on the public option" is at best on shaky ground, factually speaking. It's unmistakably true that during the campaign his plan for reform included a public option.
A summary of Obama's proposal -- still up on BarackObama.com -- says it "Offers a public health insurance option to provide the uninsured and those who can’t find affordable coverage with a real choice." And a document his campaign put together, "Barack Obama's Plan for a Healthy America," says:
The Obama plan both builds upon and improves our current insurance system, upon which most Americans continue to rely, and leaves Medicare intact for older and disabled Americans. The Obama plan also addresses the large gaps in coverage that leave 45 million Americans uninsured. Specifically, the Obama plan will: (1) establish a new public insurance program available to Americans who neither qualify for Medicaid or SCHIP nor have access to insurance through their employers, as well as to small businesses that want to offer insurance to their employees
On the other hand, the words "campaign on" have a fairly specific meaning -- they imply making some issue or message a particular focus of your campaign, as in, "In 2004, President Bush campaigned on terrorism." And while it was indeed a pretty weaselly thing for him to say, Obama's comment was, on that score, accurate.
Yes, the public option was included in his plan for healthcare reform, but he never really ran on it and barely even pushed it during 2008. As NBC's Chuck Todd noted in September, Obama "never uttered the words 'public option' or 'public plan' in his big campaign speeches on health care."
A search of Lexis-Nexis' database of news coverage for the words "Barack Obama" and "public option" returns only 46 results from the period between Jan. 1, 2008, and Oct. 31, 2008. Similarly, a search for "Barack Obama" and "public plan" comes up with only 362 results for the same time frame, and most of those don't bolster the case that Obama did campaign on the idea -- the results are dominated by media outlets' comparisons of the candidate's published plans. And when the formulations used on Obama's Web site and in his campaign document, "public health insurance option" and "public insurance program" are swapped into the search, there are only three results and 51 results, respectively.
At the same time, one result from that last search, a candidate questionnaire sent out by Newsday, does show again that this really is a question of Obama trying to get cute with semantics.. Asked to keep each of his answers to 50 words or less, Obama's summary of his healthcare plan was, "I have pledged to sign a universal health bill into law by the end of my first term in office. My plan will ensure that all Americans have health care coverage through their employers, private health plans, the federal government or the states. For those without health insurance I will establish a new public insurance program."
War Room is written and edited by Alex Koppelman, with contributions from Salon reporters around the country.