Posts Tagged ‘President Obama’

House Votes to Eliminate Public Financing of Presidential Campaigns

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

Just over a year after the Supreme Court’s landmark decision on campaign finance, the House Wednesday passed a Republican- sponsored bill to eliminate the public financing of presidential campaigns and party conventions.

Republican supporters said the legislation would reduce the deficit by cutting $617 million over 10 years. Democrats countered that the legislation would expand the Citizens United decision that allowed corporate entities to fund independent political ads and decrease the power of individuals in elections.

The White House budget office released a statement in opposition to the bill stating the effect of the legislation would be “to expand the power of corporations and special interests in the Nation’s elections; to force many candidates into an endless cycle of fundraising at the expense of engagement with voters on the issues; and to place a premium on access to large donor or special interest support, narrowing the field of otherwise worthy candidates.”

Several members criticized President Obama for opposing the bill because his 2008 campaign opted out of public financing and instead raised record funds through individual donors. Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., said Obama broke his pledge to participate in the program she called “outdated.”

The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., said “The idea that Americans need this program in order to support candidates is absurd. It’s not 1971 anymore.” Republican members called on passage of the legislation as a way to reduce the federal deficit. Maryland Rep. Roscoe Barlett, R-Frederick, was one of the bill’s 20 co-sponsors.

Under current law, citizens may check a box on their tax return to designate $3 to a fund for distribution to candidates who meet certain eligibility requirements. Candidates must agree to funding limits and must meet certain reporting requirements by the Federal Election Commission.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Kensington, spoke in opposition to the bill. “Rather than presidential candidates trafficking in secret slush funds our nation decided that our democracy would be better served by a system of public disclosure, contribution limits, and emphasis on smaller dollar contributions, matched by the presidential financing fund,” he said.

Van Hollen called for a revision rather than elimination of the 1974 tax code provision that established the program. He and Rep. David Price, D-N.C., introduced legislation to amend the current law.

Several Democratic members expressed concern that the end of public financing would increase the power of special interests in elections. Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., said the bill added “insult to the injury” of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision last year. “Now my Republican colleagues propose to further erode whatever protections our government has left against a state of democracy for the highest bidder,” she said.

Ten Democratic members voted in favor of the legislation which passed the House with a vote of 239-160.

-By Capital News Service’s Laura E. Lee

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

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

Obama Lauds Maryland Team at White House

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010
President Obama at the NCAA ceremony.

University of Maryland women's lacrosse player Mary Jordan shakes President Obama's hand at the White House reception honoring the team and other NCAA athletes. (Photo courtesy of the Maryland women's lacrosse team)

WASHINGTON – Jerseys, helmets, cleats and kneepads were replaced with shirts, ties, heels and dresses this week as more than 650 NCAA collegiate athletes from across the country — including a team from the University of Maryland — were welcomed to the White House by President Obama.

Students and coaches from more than 30 NCAA championship-winning teams, including the women’s lacrosse team from the University of Maryland, College Park, and the University of Virginia’s men’s soccer and women’s rowing teams, were honored Monday for their excellence in athletics, academics and community service.

“That term student athlete is the thing that makes me so proud to stand before you today,” Obama said. “When each of you won the titles that you won, whether it was in lacrosse or wheel chair basketball, you didn’t do it as professionals. You didn’t have multi-million dollar contracts or huge endorsement deals. You woke up early. You put in countless hours of practice for the love of the game and for the pride of your school.”

Amid the sprawling group of participants vying for the perfect picture of Obama, players from the University of Maryland’s women’s lacrosse team secured a position close to the president’s speaking podium. For a team known for their defense, protecting their turf wasn’t hard to do.

Down six points in the opening minutes of the 2010 NCAA Women’s Lacrosse Championship in May, the team orchestrated a rally to defeat the five-time defending champions, Northwestern University, 13-11.

“This is really exciting. I’ve been here four years; I’ve never [gotten] the chance to come to the White House,” said Brandi Jones, mid-fielder for the Maryland team. “I would say that our favorite part was getting the chance to shake Obama’s hand. He actually said, ‘Congratulations Terps’ in our camera.”

Obama told the players that lessons learned while studying in airports and locker rooms will help them transition from student athletes to professional doctors, lawyers, nurses and teachers.

The president also spotlighted lesser-known teams, such as Texas Christian University’s all-female rifle squad.

–By Maryland Newsline’s Michelle J. Nealy

Hoyer Holds Forth on War, Health Care, Guarantees

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Mechanicsville, reflected on his recent discussion with President Obama regarding Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s call for more troops during his weekly pen and pad briefing Wednesday.

“I think there was a general feeling around the room that whatever your particular view on what General McChrystal had recommended, the president had to grapple with this and come up with a policy that accomplishes the objectives the president thinks are critical,” Hoyer said.

“This is an issue that requires us to think very carefully … Afghanistan has not been a successful venue for many great powers in the past, I can’t think of any. I think we also need to have some great confidence that the government in Afghanistan is a viable government, with the confidence of its people.”

Switching gears to health care, Hoyer talked about reconciling the Senate’s bill with one that would pass in the House.

“I would be shocked if there was not a very robust conference where we would come to grips with differences between the House and the Senate. We’re not there yet in determining what the Senate bill is going to look like.”

When asked if he could guarantee the House would pass a health care bill before Christmas, Hoyer said: “Can I guarantee that? No. Do I think it will? Yes. I am way beyond guaranteeing what we’re going to do and when we’re going to do it.”

- By Capital News Service’s David Johnson

Obama Seeks Help on Health Care Reform

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

President Obama tells thousands gathered at the University of Maryland’s Comcast Center that he needs their voices and help to reform the health care system.

What are your thoughts on his proposal?