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Showing posts with label HUFFPOST. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HUFFPOST. Show all posts

Saturday, July 13, 2013

HUFFPOST HILL - This Year In Jerusalem!

Per the United Nations, today is the first International Day of Happiness, though we're not sure if that's possible on the ten-year anniversary of the war in Iraq while White House tours are suspended. The Tea Party Caucus has been inactive for months, though its members would prefer the lapse be considered a temporary reduction in the size of government. And the president's limousine broke down in Jerusalem, meaning it's only a matter of time until Uber becomes a government contractor. This is HUFFPOST HILL for Wednesday, March 20th, 2013:

SENATE PASSES CR, DELAYS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN FOR SUPER LONG TIME (SEPTEMBER!!!!) - Also, it's a terrible piece of legislation. Mike McAuliff and Sabrina Siddiqui: "The U.S. Senate passed a bill Wednesday to keep the federal government running after March 27, approving a six-month spending bill that adds to the unpopular cuts of "sequestration." The $984 billion "continuing resolution" passed 73 to 26. It makes additional across-the-board cuts of 1.9 percent to 2.5 percent to various categories of spending on top of the $85 billion in cuts mandated by the Budget Control Act of 2011 -- the infamous deal that created the failed supercommittee and the resulting budget sequestration that slices $1.2 trillion over a decade. Lawmakers on all sides have hammered the blunt cuts as 'stupid' and 'irresponsible', yet resorted to the same strategy in this new funding measure because they have been unable to agree on anything else. A congressional source familiar with the negotiations -- speaking freely on the condition of anonymity -- explained that when the six-month bill was originally agreed to in principal last fall, all sides expected that the sequester would be replaced. But sequestration remains, and under the Budget Control Act, Congress had to spend less over the rest of this year than the original agreement contemplated." The House is expected to vote tomorrow. [HuffPost]

Meanwhile in the House, shenanigans of the highest order: "Democrats voted present to force more Republicans to vote against the Republican Study Committee's (RSC) budget. Democrats hoped that by getting their members to vote present instead of against the budget, it might be approved by the House. That would have allowed Democrats to train their campaign ads on the RSC budget, which would boost the Social Security age to 70 and cut Medicare benfits, including for people now 59 years old. The RSC blueprint would balance the budget in four years. Only 14 Democrats voted against the RSC budget, along with 118 Republicans." [The HIll]

Oh, and the House voted down the Senate's budget today.

ANY FRIEND OF ROBERT MENENDEZ IS A FRIEND OF THE FORMER ABRAMOFF LOBBYIST PISSED AT THINGS - HuffPost Hill's Former Abramoff Lobbyist Pissed At Things was having a great time yesterday at Equinox, stealing the patrons' cellphones for their contact lists. Then he read in Politico that Salomon Melgen met President Obama and courted Harry Reid. "FALPAT likes this Melgen character. He is Team Abramoff material," he writes. "I also like that he hugged-up to Harry Reid (he is a great relationship deny-er). We had conservatives, liberals, Blue Dogs and the Velvet Mafia locked-up tight. What we were missing was a brown guy." Thanks, FALPAT!

JUSTICE HONCHO IS DUNZO - Ryan Reilly: "Associate Deputy Attorney General Steven Reich, who has overseen the Justice Department's handling of congressional investigations into Fast and Furious and Aaron Swartz, will depart the Justice Department on April 1. Reich, formerly senior associate White House counsel for President Bill Clinton, joined the Justice Department in June 2011. 'I am grateful to Steve for his tireless advocacy on behalf of the Department of Justice over the last two years," Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement released by the Justice Department." [HuffPost]

DAILY DELANEY DOWNER - Everyone knows unemployment persists because American workers aren't skilled -- that is, there aren't enough workers skilled at liking terrible pay. From the Associated Press: "America's lower-income workers have posted the biggest job gains since the deep 2007-09 recession -- but few are bragging. As a workforce sector, those earning $35,000 or less annually are generally pessimistic about their finances and career prospects. Many see themselves as worse off now than during the recession, a two-part Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey of workers and employers shows....Yet 44 percent of employers surveyed said it's hard to recruit people with appropriate skills or experiences to do lower-wage jobs, particularly in manufacturing." [AP]

DOUBLE DOWNER - At the federal level, some Republicans want to call every form of government assistance "welfare" in an effort to make it look bad. In Pennsylvania, Republicans want to rename the state's Department of Public Welfare so it doesn't look bad. Unfortunately for them, the change costs too much money. "The acting head of Pennsylvania's Department of Public Welfare said Tuesday the state can't afford a legislative proposal to change its name to the Department of Human Services. Secretary Bev Mackereth said the change would cost about $8 million, and she would support the idea if not for its hefty price tag." [AP]

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OBAMA IN ISRAEL: U.S. INVESTIGATING USE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS IN SYRIA - NYT: "President Obama said Wednesday that the United States was investigating claims that chemical weapons had been used in Syria the day before and that he was 'deeply skeptical' of the Syrian government’s assertion that the insurgency had deployed such weapons. The president’s remarks were surprisingly strong in tone and suggested that if Washington finds evidence that such weapons had been used he would hold the Syrian government responsible.... Mr. Obama’s remarks, at a news conference in Jerusalem with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, were his first public reaction to the reports on Tuesday that chemical weapons had been used in Syria. Both sides in the conflict have accused the other of responsibility but there has been no independent evidence that the weapons were used." [NYT]

Obama and Netanyahu, whose relationship could be charitably characterized as "strained," completed burying the hatchet over their shared annoyance at Chuck Todd: "President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took digs at NBC News White House correspondent Chuck Todd today after he asked three questions during the joint press-conference in Jerusalem. 'Chuck, how many you got?' Obama asked Todd... 'These are Talmudic questions, they have reiterations,' Netanyahu joked, as Todd protested that he was allowed four questions because 'Passover starts in a few days.'" [Politico]

The strongest and most indestructible American-made car broke down. Someone please leave China the keys with a note to jiggle the handle when tapping into our strategic oil reserves. CNN: "The official limousine awaiting President Barack Obama's arrival in Israel malfunctioned after its driver refueled it using gasoline rather than diesel fuel, an official said Wednesday. The limo failed to start, and required towing in Jerusalem at 10 a.m. local time. Obama, who landed in Tel Aviv around noon, was not in the country at the time the limo was towed. A second presidential limo was brought to transport Obama." [CNN ]

COLORADO GOV SIGNS LANDMARK GUN CONTROL LEGISLATION - Christina Wilkie: "Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper (D) signed three major gun control measures into law on Wednesday morning, just hours after the state's Department of Corrections chief, Tom Clements, was shot and killed at home. The new legislation represents the culmination of a battle between Hickenlooper and national gun rights advocacy groups that began on a cordial note, but ended acrimoniously on both sides. The three laws will ban gun magazines with a capacity of more than 15 rounds, require background checks for all firearms sales (with exceptions made for antique guns and 'bona fide' gifts between immediate family members), and impose a fee on background checks that covers the cost to the state of performing them. The laws are scheduled to go into effect July 1." [HuffPost]

CHARLOTTE MAYOR LEADING CONTENDER FOR DOT - Thankfully the rumors of Thomas the Tank Engine being on the shortlist have been overblown -- that dude hates high speed rail. Bloomberg: "President Barack Obama is considering Charlotte, North Carolina, Mayor Anthony Foxx for secretary of transportation, according to two people familiar with the matter. Foxx, 41, has been a proponent of street car and light-rail projects as mayor of the city, where the Democratic National Convention was held last year. He was first elected in 2009 and re-elected in 2011. Obama also is considering Deborah Hersman, the head of the National Transportation Safety Board, for the position, according to one of the people, both of whom asked for anonymity because the deliberations haven’t been made public. The president is considering candidates from within the transportation department as well... In last year’s presidential campaign, Foxx received national attention as the mayor of the city that hosted the Democratic convention where Obama was renominated as the party’s presidential candidate. As co-chairman of the host committee, he was involved in a fundraising effort that fell $12.5 million short of its goal." [Bloomberg]

In other administration news: "President Barack Obama has asked Jeff Zients to stay on as acting budget director, the White House said Monday, a move that takes him out of the running to become trade chief. White House spokesman Jay Carney said Zients, who had been the front-runner to take over as Trade Representative, would remain in his current job, confirming a Reuters report. A source familiar with the White House plan said Obama decided he needed Zients to stay on the economic team at a time when the Office of Management and Budget, or OMB, was playing a critical role in dealing with across-the-board budget cuts, known as the sequester." [Reuters]

NetJets, a private jet company owned by Berkshire Hathaway that allows individuals and companies to buy a share of a private jet, has retained the services of Baker Botts. There is a history of NetJets asking for lower taxes despite Warren Buffett's insistance that his taxes be raised.

Republican pollster John McLAughlin, whose surveys missed the mark in 2012, is very upset: @jmclghln: No upgrade on USAir Shuttle this am #HillaryClinton #MrsWeiner n posse clogging first Bet still @ govt rate? Not showing them poll data You're probably doing her a favor, guy!

TEA PARTY CAUCUS, WE BARELY KNEW YE - Roll Call: "Democrats slam the group as a haven for radicals while conservatives tout membership among their bona fides, but the fact is Rep. Michele Bachmann’s Tea Party Caucus has been inactive for several months. The caucus, much heralded and well-covered by the press when it was created in 2010 as a congressional conduit for the national movement of the same name, has not announced a public meeting since July, and the group’s Twitter account has been silent since September. 'To say we haven’t been real active is an understatement. We haven’t done anything,' said Texas Republican Rep. Joe L. Barton, a member of the group." [Roll Call]

WASHINGTON POST EDITORIAL PAGE OVERLOOKS IRAQ ANNIVERSARY - Now Katharine Weymouth is going to have to send Iraq one of those belated birthday cards with an animal on the front making a funny face with an "Ooops!" caption. Amanda Terkel: "In the months leading up to the Iraq War, The Washington Post ran 27 editorials in favor of invasion, according to a count by veteran PBS journalist Bill Moyers. This week, around the 10-year anniversary of the war, it has yet to print any editorials or columns on the subject. Media outlets have been publishing their Iraq War anniversary coverage on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, since Americans learned that the U.S. invaded Iraq the night of March 19. The New York Times, for example, centered its coverage on Wednesday, with several op-eds on Iraq and an editorial looking back. But so far, The Washington Post editorial page hasn't run a single column or editorial addressing the war. In an email to The Huffington Post, Fred Hiatt, the Washington Post's editorial page editor, said there will be "a couple of pieces coming this week." In 2003, the Washington Post editorial board -- like many others in the media at the time -- supported the invasion of Iraq and viewed the war as inevitable." [HuffPost]

Apologies in advance for the vomit you're about to splatter all over your keyboard/smartphone: "Richard Perle, the former chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board and a leading advocate for the war in Iraq, said Wednesday that it was not reasonable to ask whether the war was worth it. NPR 'Morning Edition' host Renee Montagne asked, 'Ten years later, nearly 5,000 American troops dead, thousands more with wounds, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis dead or wounded. When you think about this, was it worth it?' 'I've got to say, I think that is not a reasonable question. What we did at the time was done in the belief that it was necessary to protect this nation. You can't, a decade later, go back and say, "Well, we shouldn't have done that,"' Perle responded." [HuffPost's Luke Johnson]

BECAUSE YOU'VE READ THIS FAR - Dog photobombs Craigslist apartment listing.

COMFORT FOOD

- The latest installment of "7 Sites You Should Be Wasting Time On Right Now." [http://huff.to/160tTCo]

- Guy at Magic-Pacers game refuses to share his ice cream with his girlfriend. [http://bit.ly/ZctNkR]

- Kate the WASP celebrates St. Patrick's day. [http://huff.to/16JIinG]

- Was the Death Star's destruction an inside job? [http://chzb.gr/11bMZmo]

- The Baby Bullet reimagined as a something way... creepier. [http://bit.ly/sv0bJj]

- There are two women out there who still receive Civil War pensions. [http://gaw.kr/138NWke]

- An animated version of "Calvin & Hobbes," history's greatest comic. [http://huff.to/11cnHV5]

TWITTERAMA

@TVietor08: Anyone else half expecting @JeffreyGoldberg to grab the mic and start answering Qs at the Obama/Bibi presser?

@whitneysnyder Google gives us a New York Times headline from hell pic.twitter.com/BR6DvAMN6m

@frates: Fist bumping has officially jumped the shark when Chuck Schumer and Barbara Mikulski do it on the Senate floor.

ON TAP

TONIGHT

5:30 pm: Lisa Murkowski continues to insure herself against another M-U-R-K-O-W-S-K-I situation with a fundraiser featuring appearances by Lamar Alexander and John Hoeven. [Rosa Mexicano - 575 7th Street NW]

6:00 pm: The editor-in-chief of Elle and president of Gucci America host a dinner lauding ten of Washington's leading lady luminaries. Jill Biden, Kirsten Gillibrand, Alyssa Mastromonaco and Susan McCue are among those being honored. [Villa Firenze, 2800 Albermale Street NW]

6:30 pm: Shelley Moore Capito fills her Senate campaign coffers with an assist from her (likely future co-worker) Rob Portman. [Monocle Restaurant, 107 D Street NE]

6:30 pm: John Thune passes the hat for his Heartland Values PAC. The event will be held at Wolfgang Puck's The Source, Washington's most flyover state-y dining establishment. [575 Pennsylvania Ave NW]

7:00 pm: The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation hosts a dinner for Ed Perlmutter and, man, take it from us: The bros at the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation know how to get down. [Cava Mezze, 527 8th Street SE]

TOMORROW

12:00 pm: Dean Heller, just about the only swing-state Republican Senate candidate who didn't screw the pooch in November, hosts a lunchtime debt retirement fundraiser. [Bistro Bis, 15 E Street NW]

5:00 pm: In what is easily the most fit pairing of individuals in American political history, Paul Ryan appears at a fundraiser for Aaron Schock's reelection campaign. [Washington, IL]

6:00 pm: If you follow the North Star you'll always be able to find your way back to... Amy Klobuchar's fundraiser. The Minnesota senator raises cash for her Follow the North Star Fund. [B Smith's, 50 Massachusetts Ave NE]

6:30 pm Lookie here: Cory Booker for Senate gets an injection of green at a Newark fundraiser. [Newark, NJ]

Got something to add? Send tips/quotes/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to Eliot Nelson (eliot@huffingtonpost.com), Ryan Grim (ryan@huffingtonpost.com) or Arthur Delaney (arthur@huffingtonpost.com). Follow us on Twitter @HuffPostHill (twitter.com/HuffPostHill). Sign up here: http://huff.to/an2k2e


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Thursday, April 4, 2013

HUFFPOST HILL, sponsored by America's Health Insurance Plans - NRA Readying For America's Mad Max-tastic Future

Democrats are SO EXCITED that Marco Rubio took that hilarious sip of water during his response to... wait, why was Rubio there, again? It's clear that Wayne LaPierre isn't giving up crazy for Lent, given his new Daily Caller op-ed. And to truly appreciate the creepiness of Lindsey Graham's statement that, "I own an AR-15. I saw the movie 'Django.' I like Quentin Tarantino," try imagining it as an OKCupid bio. This is HUFFPOST HILL for Wednesday, February 13th, 2013:

WAYNE LAPIERRE'S DAILY CALLER OP-ED IS EXACTLY WHAT YOU THINK IT IS - Git yer dehydrated food packets and yer AR-15 and yer least dovetailed "Left Behind" installment because the government man is coming. Take it away, Wayne: "Meanwhile, President Obama is leading this country to financial ruin, borrowing over a trillion dollars a year for phony 'stimulus' spending and other payoffs for his political cronies. Nobody knows if or when the fiscal collapse will come, but if the country is broke, there likely won't be enough money to pay for police protection. And the American people know it. Hurricanes. Tornadoes. Riots. Terrorists. Gangs. Lone criminals. These are perils we are sure to face--not just maybe. It's not paranoia to buy a gun. It's survival. It's responsible behavior, and it's time we encourage law-abiding Americans to do just that." [Daily Caller]

EXECUTIVE BRANCH CAN'T STOP WRITING MEMOS ABOUT HOW IT CAN KILL YOU - Just so long as these things stay memos and don't devolve into fundraising emails from drones ("Hey"). Ryan Reilly: "Sen. Dianne Feinstein's office revealed Wednesday that the Obama administration has yet to show members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence seven additional opinions laying out the legal basis for targeted killing. Disclosure of the existence of the additional seven opinions from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel came the day after President Barack Obama pledged greater transparency during his State of the Union address. Feinstein (D-Calif.) said there were a total of 11 OLC opinions related to targeted killing. Senators had already seen two of them and an additional two were made available to senators -- but not their staffers -- last week, leaving seven that haven't yet been disclosed." [HuffPost]

Rand Paul'd: "Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul announced Wednesday that he plans to place a hold on the nomination of John O. Brennan to run the CIA until he receives information related to the administration's use of armed drones...The Senate Intelligence Committee is scheduled to vote Thursday on Brennan's nomination, after the panel held a closed-door session Tuesday with the nominee." [Roll Call]

Lindsey Graham today on his Benghazi antics: "If this were a Republican president, then I guaran-damn-tee-ya Democrats would be doing a whole lot more than I'm doing." Kind of like how Democrats drove all the officials involved with the WMD fiasco out of government...

MICHAEL BRUNE ARRESTED - The Sierra Club broke today with a 120-year-tradition of playing nice when its leader, Michael Brune, was arrested in front of the White House protesting the Keystone XL pipeline. It's not easy for liberal groups who operate inside the White House orbit to break with it, so HuffPost Hill give this a big radical thumbs up. It comes a day after the president promised to do what is in his power to save the planet. Presumably that includes not actively wrecking it. [AP]

RUBIO: GOVERNMENT ISN'T GOING TO HELP YOU. ME? MAYBE - Addressing the nation on Tuesday night, Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio came with a simple message. "More government isn't going to create more opportunities. It's going to limit them. And more government isn't going to inspire new ideas, new businesses and new private sector jobs," Rubio said. "More government isn't going to help you get ahead. It's going to hold you back." That might be true for you. It's not true for Marco Rubio.

Read this rundown of Rubio financial shenanigans and tell us if you really think he has national potential. That's a rhetorical question. Don't actually tell us.

@thegarance Rubio selling home in "same working-class neighborhood I grew up in" -- $675K, pics via Curbed http://bit.ly/VbrOT0

GOP SENATORS SLOWING DOWN HAGEL CONFIRMATION BECAUSE SECRET SERVICE WON'T LET THEM WET WILLY THE PRESIDENT - The Hill: "Republican senators are blocking a vote on former Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) this week unless he provides additional financial information, setting up what Democrats say is the first-ever filibuster of a Defense secretary nominee. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) filed cloture on Hagel's nomination when he said it was clear Senate Armed Services ranking Republican Jim Inhofe (Okla.) and others would block a motion to proceed to a vote. But Republicans say they aren't filibustering Hagel's nomination, only delaying the vote in order to get answers to their outstanding questions on payments to Hagel and paid speeches, as well as answers from the White House about last year's Benghazi, Libya, attack. Republican senators said Wednesday they were confident they had 41 votes to block a vote on Hagel's nomination this week, even though some GOP senators have said they are opposed to filibustering a Cabinet nominee." [The Hill]

Final vote is on Friday. Hagel should be confirmed.

DAILY DELANEY DOWNER - Arthur is still on vacation. :-(

Does somebody keep forwarding you this newsletter? Get your own copy. It's free! Sign up here. Send tips/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to huffposthill@huffingtonpost.com. Follow us on Twitter - @HuffPostHill

JACK LEW CONFIRMATION HEARING ABOUT AS EXCITING AS JACK LEW - Zach Carter: "Jack Lew, President Barack Obama's nominee for Treasury Secretary, maneuvered around questions during a Wednesday confirmation hearing about his work at bailed-out bank Citigroup during the financial crisis, including his controversial investment in a Cayman Islands fund. [Orrin] Hatch pressed Lew on his activities at Citi, where Lew was Chief Operating Officer of the company's Alternative Investment Unit. Little is known about Lew's precise role at Citi, but the unit he helped manage was responsible for some of the most disastrous bets the bank placed prior to its bailout. Lew appears to have arrived after the bets were placed, but has not detailed his work mitigating the damage...Hatch asked Lew whether he was involved with controversial securities maneuvers that eventually drew charges of wrongdoing from the Securities and Exchange Commission. He also asked whether Lew was a competent manager or someone who held 'a political trophy position.' In response, Lew said that while he had been aware of his unit's operations, he was not responsible for them." [HuffPost]

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CORY BOOKER UNLEASHES THE LAUTENBEAST - Unless Newark's mayor finds a way to save every single Garden State resident from a burning building and/or exhumes them from a snowbank, his path to the Senate is going to be messier than anticipated. NYT: "If Mr. Booker was hoping to nudge Mr. Lautenberg toward the door, his announcement has had precisely the opposite effect. Mr. Lautenberg, a fighter dubbed 'swamp dog' by a past opponent, has embraced his job with new vigor. He has taken a leading role on the issues of the day: fighting for recovery money for his hurricane-hit state and pushing for gun control after the shootings in Newtown, Conn. And he brightens at the prospect of tussling with a man half his age, even speaking openly to his staff about running again. He has jabbed at Mr. Booker, joking that he deserves a spanking for trying to unseat a fellow Democrat, and noting that the well-traveled mayor has no shortage of work to do in his own struggling city. 'I'm going to finish the work I'm doing,' he said in an interview." [NYT]

CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORMERS UPSET WITH STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS - Washington's favorite pushovers, good governance types (they're basically the political version of the stapler guy from "Office Space" -- but we sure they'll torch the Capitol eventually), were given no love in last night's address. Paul Blumenthal: "Campaign finance reformers and government watchdogs were disappointed Tuesday night when President Barack Obama failed to include any messages around money in politics in his 2013 State of the Union address. This was actually the first of Obama's State of the Union addresses where the president did not mention any steps that reformers have championed to reduce the influence of big money or lobbyists in the political system. 'Historically, President Obama has spoken forcefully about his commitment to addressing the money in politics crisis, but has failed to follow through with anything of substance,' said Josh Silver, president of campaign finance and lobbying reform organization United Republic and the director of Represent.us, an effort to pass a campaign finance reform bill. 'This week he abandoned even the pretense of leading reform.'" [HuffPost]

Poland Spring responds to Marco Rubio's on-air water gulp.

SOTU scorecard: " A majority of Americans who watched President Barack Obama's State of the Union address said they had a very positive reaction to his speech, according to a survey of people across the country who viewed Tuesday night's address. But a CNN/ORC International poll also indicated that less than four in ten think the speech will lead to more bipartisan cooperation. Fifty-three percent of speech watchers questioned in the poll had a very positive reaction, with 24% saying they had a somewhat positive response and 22% with a negative response." [CNN]

LINDSEY GRAHAM IS NOT COMPENSATING FOR ANYTHING, NOT AT ALL - The South Carolina senator today, during a press conference on guns, came about *yay* close to professing his love for BMX bikes and Insane Clown Posse. Sabrina Siddiqui: "Many lawmakers have touted themselves as responsible gun owners amid the national debate on gun control. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) took things a step further on Wednesday while pushing back against the call for new gun laws -- by professing his love for Quentin Tarantino and his violent movies. 'Being from South Carolina, I've owned guns all of my life,' Graham said at a press conference. 'I own an AR-15. I saw the movie "Django [Unchained]." I like Quentin Tarantino.'" [HuffPost]

Paul Broun, who is running for the Senate seat being vacated by Saxby Chambliss, called shotgun: "As a Member of the House of Representatives for the last few years, I have fought tooth-and-nail against President Obama's agenda at every turn. I was the first Member of Congress to call him a socialist who embraces Marxist-Leninist policies like government control of health care and redistribution of wealth..." He must be referring to Lenin's lesser known pamphlet, "What Is To Be Done To Boost The Customer Pool
For Private Insurers." [AJC]

Paul Broun should dial up every municipal, state and federal elected official and call them a socialist, just to be safe. You never know who my be president in 2020.

WE'RE GIVING MEDALS TO DRONE OPERATORS NOW - Sgt. Menendez distinguished himself conspicuously at his LAN party by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his dating life above and beyond the Call of Duty multiplayer guidelines. AP: "Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is expected to announce Wednesday that for the first time the Pentagon is creating a medal that can be awarded to troops who have a direct impact on combat operations, but do it from afar. The Associated Press has learned that the new blue, red and white-ribboned Distinguished Warfare Medal will be awarded to individuals for 'extraordinary achievement' related to a military operation that occurred after Sept. 11, 2001. But unlike other combat medals, it does not require the recipient risk his or her life to get it. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the announcement had not yet been made. A recognition of the evolving 21st Century warfare, the medal will be considered a bit higher in ranking than the Bronze Star, but is lower than the Silver Star, defense officials said." [AP]

Gives him more time to catch up on his (harmless) emails, we suppose: "Gen. John Allen, caught up and later cleared in a scandal over emails with a Florida socialite, is likely to withdraw from consideration for the job of top NATO commander, three U.S. military officials have told NBC News. A Pentagon investigation last month cleared Allen of wrongdoing, but U.S. military officials said that Allen does not want to drag his family through a nomination process in which the emails would almost certainly come up." [NBC News]

RON PAUL TO APPEAR ON THE RADIO - Catch him before Agenda 21 takes him away from us! Nick Wing: "Starting in March, former Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) will be taking his libertarian-leaning voice to talk radio, where he'll deliver one-minute radio commentaries twice a day. Courtside Entertainment Group announced the upcoming launch of "Ron Paul's America" in a statement on Wednesday...Paul addressed the career move, saying he was ready to deliver dispatches with an angle that people were 'hungry' to hear. 'I am very excited to have this opportunity to take the message of freedom to more people than ever, especially now when our country needs it so much,' said the former congressman and presidential candidate." [HuffPost]

BECAUSE YOU'VE READ THIS FAR - Cat knocks on doors in a very strange way .

COMFORT FOOD

- History's coolest Teen Jeopardy! contestant gives phenomenal final answer. [http://bit.ly/XA0Te3]

- "Die Hard" redone with claymation. Yippie kay clay, mother----. [http://bit.ly/XyIWjM]

- Valentine's Day is tomorrow, which means you're either going to have your TV-watching plans interrupted or are depressed. Either way, we're sorry. Here's a video on the science of love. [http://chzb.gr/Y7i2LT]

- "Seven Sites You Should Be Wasting Time On Right Now," including "Crabify," which puts crustacean limbs on celebrities. [http://huff.to/ZanDYP]

- Daschund is not fazed by this wall. [http://bit.ly/X4MB8Z]

- An honest trailer for "The Notebook." Enjoy your Valentine's Day, chumps. [https://bitly.com/shorten/]

TWITTERAMA

@elisefoley: Blocking nominees is the new holding press conferences to yell about nominees.

@dceiver: Marco Rubio! WHAT ABOUT YOUR CARAFES?

@pourmecoffee: If you can't stand up to applaud protecting the right to vote, maybe being an elected representative isn't the right job for you.

ON TAP

TONIGHT

5:30 pm: Help prolong the Republican Party's political life while you shorten yours at Jerry Moran's "Burgers and Shakes" fundraiser benefiting his NRSC PAC. [NRSC, 425 2nd Street NE]

6:00 pm: Steny Hoyer, who we strongly feel needs an Onion-style Joe Biden treatment (we're sure he'd appreciate the attention), is the man of the hour at a campaign function benefiting his reelection. [DNC, 430 South Capitol Street SE]

TOMORROW

1:00 pm: Nothing says love quite like the soft, doe eyes and come-hither lips of Jim Inhofe. The Oklahoma senator hosts a "Valentine's Lunch" because love is in the air. [Johnny's Half Shell, 400 North Capitol Street NW]

Got something to add? Send tips/quotes/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to Eliot Nelson (eliot@huffingtonpost.com), Ryan Grim (ryan@huffingtonpost.com) or Arthur Delaney (arthur@huffingtonpost.com). Follow us on Twitter @HuffPostHill (twitter.com/HuffPostHill). Sign up here: http://huff.to/an2k2e


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