California Representatives Introduce Bill To Withdraw US Troops From Iraq Within Six Months

(Cross-posted from The Courage Campaign)

Rep. Lynn Woolsey (CA-06), with the support of Rep. Barbara Lee (CA-09) and Rep. Maxine Waters (CA-35), today introduced HR 508, The Bring Our Troops Home and Sovereignty of Iraq Restoration Act.

Follow me over the flip for a look at what the bill would accomplish, per Rep. Woolsey's diary over at dKos:

1. Withdraw all U.S. troops and military contractors from Iraq within six months from date of enactment.

2. Prohibit any further funding to deploy, or continue to deploy U.S. troops in Iraq. The bill does, however, allow for funding to be used, as needed, to ensure a safe withdrawal of all US military personnel and contractors, diplomatic consultations. Funding may also be used for the increased training and equipping of Iraqi and international security forces.

3. Accelerate, during the six month transition, training of a permanent Iraqi security force.

4. Authorize, if requested by the Iraqi government, U.S. support for an international stabilization force. Such a force would be funded for no longer than two years, and be combined with economic and humanitarian assistance.

5. Guarantee full health care funding, including mental health, for U.S. veterans of military operations in Iraq and other conflicts.

6. Rescind the Congressional Authorization for the War in Iraq.

7. Prohibit the construction of permanent US military bases in the country.

8. Finally, we believe that Iraqi oil belongs to the Iraqis. Once the oil is in the international market, the U.S. will certainly have access to our share. That’s why our bill ensures that the U.S. has no long-term control over Iraqi oil.

Thank you, Reps. Woolsey, Lee, Waters and all that are supporting this bill. Contact them below to let them know they have your support:

Rep. Woolsey

Rep. Lee

Rep. Waters

Kuehl shreds Ahnuld’s “Universal” Plan

(While we’ve been busy crashing the gates of the party, health care and budget issues are rolling along. This is a good little update. – promoted by bolson)

(I composed this for the broader orange audience – let me know if this is too redundant here)

Sen. Sheila Kuehl, the author of the state’s most popular universal health care proposal, nicely waltzes through the Schwarzenegger plan, and leaves no doubt that it’s a patchwork that won’t, in the end, fix a thing.

Kuehl’s key points after the jump.

1. An individual mandate guaranteed to leave millions without insurance.

The central basis of the Governor’s plan is simply to mandate that every Californian must, by law, carry health insurance. There is no requirement that it be affordable and no minimum coverage. This means that the requirement can be met by a bare-bones policy covering only catastrophic events, with a $5,000 deductible and up to $7500 in out of pocket expenses for all the things that aren’t covered by the policy.

This is not universal health insurance. Think for a moment about automobile insurance. Even before Prop 103 passed, limiting the amounts by which insurance companies could raise your auto insurance premiums to those approved by the Insurance Commissioner, we all had to have auto insurance. Would you call it Universal Auto Insurance? 25% of Californians don’t comply […]

Healthcare wonks immediately notice that those uninsured people will just get paid for, expensively and inefficiently, by the rest of the system, by you and me.

2. The employee mandate is nonsense. It only covers 20% of businesses – those with 10 or more employees – and only asks business who opt out to pay for less that half of the cost of insurance. This ham-handed version of a mandate contains the worst of worlds, it continues to let bad bosses skate, and it encourages small employers to reduce payroll. Worse still, this mandate caps employer expenses but shifts 100% of cost increases to employees.

3. Scope. Unbelievably, the plan does not set a floor for minimum benefits.

4. The cost containment farce. Who needs cost containment when you let insurers cut coverage?

5. Screw the poor. The plan costs many families more than the current MediCal cost sharing system does. Parenthetically, this is just one more body blow to a system that structurally unsound. Now reimbursements are so  low, most pediatricians refuse to see MediCal kids – they can’t, since reimbursements are around half of actual office expenses.

These are the high points, but go read the rest. It’s the template we’ll be using to fend off another Schwarzenegger big budget disaster.

Leno vs. Migden and AD Elections

In a very insightful look at the (expected) 2008 primary campaign with Assemblymember Mark Leno challenging incumbent Senator Carole Migden, Randy Shaw writes:

Migden’s inability to mount a serious challenge to Leno’s slate of delegates for the California Democratic Party convention reflects her disconnection from the city’s activist base. For a sitting Senator to field a slate, then abandon the slate, then deny she ever tried to run a slate, is not a good sign for her chances against Leno in the June 2008 primary.

There was a surreal feel to Leno owning the very same room where Migden once ran Democratic Party Central Committee meetings with an iron fist. But as Shaw notes, the upcoming primary race will be about far more than the traditional San Francisco fight over who is the most left.

More and more, I believe it is important to judge primary campaign candidates on three axis:

Left – Right
Grassroots – Top Down
Forward – Back

While there may not be much difference between Leno and Migden on the first axis, I think only looking at the traditional stances on issues is a very superficial way to view the race (but I’m sure we’ll see many articles on how they are both gay and similar on the issues).

On the second axis, Shaw is correct in noting the disconnect between Migden and the SF activists. While a few years ago many would have assumed that the fallout from the Leno/Britt primary would have lingered, Leno has so impressed San Francisco’s activists that many of Britt’s biggest supporters have nothing but great things to say about Leno. Even more, Leno has significant approval from members in both the Milk and Alice clubs — a feat deserving a peace prize.

But the third axis may have even more contrast. Shaw sums this up nicely:

Why have people encouraged Leno to run against a fellow Democrat for the State Senate? The late Miquel Contreras, whose leadership of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor starting in the mid-1990’s soon transformed the city into a pro-labor stronghold, offered the best explanation in a similar context.

Contreras drew some criticism when he backed Democratic State Senator Hilda Solis against an incumbent Democratic Congressperson Marty Martinez, who had an 80% pro-labor voting record. Contreras said labor would no longer be content to support politicians who simply voted right, instead “we want warriors for working people.”

Mark Leno has proved a warrior for progressive causes in the Assembly, and many San Franciscans want the city to have a fighter for its interests in the State Senate. In contrast, Carole Migden is so disinterested in fighting for her constituents that she abandoned the powerful role as chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee so she could devote her full energies to Steve Westly’s campaign for the Democratic nomination of Governor.

That’s not a misprint. San Francisco’s chief representative in the State Senate cared more about advancing the political career of the multi-millionaire Westly than she did the economic interests of her own constituents.

This is what Matt Stoller calls the bar fight primary and this axis is the one that has become far more important during the Bush era. Phoning it in isn’t good enough. Activists don’t want leaders to pay their dues, they want them to aggressively lead.

Looking at the full picture of the race, it is clear that Leno is viable (if not heading into the race with an advantage). Throw in Joe Nation minimizing the North Bay vote and I think Leno is the front-runner.

Rohrabacher: Take your bipartisanship and shove it

UPDATE:Oops, I misspelled Congressman Rohrabacher’s name. I corrected it.  Oh, and is this post-partisan, too?

For the last few years, the Congressional delegations of large states like Texas and Pennsylvania have met to discuss issues important to the state.  The California delegation, ummm…well they met one time in 2005 to welcome the Schwarzenegger to town.  The Democratic delegation, led by Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose), has sent numerous letters to the leader of the GOP delegation, David Dreier (R-Closet), requesting a meeting of the delegation. The response from Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach) was, well, classic Rohrabacher:

“The only thing I see coming out of meeting with Democrats is that Democrats try to pressure Republicans from California to be irresponsible and spend more money,” said Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach.

{snip}

“They don’t have to convince me to support good projects from California,” he said. “But this idea that people with different ideologies can get together and find a middle ground, it just doesn’t happen.

“Democrats may honestly believe if you get together and hold hands and sing `Kumbaya,’ the world is going to be more peaceful. That’s not what Republicans believe,” he said. Those comments, not surprisingly, touched off some sniping among Democrats. (LA Daily News 1.16.07)

You’d think now that they are in the minority, they’d at least be interested in talking to the rest of the delegation.  Not so much.  Ol’ Dana puts his attitude, and his outsized ego, over what is best for his constituents.  Fancy that, a Republican with an attitude problem. Why, that’s as rare as a pigeon in San Francisco.

The Upside of Arnold

(Cross-posted from The Courage Campaign also at MyDD)

Leading up to the November 7 elections, Arnold Schwarzenegger came out strongly against Proposition 90, which you’ll recall was an anti-government regulation measure masquerading as eminent domain reform. In the process he positioned himself to the left of his own conservative Republican candidate for Lieutenant Governor, Tom McClintock, who was strongly advocating FOR 90.

To make this maneuver, as I wrote then, Arnold cleverly used conservative talking points to make the progressive case for NO on 90. In his statement opposing 90, Arnold railed against wasted tax payer money, frivolous lawsuits and more government intrusion into our lives, conservative bogeymen all.

When my Republican uncle told me on election day that he had voted against 90, I knew it was going down and I came to appreciate the potential value Arnold holds for progressives.

More over the flip…

a. When Arnold takes our position he gives it credibility

As a moderate Republican or, as he would call himself, a "post-partisan public servant," Arnold has the benefit of instant credibility when he takes the progressive position, because noone can accuse him of adopting it for political reasons. You've seen this phenomenon with McCain over the last few years; when a Democrat would criticize Bush on the war, for example, he would be deemed a partisan Bush-hater yet when McCain would do it, perhaps even using the same rhetoric, he was labeled serious and independent-minded. It was bullshit but it sure worked against Democrats in 2004. At this point McCain's maverick status has been pretty well debunked but Arnold very much has that aura about him, especially post-November.

We can see this phenomenon in action on the healthcare debate. As many on the left who have plenty of criticism for Arnold's healthcare proposal have said, the mere fact that we have a Republican advocating for "universal healthcare" (no, his plan is not universal and yes it is quite flawed) is huge because it gives the entire premise instant mainstream credibility. Chris Matthews put it well on Hardball yesterday:

MATTHEWS:  You know what?  You know what, fellows?  I think we‘re on the verge of a national health care plan.  You know why I think so?  Because the middle is moving…Romney and Schwarzenegger.  It‘s not just Ted Kennedy and Hillary Clinton.

Like it or not, Arnold has had a hand in moving the debate to where it is now. As Juls puts it in the comments at Calitics:

We are staking out the concept of universal health care and mandatory employer contributions as the middle.  That is a huge change from where this debate was last year.  Framing the debate this way helps not just Californians but the rest of the country.

Which leads us to the other way in which Arnold can benefit progressives: the unique way he communicates our position.

b. Arnold normalizes the progressive position by putting it in terms Republicans can relate to

As I mentioned above, Arnold made it OK for Republicans to vote against Prop 90 despite the fact that the talking points for 90 tapped into conservative fears of eminent domain, another HUGE bogeyman of the right. I have no doubt that his framing of the issue as the correct position for those who want to reduce government intrusion in our lives as well as frivolous lawsuits helped push No on 90 over the top in November.

Arnold is doing the same thing within the healthcare debate.

On This Week With George Stephanopolous on Sunday, this is how Arnold defined universal healthcare:

What we want to do is eliminate the hidden tax. Right now the 6.5 million people that are uninsured are being covered by all of us that are insured.

Message: against taxes? against freeloaders? then you should be FOR universal healthcare.

In addition, look at the way he frames his desire to cover children of illegal immigrants:

This is not like I say should we cover them or not cover them. By law, by federal law, it's very clear that no patient can be turned away from an emergency room if they need care…They are by law already insured so let's not argue about that.

I mean, is it me or is Schwarzenegger channeling Stoller?

It's been clear for some time that America already has a universal health care system, it just works through pushing costs to states and localities and shunting people to emergency rooms where they die faster and their care costs more.  Once we accept the framework that American taxpayers already pay for health care coverage for everyone, we just do it in the worst way possible, the argument changes from 'should the government pay for health care' to 'who's ripping us off'.

Arnold's strategy of selling universal healthcare to the anti-tax, anti-freeloader, anti-immigrant crowd has the added benefit of normalizing our messaging for us, which will only benefit the pro-universal healthcare position in the long run. So yes, there is an upside to Arnold. We just need to make sure that elected California Democrats exploit Arnold’s “new middle” messaging when it benefits us and challenge it fiercely when it doesn't.