11th Commandment is history

I remember when Ronald Reagan invoked what he called the “11th Commandment,” which decreed that Republicans never should speak ill of other Republicans.

Some of today’s Republicans — self-professed devotees of the Gipper — are committing a form of political sacrilege. They’re targeting fellow Republicans with abandon.

The latest of them is one Liz Cheney, daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, who wants to run for the U.S. Senate seat in Wyoming against, that’s right, Sen. Mike Enzi, a Republican incumbent with a 92 percent rating from the American Conservative Union.

Seems that Enzi’s major “sin” has been his willingness to work with Democrats in the Senate. Cheney’s announcement of her candidacy declares she will never compromise. She’s going to stand by her principles, by golly, no matter what.

Enzi said he “thought we were friends” when describing his relationship with Cheney. Apparently not.

In another interesting twist to this budding campaign, Chris Mathews of MSNBC noted today that Liz Cheney has never actually lived in Wyoming. She went to high school in Washington, where she lived with her parents and younger sister. Cheney recently moved to resort community of Jackson Hole, in western Wyoming. But as Howard Fineman, also of MSNBC, noted, that is like “someone moving to the Hamptons and then claiming to know all about New York state.”

As for the 11th Commandment, Cheney is just the latest GOP hopeful to throw President Reagan’s mandate into the dumper. Utah GOP Sen. Bob Bennett got “primaried” out of office by another Republican. So did Republican Sen. Dick Lugar of Indiana. Those men had this habit also of working with Democrats to craft legislation, to get things done for the good of the country.

As the Republican Party continues fighting among itself, though, it is embarking on a suicide mission.

Somewhere, the Gipper is wishing he could come back and talk sense into his ideological descendants.

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NM top cop resigns … perhaps

New Mexico state police chief Robert Schiller has quit his job.

But as the blog attached here notes, there remains some questions to answer:

http://joemonahansnewmexico.blogspot.com/2013/07/gatorgates-first-victim-state-police.html

The husband of New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez is caught in a dustup over an alligator-hunting trip he took in 2011. He went to Louisiana to hunt some gators, but had state police protection go along with him. Some folks have asked questions about it, wondering why the governor’s office has detailed the expense incurred by Chuck Franco — Martinez’s husband — on the trip.

Schilling is caught in the middle of all this.

Martinez needs to do the right thing and release the details of the expenses. She contends it was paid by private interests, that the public expense amounted to about $123.

That’s not nearly good enough, governor.

Meanwhile, the state has lost its top cop.

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Boycott Olympics? Get a grip, Sen. Graham

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., wants to “punish” Russia by not allowing our Olympic athletes to venture to Sochi for next year’s Winter Olympics.

Yeah, senator, that’ll teach ’em to quit meddling in the affairs of the United States vs. Edward Snowden.

Give me a break.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/07/16/sen-graham-us-should-consider-boycotting-olympic-games/

Russia is considering granting Snowden, the NSA leaker who’s on the lam from U.S. law enforcement, temporary asylum while Snowden shops around for a country that will take him permanently. So, to make some kind of point — God only knows what it is — Graham says the United States should deny its Winter Olympic athletes the chance to compete on behalf of their country.

Maybe Graham doesn’t remember, but we tried that once already. In 1980, the then-Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. President Carter decided he would stick it in the Big Bear’s eye by boycotting the Moscow Summer Olympics. Several nations joined us to protest the Soviet invasion. The Games went on without us and they were, from what I understand, largely successful.

Four years later, with the Summer Olympics set for Los Angeles, the Soviets decided to return the favor. They boycotted the LA Games, along with a smattering of their allies around the world. Guess what? The LA Olympics also took place and they, too, were hugely successful.

Not a single thing was accomplished by either boycott.

Nothing will be accomplished with any future boycott if Lindsey Graham has his way. Let’s get real and stopĀ threatening to useĀ our athletes as pawns in a geopolitical chess game.

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Pauken issues challenge

I’ll say it once again: Tom Pauken could add considerable spice to the Texas Republican governor’s primary campaign in 2014.

Now all Attorney General Greg Abbott has to do is take Pauken — the former Texas Republican Party chairman — up on his debate challenge.

http://blog.beaumontenterprise.com/bayou/2013/07/16/paulken-challenges-perry-lite-greg-abbott-to-serious-debate/

I like the idea of these two men going head to head across the state. They both want to be the state’s next governor and it’s a pretty good bet that one of them will get the job after the November 2014 election.

Abbott has been anointed the frontrunner. I’ve also said this before, too, but Pauken deserves to be heard. He’s claimed there should be no “divine right of succession” to Rick Perry, who’s leaving office in January 2015 after serving since the beginning of time — or so it seems.

Abbott and Pauken are two smart men. They’re trained in the law and they know how to argue their points … whatever they are.

I’m one Texas voter who’s willing to learn more about what these men believe, what they stand for and how they intend to lead this state.

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Sen. Davis raking in the cash

I hate tossing a wet blanket over Wendy Davis’s big moment, but I fear she’s spitting into the wind if she’s harboring hopes of becoming Texas’s next governor.

The Fort Worth Democratic state senator is going to a couple of Washington, D.C., fundraisers soon. The guest list includes some big hitters within the national Democratic Party. They want her to run for governor in 2014 and Davis — still fresh off her filibuster of a restrictive anti-abortion bill — is considering it.

The smart money in Texas believes that 2014 isn’t the Democrats’ year. Perhaps that time will come as the state’s demographic balance keeps changing, but it’s not here just yet. Davis is the party’s newest superstar, given all the national attention she pulled in with her marathon filibuster effort in June.

http://blog.mysanantonio.com/texas-on-the-potomac/2013/07/wendy-davis-to-make-fundraising-rounds-in-d-c/

One little problem stands in Davis’s way. It’s that Texas is still a heavily Republican state. The GOP already has at least one monstrously formidable candidate running for governor, Attorney General Greg Abbott, who’s still going to face a spirited challenge within his own party from former Texas GOP chairman Tom Pauken.

Texans have shown over the past two decades that they’re going to vote Republican no matter who the party nominates for high office. The latest best example, by my way of thinking, is Railroad Commissioner David Porter, who beat a much moreĀ qualified Democratic candidate for a spot on the three-member commission in 2010.

Sen. Davis is swimming against a huge tide if she seeks the governor’s office in 2014. She’s raising a lot of money so far, nearly a million bucks in the past couple of months.

In Texas these days, however, money doesn’t speak nearly as much as party branding. The Republican brand may be poison in much of the rest of the country. In Texas, it remains a kind of political nectar.

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Perry faces steep polling hill

I am not surprised at poll results that show Gov. Rick Perry faring poorly among Texas Republicans no less in the still-developing Republican Party field for president in 2016.

Perry announced he wouldn’t seek another term as Texas governor and began dropping all kinds of hints that a second presidential campaign may be in the Pride of Paint Creek’s future.

http://blog.mysanantonio.com/texas-on-the-potomac/2013/07/top-ten-rick-perry-bows-out-as-governor-polls-poorly-as-presidential-candidate/

But one recent poll shows him tracking in sixth place. The guy in first? U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, the state’s junior senator and current golden boy among the tea party wing of his Republican Party.

Why no surprise at Perry’s so-far-dismal poll standing? I’m quite sure Texans have had enough of the governor, who’s occupied his current office since The Flood — or so it seems.

It’s interesting to me as well that one has not heard a lot of teeth-gnashing over his impending departure. Even here in the Texas Panhandle — where Republicans ruled the roost long before they took command of the entire state government/political structure — we’re not hearing a lot of wailing over Perry’s announcement.

My guess is that Texas Republicans yearn for someone fresh to lead them, which makes me wonder why Attorney General Greg Abbott is being anointed as the next probable governor. Abbott’s held statewide office just about as long as Perry, but he’s done so with a lot less fanfare and showmanship than ol’ (with apologies to the late, great columnist Molly Ivins) Gov. Goodhair.

If Perry seriously wants to run for president, he’s got a lot of image-makeover ahead of him. His first run for the GOP presidential nomination was highlighted more by his gaffes and other embarrassments than anything of substance that came out of his mouth.

If he’s polling this badly in Texas — where’s never lost an election — I only can imagine how he’s going to fare in faraway places where voters aren’t as taken with his unique brand of Texas “charm,” if you want to call it that.

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Reason prevails in Senate … more or less

Those wacky U.S. Senate Republicans have come to their senses by letting President Obama’s executive branch appointees join the administration team.

What a concept. Someone wins a presidential election, chooses like-minded — and qualified — individuals to run key agencies and they get approved by the Senate, as laid out in the Constitution.

It hasn’t worked out that way.

http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/07/16/19502641-senate-breaks-standoff-over-nuclear-option?lite&ocid=msnhp&pos=1

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid had threated the “nuclear option” on filibusters, which is removing the 60-vote super majority needed to break the filibuster. Republican senators cried “foul!” even though they had held up some appointments seemingly out of spite.

Today the GOP minority relented. Good for them. The Senate will allow the votes on some appointments, which is all the Obama administration had sought in the first place. One of the stalled appointments involved the selection of labor secretary, which had languished for months.

As Reid and others have noted, elections do have consequences. Presidents are entitled to select team members. The Senate is entitled to provide consent to the appointments. Reasonableness, though, suggests that since the president wins elections, he gets to surround himself with individuals with whom he feels comfortable.

I’m glad the Senate won’t explode under the nuclear option. Let’s not hold our breath believing this kind of fight is over. The partisan divide on Capitol Hill is as deep and wide as ever. I’m quite sure Republicans in both congressional houses will find another issueĀ over which toĀ battle withĀ the president.

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Obama pays tribute to Bush 41

I’ll admit to something my family and even a few of my friends have known: I’m a sucker for ceremonies that involve politicians who are able to cross partisan divides.

President Barack Obama and former President George H.W. Bush — one a Democrat the other a Republican — came together today at the White House to honor the 5,000th recipient of the Points of Light Foundation Award given to individuals who exemplify the ideals of the voluntarism promoted by President Bush during his time in office.

http://www.politico.com/politico44/2013/07/obama-praises-george-hw-bush-at-white-house-168382.html?hp=l2

Obama’s agenda has been stymied by partisan division. The arguments have gotten personal between the president and his foes. But he set all that aside to praise a man, known as Bush 41, who is the embodiment of public service.

The link attached to this blog post is a big lengthy, but it gives one a good look at what President Bush’s years of service have meant to the nation. President Obama didn’t detail his predecessor’s service during his remarks at the White House, but it is lengthy: combat during World War II as a naval aviator; service as a member of Congress from Texas; director of the FBI; director of the CIA; special envoy to China; ambassador to the United Nations; vice president of the United States; president of the United States. He’s also helped raise money — along with former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush for disaster relief victims since leaving the presidency.

George H.W. Bush might, on paper, be the most qualified man ever to serve as president.

His Points of Light program, initiated immediately after he became president in 1989, carries on the tradition of public service. As Barack Obama noted, it continues in programs developed since ”41″ left office in 1993.

I’m delighted the frailĀ former president was able to attend the ceremony today and to receiveĀ such richly deserved high praise from one of his successors.

Events such as these appeal to my sentimental side. I like feeling this way.

Wrestling with federal Zimmerman probe

At this moment, still just a couple of days past an acquittal in a highly charged Florida murder case, I am unsure about the wisdom of prosecuting the defendant on a civil rights charge.

George Zimmerman was acquitted of second-degree murder in the case involving the 2012 shooting death of Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old African-American boy. The case drew widespread attention. It has split the nation largely along racial lines.

Do I think Zimmerman should have been convicted of something, say, manslaughter? Yes, probably.

But he wasn’t. Then again, I’m passing judgment from the peanut gallery, far from the action in the Sanford, Fla. courtroom.

Now the U.S. Justice Department is considering whether to pursue civil rights charges against Zimmerman. Some have alleged that he violated Trayvon’s civil rights by stalking him simply because he was black. Zimmerman, incidentally, is half-Hispanic.

http://thehill.com/video/administration/311053-holder-trayvon-martin-death-unnecessary-tragic

Attorney General Eric Holder today said that Martin’s death was “unnecessary.” Do you think, Mr. Attorney General? It could have been avoided if Zimmerman had not approached Trayvon, or had he waited for the police, per the 911 dispatcher’s advice.

The debate over whether Trayvon Martin’s civil rights were violated will continue no matter what the feds decide to do. Holder and the White House say the DoJ will pursue its probe strictly within the parameters of federal law. My hope is that Justice decides soon and does not keep the nation waiting anxiously.

I’m still not completely sure about where I think this case needs to go, if anywhere. For now, though, I’m thinking the feds ought to let the local court system sort this matter out.

I’m pretty sure a civil lawsuit will be forthcoming eventually. Maybe a decisionĀ in that caseĀ will settle this matter.

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Abbott tosses hat into ā€˜14 campaign ring

Itā€™s official: Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott is running for governor.

Heā€™s the prohibitive favorite to win the Republican Party nomination next spring and with that, heā€™ll be the prohibitive favorite against any Democrat who decides to run. Thatā€™s the way it is in Texas politics these days, even if the Democratic Party has a budding superstar by the name of Wendy Davis.

http://www.texasmonthly.com/story/greg-abbott-makes-his-move

As the link attached here notes, Abbott didnā€™t offer any specifics when announcing Sunday his candidacy. He spoke in broad terms about how state government has to get out of the way while the state wrestles with vexing problems. Thatā€™s a fascinating approach, particularly as it relates to water management, which Abbott did acknowledge as one of the prime challenges facing Texas. The state needs an, um, statewide water management plan, donā€™t you think? The AG said, though, that we need to cut spending in Austin.

OK, letā€™s hope the specifics will arrive down the road as voters start dialing in on the gubernatorial race.

Iā€™ll be mildly interested to see whether the current governor, Republican Rick Perry, endorses anyone in this contest. Another GOP candidate, former party chairman Tom Pauken, also is running. Remember, that Perry appointed Pauken to lead the Texas Workforce Commission, so one can presume the two men are political allies.

Despite my stated interest in whether Perry makes an endorsement, my hunch is that heā€™ll sit the primary out and then weigh in to back whoever wins that contest.

Iā€™m still holding out hope that Pauken and Abbott make this an interesting and issues-filled contest. Neither man is a shrinking violet. As Pauken has noted, political favorites such as Abbott arenā€™t entitled to a ā€œdivine right of successionā€ to any public office.

They have to work for it. This contest will be fun to watch.