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Entries in senate (72)

Wednesday
Jul292009

Sotomayor Backed By Civil Rights Organizations

By Courtney Ann Jackson-Talk Radio News Service

Civil rights organizations voiced their support of Supreme Court nominee Judge Sonia Sotomayor just one day after the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 13-6 to confirm her nomination.

Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) joined representatives of various organizations in a press conference Wednesday to discuss the historic nomination and upcoming Senate vote.

Leadership Conference on Civil Rights President Wade Henderson said, “Her elevation to the Supreme Court would mark another advance on the road to equal opportunity that this nation has traveled from its founding; but, even more importantly, it would give Americans a Justice they can be confident will uphold their constitutional values, the rule of law and the principle of equal justice for all.”

Lillian Rodriguez Lopez of the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda spoke about Sotomayor from both a professional and a personal perspective. Lopez fought back tears as she explained that while she, too, is a Hispanic woman from New York, she could only “pray to possess” the qualities and skills that Sotomayor possesses.

“I hope that next week that the members of the entire Senate will send a message of resounding support for Judge Sotomayor to the American people, to the Hispanic American people, when they vote for her confirmation,” said Lopez.

Reid said he is currently trying to cut a deal with Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) regarding the floor debate, but isn't certain on how long the debate may last. He dismissed Republicans' concerns over Sotomayor, asking rhetorically, “How many times do we have to listen to the same speeches on the same brief statements she made, on the same case that she talked about?”

Reid added that the Senate will be working long hours to ensure that the confirmation vote is one of the last things they do before they leave for the August recess.
Tuesday
Jul212009

Republicans Postpone Sotomayor Vote

By Matthew S. Schwartz
Legal Affairs Correspondent - Talk Radio News Service

The confirmation of Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor may be a sure thing, but Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee have requested a one-week delay in the committee vote.

Chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) said he was "disappointed" by the delay, but "they have a right to put it over." Republicans informed him over the weekend of their intent to delay the vote to next Tuesday. If the committee approves her, the vote will go to the full Senate floor.

Leahy stressed the importance of confirming Sotomayor quickly, as the Supreme Court reconvenes early next term to hear a case on the constitutionality of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance bill. "I hope that once she is passed out of this committee, there will be no delay on the floor, because she will have a very, very few weeks after she is confirmed to move to Washington" and prepare for the case, he said. "Delay would not help either her or the Supreme Court."

Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Al.) said that even with the delay, "Confirmation, if it occurs, will occur sooner than even John Roberts." Chief Justice Roberts began his Judiciary Committee hearings on Sept. 12, 2005, and was confirmed by the full Senate on Sept. 29.

Just 10 members of the 19-member Judiciary Committee showed up Tuesday, the minimum needed for committee business to take place.

Leahy told reporters he doesn't know how long the floor debate will last, but it should be quick because senators should all know how they plan to vote by the time the official debate starts.
Monday
Jul062009

Senator-elect Franken Receives Warm Welcome From Democrats

By Courtney Ann Jackson-Talk Radio News Service

Senator-elect Al Franken (D-Minn.) is receiving a warm welcome from Congressional Democrats, complete with a press conference alongside Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). During his brief statement, Franken struck a more serious tone than that of his days as a comedian. 

Al Franken


“I am going to work day and night to make sure that our kids have a great future and that America’s best days lay ahead. I’m ready to get to work,” said Franken.

Franken will raise the total number of Democrats in the Senate to 60. However, Franken said all he is focused on is the number two, noting that he sees himself as the second Senator from the state of Minnesota. 

“Much has been made of the expectations of Al Franken joining the Senate,” said Reid. “Here are my expectations. He, of course, is going to work hard for the people of Minnesota. They’ve gone far too long without full representation...I expect him to help deliver on the change that this country is demanding.”

Franken described Minnesotans as practical people, adding that his constituents want to make sure the work being done in the Senate makes sense and has a “strong return for investments.”

Franken highlighted health care, economy, energy policy, and education as some of his major concerns.
Thursday
Jun112009

Pelosi Supports President's Pay-As-You-Go Method

By Courtney Ann Jackson-Talk Radio News Service

The acceleration of President Obama's pay-as-you-go initiative, a method that would require Congress to use current revenues for capital items instead of borrowing funds by issuing bonds, and health care reform are important steps in turning the economy around, according to U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). Pelosi and other legislators met with the President earlier this week as he announced the details of the PAYGO initiative.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi


The U.S. operated under the PAYGO method throughout the 1990’s. Pelosi credited it for leading to the balanced budgets and eventual surplus of the Clinton administration. 

“Democrats are coming together around this concept. For many years it has been the central organizing purpose of the blue dogs: fiscal discipline, fiscal responsibility...But I want you to know that there are initiatives from all sectors of our caucus which support pay as you go,” said Pelosi today during a press conference.

Pelosi said she was enthusiastic about “accelerating the (PAYGO) discussion” as a tool to improve the economy and initiate healthcare reform in the U.S.

The Speaker touched upon what kind of healthcare model Congress will pursue.

“It should be administratively self-sufficient. It should be a real competitor with the private sector and not have an unfair advantage. When you say the words public option and that is the term of art we will be using, you have to say right next to it: level playing field.”

She said Congress will soon consider legislation on the supplemental appropriations bill for Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and pandemic flu. The House will also consider legislation to give the Food and Drug Administration legal authority to regulate how cigarettes and other tobacco products are produced and distributed.  Committee work will be focused on the pillars of the President’s agenda which were in the budget. They include: health care, education, energy, reducing the deficit, lowering taxes, creating jobs, and turning the economy around.
Wednesday
May202009

Faulty Buildings Not Bullets Killing American Soldiers  

By Jonathan Bronstein, Talk Radio News

Senator Byron Dorgan
Senator Byron Dorgan
Ryan Masseth, a Staff Sergeant in the United States Army, was killed not by an enemy bullet, but by faulty electrical wiring. He was electrocuted while showering on a United States military installation in Baghdad during January 2008.

Yet, the company who wired the building, Kellogg, Brand and Root, also known as KBR, was aware of this issue some 11 months before Staff Sgt. Masseth’s death. The U.S. government recently reclassified Staff Sgt. Masseth’s death as accidental to gross negligence on the part of KBR.

“KBR’s shoddy electrical work wasted tax payer money,” said Senator Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) at the Senate Democratic Policy Committee hearing, who continued to say, “and even worse put our service members at risk, sometimes for their lives. 18 people died as a result of this negligence.”

Senator Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.), Chairman of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, was critical of the government for giving bonuses to KBR from 2004 to 2008 that totaled some $85 million, even though their work failed often to meet even the most basic standards.

The Army’s standard definition for awarding bonuses requires that the contractor's “performance is of the highest quality that could be achieved under the contract. There are no areas of deficiencies or problems encountered during the evaluation period.”

The 2008 edition of the Defense Contract Management Report found that there were 26,205 incidents of improper wiring, 4,571 incidents of outlet box hazards, and 3,201 hazardous switches and fuses. All of these safety deficiencies pose an unneeded threat to American service people, according to Dorgan.

KBR Master Electrician, Eric Peters, estimated that 50 percent of all buildings were not wired properly, and it often took several visits before KBR’s poorly trained electricians could fix the problem. Each one of these visits was charged to the U.S. government, and therefore to the American taxpayer.

Lautenberg attributed KBR’s ability to obtain these large bonuses to the no-bid contracts given to corporations for the reconstruction of Iraq.

“I knew I could no longer work for a company so completely focused on the bottom line they would disregard the safety of their employees and those we were serving: our soldiers,” said Peters, who left KBR two months after being hired.

Jim Childs, another Master Electrician who worked for KBR, had similar gripes with the company and their complete disregard for safety.

“KBR did not do this work to any electrical code,” said Childs.

KBR even attempted to switch to the more lenient British electrical code, but upon re-inspecting the wiring according to the newly implemented standards he still discovered multiple violations.

Childs cited examples of safe buildings that KBR retrofitted and became dangerous, when he said “what had been a safe, properly wired building became a danger to those inside because the re-wiring performed by KBR was not done properly.”

When Childs attempted to solve the wiring problems with quick and cheap solutions, KBR refused to listen and wanted to re-wire the entire building, at the expense of the tax payer.

Childs travelled to Afghanistan to inspect KBR’s work their, but to his dismay, “I found the exact same code violations.”

This wiring situation, according to Childs, is an epidemic that needlessly endangers the lives of American servicemen and women.

Much like its own employees, the Department of Defense is also losing confidence in KBR’s ability.

Captain David Graff, Commander of Defense Contract Management Agency, said that “Many within the Department of Defense have lost or are losing all remaining confidence in KBR’s ability to successfully and repeatedly perform the required electrical support services mission in Iraq.”
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