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Archive for September, 2007

Murphy Forgets to Go to Work

September 20, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts No Comments →

Chris Murphy is at it again.

The National Republican Campaign Committee whacked Murphy today, for his ability to pontificate about issues and then fail to show up to vote on them.

Chris Murphy is once again proving that he is all talk and no action. After claiming that he would lead the fight to expand homeownership and protect those trying to hold onto their homes in the midst of a mortgage crunch, Chris Murphy didn’t even bother to show up when it came time to vote on the important issue. . .

. . . In just nine months in office, Chris Murphy has missed nine votes. Like the lobbying reform bill that he also neglected to show up for, Murphy promised on the campaign trail that he would hold himself to the highest standard when it came to his attendance on the House floor.

Sounds like another broken promise from Chris Murphy.

Lobbying reform. Homeownership. What issue will Chris Murphy forget to vote for next?

From North of our Border

September 20, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts No Comments →

… in Massachusetts, Republicam Jim Ogonowski is running hard to fill the Congressional seat vacated by Rep. Marty Meehan, who is becoming the Chancellor of the UMASS system. His opponent is Niki Tsongas, widow of the former Massachusetts Senator who ran for President in 1992. Election Day is October 16th.

Tsongas, of course, is bringing in some heavy guns to help her campaign in its final days - none other than former President Bill Clinton. That, of course, is how I spell irony. So says the Boston Globe:

Time magazine in March 1992 featured both men in a cover story, “Clinton vs. Tsongas,” and several days before the Illinois primary, Paul Tsongas aired new commercials attacking Bill Clinton.

“This is Paul Tsongas,” the announcer said in one ad. “He’s not the guy with all the endorsements from politicians, because he doesn’t just make promises.”
Now, Ogonowski is running as the outsider. And Niki Tsongas is bringing Bill Clinton to campaign for her.


Jim Ogonowski’s brother, John, was a pilot of one of the airplanes involved in the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center. Ogonowski talks about his brother in a touching posthumous letter to him. This story makes a compelling backdrop to the campaign and the effort to elect - of all things - a Republican to a Congressional seat in Massachusetts.

The Ogonowski campaign is looking for help in its final days. You can contact CTGOP Headquarters to find out how to get involved.

Park the Car in Harvard Yard … and such

September 20, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts 1 Comment →

Former intern Brian continues his writing at the Harvard Crimson, weighing in with an excellent piece on the state of the modern Republican Party:

“The fickleness with which Republicans approach their candidates is frustrating. The top tier offers an all-star cast, yet the party discards them like unwanted wool sweaters. Former NYC Mayor Giuliani reduced crime in his city by 60 percent, but he’s pro-choice. Arizona Senator John McCain advocated the successful surge strategy in Iraq years ago, but he pushed for the failed immigration overhaul. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney turned a nearly $3 billion deficit into a $700 million surplus without raising taxes, but he only recently converted to social conservatism. Former Tennessee Senator Fred Thompson—well you have me there, I don’t know what’s so great about him.”

“But the Republicans want a choir boy for their soldier; he must be a pure conservative on all fronts: foreign policy, the economy, and social issues. But past Republican presidents never have been perfect. President George W. Bush bloated the federal government with Medicare Part D and the No Child Left Behind Act. His father raised taxes. Even President Ronald Reagan, the gold standard against whom every candidate is measured, granted amnesty to illegal immigrants, political suicide in today’s GOP.”

Hartford Mayor’s Race: Stranger than Fiction

September 19, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts No Comments →

Here is a great quote from the Courant’s article today about last night’s Mayoral forum in Hartford:

“I’m watching a movie. `Footloose,’ with Kevin Bacon,” Feltman said Tuesday afternoon. Asked whether people should read anything into the fact that he was watching a movie about teenage dancing instead of attending the mayoral forum, Feltman said they should.

“At this point,” Feltman said, “I prefer dancing.”

The Grim Reaper

September 19, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts 2 Comments →

Nebraska Senator Sues God

September 18, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts 2 Comments →

This story proves that baffling the imagination gets harder and harder every day.

Nebraska State Senator Ernie Chambers has sued God. Mr. Chambers sued Him because, “Chambers says in his lawsuit that God has made terroristic threats against the senator and his constituents, inspired fear and caused “widespread death, destruction and terrorization of millions upon millions of the Earth’s inhabitants.” (WaPo).

Chambers, of course, first gained national attention for his effort to re-segregate Omaha school districts.

Sadly, the Senator is going to be leaving the legislature in 2008, as he is term limited.

The Death of Federalism

September 18, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts 2 Comments →

Watching the playback of Congressman Chris Murphy’s town hall meeting in New Britain from 9/13, I was struck by the complete dismissal of federalism in the Congressman’s answers to the questions asked of him. Federalism, as a principle, simply plays no role in the governance philosophy of Mr. Murphy.

Federalism, of course, is a question that has been asked and answered by generation after generation of Americans. The debate itself started, most famously, with the Founders themselves who were torn on the issue. But Constitutional checks and skillful case-making by its supporters has long kept federalism a key organizing principle of the American republic. And it makes sense. Supporters of federalism have long cited the administrative difficulties of imposing ‘one size fits all’ solutions to a nation so geographically and culturally, the vast disparity of problems that face groups of people in different regions, the right of all states, large and small, to have an equitable say in the discussion, and the Constitutional provisions that explicitly prescribe a federalist solution, as reasons for continuing to govern by federalist principles. And yet, Mr. Murphy and others of left-leaning ideology seem only to have the ability to equate federalism with “states’ rights”, and “states’ rights” with the sinful behavior that some states engaged in to discriminate against African-Americans in decades past.

In a nation so diverse and ardently heterogeneous as the United States of America, the idea that the federal government should take on a very limited number of tasks. The needs and desires of the people of Texas are different from the needs and desires of people from New Hampshire and Idaho. They are even different from the needs of the people of regional neighbors Oklahoma, Louisiana, and New Mexico. And thus, a federal solution to any problem posed by one group would, in many cases, seem to be incredibly short-sighted and difficult to administer. We here in Connecticut experience this problem every time a federal formula for aid distribution makes sub-unit designations based on counties instead of the more logical organizational unit for Connecticut - towns. And yet, at least from Mr. Murphy’s point of view, the need to impose ‘one size fits all’ Washington solutions to the problems faced by Connecticut residents, it seems, dominates the need for an effective ability to administer programs across a big nation.

The vast disparities of problems faced by people in different states on its own should be enough to discourage centralized solutions to widespread problems. In Massachusetts, the research showed that middle income citizens were going without health care in this highest numbers (Mitt Romney power point, see slide 4). Further, during the time in which then-Governor Mitt Romney was considering health care, 11.4% of Massachusetts citizens said they did not have health care. In response, Romney crafted a health care plan which provided coverage for everyone in his state where the poverty rate was 9.9%. These same reforms, though, quite likely would not work exactly the same way in Arkansas, where the poverty rate was 15.6% and 22.9% of the people do not have health insurance.

The case on federalism continues to be debated, though perhaps not as openly as it once was. Fred Thompson seems to be the only candiate talking about federalism in this campaign, at least so far. He quite effectively makes the case for federalist principles of government. But as Mr. Murphy and others like him continue to pursue Washington solutions to Connecticut problems, it makes you wonder if they have ever considered the idea that they don’t have all the answers.