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.

 

 

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 issue over which to battle with the president.

 

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 frail former president was able to attend the ceremony today and to receive 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 decision in that case will settle this matter.

 

Abbott tosses hat into ‘14 campaign ring

It’s official: Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott is running for governor.

He’s the prohibitive favorite to win the Republican Party nomination next spring and with that, he’ll be the prohibitive favorite against any Democrat who decides to run. That’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 didn’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. That’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, don’t you think? The AG said, though, that we need to cut spending in Austin.

OK, let’s hope the specifics will arrive down the road as voters start dialing in on the gubernatorial race.

I’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 he’ll sit the primary out and then weigh in to back whoever wins that contest.

I’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 aren’t entitled to a “divine right of succession” to any public office.

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

Criminal charges? Come on!

The breadth and depth of the hatred that President Obama’s political foes have for him simply takes my breath away.

U.S. Rep. Tom Marino, R-Fla., is the latest congressional right-winger to launch a loony attack on the president. He wants Congress to explore filing criminal charges against Obama for delaying the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, which I thought would have pleased ACA critics.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/12/tom-marino-obama-_n_3588114.html?ncid=txtlnkushpmg00000037

To borrow a phrase from the late John Belushi: But no–o-o-o-o-o!

Marino thinks Obama broke the law and wants to look for something — anything to hang around the president’s neck.

He’s also saving some of his ammo for Attorney General Eric Holder, who he says should be prosecuted for not following the law.

Obama delayed the ACA’s employer mandate provision to give some “transition relief” to companies. When he announced the delay, I thought it might quell some of the anger from those on the right who think the mandate is some nefarious form of “socialized medicine.” It didn’t.

Marino thinks the president skirted the law and, by golly, he needs to face the music.

This nonsense is beginning to drive me just a bit batty. While he’s at it, Marino ought to see about prosecuting Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts — a G.W. Bush appointee — for casting the key court vote in 2012 that determined that “Obamacare” is in fact legal.

 

Happy birthday, Mr. President

This day almost got past me without my noticing it.

Today would have been Gerald Ford’s 100th birthday.

The 38th president of the United States came into this world on July 14, 1913 as Leslie King Jr. His parent divorced when he was a baby, his mother remarried and her new husband adopted the youngster, giving him the name of Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr.

Ford went on to do some marvelous things: a standout football career at the University of Michigan, obtaining a law degree from Yale, service in the U.S. Navy during World War II, service in the U.S. House of Representatives, service on the Warren Commission examining the assassination of President Kennedy, selection as vice president of the United States and, finally, his elevation to the presidency in 1974.

The attached link notes his early stance for civil rights for black Americans.

http://www.npr.org/2013/07/14/201946977/the-civil-rights-stand-of-a-young-gerald-ford?ft=1&f=1014

The link also takes note of his pardon in September 1974, one month after becoming president, of his predecessor, Richard M. Nixon, for crimes he committed or may have committed against the United States.

The pardon arguably cost Ford election to the presidency in 1976, but it turned out to be the right thing to do.

Indeed, none other than the late Sen. Ted Kennedy — one of the president’s harshest critics of the pardon at the time he issued it — took note of the courage that Ford demonstrated in pardoning Nixon. In 2001, the John F. Kennedy Library awarded Ford its Profile in Courage Award, acknowledging for all time the courage the president demonstrated in seeking to end the divisiveness of the Watergate era. Sen. Kennedy admitted at that ceremony that he was wrong in 1974 to criticize the president for issuing the pardon.

Gerald Ford said simply after taking the presidential oath of office on Aug. 9, 1974 that “the Constitution works.” He was so correct.

It worked at that instant in large measure because a good man took the reins of power at precisely the right moment.

 

IRS tempest calms down … finally

I’ll admit it: When the Internal Revenue Service tempest involving the agency’s vetting of conservative non-profits’ activities came to light, I thought it had the potential of becoming a very big deal.

Turns out it wasn’t.

Indeed, it’s now turning out that congressional Republicans who keep trying to make more of it than it deserves are embarrassing themselves.

I refer now to the attached link.

http://mediamatters.org/blog/2013/07/12/ny-times-egan-rep-issas-failed-investigations-a/194848

U.S. House Government Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., should be the most embarrassed member of Congress of all. He isn’t. Issa keeps plugging away, looking for scandal where none exists.

It is now becoming clear that the IRS operatives who were examining conservative groups were giving equally rough treatment to liberal groups. What’s more, they did all this without any apparent instruction from Washington, D.C., let alone from the White House … or from the Oval Office, where Issa and his cronies had hoped beyond hope they could find the proverbial smoking gun.

I suppose the same can be said of the Benghazi controversy, which Issa and others keep insisting involved some kind of massive coverup by the State Department over details of the Sept. 11, 2012 firefight at the U.S. consulate in Libya that resulted in the deaths of four American diplomats. We now have learned that Republican staffers on Issa’s committee doctored emails to make then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton look bad.

This is part of the Washington culture that infuriates so many Americans, such as myself.

Keep digging, probing, searching, scouring everywhere to find something you can hang on your foes. That’s the modus operandi of those who run the House of Representatives. It stinks to high heaven.

 

Still trying to make sense of this verdict

Well, I had a pretty good night’s sleep, awoke this morning and got ready for church.

I also began sorting through the news that broke last night that a Sanford, Fla., jury acquitted George Zimmerman of second-degree murder in the death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. I thought sleeping on it overnight would clear my head.

Instead, I woke up this morning more confused than I was last night.

http://dallasmorningviewsblog.dallasnews.com/2013/07/shocking-verdict-in-zimmerman-trial.html/

The case gripped much of the nation, if not the world. Trial testimony revealed that Zimmerman stalked the youngster, who he suspected — apparently — of being up to no good. Zimmerman was carrying a gun; Martin was unarmed. They got into a tussle. Zimmerman then shot Trayvon. Dead.

I’m still trying to process this one. How did the gun go off? Did it shoot itself? Did the boy grab the gun and shoot himself by accident? No, it’s pretty clear Zimmerman pulled the trigger.

My question today is how does one avoid conviction at least for a manslaughter charge, which the jury was empowered to consider along with the murder charge?

I was raised to have faith in our system of laws. I almost always hold true to that faith. Moreover, I will accept the jurors’ decision only insofar as they heard all the evidence, watched the body language, combed through copious notes and argued among themselves for 16 hours. I did none of that.

However, I still am left to scratch my head and wonder: Is it at all possible — just the slightest possibility — that this jury got it wrong?

 

What now?

George Zimmerman’s acquittal of a murder charge in connection with the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, 17, leaves me virtually speechless.

http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/13/justice/zimmerman-trial/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

OK, I wasn’t in the jury room. I didn’t hear all the evidence. I even have acknowledged a bit of trial-coverage fatigue, which means I didn’t watch every moment it was shown on cable news networks.

But I had formed an opinion quite some time back on what I thought ought to happen, which is that Zimmerman would be found guilty of at least manslaughter. The six-woman jury saw it differently. I respect the jury’s decision, even if I disagree with it.

That’s how the system works.

Time will enable us to sort out how the jury came to its conclusion. It appears in the immediate aftermath that the defense team cast enough reasonable doubt on the facts of the case to make it impossible to convict Zimmerman “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Sound familiar? It should. It smacks of the same reasoning that resulted in O.J. Simpson’s acquittal of murder in 1995.

OH, my.

I’m just hoping now for calm.

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