In an interview with radio host Michael Savage on Thursday — where Savage insinuated that Obama is a Muslim and Michele Obama is fat — Rep. Michele Bachmann said that if the health care reform vote happens on Sunday Democrats will “profane the Sabbath.” She also incorrectly states that health reform would force taxpayers to pay for abortions.
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Bachmann missed four times more committee votes than Ellison, Paulsen
Rep. Michele Bachmann has missed about four times more votes than her colleagues Rep. Keith Ellison, a Democrat, and Rep. Erik Paulsen, a Republican, on the House Financial Services Committee, her only committee assignment. Three quarters of votes at which Bachmann wasn’t present happened on days she had national cable news appearances.
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The American Independent News Network:
- Court to Wrangle Documents From the Fed’s Cold Hands
- Congressman Pushes Unsourced Rumors of Dems Trading Votes for Jobs; Accused Dems Push Back
- $153,000 Later, Titus Is a ‘Yes’
- GOP Leaders Back Away From Fishy ‘Democratic Memo’ on Health Care
- Denver community reps anxious over police review board appointments
- Swalm takes last swipe at gender equality insurance bill
- IREA’s Kempe blasts co-op board resistance to election reform
- Uranium surge prompts Colorado lawmakers to call for stiff cleanup regulations
- How Reconciliation Irons Out the House and Senate Health Bills
- PoliTweeps
- Grassley: Dems bill won’t nationalize health care, but will cost them this fall
- Lunchtime Links
- Poor sanitation threatens water resources in Michigan and globally
- Supreme Court considers Asian carp case today
- Riddle to get plea deal on assault charge
- MEDC to begin background checks for companies seeking tax breaks
Top stories:
Driver’s licenses for all — off the table for now
Despite an audience sprinkled with supporters, a bill that would have made it possible for undocumented immigrants to receive driver’s licenses was tabled in the state House Thursday.
White House shifts away from ‘War on Drugs’ rhetoric
Quietly, free of headlines and fanfare, the Obama White House is toning down the bellicose “war on drugs” position that’s defined the country’s narcotics policy for the last 25 years. Instead, the focus is on tackling addiction as an illness to be treated.
Ellison considers resolution in support of Mumia Abu-Jamal
At an event in Minneapolis last month, Rep. Keith Ellison went toe-to-toe with former Black Panther Dhoruba Bin Wahad, eventually promising the crowd he’d consider a congressional resolution questioning the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal — who was convicted of murdering a Philadelphia policeman in 1982, although supporters say he didn’t receive a fair trial.
Nervous tea partiers see possible Democratic win on health care
Tea party protests on Capitol Hill are getting smaller and more pessimistic as activists realize the U.S. House of Representatives may well pass the health care reform bill.
Nine years in, sick nuke workers still fighting for benefits
Legislation to reform the program designed to provide assistance to nuclear workers suffering illnesses related to exposure to radiation and toxic substances continues to languish in the U.S. Senate.
At ‘Kill the Bill’ rally, Bachmann compares Obama to Chavez
Before a crowd holding signs that read “Damn this federal government to hell” and “The citizens must declare war on their immoral, corrupt, Marxist government,” Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann addressed around 1,000 people Saturday at a “Kill the Bill” rally against Democrats’ health care reform measures at the State Capitol.
Panelists search for answers to farmer drain
Expressing “deep concern” that the number of young farmers is dwindling, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack asked a panelists of farmers at Friday’s DOJ/USDA antitrust workshop to tell him what else needs to be done to ensure the future of rural America.
Family-farm advocates call for U.S. to ‘bust up big ag’
An often rambunctious town hall event outside Des Moines last night gave small and family farmers an opportunity — largely unavailable at a joint U.S. Department of Justice and USDA antitrust workshop on Friday — to express their opinions on the agricultural industry. And it had one overarching message: “Bust up big ag.”
‘Death rights’ bills for same-sex couples pass House committee
Three bills that would assist same-sex couples in the event of one partner’s death were passed by the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday. Legislators recalled stories of couples who underwent hardships because of inequality in the law, while Tom Prichard of the Minnesota Family Council called the bills “discriminatory” and said they are “unfair to married couples.”
Capitol Hill Democrats represent deficit roadblock
On issues as diverse as health care and student lending, provisions designed to rein in deficit spending have all run smack into the ubiquitous inclination of lawmakers to protect their home turf from the scalpel of budget cuts. Their message is familiar: Congress must do something to get its fiscal house in order, just don’t do it in my back yard. And party affiliation is largely irrelevant.
Pelowski pushes for government data reforms
When a stubborn government official refuses to release public information as required under Minnesota law, a costly and lengthy lawsuit is often a citizen’s only recourse. But state Rep. Gene Pelowski, DFL-Winona, has authored a bill that will simplify, cheapen and shorten the process used by citizens and the media to gain access to public government information.
Anti-porn bill would reduce sexual assault, advocates say
Five Minnesota lawmakers — four Democrats and a Republican — are proposing legislation they hope will reduce sexual assault in Minnesota. The bill, introduced Feb. 25, would give preference when planning taxpayer-funded events to hotels and meeting facilities that do not show violent or exploitative pornography.
Sen. Moua: Same-sex marriage foes ‘fixated on sex-making’
State Sen. Mee Moua said some who testified at a Mar. 2 hearing on gay marriage were so “fixated on the sex-making aspects” that they missed the spirit of the bill. But here’s another aspect of recent hearings on the topic that hasn’t been examined: Tuesday’s statement by Janet Boynes was nearly identical to one by Barb Davis White. One difference: Boynes didn’t repeat White’s claim that “Rosa Parks didn’t move to the front of the bus to support sodomy.”
Twenty of Bachmann’s 47 missed votes coincide with media appearances
Rep. Michele Bachmann’s political opponents have targeted her busy national travel and media schedule saying it has hampered her ability to work for her district. One of those criticisms is that she’s missed a large number of votes. The Minnesota Independent analyzed Bachmann’s record to determine if those charges stand up to scrutiny.
Blog: The Monitor
Bachmann: Democrats are going to ‘profane the Sabbath’
Plategate update: Legislators criticize Pawlenty’s office funding scheme
Representatives from Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s administration defended the governor’s decision to pay his faith-based office coordinator out of a license plate fund for veterans during a legislative hearing on the issue on Thursday. But legislators criticized Pawlenty’s use of inter-agency agreements to pay his staff — the cost of which has jumped from $37,000 under Gov. Jesse Ventura in 1999 to $702,000 under Pawlenty in 2010.
“It’s a questionable trend when we are telling everyone else they need to tighten their belts and live within their means,” Sen. Don Betzold, DFL-Fridley, said at the hearing.
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Minnesota gay groups give Franken high marks
Sen. Al Franken met on Thursday with leaders from several of Minnesota LGBT advocacy organizations, who “applauded” Franken’s work on LGBT issues, including his work towards repealing the military’s ban on openly gay and lesbian servicemembers and his support for the Employment Non-Discrimination Act and the Student Non-Discrimination Act.
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Is Oberstar back to ‘undecided’ on health care reform?
Rep. James Oberstar has gone from a ‘no’ vote to an ‘undecided’ vote to a ‘likely’ vote on health care reform, but according to the Star Tribune, he’s still not certain.
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Pawlenty to Minnesota delegation: Defeat health care reform
Gov. Tim Pawlenty sent a letter (pdf) to Minnesota’s congressional delegates on Thursday urging them to vote against the health reform legislation currently pending in Congress. He praised Minnesota’s health care system and criticized the Democratic plan.
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Bachmann: Deem and pass ‘never been done before in history’
Rep. Michele Bachmann has been on a media blitz this week trying to drum up opposition to health care reform. In the last 7 days, she has appeared on Bill Bennett, Matt Lewis, Chris Baker and held two “kill the bill” rallies — one in Minnesota and one in Washington. She also appeared on Fox News’ Red Eye on Tuesday; immediately after that she was a guest on the Family Research Council’s anti-health care reform webcast. And on Thursday, she appeared in a video interview with NewsMax. In a number of these appearances, Bachmann said — incorrectly — that Congress has never used “deem and pass” or the “Slaughter rule” in history.
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Bachmann pushes rumor that ‘Kucinich sold out for veganism’
I thought yesterday’s NRCC hit on Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) for the “coincidence” of voting for health care reform after his wife got to appear at a White House event promoting vegetables was sort of silly. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) did not. From her appearance on Bill Bennett’s radio show today:
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Bachmann: SCOTUS will ‘absolutely overturn’ health care if Dems use ‘deem and pass’
In an interview with Matt Lewis, Rep. Michele Bachmann moves Ken Cuccinelli’s ball down the field, saying “it won’t even be close on how unconstitutionalized” it is to use a “deem and pass” solution for health care reform.
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Catholic group ads praise Oberstar in advance of health vote
Following Wednesday’s news that Rep. James Oberstar will be voting for the health care reform bill before Congress, the progressive group Catholics United is airing TV commercials praising the Minnesota Democrat. The spots, which began airing in Minnesota on Wednesday, is part of a “broader national campaign to underscore Catholic support for health care reform” just as “as insurance company-backed interests are pulling out the stops to oppose affordable health care for all Minnesotans,” according to a statement by the group.
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Oberstar, Kucinich to vote for health reform bill
It’d appear that momentum is picking up for health care reform: Today, Ohio Democrat Rep. Dennis Kucinich reversed his position, stating he’d vote for the bill. And Minnesota’s Rep. James Oberstar, once thought to be one of the “Stupak 12″ — 12 anti-abortion Democrats said to be opposing the reform bill — says he’s on board, too.
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