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Tag Archives: republicans

For the time being it’s still about people getting out and voting

11 Wednesday Jun 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Erica cantor, Primary, republicans, Virginia

In case you haven’t heard yet, Representative Eric Cantor (r), the number two republican in the House leadership, lost his primary to a teabagger:

State of Virginia Results

[….]

Unofficial Results – Primary Election – June 10, 2014

Precincts Reporting 242/243

Member House of Representatives – 7th District – Republican

David A. Brat 35,787 55.55%

Eric I. Cantor  28,631 45.45%

Total Votes 64,418

On Twitter:

Robert Costa ‏@costareports

it’s the biggest blow to the GOP establishment in years. Whole network of DC Rs have been wired into Cantor, prepping for when he got gavel 7:47 PM – 10 Jun 2014

That’s a feature, not a bug.

Taegan Goddard ‏@politicalwire

This is easily one of the most stunning primary losses in U.S. political history [….] 7:49 PM – 10 Jun 2014

Seth D. Michaels ‏@sethdmichaels

There is no length you can go to on your right to protect yourself, House Republicans, no show of opposition showy enough. So maybe govern? 7:51 PM – 10 Jun 2014

Heh.

Money, check. Polling, check. Voters, uh….

Reckless Republican Medicaid fiscal follies

15 Thursday May 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Fiscal Responsibility, Medicaid expansion, missouri, Obamacare, republicans, SB509, voter ID

Missouri Republican politicians put the squeeze on middle class and working taxpayers all the time – just consider their reckless tax cut for the rich, a taxcut that will decimate Missouri’s coffers with little benefit for the ordinary Joe. They’re willing to risk tax dollars any old day when it comes to serving their rich patrons or pandering to their base – here you can reflect on the potential costly court cases that will result if Brian Nieves’ gun law nullification bill manages to squeak through. Or think about the beaucoup bucks that will be spent paying for ID cards and other nonsense if Republicans manage to get their way about voter ID – money spent to solve an imaginary problem (although the actual problem Republicans hope to address – voting Democrats – may not be so imaginary).  

By far the worst example of such waste can be found in the GOP’s to-the-death opposition to the Obamacare Medicaid expansion. You know that by refusing to expand Medicaid they’re not only depriving poor Missourians of health insurance that will, for many, be a matter of life and death, but they’re depriving the state of billions in federal Medicaid support. You also know that failing to expand Medicaid will cost the state many potential new jobs in the health sector. Hospitals will also bear the cost of the GOP Obamacare tantrum when they have to continue to treat the uninsured who don’t qualify for either Missouri Medicaid or the Obamacare exchanges in their emergency room, but with considerably smaller federal subsidies to do so. Many might actually be forced to close.

But these costs are all old news. There’s yet another potential strain on the state budget, if Republicans remain obdurate. Obamacare’s coverage mandate along with the publicity about insurance coverage has led many previously uninsured people who are eligible for Medicaid to sign up for coverage, people that Wonkblog’s Jason Millman identifies as “woodwork enrollees,” as in folks coming out of the woodwork. So how does this potentially strain Missouri’s budget? Here’s how:

From a state budget perspective, there’s an important difference between the woodwork population and those newly eligible under the Medicaid expansion. Under the Affordable Care Act, the federal government pays 100 percent of the costs for the Medicaid expansion population through the end of 2016, with the state share gradually increasing to no more than 10 percent. New woodwork enrollees are funded under the traditional Medicaid structure, in which the federal government on average pays 57 percent of the cost – though the federal share varies by state.

In Missouri the actual percentage paid by the state is 64% so the cost will be higher than average, although Millman speculates that fewer folks may come forward in states that don’t have their own exchanges since there’s been less healthcare outreach push to enroll the citizens of in those states. Millman goes on to say that:    

States knew the woodwork effect was coming and had time to prepare for it, since the ACA was passed more than four years ago. The big question is just how accurately were they able to predict its impact.

Except, of course, states like Missouri which is run by Republicans equipped with ideological and partisan blinders. It’s doubtful whether our feckless leaders could manage to plan their way out of a paper bag, much less plan for increased Medicaid enrollment – especially without the increased federal subsidy. These are, after all, the tax-cutting imbeciles who ignored all the contrary evidence and cost the state budget somewhere between $600 to 800 million dollars and $4.8 billion dollars yearly, depending on who you believe.  

The Missouri GOP, Evel Knievel and political stuntsmanship

24 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

corruption, Evel Knievel, impeachment, Jay Nixon, Mark Moon, missouri, republicans, SB509, tax-cuts

 In case you wondered what Missouri Republican legislators are currently cooking up, they are starting impeachment hearings against the Governor. They think that if they set off some big rhetorical fireworks, reality-challenged Missourians (a.k.a., the Republian base) might be susceptible to becoming so riled up about the Governor’s efforts to take care of business that they’ll show their appreciation come election time.

If you want more background read the earlier post by Blue Girl, (“When ideology overtakes governing”). After doing so, you’ll be in a good position to appreciate Rep. Mike Moon’s (R-157) effort at wit when he attempted to defend the risible GOP project:

Moon says the Governor has called the impeachment resolutions “stunts.”   But he says,  “I  guarantee you I’m no Evel Knievel,” referring to the famous motorcycle stunt rider.

Rep. Moon is right that there are some differences beetween the famous stuntman and the state’s GOP lawmakers – although the difference might have to do with something other than performing stunts. Evel Kneivel, who attempted to jump motorcycles over strings of trucks, canyons and other lethal spaces, had to know something about what he was doing in order to avoid going terminally splat. Can we say the same thing about the Republican contingent in Jefferson City? Is it possible that these folks don’t have a clue? For example, the latest evidence that we are represented by buffoons pulling one mindless stunt after another is the current manifestation of the GOP’s ongoing preoccupation with cutting the taxes of the wealthy, SB509:

Nixon says lawmakers might have intended to lower the income tax at the top level.  But what they did to is eliminate state income taxes on incomes of more than $8,000.   He maintains the wording is clear. “Senate Bill 509 says that once this legislation is fully phased in, the top bracket ‘shall be eliminated,'” he says. “The result of this provision is to wipe out 97% of all individual income tax collections in the state of Missouri.”

Nixon’s got expert opinion on his side and the GOP have got an retired Missouri* Supreme Court judge who disagrees. So how do the intellectual giants in the lege come down on the topic? According to Senate floor leader Ron Richard, “we got one learned man who says it’s not an issue; one learned man who says it is. So what do you do?  You take your best shot and try to deal with what you think is your best interest.”  

Does that mean that Richard thinks it is in the state’s best interest to get tangled up in litigation that could do away with most income tax? Or is he just saying that Republicans propose to do nothing about what is either a dangerous error or a potentially dangerous ambiguity? Am I the only person who sees the problem with this response? You think that Richard and his GOP colleagues have got some hidden agenda that would keep them from fixing an ambiguous passage? Or does he think a slap-happy approach to state tax revenue is really the way to go?

Bolstering the latter explanation is the fact that this is not the first time that the geniuses in Jefferson City have proven unable to draft coherent legislation. They made a potentially disastrous drafting error when they tried to push a tax cut bill through last session. And it wasn’t the only such error. Just think – these bozos can’t even get the basics right even when they’ve got outside lobbyists, like the American Legislative Educational Council (ALEC), who want to write legislation for them!

Supporting the hidden agenda thesis, however, is the Governor’s contention that maybe these folks are sneaking in through the back door in order to to do billionaire Rex Sinquefield’s dirty tax cutting work:

Nixon said there were only two possible explanations for how this happened,” the newspaper reported. “It was either an accident or it was put in deliberately ‘at the behest of ideological interests led by one St. Louis billionaire.’ ”

The governor was apparently referring to wealthy financier Rex Sinquefield, who has long advocated eliminating Missouri’s income tax as a way to attract more business to the state.

Nixon hasn’t offered any hard proof for this assertion, but, on the other hand, Missouri’s wild-West attitude toward influence buying in government, coupled with Sinquefield’s rather lavish generosity towards compliant pols, does lend his accusation a certain piquancy, particularly when the GOPers try to pooh-pooh the potential problem when it’s pointed out to them. This point of view suggests that perhaps the strongest resemblance between Missouri GOP pols and Evel Knievel might be that they’re all folks who are (or, in the case of Knievel, were) paid for performing dangerous stunts.

And cutting already low taxes in a low service state is unequivocally a dangerous stunt. The same stunt has backfired in Kansas and it has failed dismally to benefit the citizens of Texas and Oklahoma, states that, while experiencing growth primarily due to their oil reserves, have drastically  curtailed essential services. Which point suggests another significant difference between Missouri GOP pols and Evel Knievel: while Knievel himself shouldered all the risks in return for the cash, the Missouri stuntsmen are content to pocket the bucks (whether quid pro quo or not) and to shove the danger off onto the shoulders of Missouri citizens.

* The word “Missouri” added for clarity.

 

Why Missouri GOP pols won’t expand Medicaid

13 Sunday Apr 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

ACA, Affordable Care Act, health care, John Lamping, Kurt Schaefer, Medicaid expansion, missouri, Obamacare, republicans

It looks like one more year will come and go with no Obamacare Medicaid expansion. Why won’t the Republican fools in Jefferson City do what’s right when it comes to Medicaid? Temper tantrums because the GOP doesn’t like the scary black man in the white house and want to scuttle his legacy? Sure. Pandering to special interests who don’t want to pay their fair share? Of course. Efforts to insure failure of government run social programs that would otherwise deflect power from the GOP? That too. And there’s certainly plenty of delusional thinking, not to mention the ugly, retrograde political ideologies that have resurfaced in recent years.

Martin Longman speculates that the tantrum over Obamacare has extended so long and has been played out so passionately and so irrationally that there’s no way now for the committed GOP to retreat:

What’s interesting is that the Republicans’ are so dependent on ObamaCare being unpopular that they have to try to convince people it is failing even though it certainly is not. It’s not enough to point at polls about the law because those polls will change over time. They have to try to keep the polls low any way they can. One way to do that is to keep the myth alive among their base. Another way is to misinform as many people outside their circle as possible. Finally, they can work the refs in the media to the best of their ability, but that isn’t going to work anymore for media that aren’t formally or informally working for the Republican Party.

All undoubtedly true. But what this GOP miscalculation means in practical terms for Missouri is that no matter how empty their opposition is shown to be, the hardcore deadenders that populate many of the GOP seats in the Jefferson City will fight until their last breath against Obamacare, so, since Medicaid expansion under the program would be a big win, it can’t be allowed.  

This irrational animus is the sole reason why state Senator John Lamping (R-19), when confronted with efforts from those in his own party to find a way to take a good deal without losing face, insisted no way, “this is done. It’s not happening. Go find something else to do.” It’s why state Senator Kurt Schaefer (R-19) thinks an opportunity to do something to help his constituents is a “problem,” whining about “why is this somehow now our problem, and our immediate problem that has to be solved by us before the end of the session, when we didn’t create this problem?” It’s kind of like  having a meltdown when you win the lottery because you’re too stupid to figure out how to claim the prize.

But reality’s a bitch and, as they say, what goes round comes round, so sooner or later reality will catch up with the particular butt-end of the GOP that is now running the Republican show. Small solace though, since meanwhile, Missouri, currently ranked 39th in the nation for health outcomes, will continue to hover around the bottom, and, what’s even worse, people will actually, needlessly, die just so a few Republican diehards can save face and can continue to insist for a few more years that Obamacare really is a harbringer of Armageddon.  

Campaign Finance: What, no vintners?

05 Saturday Apr 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

campaign finance, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, republicans

Today, at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C000953 04/04/2014 MO REPUBLICAN PARTY Anheuser Busch Companies One Busch Place St Louis MO 63118 4/3/2014 $10,000.00

[emphasis added]

The 1% would probably like the vintner thing. Then again, the champagne of bottle beer thing works. Oh, wait…

Campaign Finance: Pass the Dutchie…

12 Wednesday Feb 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

campaign finance, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, republicans, State Senate

…on the right hand side.

Today, at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C141013 02/11/2014 EASTERN MISSOURI SENATE PAC Missouri Senate Campaign Committee PO Box 754 Jefferson City MO 65102 2/11/2014 $100,000.00

C141014 02/11/2014 SOUTHWEST MISSOURI SENATE PAC Missouri Senate Campaign Committee PO Box 754 Jefferson City MO 65102 2/11/2014 $100,000.00

[emphasis added]

Well, that’s certainly a lot of money.

Who’s who?:

C141013: Eastern Missouri Senate Pac

3220 W Edgewood Ste E Committee Type: Political Action

Jefferson City Mo 65109

[….] Established Date: 01/16/2014

  Termination Date:

Treasurer Deputy Treasurer

Derrick Good John Sheehan

[….]

[emphasis added]

And:

C141014: Southwest Missouri Senate Pac

3220 W Edgewood Ste E Committee Type: Political Action

Jefferson City Mo 65109

[….] Established Date: 01/16/2014

  Termination Date:

Treasurer Deputy Treasurer

Miles Ross John Sheehan

[….]

[emphasis added]

And who contributed that money to these PACs?:

C071094: Missouri Senate Campaign Committee

Po Box 754 Committee Type: Political Action

Jefferson City Mo 65102-0754

[….] Established Date: 04/10/2007

  Termination Date:

Treasurer Deputy Treasurer

Tony Feather John Sheehan

[….]

[emphasis added]

You’d think it’d be easier just to write the checks from one source.

They do have resources to spend:

C071094: Missouri Senate Campaign Committee

Po Box 754 Committee Type: Political Action

Jefferson City Mo 65102-0754

[….] Established Date: 04/10/2007

  Termination Date:

Information Reported On: 2014 – January Quarterly Report

Beginning Money on Hand $281,957.19

Monetary Receipts + $223,310.00

Monetary Expenditures – $49,412.33

Contributions Made – $0.00

Other Disbursements – $0.00

Subtotal     $173,897.67

Ending Money On Hand   $455,854.86

[emphasis added]

A few of the contributions:

CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED – SUPPLEMENTAL



MISSOURI SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE
[pdf] 1/15/2014

Committee To Elect Ron Richard

PO Box 2523

Joplin MO 64803

11/4/2013

$10,000.00

Dempsey for Senate

Two Westbury Dr.

St. Charles MO 63301

11/4/2013

$6,000.00

QC Holdings Inc.

9401 Indian Creek Pkwy Ste 1500

Overland Park KS 66210

11/14/2013

$15,000.00

Consumer Lending Alliance Inc.

92 Royster Drive

Crawfordville FL 32327

11/16/2013

$5,000.00

Citizens for Ryan Silvey.

PO Box 10626

Gladstone MO 64188

11/18/2013

$10,000.00

Enterprise Holdings Inc. PAC

600 Corporate Park Drive

St. Louis MO 63105

11/26/2013

$1,000.00

Advance America

135 N Church Street

Spartanburg SC 29306

12/12/2013

$5,000.00

Dempsey for Senate

Two Westbury Dr.

St. Charles MO 63301

12/12/2013

$4,000.00

[emphasis added]

And a whole bunch more.

Since that quarterly report:

C071094 01/07/2014 MISSOURI SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE Grow Missouri 308 E High St. Suite 301 Jefferson City MO 65101 1/6/2014 $25,000.00

C071094 01/22/2014 MISSOURI SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE Silvey for Missouri PO Box 10626 Gladstone MO 64188 1/22/2014 $40,000.00

Yep, republicans will always have the money the need and more.

Previously:

Campaign Finance: paying Peter, who then pays Paul (January 7, 2014)

Campaign Finance: “…pawn to queen’s bishop three…” (January 14, 2014)

Medicaid expansion and death from preventable causes: On their heads be it

07 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

ACA, Affordable Care Act, Charlie Christ, health care, Medicaid, missouri, Obamacare, republicans, Rick Scott

Today TPM reports that former Florida govenor Charlie Crist, who is running against Medicare-fraud perpetrator Governor Rick Scott to regain the governorship of that state, spoke some home truths to MSNBC’s Chuck Todd about the consequences of failing to take advantage of Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion provisions:

About a million of my fellow Floridians are not getting health care today, and I am told by friends SEIU (sic), that means six people in Florida die every day as a result of that. Every day,” Crist said.

[…]

It’s not hard to figure that out. It’s common sense. Look at it. If people are sick, and they aren’t getting health care, what happens? They usually get sicker,” Crist said. “Or they die. I mean, those are just the facts, Chuck. That’s what happens. In addition to it, it’s economically stupid. As a result, we’re not getting $51 billion over the next 10 years for the health care institutions in Florida. So the people get better health care, so that kids don’t get sick, that we take care of people. That’s what public servants are supposed to do. That’s why I’m running against Rick Scott, because he’s not a good servant.”

The claim that six people will die daily if Medicaid is not expanded likely comes, as TPM noted, from a joint Harvard University and  City University of New York report published last month. You can quibble about the actual number – it’s an estimate after all – but the point is that people will die while ideologues posture and babble incoherently about “government dependency” and the “unsustainable costs” involved in directing federal tax dollars back to the home state.

What does this factoid mean for Missouri? Approximately 2190 yearly deaths that could have been prevented.

But we can take it farther. Most Republicans oppose expanding Medicaid and most Democrats support it. In the Missouri Senate, 24 members are Republicans; in the House, 106 representatives are Republicans, making a total of 130 Republicans running things in Jefferson City. We can do some rough math and conclude that if Medicaid is not expanded, each Republican in the legislature will be responsible for the death of 16.8 Missourians per year, give or take a few.

A crude, tongue-in-cheek exercise perhaps? But no matter, it’s a sure bet that there will be deaths as a result of the action – or rather inaction – of Missouri Republicans. And no matter how you count our dead fellow Missourians, they’ll amount to quite rack of trophies for each Missouri GOPer.

First sentence amended for clarity and a link was added.

The old GOP folks at home

18 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

energy efficiency, Energy Indepencence and Security Act of 2007, GOP, incandescent light bulbs, missouri, republicans

After Mitt Romney’s humiliating defeat in 2012, many pundits explicitly or implicitly agreed with bloger Ted Frier who wrote that the GOP had deteriorated into a party of ” elderly conservative whites who year by year are a shrinking share of the national electorate.” And it’s true. How do I know? The last-ditch war over light bulbs.

As a result of legislation passed during he Bush administration, The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, incandescent light bulbs that fail to meet higher energy efficiency standards are on the way out. The new standards were phased in, first 100- and 75-watt bulbs bit the dust, and starting this month the popular 60- and 40-Watt bulbs will not be replaced on store shelves after they are sold out. Republicans have been fighting this event tooth and nail. There’s been efforts at legislation such as Rep. Jeff Duncan’s (R-S.C.) bill, H.R. 3818 which attempts to repeal the ban. And now victory of a sort – the new omnibus appropriations bill contains a rider that will defund efforts to enforce the new standards. Of course, American manufacturers have, in anticipation of the new rules, almost completely ceased manufacture of the less efficient bulbs, but, with no prospect of enforcement, such bulbs could conceivably be purchased from foreign suppliers and sold in the U.S. to the folks who just can’t let go.

Stopping the new rules, believe it or not, has been one of the GOP’s leading priorities. When it first came to my attention in 2011, I wrote:

Did you scratch your head when the GOP House, faced with a deteriorating economy, decided to concentrate their energies on light bulb standards a few weeks ago? Did this suggest nothing so much as the crankiness of some of your elderly family members who curse as they try to figure out how to circumvent car seat belts, wax furious when they can’t smoke in restaurants, and carry on about the fools who buy “five-dollar” cups of coffee? …

Yup. You know just who it is who can’t let go. Geezers. I hate to say it because I think – technically at least – I qualify as one, but most of the carpers are undoubtedly geezers. Represented by the GOP, a.k.a. Geezers Only Party.

I noted back in 2011 that there’s more to the great light bulb war than how we get our light. What’s in play is the same impulse Charles Blow was talking about when he wrote that “Republicans are trying to hold back a storm surge of demographic change with a white picket fence.” The GOP plays to a constituency filled with nostalgia for a past that is changing, desperate to hold back a future they don’t understand and fear. Is it any wonder that the future of a GOP so constrained is itself imperiled?

2nd and 3rd paragraph slightly edited for clarity, link added to 3rd paragraph.

A simple political solution to Missouri’s Medicaid impasse

02 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Balloon Juice, General Assembly, Jay Nixon, Jonathan Swift, Medicaid, missouri, republicans

At times discourse on the Internets can be a rich source of solutions to our political problems. One such solution to the Medicaid impasse between the republican controlled Missouri General Assembly and sane people in our state is offered by dpm at Balloon Juice (in reference to Iowa). Take the same Federal money and relabel the program.

….as long as the program is called something like the “Non Obamacare Medical Workhouse Plan for Undeserving Moochers Who Should be Shamed”….

The republican General Assembly just might go for it with slight modification – refuse the Federal dollars and completely defund it. The shaming part could remain.

You’re welcome.

2013’s worst of the worst in Missouri

01 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Ann Wagner, Boeing, Brian Nieves, GOP, Government shutdown, Jay Nixon, Medicaid expansion, missouri, Obamacare, republicans, Rex Sinquefield, tax-incentives, The Greater St. Louis Labor Council, unemployment benefits, Unions, Vicky Hartzler

I admit it. I like making my own end-of-the-year lists, and I like to see how my opinions line up with other list-makers. It’s silly maybe, but it can help to refine one’s perspective. So here’s my first end-of-the-year list which names the political actors and/or acts that struck me as the most absurd and/or inexcusable during 2013, hence the titular worst of the worst. (In order to balance the negativity, though, I’ll be following it with a list of the best of the best.) It goes without saying that my selections are entirely subjective and reflect my opinion only – nobody else is implicated by my judgement, although I invite anyone so inclined to take issue with my selections or offer their contrary assessments in the comments. And with that, away we go:

1. Rex Sinquefield: Sinquefield is a retired billionaire financier whose hobby is buying up Missouri state government in order to provide a staging ground for his libertarian theology. He plays a long game, lavishing tons of dollars on politicians of every stripe as long as they show even some teeny-tiny signs of sympathy for a small sliver of his goals.  What does he want long-term? Just a Missouri with all the attractions of the brutish Randian paradise for wealthy Übermenschen that excites today’s conservatives.

But hey, perverting the political process for the benefit of the rich and powerful is nothing new and, on its own, wouldn’t merit more than an honorable mention among the worst of Missouri’s recent worst. Mr. Sinquefield has been taking full advantage of the Supreme Court’s destructive endorsement of the idea that money equals speech for a long time. This year, however, plantation master Sinquefield found it necessary to crack the whip; he quickly helped launch a lawsuit to stop a campaign finance reform bill that would have reduced the decibels of his green-backed free speech to a level more in line with that enjoyed by less wealthy citizens of the state. And what does he do with this free-speech? He lies – as in his recent Forbes Magazine op-ed, an overtly counterfactual apotheosis of Kansas Governor Brownback’s tax free policies.

2. The Missouri anti-Obamacare obstructionists: And by obstructionists I mean the Republicans who control the state legislature. Thanks to these jerks, 193,000 Missourians will be out in the healthcare cold. These are the people who don’t make enough money to qualify for subsidies on the Obamacare exchanges since those in their income range were were meant to to get coverage through an extension of Medicaid eligibility, an extension that the state’s GOP, taking advantage of another gift from our conservative Supreme Court, have refused to enact. The same folks have refused to set up Obamacare exchanges, tried to hinder use of the federal exchange and pushed one dishonest story after another about the imagined perils of the law. Talk all you want about the initial failures of the Obamacrare Website or Obama’s rather tame “lie of the year,” the folks who’ve done the real damage are quite simply the politicos who are busy patting themselves on the back because they have saved Missouri’s poor from the moral hazard represented by actual health care.

3. Members of the Missouri GOP congressional delegation: These folks, many of them multi-millionaires, came home to enjoy their cushy Christmas celebrations after refusing to extend benefits for unemployed American workers. As a result, last Saturday 21,329 jobless Missourians lost the meager stipend (averaging $242) that often meant keeping food on the table. If nothing is done, 35,400 more workers will lose this cushion in the first months of 2014. The people’s Republican representatives felt free to cut benefits off even though currently there are, according to some sources, three applicants for most jobs and over 4 million long-term unemployed nationally. Missouri’s current unemployment rate is 6.1%.

4. Rep. Ann Wagner (R-2): Wagner makes it onto this list due to her emergence as one of the aspiring leaders of the GOP House membership, in which role she stood behind the recent government shutdown, welcoming the “fight” on behalf of “the American people,” while simultaneously trying to lay the blame on the Democrats who, for some inexplicable reason, wouldn’t roll over and play dead after winning a major election. This shutdown cost taxpayers $24 billion at a conservative estimate. Thanks alot, Ann. If Wagner represents the new face of the GOP, the concept needs some work.

5. Governor Jay Nixon: Nixon arguably doesn’t belong on a list filled with boneheads and charlatans – but he landed here because I expect more of him when it comes to looking out for the long-term welfare of the state as opposed to selling us out for a short-term, politically attractive “get.” I’m talking about the Boeing giveaway here. There’s plenty of evidence that massive incentives such as those offered to Boeing are bad economic policy, particularly in a state that like Missouri is already starved for revenue. It leaves a particularly bad taste when one takes into account the sort of underhanded back-room deals that seem to have been required to bring it into being. But no matter how you cut it, $3.5 billion in tax breaks is a bit much to pay in order to buy bragging rights for a handful of jobs – especially when we’re talking about jobs that were probably never going to come  here in the first place. When politicians you have no choice but to trust are influenced by corrupt, corporatist thinking about the allocation of cost and benefit, it makes it just that much harder to believe that change will ever be possible. You want to know why Democrats don’t turn out in off-year elections, why there’s an enthusiasm gap? Look no further.

6. The Greater St. Louis Labor Council: This one hurts. It hurts because it’s more evidence of the demise of labor. It’s clear that Boeing’s effort to spike a bidding war for its 777X manufacturing facility, as the Kansas City Star’s Mary Sanchez noted, is “just leverage for Boeing Co. to go after the jugular of a labor union.”  Now, I’ve always believed that what made unions work was a little thing called solidarity – and that its exercise is not defined in regional terms. Yet not only were local unions willing to undercut their brothers and sisters in Washington, but they quickly squelched Gordon King, a representative of the  local Machinists District 837, when he attempted to stand up and do what union members are supposed to do for each other. When it becomes “my workers first” and not “all workers together,” unions have truly lost the war, and the unbecoming eagerness of the local labor council to kiss up to Boeing is just one more step along the way. I understand the desperation that has brought our local labor leaders to this point, but it still hurts.

7. Rep. Vicky Hartzler (R-4): No list of worsts would be complete with the stench of hypocrisy – of which Hartzler is redolent. And make no mistake, it takes chutzpah to vote to cut the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), part of the safety net for the poor, wile keeping sacrosanct massive agricultural subsidies for rich farmers that Hartzler and her family continue to receive. Hartzler, author of a book titled Running God’s Way that is described as “a must-read for everyone interested in serving God through political involvement,” has shown herself again and again to be unwilling to put into practice Christ’s admonition in Matthew 25:34-36 to minister to those in need, and has, instead, allied herself with the wealthy about whom Christ declared “it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God” (Mark 11:25).

8. Brian Nieves: In a state legislature filled with chuckleheads and bozos, if one had to single out one supreme example of the resentment-fueled, raging white doofus, it would have to be state Senator Brian “Mad Dog” Nieves. Sharia law, Agenda 21, drones spying on farmers, gold-buggery, tentherism, you name it, if it’s crazy Nieves is for it. Add to the mix his eagerness to physically and verbally attack opponents, constituents, you name it, and you’ve got a disaster ready to happen. He’s on this year’s list, though, because he’s one of the brains (and I use the term loosely) who responded to the Sandy Hook massacre by pushing a gun bill so irresponsible that even members of his own party ultimately refused to over-ride its veto by the Governor. In his own words:

… If we, as a nation, would collectively take a few short minutes, maybe even an hour, to actually research what our Founding Fathers said, in their own words, about gun ownership and gun control, we would see that what we arbitrarily refer to as “Assault Rifles” would fit squarely with what they wanted us to have! …

Now that constitutional scholar Nieves has devoted an hour or so to researching the issue, I should probably run out and buy my assault weapon today! Then I can wave it around and act tough just like “Mad Dog.” Just in case you’re worried, there’ll be lots more fun and games ahead. And like last year, very little attention to important business.

Slightly edited for clarity.

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