Archive for the ‘National Politics’ Category

Supreme Court Sends Six to SOTU, Despite Obama’s Criticism

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

“I’m willing to bet a lot of money there will be no Supreme Court justice at the next State of the Union speech,” University of Texas law professor and Supreme Court historian Lucas Powe told ABC’s Jake Tapper last year.

No one took Powe up on his offer, and it’s a good thing for him. Six justices showed up for last night’s State of the Union address — the same number as last year.

“Jake can’t have my money,” Powe said with a laugh in a phone interview Wednesday.

Powe said he was stunned last year when Obama called out the justices during his speech for their ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Elections Commission, which loosened restrictions on corporate campaign contributions. Obama’s remarks prompted Justice Samuel Alito to mouth the words, “Not true.”

Powe said he agreed with Obama’s take on the case, but the State of the Union wasn’t the right venue to express distaste for the decision.

“I thought what Obama did last year was absolutely uncalled for,” Powe said. …The polite thing to do is not attack people who can’t leave.”

That’s why Powe said he figured none of the justices would show up to the State of the Union this year. But Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Anthony Kennedy and John Roberts were all in the House of Representatives chamber to hear the speech last night.

The justices are not asked, encouraged or required to attend the State of the Union. They may go or not go of their own volition. Six justices have attended the previous two years and in the early part of the decade it was more common for only one or two to show.

Obama’s remarks last year did not seem to have a marked effect on attendance this year, and Powe said that in retrospect he probably should have known that at least some justices would attend.

Kagan and Sotomayor were appointed by Obama, and Breyer has spoken publicly about his affinity for the State of the Union address.

The presence of Roberts, the chief justice, was less of a sure thing. After last year, he openly questioned the usefulness of having Supreme Court justices at what he said had become “a political pep rally.”

But this year’s address was decidedly less peppy and partisan in the wake of the Jan. 8 shootings in Tucson that left Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., with a bullet wound to the head.

Democrats sat with Republicans, there were far fewer party-line standing ovations than usual and no one felt entrenched enough to scream “You lie!” at the president as happened during a September 2009 speech the president made to Congress.

James O’Hara, a former Loyola (Md.) University law professor and chairman of the publications committee of the Supreme Court Historical Society, said anticipation of the different atmosphere probably played into Roberts’ decision attend this year.

The other three conservative members of the court — Antonin Scalia, Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas — were not attending and the court was in danger of appearing unduly partisan at a time when the nation had little patience for partisanship.

“If Roberts had not gone, then it might have looked as if all of the liberals were going and all of the conservatives were not going,” O’Hara said. “Then the next time there’s a Republican president does it get reversed? At that point it does involve the court in an arena that the court, I think, doesn’t like to get involved in.”

Powe agreed that Tucson probably played a role in Roberts’ attendance and cautioned against any speculation about the justices’ political ideologies influencing their decision to sit in on the speech.

“Scalia and Thomas didn’t show up for Bush, so I think we have to give them a pass,” Powe said.

– By Capital News Service’s Andy Marso

Obama Will Urge Cooperation, Innovation

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Obama will invoke the space race with the Soviet Union to challenge Congress to tone down partisan rancor and work with him to usher in a new age of American innovation in his State of the Union address.

With Republican and Democratic senators and representatives planning to sit together in a symbolic gesture of solidarity in the wake of the Jan. 8 mass shooting in Tucson, Obama will push for investment in research and education as the key to keeping the nation competitive in the global economy.

“This is our generation’s Sputnik moment,” Obama will say, according to excerpts released by the White House, referring to the Soviet satellite that first orbited the earth in 1957 and startled the United States into a flurry of scientific breakthroughs.

Obama will make the case that breakthroughs in green energy, information technology and biomedical research will grow new jobs where the recession has washed them away and that he will be sending a budget to Congress that includes government investment in those areas.

Government investments to spur new technology could be a bone of contention between Obama and Republicans, many of whom were elected on a platform of reducing government as the best path to economic growth just a few months ago.

– By Capital News Service’s Andy Marso

Harris Pushes Anti-Abortion Legislation

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011
Rep. Andy Harris discusses his anti-abortion views.

Rep. Andy Harris discusses his anti-abortion views.

BETHESDA – On the heels of a successful health care repeal vote in the House, anti-abortion legislation is fast emerging as the next major priority for House Republicans, a point Rep. Andy Harris, R-Cockeysville, drove home Friday night in a March for Life kick-off lecture at Bethesda’s Knights of Columbus Rock Creek Council.

“I believe in the value of human life,” said Harris. “And until we value every human life, we’ll have an attitude in the country that it is less than valuable.”

Harris, addressing about 100 people a little before 8 p.m., said babies are more than “a blob of tissue” and society is changing its mind about abortion.

These changed minds, he said, are the impetus behind the No Taxpayer Funding for Abortions Act, HR 3—a bill introduced Thursday by House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. The bill aims to end public funding for abortions.

The Hyde Amendment already prohibits Medicaid from paying for abortions for low-income women, but provides for exceptions in the case of rape or incest, or if the woman’s life is endangered by illness or injury. Similarly, other federal health care programs — for prisoners, Native Americans, federal workers, the military and other groups, also ban abortion funding, according to several Web sites that track the issue.

Harris said polling shows that though most Americans say they are pro-choice, they still oppose using their money to fund them.

“When the American people say, ‘I think it’s OK, but we shouldn’t spend money to do it,’ they don’t really think it’s OK,” said Harris.  “If they thought in their hearts this was a basic right, they would say, ‘We should absolutely fund them,’ but they don’t.”

Attendees applauded as the congressman denounced late-term abortions and Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that legalized abortion.

The audience poured into the council’s Cantrel ballroom as early as 7 p.m.  Participants included a mix of 30 “pilgrims” or visiting high school and college students from Fort Worth, Texas; Albuquerque, N.M.; and Nashville, Tenn.; lifelong abortion foes and Defend Life volunteers.

Founded in 1987, Defend Life is a Baltimore-based organization that offers an ongoing, anti-abortion lecture series.

Olga Fairfax, 70, is a full-time Defend Life volunteer. The Chevy Chase resident said she was an Obama supporter until she discovered his stance on abortion.

“Two times he voted for infanticide and three times he voted for partial birth, total death abortions,” said Fairfax. “There’s no way I could support him, and I hope to God he doesn’t get in again.”

Fairfax, who wore a red and white T-shirt reading, “Pro-life: Face the truth. Abortion stops here,” said she opposes abortion, even in instances of incest and rape.

“My adoptive daughter is a result of date rape. She went on to get six college scholarships. Hello?” said Fairfax. “God had her name carved in the palm of His hand, and He created her. Every child, we feel, is valuable.”

“People always throw that at me. ‘What about rape?’ I say, ‘What a minute, you’re talking about my daughter.’”

Luna Rodriguez, one of the high school students visiting from Albuquerque, N.M., said someone must speak up for unborn babies, since they are unable to do it themselves.

“If you don’t want your child, you can give it up for adoption,” Rodriguez, 14, said. “That baby can contribute to the world as much as anyone else can.”

Shortly before Harris’ talk, Jack Ames, co-founder of Defend Life, presented Missy Reilly Smith, a former congressional candidate, with Defend Life’s Ronald Reagan Award for Unprecedented Pro-Life Heroism.

Harris’ Friday night lecture was a run-up to the March for Life, an annual anti-abortion rally at the National Mall in Washington, D.C., scheduled for Monday.

– By Capital News Service’s Jessica Harper

Edwards on ‘Hardball’: Unemployment a Worry

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

In a national TV appearance Monday, Rep. Donna Edwards, D-Fort Washington, said her constituents in Maryland’s 4th District “love the president” as a person and a symbol of racial progress, but he hasn’t addressed all of their policy concerns.

Edwards highlighted unemployment as the chief worry while a guest on “Obama’s America,” a “Hardball with Chris Matthews” special report that aired at 5 p.m. on MSNBC. The segment was intended to evaluate the first half of Obama’s first term as president. Economics and race dominated the hour-long program, which also fell on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

Edwards appeared for the first 12 minutes of the program and was joined by former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele and Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson.

(Watch video of the segment — Obama’s America: the scorecard at half-time)

Matthews likened the idea of the new Republican-led House of Representatives working with the Obama administration to a sack race, with each party putting one leg in the sack and then running together. When he asked Edwards if she thought there would be bipartisan cooperation, Edwards said, “It depends,” then noted that the Republican congressional leadership had made repealing the health care law passed under Obama last year its first priority.

“I don’t think that’s a great message for running in a sack race together,” she said.

At times Edwards seemed to have difficulty getting a word in edge-wise, with Steele, Matthews and Robinson going back and forth. But she did break in near the end of the segment to console Steele, who lost his chairmanship three days earlier.

“You got a raw deal in the Republican Party,” she said.

– By Capital News Service’s Andy Marso

DREAM Act Supporters Encouraged By House Passage, Senate Delay

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Far from being discouraged by the Senate’s decision Thursday to postpone a DREAM Act vote until next week, the immigration bill’s supporters are optimistic that the step will help keep the bill alive and give them time to secure the 60-vote minimum needed to proceed.

“This is good,” said Roberto Juarez, co-founder of the Maryland DREAM Youth Committee. “We have more time now. The Senate is doing this because this is the best chance it has to pass.”

Juarez sat in the House chamber Wednesday night and watched as six of Maryland’s eight U.S. representatives voted for the legislation, which provides a conditional path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who came to the country as children and attend college or serve in the military for two years.

Reps. Steny Hoyer, D-Mechanicsville, Elijah Cummings, D-Baltimore; Donna Edwards, D-Fort Washington; John Sarbanes, D-Towson; Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Cockeysville; and Chris Van Hollen, D-Kensington voted for the bill, which passed by a 216-198 vote. Rep. Frank Kratovil, D-Stevensville, was the only Maryland Democrat to vote against the bill.

The DREAM Act’s House victory is a testament to the legislation’s building momentum that could push its passage in the Senate, Juarez said.

Leading up to the House vote, Juarez and his group’s members targeted Kratovil by “getting as many calls as we could to his office,” Juarez said.

We were hoping that Congressman Kratovil would vote for the bill,” Juarez said.

But Juarez was expecting the “no” vote from Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-Frederick, who opposes the DREAM Act, arguing that it is tantamount to mass amnesty that encourages illegal behavior.

“But we have a lot of support in Maryland,” Juarez said. “Congressman Kratovil and Congressman Bartlett are going to be the only ones in Maryland to vote against it.”
Kratovil’s vote against the DREAM Act was not unexpected. Last year, Kratovil supported the Coast Guard Reauthorization Act to strengthen penalties for unauthorized immigration.

“Rep. Kratovil did not like that this immigration bill didn’t include any provisions to improve enforcement” and did not include improvements to the work visa system, said Kratovil spokesman Kevin Lawlor.

By Capital News Service’s Michaelle Bond

Maryland Congressmen Say Lame Duck Session Likely Pretty Lame

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

It seems everyone is talking about what Congress will do during the lame duck session that stretches from now until probably early December: the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the DREAM Act immigration bill, the extension (or not) of the Bush tax cuts.

The way politicians have taken to the soapbox since the elections would indicate a lot of upcoming legislative drama — but Maryland Democratic congressmen Dutch Ruppersberger and Elijah Cummings are pessimistic about anything significant getting done before the end of the 111th Congress.

“I don’t think a lot’s going to happen during this session,” Cummings, D-Baltimore, said outside the Democratic Caucus yesterday.

But while Cummings may have just been pessimistic, Ruppersberger, D-Cockeysville, seemed to not want much to happen, saying now was not the time for Congress to rock the boat.

“You don’t want to push through something that’s controversial or that will repealed later on,” Ruppersberger said. “I think right now in a lame duck session you only try to work through things that weren’t completed that both sides can agree to.”

Ruppersberger also said he “can’t imagine at this point” that any progress would be made on the repeal of the ban on gays serving openly in the military. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has said he is “committed” to bringing DADT to the Senate floor after the Thanksgiving recess, and White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said the issue is “a priority” for President Obama. Some Democrats have balked at the vote, however, saying that Congress should wait to see the findings of a Pentagon study scheduled to be released Dec. 1.

A Wall Street Journal/NBC poll released yesterday showed 50 percent of Americans support the repeal of the regulation.

Ruppersberger also dismissed any optimism regarding the DREAM Act, a bill that came up in September but failed to get enough votes to bring it to the Senate floor as an amendment to the Defense Authorization Bill. The bill would give a path to citizenship for those who came to the U.S. illegally before age 16, granting permanent residence to those who apply to the program and complete either two years of college or two years of military service.

But Democratic leaders in both houses have said they intended to bring the measure to a vote, and Obama said he would begin calling individual legislators to get them to vote for the bill, according to Politico’s Simmi Aujla.
What Ruppersberger did support, however, was the reduction of government spending — and the extension of all the Bush tax cuts.

“We have to change gears and start focusing on the deficit,” Ruppersberger said. “We have to stop the spending. This deficit literally is making us weak as a country. We can’t compete.”

But he then said that all of the Bush tax cuts — set to expire Dec. 31 — should be extended for a year, even though they will “cost us more money and add to the deficit,” adding that extending tax cuts for the wealthy will encourage investment and spur jobs growth. CNN Money’s Jeanne Sahadi reports that “based on Treasury Department numbers, the cost is likely to range anywhere from $200 billion to $500 billion, depending on whose cuts are extended and for how long.”

Cummings, D-Baltimore, said his biggest priority was extending unemployment benefits. The current package expires at the end of the month, but the House introduced a “last-minute addition” to the voting docket to extend benefits for another 90 days, according to NBC’s Shawna Thomas and Luke Russert.

“The thing that we ought to be concentrating on is this unemployment insurance situation. We’ve got two million people that are about to lose their unemployment benefits,” Cummings said. “We’ve had hours upon hours of discussion about tax cuts for the rich, but when it comes to people who will be getting no check to even be taxed, there’s very little being said.”

– By Capital News Service’s Rich Abdill

Republican Tide Carries Harris in 1st District

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

KENT ISLAND – State Sen. Andy Harris made this round look easy — toppling freshman Democratic Rep. Frank Kratovil in their rematch for Maryland’s 1st Congressional District.

Kratovil spoke to his supporters at the Crab Deck restaurant a little before 11 p.m., saying that he was “consistently overwhelmed” by his supporters and praised the electoral process.

“The battles we have we fight at the ballot box and not on the battlefield.”

With 77 percent of the vote in, Harris was leading Kratovil 54 to 42 percent. The Washington Post called the race for Harris. Last time around, in 2008, it took a week before the race between the two was official.

Frank Kratovil Sr., 77, from the Crab Deck restaurant, said he was “apprehensive” most of the night.

Just a half mile away at Harris Crab House, Kathryn Harris, the candidate’s niece and a nurse, said she was “very confident” that her uncle would pull it off this time.

“He will use his platform as a doctor to affect change in Congress,” she said.

But perhaps the biggest deciding factor in the race may be the mood of the electorate. In 2008, Kratovil was helped by enthusiasm for President Obama, although Sen. John McCain won the district. This time, it’s a rising tide of Republicanism and a call for change that is lifting Harris.

“It’s time to take the trash out,” said Bernie Parkinson, 62, a retired firefighter and registered Democrat who voted for Harris. “Everybody wants change” this year.

That’s the feeling, too, of Charles Dyes, a 55-year-old Dorchester businessman at the Harris party.

“Politicians are playing puppets with us all,” he said. “We need change.” And he said that Kratovil has been unresponsive.

“Where’s (Kratovil) been? He’s been a ghost.”

Even House Minority Leader Steny Hoyer in Maryland’s 5th District got a taste of the mood. Republican Charles Lollar was close enough after early results were in that it was the only other federal race in Maryland not called almost immediately. Hoyer went on to beat Lollar.

Marcella Drain, 31, who voted on Kent Island in the 1st District Tuesday, demonstrated the 1st District’s swing nature. She voted for Republican gubernatorial candidate Robert Ehrlich, and also for Kratovil.

“What I like about him is he’s local,” she said of Kratovil, the former Queen Anne’s County state’s attorney. “I like his history and track record.”

Kratovil and Harris first butted heads in 2008, when Harris unseated nine-term incumbent Rep. Wayne Gilchrest in the Republican primary.

That time around, the general election was so close it took a week for Harris to concede. Ultimately, 360,480 votes were cast in District 1 and official results left Kratovil the winner by 2,852 votes, or a .8 percent margin. On election night, however, Kratovil led by just 915 votes.

The lead-up to this year’s race has indicated it could be just as close: an Oct. 6 poll published by The Hill and conducted by Penn Schoen Berland had the candidates statistically tied; another, an automated poll from Monmouth University two weeks later, had Harris ahead 53 percent to 42 percent. On Oct. 25, the Baltimore Sun released yet another poll, this one with the two candidates tied at 40 percent.

The Washington Post and other media outlets already called the U.S. Senate race for Democratic incumbent Barbara Mikulski, and all other congressional incumbents except the 1st District and 5th District, where House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer was wrangling with tea party leading light and Republican Charles Lollar.

By far the closest House contest in the state, District 1 had more spending than the rest of the races combined: while final tallies won’t come in until early next month, Federal Election Commission reports show the two candidates spent a combined $1.3 million between Aug. 26 and the end of September. The other House races combined spent less than half a million dollars.

More than $1.1 million of Kratovil and Harris’s spending has gone into several heated television spots in which each accused the other of dishonesty in ways that may have been dishonest themselves.

Kratovil accused Harris in an ad of supporting a 23 percent sales tax, a mischaracterization of a bullet point on Harris’s website saying he “can support either the flat tax or the fair tax.” Harris demanded Kratovil stop running the ad and said Kratovil cited a report that never mentioned the fair tax. The report, compiled by a committee commissioned by President George W. Bush, mentions the fair and flat tax programs more than 30 times.

Harris mirrored the strategy of many Republican challengers nationwide, attacking Kratovil’s association with the current Democratic administration by pointing to his votes in favor of the economic stimulus and the cap-and-trade energy bill. The Harris campaign also put out a statement attacking Kratovil for a recent fundraiser headlined by Vice President Joe Biden.

Kratovil has banked on his independence, a necessity in his deeply Republican district. He pointed to votes against the final version of the health care bill and the 2010 budget, as well as endorsements from Chambers of Commerce and the National Rifle Association, which supported Harris in 2008.

Harris, like Kratovil, did get an A rating from the NRA and said he didn’t get the endorsement because groups tend to support incumbents. Harris did once again get the endorsement of the Gun Owners of America.

The Republican Party also considered Harris a rising star, with National Committee Chairman Michael Steele bringing his “Fire Pelosi” (for getting rid of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi) to Harris’ campaign headquarters in the final weekend before the vote.

In 2008, the Obama wave didn’t quite reach the Eastern Shore. Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain won the 1st District by 19 points, but Harris still lost to a Democrat. A win for him this time around would signal just how much discontent there is with Democratic leadership, even with those who have not voted the party line on key votes.

–By Capital News Service’s Richard Abdill and Jon Aerts

Social Media Tools Being Tested for 2012

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Get-out-the-vote organizations like Rock the Vote are experimenting this year with social media innovations that will serve as a test run for the 2012 presidential elections — especially as a way to reach out to the youth vote.

Rock the Vote, teaming with Google, the Pew Research Center and others, recently came up with a way to track where people vote by having them “check in” online on Foursquare to indicate their polling station. Those who do so receive an “I Voted” badge on Foursquare, a social media forum where users can find out other users’ locations and give their own. The data for this voting information project shows up on a map so users can see where other people have voted and when, although not with individuals’ names attached.

“Location data is an important social media tool that is currently in early-adopter phase, but that will likely play a major role in 2012,” said Rock the Vote spokeswoman Maegan Carberry. “We’re excited to see how it comes together in 2010 and learn from that going forward.”

Mindy Finn, a partner at the D.C.-based company Engage, which is working with Foursquare, said they’re looking to see if the “bandwagon effect” will help to increase voter turnout. “When someone checks in [on Foursquare], many people push that to Facebook and Twitter,” she said, explaining how information shared on one social media network can spread to others.

The tools could carry increased importance, as at least one national poll seems to indicate enthusiasm among young voters has waned. The Harvard Institute of Politics released a national poll last week of 18- to 24- year-olds. The poll, conducted Sept. 24 to Oct. 4, showed that while enthusiasm normally tends to ramp up as an election draws nearer, the percentage of millennials who say they will “definitely” vote in this election has fallen over the past 11 months, from 36 percent to 27 percent.

In addition, those who said they were politically active or engaged also dipped, from 24 percent who answered positively in November 2009 and February 2010 polls to 18 percent.

Politico and Facebook sponsored a panel discussion Oct. 25 at George Washington University to discuss the ways campaigns are using social media in the midterm elections. “Very few congressional candidates are doing a good job using these tools,” said panelist Matthew Hindman, an assistant professor of media and public affairs at GWU. “The most important thing in these social media is that they have to be updated constantly, and so many candidates just use them as window dressing.”

Finn, a panelist, noted that in 2008, generally only candidates who wanted to reach young voters used social media. “Now, in 2009, and particularly in 2010, it’s just the default. As a candidate or campaign you have to have a Facebook profile,” she said.

In 2008, online tools played a role in Barack Obama’s successful run for the presidency. The Washington Post reported after he won the election that Obama had raised more than $500 million online, most of it in small donations. Political analysts observed that Obama had far more Facebook friends and Twitter followers than Republican nominee John McCain.

Campaigns continue to use Twitter and Facebook, but some are doubtful of their effectiveness in delivering votes on Election Day. “I don’t believe that Facebook can win an election,” said Jake Weissmann, the 25-year-old president of Young Democrats of Maryland. Weissmann said he does find Facebook useful for organizing volunteers and reminding people about early voting.

One Facebook application that is generating a lot of interest (and opposition) is Obama’s “Commit to Vote” challenge, which lets users share why they’re voting by posting on their friends’ walls. Bloggers who say that the application collects an invasive amount of private information are spreading the word about blocking and avoiding it.

Facebook was also used to get out the word about two big rallies Oct. 30 in Washington, D.C., hosted by comedians Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert. The largest Facebook event pages for the “Rally to Restore Sanity” and the “March to Keep Fear Alive” had reached 224,492 and 91,585 members respectively two days before the event, although smaller spin-off groups exist.

“Rock the Vote works with many organizations to get out the vote, and Comedy Central is an entertainment network that young people watch,” Carberry said, about the natural synergy between the two. Rock the Vote wants to encourage young people to show up on Election Day.

“We want to connect with them at an event they are interested in, just as we attend Ohio State football games and Lady Gaga concerts,” Carberry said.

Old-fashioned star power never dies as a get-out-the-vote tactic. But is it effective?

“It obviously helps when someone like Jay-Z comes out and talks about enfranchisement,” said Dan Hochman, 21, a senior at Johns Hopkins University. “But in the end, they can’t drag you to the polls. You have to feel something.”

When it comes to more practical matters like voter registration, Rock the Vote has an online tool that it’s used since 2004, updating and redeveloping it every election cycle. It seems to be working.

“In 2006, we registered 50,000 young people, and this cycle we’re at almost 300,000 registrations in person or via our downloadable tool online,” Carberry said.

–By Maryland Newsline’s Esther French

Tea Party Takes Health Care Message to Kratovil

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

BEL AIR, Md. – Protest signs went up, “Don’t Tread on Me” flags waved and car horns blasted outside Rep. Frank Kratovil’s Bel Air office Tuesday night as Maryland’s Tea Party movement rallied to press for a no vote from Kratovil on the health care bill.

About 200 people came to send a message to Kratovil, D-Stevensville, by rallying outside his Main Street office for two hours.

Tony Passaro, an organizer with the Bel Air Tea Party Patriots, said his group wants to reform the health care system, but not if it means turning it over to more government control.

“We’re just against big government doing health care reform,” Passaro said. “We’re afraid that if you leave that much money and that much power to the federal government, they’ll lose control of it.”

Kratovil, a moderate Democrat who voted against the health care bill passed by the House in November, has said he will vote no if, as expected, the House is asked to pass the Senate version of the bill.

After almost a year of public debate, House Democratic leaders are trying to round up 216 votes to pass the Senate version of the bill by this weekend, which is the most viable way to move the legislation forward after Senate Democrats lost their filibuster-proof majority with the election of Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass.

Kevin Lawlor, a Kratovil spokesman in Bel Air for the protest, said the congressman’s position hasn’t changed; he will vote no on the Senate bill, but will reserve judgment on any proposed fixes that might come later.

When asked about the proposed “Slaughter solution,” a complicated parliamentary tactic that would allow House Democrats to pass the Senate bill without a direct vote, Lawlor said Kratovil is more focused on the bill’s content.

“He’s been in favor of transparency the entire time,” Lawlor said. “In the long run, he knows he’s going to have to answer for this bill.”

–Text by Capital News Service’s Graham Moomaw, video by Maryland Newsline’s Ben Giles, with Moomaw

Kratovil Wants Cyber-security Center in Maryland

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

U.S. Rep. Frank Kratovil hopes Maryland will be picked as the location for a proposed National Center of Excellence for Cyber-Security, called for as part of a $396 million cyber-security bill passed by the House Thursday.

The Cyber-security Enhancement Act of 2009 (HR 4061), includes an amendment proposed by Kratovil that requires the establishment of the center by the National Science Foundation, a federal agency that oversees research funding for colleges and universities.

According to a Kratovil press release, the center would bring together the public, private and academic sectors to create a hub for cyber-security training and research.

“Maryland’s world-class educational institutions, dynamic private sector, and existing federal installations make our state a great fit for this initiative,” Kratovil said in a statement.  “As this legislation proceeds, I will be working closely with state leaders and the rest of the delegation to ensure Maryland receives consideration to host this Center of Excellence.”

Gov. Martin O’Malley released a report in January that aimed to position Maryland as a prime location for cyber-security investment.

“Maryland resources make us a national leader in securing our country’s critical cyber infrastructures,” O’Malley wrote in the report. “We have a robust higher education system that trains the next generation of cyber security experts, institutions that are developing innovative cyber technologies and one of the nation’s most technically advanced workforces.”

The establishment of the cyber-security center was one of the major recommendations included in that report.

After passing the House by a vote of 422-5, the bill now heads to the Senate for consideration. More information about the bill is here:

– By Capital News Service’s Graham Moomaw