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Tag Archives: Eric Cantor

Best quotes so far about the republican debt hostage crisis

14 Thursday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Debt ceiling, Digby, Eric Cantor, whining

From the inimitable Digby:

So you’ve probably heard that Eric Cantor came running out of the White House debt meeting today screaming “the bad man tried to touch me!”….

From Blue Girl via Twitter:

@BGinKC Blue Girl

Wouldn’t it be hilarious if at tomorrow’s #debtceiling talks, @EricCantor’s chair had a booster seat & a Tonka truck on the table? 8 hours ago

The governator had it right in a previous life:

Kindergarten Cop (1990)

Detective John Kimble: They’re horrible. They’re like little terrorists.

Phoebe O’Hara: Tell me about it.

They sat Eric Cantor at the wrong table.

Previously: Eh, what a maroon… (July 11, 2011)

 

Eh, what a maroon…

12 Tuesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Congress, Debt ceiling, Eric Cantor, Hypocrisy

…what an ignoranomus:

GOP leaders say they’ve sacrificed enough already on debt negotiations

Amid ongoing negotiations with President Obama over raising the debt ceiling, House Republican leaders responded to Obama’s call Monday for compromise by saying that their openness to raising the debt ceiling at all is sacrifice enough.

“A vote to increase the debt limit in this country is an existential question for a fiscal conservative,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said Monday. “These votes aren’t easy. …What I don’t think that the White House understands is how difficult it is for fiscal conservatives to say they’re going to vote for a debt ceiling increase….”

[emphasis added]

Cue the violins.

In 2003:

H.J.RES.51

Latest Title: Increasing the statutory limit on the public debt.

Sponsor: No Sponsor (introduced 4/11/2003)      Cosponsors (None)

Related Bills: H.CON.RES.95, S.2986

Latest Major Action: Became Public Law No: 108-24 [GPO: Text, PDF]

Note: On 4/11/2003, pursuant to Rule XXVII, H.J.Res. 51 was deemed to have passed the House as a result of the adoption by the House and Senate of the H.Con.Res. 95 conference report….

[emphasis added]

FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 141

     H CON RES 95      YEA-AND-NAY      11-Apr-2003      2:39 AM

     QUESTION:  On Agreeing to the Conference Report

     BILL TITLE: Congressional Budget for FY 2004

—- YEAS    216 —

Cantor

[emphasis added]

That’s one difficult yes vote. And who was President and had just exploded the budget surplus with a windfall tax break for the top two percent? Oh, yeah….

In 2005:

H.J.RES.47

Latest Title: Increasing the statutory limit on the public debt.

Sponsor: No Sponsor (introduced 5/2/2005)      Cosponsors (None)

Related Bills: H.CON.RES.95

Latest Major Action: 3/20/2006 Became Public Law No: 109-182.

4/28/2005 11:59pm:

   Passed House pursuant to rule XXVII and H. Con. Res. 95….

[emphasis added]

FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 149

     H CON RES 95      YEA-AND-NAY      28-Apr-2005      8:35 PM

     QUESTION:  On Agreeing to the Conference Report

     BILL TITLE: Congressional Budget for FY 2006

—- YEAS    214 —

Cantor

[emphasis added]

That’s a second difficult yes vote. The existential angst must have really started to build at that point. You know, over six years ago.

The republicans in the House must think everyone else is stoopid.

Crashing the Economy for Fun and Profit

01 Friday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Eric Cantor, manipulation, Treasury Bonds

I don’t expect the republicans to be good-faith negotiators in the debt ceiling talks. Crashes can be beneficial to those in the “have” column, who have the cash to shield and insulate themselves from the vagaries of the resulting chaos. Those folks make a killing on everyone else’s misery.

That is the angle Eric Cantor is working right now. He is heavily invested in a hedge fund that is shorting long-dated treasury bonds.

Now, I am no financial genius. Even if I had money, I wouldn’t make it go out and get a job and “work for me.” I would leave it convalescing in a nice FDIC-insured savings account. I have never believed everyone was intended to get into the stockmarket. 401Ks and the like have always just sounded like a scam to get middle-class pockets legally picked by Wall Street parasites,  because if the average person were honest with themselves, they would admit that they are flying blind when it comes to managing those numbers on the page.

But I am not so ignorant of the ways of money that I don’t know good old-fashioned manipulation when I see it.

Cantor is in a position to push the United States into default, and if that were to happen, that investment would make him a very, very rich man, because the price of bonds would fall and interest rates would spike and the Minority Leader, who flounced out of talks a weekk ago would clean up.

So I have a question: HOW THE FUCK IS THIS LEGAL???  

FEMA declares Eric Cantor a Disaster Area

31 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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emergency disaster relief, Eric Cantor, FEMA, missouri

Citizens of Joplin, please know that denying you disaster relief couldn’t be helped. Eric Cantor wouldn’t even give himself relief if it meant increasing the deficit.

One day after Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA) stirred controversy by withholding funds for tornado relief, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) took the extraordinary step of declaring Rep. Cantor a disaster area.

Within hours of the declaration, FEMA officials were dispatched to assess the damage to Mr. Cantor’s status as a human being capable of empathy.

“I’ve seen a lot of hurricanes and tornados, but this is something new,” said FEMA spokesman Tracy Klugian.  “Rep. Cantor appears to have been caught up in a moral vacuum.”

While concerned FEMA officials looked on, the morally ravaged House Majority Leader took to the floor of the House to make the case for denying funds to repair himself.

Okay, sure, this is from the Borowitz Report, and I didn’t tell you that in advance. Just thought you might appreciate exercising your satire sensor. How long did it take before you knew?

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): What, no hot meals?

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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4th Congressional District, Eric Cantor, Joplin, missouri, Sedalia, tornado, Vicky Hartzler

A tornado or access to health care, to right wingnuts it’s all the same, right?

A health care story (September 3, 2009)

….Randy Huggins:…Last Thursday I went to a health care information forum, I guess you could call it, Vicki Hartzler [a declared Republican candidate for the 4th Congressional District seat] held here. And she had concerns about the legislation and she had things that she liked about the legislation. Then she said she had solutions. The solution that she offered for the pre-existing condition my grandson had was, she offered to bring the family a, a hot meal. [pause] We’re hungry, but that’s not gonna help his heart, so….

Homes and businesses in Sedalia, Missouri, in the 4th Congressional, were damaged in yesterday’s tornado outbreak. The 4th Congressional District is represented by freshman Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) who has been silent about House Majority Leader Eric Cantor’s (r) demand for budget offsets as a condition for the approval of disaster relief in Joplin, Missouri after Sunday’s devastating tornado.

Lo and behold, via Twitter:

@RepHartzler Rep. Vicky Hartzler

Just talked to Dave Clippart, Pettis Co.Emergency Mgmt. Dir. He confirmed substantial damage from today’s tornado & some injuries. 21 hours ago

@RepHartzler Rep. Vicky Hartzler

I have offered whatever help I can after the tornado. I stand ready to help. Will continue to pray for all Missouri storm victims. 21 hours ago

“…I have offered whatever help I can after the tornado. I stand ready to help…”

Does that include advocating for federal disaster relief? Or just a hot meal? Just asking.

Others are, too:

@Psyched55 Dr. Connie S.

@RepHartzler I hope your help includes votes that keep aide intact for those who are suffering rather then putting stipulations on such aide 20 hours ago

@aprillivings April Livings

@RepHartzler: Does that help include making sure that all aid is offset by spending cuts? Aid should not be held up by politics.

15 hours ago

Really, without the republican majority’s insistence on budgetary reductions in times of need we wouldn’t be able to protect those windfall tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires. And that wouldn’t be fair at all, would it?

The GOP and Joplin: No compassion, only gamesmanship

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Billy Long, disaster relief, Eric Cantor, Jo Ann Emercon, Joplin, missouri, Roy Blunt, Same Graves, Vicky Hartzler

You’ve probably read about how Eric Cantor, the House Majority Leader, refused to designate emergency aid for Joplin in the wake of Sunday’s tornado unless he got a pound of flesh in the form of cuts to some spending programs that the GOP finds ideologically offensive. Today, he seems to have gotten his way. The price for pumping up a dangerously stretched FEMA?:

House Republicans, who require spending cuts whenever new spending is proposed, said the FEMA funds would be paid by cutting $1.5 billion from an Energy Department loan program for the production of fuel-efficient vehicles. Aides said the measure would probably pass the House next week.

Note the special irony of the particular cut that was exacted. In the same way that one can’t demonstrate that an occurence of lung cancer is a direct result of a lifetime spent smoking, one can’t really say that the string of fierce storms and tornados that have afflicted Missouri this spring are a direct result of global warning, but the fact is that such weather events have been predicted to become more and more common as we enter an age of irrevocable warming. Doesn’t it seem typical of the GOP lack of aptitude for governing that they cut subsidies directed toward mitigating global warming?

The more immediate implications, though, are disturbing enough. When President Obama told  the ravaged city of Joplin that “the American people are by your side,” we just have to understand that that statement excepts GOP lawmakers who are only interested in Joplin’s tragedy as long as they can use it to score an unrelated policy victory – disaster relief as political gamesmanship, in other words.

Russ Carnahan put the GOP behavior into perspective very succinctly on “The Ed Show” last night:

We have a long history in this country of backing up people when they’re at their worst, when they’ve gone through natural disasters. … But to have that debate in the face of the suffering we’ve seen in Joplin is just plain wrong. […]

When you talk about cutting clean energy programs versus cutting subsidies for big oil, let’s have that debate here in Washington. But let’s not have it on the backs of people of Joplin.

What I want to hear now is just how Springfield’s Billy Long, Harrisonville’s Vicky Hartzler, Tarkio’s Sam Graves, or Cape Girardeau’s Jo Ann Emerson responded to this effort to hold the people of Joplin hostage to GOP ideology – and how they would react if it were their community that had been ravaged. And while you’re at it, add Big Oil buddy Roy Blunt to that list – I really want to hear him try, in his inimitable wooden style, to justify the inexcusable. As Oliver Wills put it, “The Republican party has so far gone around the bend, it’s beginning to resemble an actual monster.”  

Image from Wikimedia Commons.

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D) on the floor of the Senate: calling out Rep. Eric Cantor (r)

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, Eric Cantor, Joplin, missouri, tornado

Monday, May 23, 2011

Eric Cantor: Disaster relief for Joplin must be offset by spending cuts

If House Majority Leader Eric Cantor has his way, the city of Joplin will receive no disaster relief unless it is offset by spending cuts….

Senator Claire McCaskill spoke about the tornado in Joplin, Missouri on the floor of the Senate today. She praised the response of the community, of state and federal agencies, and first responders. She mentions House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (r) at approximately six minutes into the video:

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): [6:11] …In this instance we’re gonna need to sustain the support to this community far beyond the headlines, far beyond the satellite trucks going home. We’ve got to get these schools open in September. We’ve got to get this hospital rebuilt. We’ve got to make sure this community is not left stranded without the assistance it needs.

There is no question we have to be careful about the ay we spend federal money, but, with all due respect, to Congressman [Eric] Cantor [r] I have a hard time believing that if this were in his congressional district he would be talking about how additional disaster relief would not be available, uh, unless we found some other programs to take it from. It must be available. This cannot be a political football. We must provide the assistance. [7:00]

We can guess what Claire was really thinking about Representative Cantor and his comments about Joplin, Missouri. And to think he’s a member of the House’s republican leadership.

Forget Claire McCaskill; vote for Ed Martin in 2012.

14 Monday Feb 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Eric Cantor, Grover Norquist, missouri, Pentagon budget, tea party

My husband, who has been a socialist since he was thirteen, announced at breakfast today that he plans to vote for certain Tea Party candidates.

Blink.

This violent about-face comes on the heels of Grover Norquist announcing that he wants to drag into his infamous bathtub … wait for it: the Pentagon budget–you know, that $534 billion monstrosity (well, $533.8 billion actually, but who’s going to quibble over a piddling .2 billion dollars, right?) the budget that every year, in Afghanistan and Iraq, has gone mostly down the toilet instead of into the tub.

For years only a hardy band of liberals in Congress-the Progressive Caucus, the Black Caucus and individuals like Representative Barney Frank-challenged the bloated military budget. The Republicans, ignoring President Eisenhower’s warning fifty years ago about the military-industrial complex, always gave the Pentagon what it wanted and more, gleefully bashing Democrats as weak-kneed on national security. Since the fall, however, a civil war of sorts has broken out among Republicans over defense, with the dissident faction led by Norquist, the libertarian Cato Institute and a growing group of allies, including some factions of the rambunctious Tea Party movement, backing significant cuts.

According to a well-known conservative activist, in early January House majority leader Eric Cantor quietly circulated to the entire GOP caucus a letter organized by Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) that called for the Pentagon’s budget to be put on the chopping block. “We write to urge you to institute principled spending reform that rejects the notion that spending cuts can be avoided in certain parts of the federal budget,” said the letter, written in November to Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell and incoming House Speaker John Boehner. “Department of Defense spending, in particular, has been provided protected status that has isolated it from serious scrutiny.” The letter was signed by twenty-three people, a Who’s Who of the conservative movement, including Norquist, David Keene of the American Conservative Union, Cato’s Christopher Preble, Richard Viguerie, Al Regnery of The American Spectator and many others. Also signing were Lisa Miller of Tea Party WDC and Matt Kibbe of FreedomWorks, the pro-Tea Party organization led by former House majority leader Dick Armey. That Cantor, who has advocated cutting the military budget, sent ATR’s letter around was seen as a shot across the bow of Republicans who consider that budget a “sacred cow,” as ATR called it.

On January 19 more than 150 Congressional staffers and experts packed a Capitol Hill forum sponsored by Cato at which Norquist and Preble laid out the conservative case for slashing military spending. Preble, with Ben Friedman of Cato, outlined a series of cuts that go far beyond what Defense Secretary Robert Gates and the Obama administration have proposed, identifying more than $1.2 trillion in cuts over the next decade-about a fifth of overall Pentagon spending. “When the Soviet Union disappeared,” said Norquist wryly, “a lot of people on the right failed to notice.” Referring to George W. Bush’s support for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and for greater military spending, Norquist said too many Republicans support feeding the Pentagon’s appetite “just because Fearless Leader said it’s a good idea.”

Instead, Norquist called for a debate among Republicans over Obama’s escalation of the war in Afghanistan, asking, “What are we doing? Why are we there? How long do we plan to be there?” A week earlier, speaking at a dinner organized by Steve Clemons of the New America Foundation, Norquist cited polling data to support his view that, if debated, pro-war neoconservatives and hawks would lose the argument. “I’m confident about where that conversation would go,” he said. “I think the people who are against that conversation know where it would go, too.”

They must fear such a debate, because a powerful coalition (the American Enterprise Institute, the Heritage Foundation and the Foreign Policy Initiative (home to William Kristol of The Weekly Standard) is gearing up to challenge the anti-war wingers.

Whether or not my husband could actually vote for Ed Martin, I do not know. It’s not like Claire’s any prize, but Martin? God, he’s such a low life. Anyway, closer to the here and now, nothing will seriously endanger our War Budget this session, even if Barney Frank and Eric Cantor join hands. But the seeds of reality might be planted. I want to see a vocal debate about cutting war, oh excuse me, defense funds. Right now, Democrats are giving away the social safety net store without asking for war spending cuts in return.  

Ed Martin: Young Gun in waiting.

11 Monday Oct 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Ed Martin, Eric Cantor, GOP propaganda, Kevin McCarthy, Midterm election, missouri, Nazi sympathizers, Paul Ryan, Rich Iott, Young Guns

There’s an opening for a new “Young Gun,” the not-so-very-young pols whom the Republican National Congressional Committee is grooming to be the “future leaders of America.” The Young Guns program lost a promising member last week when it was disclosed that Rich Iott, the GOPer running against Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur in Ohio, likes to dress up like a Nazi as part of his membership in the 5th SS Wiking Panzer Division, a group of Ohio World War II reenactors with a difference:

According to their website, the Wikings strive to “salute” the “idealists” from occupied northern Europe who saw the Third Reich as “the protector of personal freedom and their very way of life” and signed up to fight for the Wermacht and “gave their lives for their loved ones and a basic desire to be free.

While the RNCC doesn’t really seem to care so much about just how right their right wingers are (the righter the better seems to be the case), they do shy away from a such a glaringly public association with the actual prototypes of racist murderers, hence the opening. And prominent on their Young Guns Webpages, as a “contender” for Young Gun status, is none other than Missouri’s own Ed Martin, Russ Carnahan’s Tea Party opponent for the 3rd district House seat.

So what would Martin’s selection as a Young Gunner mean – besides getting lots of money? Simply that the RNCC thinks he has a realistic chance of winning his race and getting into congress where he could support the Young Guns agenda.

And what is that agenda? Just consider that  Young Guns is the title of a book by Reps. Eric Cantor, Paul Ryan, and Kevin McCarthy, the avant garde of retrograde GOPism. They like to think of themselves as not belonging to “your grandfather’s Republican party.” And they’re right. My grandfather’s Republican party was the party of moderate Nelson Rockefeller – they are more like my great, great grandfather’s Republican party, the one owned by John D. Rockefeller and Cornelius Vanderbilt during the Gilded Age. Not a really nice time for the working man or the tiny middle class of the period as I recollect.

This Americans United video may be satirical, but it’s on the money in its depiction of the exemplary young guns and their targets:

Apart from the original young guns spurious intellectual aspirations, Ed Martin should fit right in. He has, after all, already tweeted his allegiance to Ryan’s “Road Map for America’s Future” which aims to slash entitlement programs as part of dismantling the entire government, although, sly boots that he is, he is careful to run for cover when directly confronted with his support for the agenda that dare not say its name. As SMP blogger Hotflash puts it:

True, Ed Martin is not on record ever having uttered the words, “I support privatization of Social Security,” but unless he didn’t know even the most basic information about the Ryan plan, he implicitly stood in favor of privatization.

Only lately has Martin started acting as if he hadn’t noticed that little privatization thingie in the Ryan plan. But he is, at least, very sure where he stands now–in the only safe spot for a candidate with a prayer of getting elected.

Of course, it is where they stand after they get elected that defines members of the party of the Big Lie.

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