Lazy Saturday Reads: Media Belatedly Begins Vetting Bernie
Posted: February 13, 2016 Filed under: morning reads, The Media SUCKS, U.S. Politics | Tags: 6th Democratic Debate 2016, Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton, Income Inequality, Racism, tone-deaf, Wall Street billionaires 47 CommentsGood Morning!!
Before I get started, I want to thank Delphyne for posting the above photo on Facebook. I just couldn’t resist it. Now to the news of the day.
After his big win in the New Hampshire primary, Bernie Sanders is finally beginning to get some serious vetting from the media. It will be interesting to see how he handles the pressure.
Last night, this story popped up at The New York Times: FEC Tells Sanders Campaign That Some Donors May Have Given Too Much. The FEC found more than 100 “small contributors” had given more than the legal limit of $2,700 to Sanders’ campaign. It’s not a huge deal according to the Times, but to me it seems to be part of a pattern of dishonesty on the part of the Bernie’s campaign.
Here’s a more critical take on this story from the Daily News Bin: FEC launches inquiry into hundreds of “excessive” contributions to Bernie Sanders campaign.
In what the FEC has titled “Excessive, Prohibited, and Impermissible Contributions” to the Bernie Sanders campaign, it lists nearly a thousand contributions from hundreds of donors, some of them repeat offenders. Sanders is accused of failing to provide adequate detail on who the contributors are beyond their names, which campaigns are required to make their best effort to do under federal law. The FEC is also informing Sanders that he “may have to refund the excessive amount” if he can’t adequately explain where all the money came from….
The FEC report also accuses the Bernie Sanders campaign of widespread “incorrectly reported” reimbursements for travel purposes and other costs. Sanders has been warned that if he cannot explain the stunningly long laundry list of violations, “failure to adequately respond by the response date noted above could result in an audit or enforcement action.” Read the full FEC report.
Then there’s this from the Wall Street Journal: Sanders’s Record, Filings Show Benefits From Super PACs, Links to Wall Street Donors.
In nearly every speech, Bernie Sanders reminds voters that he doesn’t have a super PAC, doesn’t want money from Wall Street and rejects establishment politics.
Yet the Vermont senator has benefited from at least $1.5 million in backing from super PACs and from political groups that don’t have to fully disclose their donors, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission….
He may not have formed one of his own, but Mr. Sanders is getting help from National Nurses United for Patient Protection, a super PAC that gets its money from the nation’s largest nurses’ union, with nearly 185,000 members.
The union doesn’t have to disclose its donors, but a spokesman said the super PAC money comes exclusively from members’ dues. Representatives from the union have frequently joined the senator at events and this week launched a bus tour across South Carolina ahead of the state’s Feb. 27 primary. At an Iowa campaign stop, Mr. Sanders thanked the group for being “one of the sponsors” of his campaign.
In a five-minute video posted online by the nurses union in October, Mr. Sanders said he was “honored” to have the union’s support and highlighted his work on its members’ behalf.
The rest of the article provides details on Sanders’ fundraising from big donors to the DSCC, which has supported in his House and Senate campaigns.
“He was just like any other senator hobnobbing with lawyers and lobbyists from DC,” said Rebecca Geller, a Washington attorney who attended with her husband, a financial services lobbyist. Ms. Geller, who has donated to Mrs. Clinton’s campaign, said Mr. Sanders was happy to take photos with her family. “My kids have fond memories of him hanging out by the hot tub.”
In addition, Sanders’ claims in debates and other forums are getting more fact checking and scrutiny. Here’s one example from The Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler: Bernie Sanders’s claim that Hillary Clinton objected to meeting with ‘our enemies.’ This is refeering to the exchange in which Sanders claimed that Clinton said that Obama’s proposal to talk to Iran’s leaders without preconditions was troubling. Kessler:
Some arguments never die. For readers who may not recall a pivotal exchange between then-Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, here’s what Clinton and Sanders are arguing about.
In a debate on July 24, 2007 hosted by CNN, a question came to the candidates from YouTube:
In 1982, Anwar Sadat traveled to Israel, a trip that resulted in a peace agreement that has lasted ever since. In the spirit of that type of bold leadership, would you be willing to meet separately, without precondition, during the first year of your administration, in Washington or anywhere else, with the leaders of Iran, Syria, Venezuela, Cuba and North Korea, in order to bridge the gap that divides our countries?
Obama took the question first and answered emphatically yes:
I would. And the reason is this, that the notion that somehow not talking to countries is punishment to them — which has been the guiding diplomatic principle of this administration — is ridiculous.
Now, Ronald Reagan and Democratic presidents like JFK constantly spoke to Soviet Union at a time when Ronald Reagan called them an evil empire. And the reason is because they understood that we may not trust them and they may pose an extraordinary danger to this country, but we had the obligation to find areas where we can potentially move forward.
And I think that it is a disgrace that we have not spoken to them. We’ve been talking about Iraq — one of the first things that I would do in terms of moving a diplomatic effort in the region forward is to send a signal that we need to talk to Iran and Syria because they’re going to have responsibilities if Iraq collapses.
They have been acting irresponsibly up until this point. But if we tell them that we are not going to be a permanent occupying force, we are in a position to say that they are going to have to carry some weight, in terms of stabilizing the region.
Then Clinton responded, saying that before any such high-level meetings, diplomatic groundwork first would be necessary:
Well, I will not promise to meet with the leaders of these countries during my first year. I will promise a very vigorous diplomatic effort because I think it is not that you promise a meeting at that high a level before you know what the intentions are.
I don’t want to be used for propaganda purposes. I don’t want to make a situation even worse. But I certainly agree that we need to get back to diplomacy, which has been turned into a bad word by this administration.
And I will purse very vigorous diplomacy.
And I will use a lot of high-level presidential envoys to test the waters, to feel the way. But certainly, we’re not going to just have our president meet with Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez and, you know, the president of North Korea, Iran and Syria until we know better what the way forward would be.
As president, Obama took the path that Clinton had recommended.
During the PBS debate on Thursday night, Sanders tried to explain away his no vote on a comprehensive immigration bill that was sponsored by Ted Kennedy and supported by most Democrats. Matt Yglesias responded at Vox: What Bernie Sanders told Lou Dobbs in 2007 about why he opposed the Kennedy-McCain immigration bill.
In Thursday night’s debate, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders briefly exchanged words over his vote against the 2007 comprehensive immigration reform bill that John McCain and Ted Kennedy wrote and that both Clinton and Barack Obama supported, while Sanders and most Republicans plus some Democrats were opposed. Sanders cited as his motive opposition to the bill’s guest worker provisions, which he said were bad because a Southern Poverty Law Center investigation had likened conditions in existing agricultural guest worker programs to slavery.
It’s interesting to compare this with what he said about the bill at the time on Lou Dobbs’s show. Dobbs, for those who’ve forgotten, was a business news broadcaster who refashioned himself as a somewhat Trump-esque anti-immigration, anti–trade deal populist in the mid-aughts.
If you watch the interview you’ll see that Sanders isn’t particularly interested in working conditions for guest workers and he’s also not narrowly focused on the H2 programs the SPLC report was about — he also talks about H1 programs for skilled workers that, whatever their flaws, are clearly not slavery.
Dobbs is opposed to the whole idea of “amnesty,” which Sanders was not, but Sanders also doesn’t argue with Dobbs about it. Sanders doesn’t really say anything about the costs and benefits to immigrants themselves — whether that’s people who’ve been living illegally in the United States or potential future guest workers — one way or another. His focus is on the idea that “what happens in Congress is to a very significant degree dictated by big-money interests” and that “I don’t know why we need millions of people to be coming into this country as guest workers who will work for lower wages than American workers and drive wages down even lower than they are now.”
Finally, Sanders got himself in some hot water at the Black citizens’ forum in Minneapolis yesterday. Politico reported on the meeting and Twitter went nuts.
Sanders criticism grows pointed at black community forum
MINNEAPOLIS – A warm, welcoming African-American crowd grew increasingly frustrated with Sen. Bernie Sanders on Friday evening, complaining that he’s too scared to talk about specifically black issues.
Sanders was here for “A Community Forum on Black America,” introduced by the local congressman, Rep. Keith Ellison, one of Sanders’ only two endorsers in the House, But unlike many of the packed rallies that have greeted Sanders in other parts of the country, neither the folding chairs nor the bleachers in the gym here at Patrick Henry High School were full….
Questions from a panel and the crowd drilled down on felon voting rights — which Sanders said he strongly supported restoring — but turned to environmental racism and reparations for slavery, with demands for more exact answers about actions the candidate for the Democratic nomination would take if he was elected president.
The tension quickly rose over his 40-minute appearance, with moderator Anthony Newby repeatedly calling for “specific redress.”
“I know you’re scared to say ‘black,’ I know you’re scared to say ‘reparations,’” said Felicia Perry, a local entrepreneur and artist on the stage. “Can’t you please specifically talk about black people?”
Sanders responded:
“I said ‘black’ 50 times,” he said. “That’s the 51st time.”
But, Sanders said, the issues at hand are more about economics than race.
“It’s not just black,” he said. “It’s Latino. In some rural areas, it is white.”
WTF?! Could this guy be any more tone deaf? Even though he has to know he needs black voters to win Southern primaries, Sanders just can’t break away from his obsession with Wall Street billionaires and income inequality to see that racism is a separate though related issue that affects how people fare in our culture.
You can read about the exchange in a little more detail in this CNN article: Bernie Sanders faces frustrated crowd at race forum in Minneapolis. The story ends with this interesting description of the chaos:
The forum finished inconclusively when activist Clyde Bellecourt commandeered the microphone to talk about issues relating to Native Americans being what he called “completely forgotten” by the federal government.
His statement drew on for several heated and emotional minutes as moderators asked him to get to his question and Bellecourt declared, “If you have to carry me out of here, carry me out of here!”
Sanders rose from his chair, thanked the crowd and scurried offstage.
Sanders simply doesn’t understand racism. As a white person, I can’t claim a deep understanding either, but at least I get that racism is a powerful force keeping Black people down and the problem won’t be solved by breaking up big banks or raising taxes on the wealthy and middle class to pay for free college and single payer health care.
Sanders’ tunnel vision on the income inequality issue blinds him to the systemic effects of racism, sexism, and other forms of prejudice, which interact with economics but cannot be solely explained or remedied by economic policies.
This attitude goes along with Sanders’ odd statement at the debate when he was asked what he would do about systemic racism. From USA Today:
The African-American community lost half of their wealth as a result of the Wall Street collapse, says Sanders. When “you have unbelievable rates of incarceration,” which leaves children without their parents, “clearly we are looking at institutional racism” and an economy in which the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, he says. Race relations would be better under a Sanders presidency, he says, because he’d create millions of jobs for low-income kids “so they’re not hanging out on street corners.”
How does Bernie expect to pull in Black voters when he claims he would do better on this issue than the first Black American president and when he characterizes Black kids as “hanging out on street corners.” Good grief. Kids hang out on street corners in my middle class town and the even wealthier communities nearby. Kids in cities tend to do that.
Bernie just doesn’t get it, and he doesn’t even seem able to tailor his message to groups whose votes he desperately needs.
What stories are you following today? Please post your thoughts and links in the comment thread and have a great weekend!














Tommy Christopher at Mediaite: Ben Jealous Needs to Stop Lying about Hillary and “Super Predators.”
http://www.mediaite.com/online/ben-jealous-needs-to-stop-lying-about-hillary-and-superpredators/
Ben moved to the list of people I have zero respect for when he immediately went on TV and demanded that Shirley Sherrod resign.
This was before he had seen the full video or done any research. iows – he thought breitbart was an excellent source for news.
Right on Dee.
One of the reasons Sanders can’t get support of his colleagues–like Sherrod Brown–is that he’s difficult to work with and doesn’t respond well to new information. You can read a lot about this is Barney Frank’s book and recent columns. He appears to have settled into a life and place where he can live in a McGovern thought bubble. The biggest outcome is that while he votes the correct way on issues of gender and race inequa, he has no working understanding of intersectionality. It’s like he’s actively working to offend black people. RevSharpton got the Bernie treatment last week. Plus, I’m so tired of his supporters trying to white splain and man splain to minorities and women. It just shows a basic lack of empathy.
Bernie is tone deaf and clueless.
Melissa McEwan:
Yes. Bernie’s entire platform is: a Noun, a Verb, and WALL STREET
This totally nails it.
It’s about time Sanders is getting more scrutiny.
I think there’s another Republican debate tonight. Is it on CNN again? Does anyone know?
I think CBS
Yes, CBS at 9 ET.
View at Medium.com
Here ya go
MSNBC (I think Chris Hayes) played a clip of Bill Clinton in which they cut off a portion of a statement to make it look like he was criticizing Obama when he went on to praise him.
http://www.politico.com/story/2016/02/bill-clinton-hillary-clinton-changemaker-219239#ixzz403qgYH6e
Wow. That’s amazing. I had no idea Sanders was so unpopular with Democrats.
Nice essay from Jarvis; thanks for sharing, Dak.
Here’s some good analysis. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2015/07/16/bernie-sanderss-limited-appeal-even-to-democrats/?postshare=4071455396523110&tid=ss_fb
http://killingthebreeze.com/two-sides-of-the-same-coin-in-both-primaries/
Justice Scalia died in his sleep last night. I’ll have more info in a min.
Dallas Morning News: Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia reported dead.
http://thescoopblog.dallasnews.com/2016/02/supreme-court-justice-antonin-scalia-reported-dead.html/
I was just going to report this BB………..died of natural causes.
You know damn well the republicans aren’t going to let Obama get his choice in. I don’t see anything happening until after the elections, do you?
I don’t know. Dak reminded me that they can’t filibuster nominations anymore. The rules were changed in the Senate.
Applies to all but the Supreme Court……let me find Harry Reid explaining it.
Also if Senate goes on recess, he can make a recess appointment. Given numbers favor Dems retaking Senate, it would be a bad deal for Republicans to run their Senate campaigns on being assholes unless they are in a safe red state.
Here is Harry Reid stating all but the Supreme Court:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/11/21/harry-reid-nuclear-senate/3662445/#
Bummer. Thanks, Fannie.
President Obama is going to speak real soon, and I think he gets the deal on this one. It’s unlike any other institution in the world, huh?
It seems to me that the republicans have gotten clever, and leave someone behind during recess. If Hillary wins, we take the senate, the dem in charge will decide to hold the vote, and not McConnell. It makes things real interesting doesn’t it. It’s kind of fun to ask all these questions, and look over the history.
I thought Hillary killed him?
Wow! I just took a break from making tomato sauce and saw this immediately. It’s quite a shock and I’m not sure what to even think at this moment…
I just saw this on twitter. What a shock!
Trying so hard not to celebrate, reminding myself that no one individual-however egregious-is the problem.
May his death spell the end of the old order.
He was a really, really poor excuse for a Supreme Court Justice. I don’t mind the conservative viewpoint because there is some validity to some ideas; however, the man was not a conservative at all. He was a radical nut who thought his ideology should be above the actual Constitution.
I’m celebrating that the laws of this country will be less ugly and bigoted and that there’s an end to his reign of terror.
I’m glad he’s not on the Supreme Court anymore. If he had retired, I’d have been just as glad.
“I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure.”
–Clarence Darrow
Justice Scalia was a straight up and down Republican, Nixon, Ford, Bush, on and on. I wonder about the impact now of the “voting rights acts”………..that scares me.
My vote for new Supreme is Loretta Lynch.
What about Eric Holder?
How about Anita Hill?
Talk about a fight, mercy, someone might have to step down or retire.
Here’s the NYT obit.
//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
Wow, I had to print this out for my records. Very important when it comes to repealing Roe Vs. Wade. There are certain categories of the case, that confuse me, and I need dig further.
We elected Pres. Obama twice, he if fulfilling his job in the executive branch of the government, he is keeping his oath of office.
Hillary just said that the senate has an obligation to confirm the president’s nominee.
People need a lesson in how the three branches of government work.
Once again, sorry……….he is fulfilling his job! He is the boss.