patching...
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

Who Do You Think Should Run for Kerry’s Seat?

After President Obama’s selection of John Kerry as Secretary of State, there’s a lot of interest in the senior senator’s seat.

 

With U.S. Senator John Kerry as President Barack Obama’s pick for Secretary of State, it’s anyone’s guess who will run for the seat in a special election next summer. Kerry was nominated by Obama on Dec. 21.

If Kerry is appointed, Governor Deval Patrick will appoint an interim senator, who will be named to the position before the special election. 

Names have already been dropped locally and from afar, including actor and Cambridge native Ben Affleck, who said he is not interested in running for the seat Kerry has held since 1985.

Earlier in December, U.S. Representative Edward Markey told reporters at Malden City Hall, he would "seriously consider" running for Kerry’s seat in the U.S. Senate. On Thursday, he made it official, announcing he would make a run for it. Markey is the first prominent candidate to officially announce his interest in Kerry’s seat. 

The Boston Globe reported Thursday that both Democratic Congressmen Michael Capuano of Somerville and Stephen Lynch of South Boston have expressed interest in running, but neither have made any decisions or announcements yet. 

There is also speculation that outgoing Senator Scott Brown will run on the Republican side. 

Only time will tell who will be throwing their hat in the ring. 

So, you tell us. Who do you think should run for John Kerry’s seat once he’s officially nominated Secretary of State? Tell us in our comments section below.

Related Topics: Congress, Ed Markey, Election 2013, U.S. Senate Special Election 2013, and john kerry

Steevo

11:53 am on Friday, December 28, 2012

Anyone but a similar hypocrite lefty who's long since sold out.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

9:19 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Steevo: I disagree. Anyone but an autograph signing politician from Wrentham that would rather shake hands with an adoring F-150 crowd outside Gillette Stadium than solve our financial problems without giving more tax breaks to the country club set. Brownie's got nothing to offer, but talk about Cherokee Indians. we all know how that went.

Frank

12:07 pm on Friday, December 28, 2012

I agree Steevo. How about the only Senator who did his job. A guy by the name of Scott Brown.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

7:24 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Frank: "did his job", meaning what. Bragged about voting for Universal healthcare for 32 million uninsured Americans, watered down Todd-Frank financial reform for the banks, against a Stimulus ( which was initially Bush's idea) to forestall a deeper recession, co-sponsored the Blunt Amendment, denying women equal pay in the workplace, found our withdrawal from Iraq " troublesome", has no problem cutting Social Security and Medicare, but will vote to keep the 2% with their unneeded tax cuts in a minute, has no problem with CEOs outsourcing American jobs to China and India, wanted romney but pretended to be " independent, although a registered Republican for 25 years, and runs away from the label, will back Mitch McConnell 100%. Stuff like that? Do we have to go over all this stuff again? The People of Massachusetts told him 'NO" last Nov 6th. Been there, done that. Bye for good.

Comment_arrow

Bob

9:43 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Tyler, I know facts are a tough thing for you but Brown voted with Dems 46% of the time he was in DC. Drop the facade of wanting to solve anything. The Dems in Massachusetts showed they want more partisanship and grid lock in DC. You all have been exposed when you elected liawatha Warren.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

11:57 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Bob: Lameduck Philip voted with Democrats on inconsequential matters to up the percentages. When it counted Brown voted with his Republican country club buddies; voted 18 times not to extend unemployment benefits for working stiffs; is anti-union; voted only for the Dodd-Frank bill after be watered it down by getting 18 billion in bank fees out( now the taxpayers pick that up); voted not to abolish oil subsidies that now cost tax payers 20 billion are year to make up he difference, thanks to his buddy David Koch.
The gridlock is coming from the Republicans who have pledged to have Obama fail, their primary goal- it didn't work.
I'll disregard the insulting "Hiawatha" remark , since I don't comment on ignorance

Comment_arrow

coldwaterdiver

2:48 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

"lameduck Phillip" says the guy who wont comment on ignorance. Priceless.

Mark

2:16 pm on Friday, December 28, 2012

William "Willy" Lantigua - Meets residency requirements. Worked as a community organizer. (sound familiar). Runs one of the largest cities in the Commonwealth. Able to garner the Hispanic vote. Has shown the ability to multi-task, became the first person to hold three elected positions at once; State Democratic Committee Member, State Representative, and Mayor. "Slick" Willy (sound familiar) worked to strengthen health care and public safety, secured funding for Lawrence’s non-profit organizations, schools, and community improvement projects, and filed legislation to help those being affected by the current foreclosure crisis. Serves as Chair of the MBLC. Willy is a financial genius, putting the City on a course towards fiscal recovery. Has not claimed to be 1/32 Indian and has not to anyone's knowledge driven off any bridges or visited Chappaquiddick. Loves Ketchup! Rumored to have a yacht moored in the Merrimack River.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tom Jeffords

4:05 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

LOL Absolutely Outstanding!!!!

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

6:20 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

coldwaterconiver: his middle name is Philip and he is a lame duck. Both statements are true. Nothing wrong with that dude.

broadway Jay

4:37 pm on Friday, December 28, 2012

Ed Markey (B) Malden. His party affiliation is more Beltway Barnacle than it is Democrat !!

Reply

Joe Veno

4:58 pm on Friday, December 28, 2012

Scott Brown no question. It is interesting Warren the fool she is overspent and is looking to get $200,000 in donations to pay her bills. Now lets see if the people who put her in there come up with the money. I doubt it.

Reply

Joe Bill

10:25 pm on Friday, December 28, 2012

Does it matter in this state we live in? Scott Brown did his job and lost his seat to another borderline socialist. Massachusetts is an embarrassment. How ironic that the birthplace of the nation is one of the furthest left, pro-big government, over-regulated states in the union? Each day we get closer and closer to Socialism and the electorate in MA continues to nominate big government Liberals.

Reply

Ann Thomas

1:08 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Scot Brown should be elected. He is the best. Warren should not have been elected . She is a socialist like Obama.

Reply

Rob

7:59 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

John Tierney. Still very popular in this state.

Reply

jc

9:00 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

I don't understand all the praise for Scott Brown—he doesn't support unions and gives lip service to middle-class issues. And if you don't like women all that much, he's the man for you, I guess. I'm not sure who is out there right now worth supporting: the pipeline needs more prospects.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Bob

9:24 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

jc, 7% of private sector workers are in unions. A large percentage of those voted for Brown. They just can't admit it publicly. As for the other "points" (middle-class and women) it is good to see you continue to cling to the Dem. talking points regardless of validity or facts.
Fact - Brown was the second most bi-partisan Senator. This in a time when the Democrats are yelling about Washington being so partisan! You elect a coat holder who will vote with her party 95+% of the time. See above about Dem talking points!
Fact - Brown pushed and passed a jobs bill that was part of Obama's jobs act that was defeated in the Senate by BOTH parties! Brown pulled the good parts out and worked with the Dem MAJORITY and got pieces passed that have helped the middle class.
I hope he gives us all the finger and tells us to choke on the idiots we elect and keep re-electing! But save the talking points, only ignorant people believe those!

Comment_arrow

Diana

9:33 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

I'm endlessly amused by the wailing of "But he was bipartisan!!! You said you wanted bipartisan!!!!" Well sure, if we must have a Republican, I'd prefer s/he be bipartisan. But I'd rather have a Democrat who votes with the Dems. Duh. There is no contradiction and no hypocrisy there, no matter how hard you try to pretend there is.

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

10:59 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

You might not understand the praise for Scott Brown because you appear to be a knee-jerk progressive. You just read off the talking points from TPM. Failing to support poorly crafted legislation does not mean that one gives "lip-service" to middle-class issues or doesn't like women. I think that there were very specific reasons why Brown rejected major legislation proposed by the Senate majority, and that those reasons are thoughtful and rational.

Comment_arrow

Bob

9:46 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Diana, then stop the belly aching about the Republican's blocking Obama and nothing getting done in DC. Without bi-partisanship nothing will ever get done. It is the basis of our form of government getting things done. Without it, you have what we have gotten since the Dems took the House and Senate in 2006. Look how well that has served this country!

Comment_arrow

coldwaterdiver

2:51 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

JC, why do you say he's against women? that's one of the blind talking points that I never understood.

Comment_arrow

Harriet

3:09 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

CWD, brown co-sponsered the Blunt amendment. that's about anti-women as you can get.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

6:25 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

jc: I agree all the way . you picked it out. Buster Brown has a deep comtempt for women, and females , with the innate intuition that they have , picked it right out. Buster tried to counter that with : I fold laundry once a year and am married to a women". Ya , Buster, ya.

Comment_arrow

Bob

6:21 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Jon, read beyond the liawatha talking points! The Blunt amendment was a question of religious freedom. The DNC formed it as a war on women and their sheep took their marching orders and shouted the bs from the roof tops. It was about the Catholic church not having to pay for a service they religiously disagree with. Simple and it was the right thing.
Not anti-women, pro Constitution!

Comment_arrow

Harriet

7:50 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Bob, the blunt amendment was written by angry white old men, that support the view point of the catholic religion ( angry old white men in charge, women are subservient, second class "people"). Why should your religion have anything to say about what medication women can take. They don't believe in science or medicine. They should have no say. no employer should. and you wonder why attendance at the "church" is ever decreasing. you still live in the dark ages. nobody other that me should have any say in my insurance coverage.

saul glick

9:37 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

When Obamacare kicks in in 2014, you are going to hope you belong to a union. Companies are going to downsize their workers from full time to part time. This is to get around the health care issue. It's going to be the workers who get screwed by Obamacare mandates. Your full time job at Home Depot, and other companies, with over 50 employees, is potentially going to be downsized to part time. You have no idea what this president is going to do to you.
You want proof, google jobs and Obamacare, and see what your future holds for you.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Diana

9:44 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

I'm really, reeeeaaaaally hoping to be appointed to a Death Panel.

Comment_arrow

jc

10:07 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

I'm all for Obamacare. It's entertaining how Republicans slam that plan (while cherrypicking what they know the public wants) with no workable counterproposal, just a lot of patronizing rhetoric. Sorry, but scare tactics fail with me. My only fear was Romney winning and that worked out very well. The future looks bright.

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

2:01 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

jc, you are all for Obamacare. I realize that it is 2,700 pages that you have read in detail, but in 500 words or less, please explain what the act does and how it works.

Comment_arrow

Laurie

2:50 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

We already have Obamacare in Massachusetts. Obamacare is Romneycare. Remember?

Dick

10:09 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

What was the name of the Science flick where we all wear uniforms,live in appointed facilities/dorms.,work for big brother?
This all just scares the Hell out of me! Are you concerned yet?

Reply
Comment_arrow

Nikki

10:32 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

That is exactly how this country is becoming. I think it was called Soylent Green.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

12:16 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Ron: here is how Obamacare works ( you are not paying attention - FOX won't tell you this):
1. allows 32 million uninsured Americans an opportunity to get affordable healthcare;
2. allows kids up to 26 to stay on their parents insurance;
3. requires insurers to insure people with pre-existing conditions at affordable rates;
4. prevents automatic policy cancellations and caps that cut off benefits;
5. calls for more doctors, physician assistants and nurses, by subsidizing their educations;
6. more primary care physicians in rural areas;
7. covers contraception for unwanted pregnancies to public institutions ;
8. reforms administrative procedures to save costs
9. allows for negotiating prescription drugs and doctors' visits;
10. streamlines medicare costs , and reduces doctor's service benefits;
11. streamline 600 million from medicare costs;
12. close the prescription drug donut hole in Medicare , and saves seniors about $600 per year
to name a few

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

12:20 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Dick: NO!. it's just a movie, unless you see the uniforms outside your hospital window.

Comment_arrow

Laurie

2:54 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Tyler, thank you for spelling out Obamacare. Sounds pretty good to me!

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

9:27 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Well, Tyler, all of these are items that are on the whitehouse.gov site, and listed almost exactly in the order you listed them. But I wasn't really looking for what it does (or claims to do) without a discussion of how it works. I don't think that you will find anyone, Republican or Democrat, for example, who opposes "an opportunity" for uninsured Americans "to get affordable healthcare" or requiring "insurers to insure people with pre-existing conditions at affordable rates." I was looking for you to explain the mechanism. A thoughtful answer would touch on community rating, the health exchanges, the employer mandate, the Cadillax tax, the tax on medical devices , and who will oversee all of these.

For the record, I very rarely watch Fox News (once a year in a good year), and get my information from a variety of sources -- one of which is the whitehouse.gov site that you quoted. I rather have been paying attention, and I already know the answer to my question. I want to see a supporter articulate it.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

6:39 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Tom: I also think Ed Markey will make a great choice and will vote for him.. They( the Republicans and the so-called "independents" who always swing to the right come election time) will concentrate on trying to tie Markey to his wife, but his wife is not running. They will make the same mistake talking about Cherkoee Indians, which only shows they have no issues, and we all know how that turned out. Senator Elizabeth beat him buy 6 points, although in this neck of the woods you would not know that.

saul glick

11:15 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

http://www.forbes.com/sites/aroy/2012/12/03/why-obamacare-incentivizes-part-time-jobs/

This is a ver simple senario by Forbes. It explains the senarios of Obamacare and the future of full time jobs in America. One senario says that for every full time employee, who get downsized to part time status, the company may hire another part timer to make up the lost hours. Obama gets credit for his employment of the part time worker, and comes out of this with good employment figures.
You voted for this, and lost your jobs at the same time. Good luck..

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

6:45 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Saul: Part time jobs and no benefits are a product of profit maximizing CEOs, nothing to do with "Obama", but guys like you never miss a chance to denigrate our newly re-elected President. I like Obamacare. It allows 32 million Americans a shot at obtaining affordable healthcare. If we had a single payer system like the rest of the world, we would not have to worry about getting laid off and losing our healthcare, now , would we.

Comment_arrow

Bob

9:52 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Keep telling yourself that Tyler! Look at all those people from Canada coming here for life saving surgery etc.
Oh yea, Britain, France and Canada ALL have a strong private insurance industry. Why? So the wealthy in those countries can get the healthcare they can't get in the public model.

saul glick

11:30 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Trying to defend Obamacare, by saying that Romneys plan, whatever that was, was the lesser of two evils, is irrelivant. The fact is, Obamacare is here, and Romney is not. If you are one of the millions, who gets downsized to part time, are you going to jump for joy and hug your leader? Don't you wish you knew about Obamacare, before you voted to lose your job to Obamacare? Try feeding your family, and paying your rent, on 2 part time jobs and paying for your own healthcare.
You have no clue what you have done to yourself and your family.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

6:53 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Saul, Saul: There you go again; passing out false and misleading information. Obamacare does not even come into effect until 2014, and companies for the last 10 years have been laying people off, hiring part-times for 32 hours and no benefits, outsourcing jobs to China and India, thanks to the Republican Recession of 2009 where we were losing 750,000 jobs a month under Bush. That had nothing to do with "Obamacare", did it. You're confused, dude. Deep dislike for Barack Obama is at the root of it. No denying that. we're going Forward without you. We had an election and settled that; you lost. Obviously the American people , in spite of voter suppression in 22 states, thought differently and made the right decision.

#1T-bury Resident

11:37 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

I hope Scott Brown runs again and wins... But I don't think he will. It would be political suicide if he runs and loses.

I am against Obamacare because I am against most entitlement programs. But I don't think it will come to the extreme that Saul is referring to. Hasn't Obamacare been in Mass for years?? I haven't seen people downsized to part time in Mass... For the most part, the middleclass that are working are working full time.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

7:00 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

#1T-bury: good point. Hope Saul is listening. That is precisely where Saul's misguided anti- Obama everything philosophy falls down. Attributes economic effects to the wrong causes, and in Saul's little world , everything points to "Obama". No way to go through life. of course , if Romney were elected, outsourcing would go unabated. thank, Jesus, that CEO Romey is history

Comment_arrow

Laurie

3:02 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

#1 T-bury Resident: I hate to say, I don't think you are #1. At least not in my book. You are against entitlement programs? Which ones? I'd like to know what you consider entitlement programs. I hope you never need unemployment. I hope you NEVER become disabled. That would really suck. I hope you realize that social security and medicaid for the elderly is not an entitlement program. But an ABSOLUTE. They paid for it! So which entitlement programs are you against?? Be careful what you say, because I don't have to take advantage of entitlement programs, but I life changing events happen when you least expect it.

And yes, we have had Romneycare in this state and have not lost any jobs due to it. Obamacare is a new and improved version of it. But basically the same thing.

saul glick

11:48 am on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Well 1T- buryRes, I am not making it up. Simply read what companies are contemplating on the internet. It's reality. It's what corporate exectives and experts are saying. I am just showing you what they are saying. To deny the potential is really not facing up to what you voted for.
And congress can change this if they act.

Reply

#1T-bury Resident

12:39 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

I'm with you Saul, I voted for Romney... Obamacare is wrong for a lot of reasons. It teaches America you can sit on your ass for your entire life and taxpayers/government will make sure you are covered. Like every other entitlement program, you have no incentive to change. All I'm saying I haven't seen the effects in Massachusetts that the Forbes article is referring to. People in Mass are either getting laid off or keeping their jobs... I haven't seen the part time phenomenon that the Forbes article is talking about.

Reply
Comment_arrow

saul glick

12:54 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Yes #1Tbury restdent. This part of Obamacare starts in 2014, Not next week. But what i am reading about this part of it is really going to screw a lot of people. Companies are always looking to beat the IRS with ways to keep their monies. They are going to do the same with Obamacare. It is the employees who are going to get shafted when the company has to make ends meet.
Notice no one can ask Obama any questions on it? He has no idea what Obamacare is.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

12:32 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Saul/#1T: Companies under 50 employees are not required to do anything under Obamacare. They are EXEMPT. Most of the corporate world , aside from top management have been hiring part-time without benefits for years now. good argument for a single payer system not tied to employment. Look at Home Depot and Lowells , Maceys, most retail, supermarkets, you name it etc., as examples. Nothing to do with Obamacare. exchange markets do not start until 2014 and States can opt out anytime. The reason rising costs of healthcare costs

Comment_arrow

Laurie

3:05 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

I think you need to read up on the law. Nobody gets anything for nothing. As a matter of fact they get fined if they don't have insurance. Everyone needs to buy insurance.

linita

12:43 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Massachusetts has no right to complain about anything in the next four years. They have chosen to remain a one party state, regardless of the cost to taxpayers. Senator Brown would do well to move out of state and run in a place that values the US system of checks and balances. He is an honest politician, something MA voters no longer recognize. He might also see if he can claim the Kennedy name somewhere in his background, ala Warren, and then would have no trouble getting elected.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Anna Bucciarelli

9:58 am on Saturday, January 5, 2013

Correct, correct, and CORRECT! Love how you phrased it .. MA cannot EVER complain, not now or ever since it is such a one-party commonwealth and chose to remain so, ad infinitum it seems. But complain we must and hope to be heard at some level ... to be quiet is to appear to agree and to be complacent is weak, can lead to further demise of our democratic republic. I do wish we'd have kept Scott and would love to have him back but I'm not sure about his chances this time either. His last campaign was poor at best, and it's such a shame since I truly believe in his integrity and always felt his decisions were based upon good and well-thought reasoning, not along party lines. Ah, well, life is full of a number of things, we shall have to wait and see what his choice will be.

quasimodo

1:24 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Obamacare, Obamacare. The sky is falling, the sky is falling!!!!!! You bet, just look what happened in Massachusetts...;~))

Reply
Comment_arrow

quasimodo

6:16 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Yes, Ron, I read your article about a shortage of medical doctors, but NOWHERE is it said it is the result of Obamacare. The shortage existed way before Obama ever thought about the "Care", and since there will now be more people insured and wanting proper health care, if nothing is done about the doctors shortage, then it will not get better, with or without Obamacare. The basic problem is that not enough candidates with adequate education are available to postulate for the jobs.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

7:09 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Ron: The doctor shortage is caused by the AMA limiting enrollments, to pump up the salaries of their member doctors . There are plenty of highly qualified American students that would jump at the opportunity to become doctors . There is not shortage there if only the AMA would get out of the way, allow a few more medical schools to open, expand enrollment. BTW, Obamacare provides incentives for more , physicians, asst physicans, nurses, paralegals- that is part of the Plan, especially primary care physicians in rural areas. That's a good thing, Ron, unless you really do not want more doctors and would prefer to bash Obama, no matter what. face it, Ron, Obama won, and we are moving on. Peace.

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

8:21 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

You stated, "Just look what happened in Massachusetts." What happened in Massachusetts was universal coverage (or near universal coverage), but a shortage of doctors and much longer waiting times. And costs have not really been contained as far as I can tell. And I agree that Obamacare will face the same exact problems, for the same exact reasons.

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

8:23 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Oh, but one difference between what happened in Massachusetts and what will happen nationally: there was no Cadillac tax that will hit a large number of the middle class here in Massachusetts.

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

8:25 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Oh really? Is that why the shortage began right after the act was signed into law? It's really a question of math. There are many more patients and fewer doctors.

Comment_arrow

Bob

10:00 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Tyler, again facts have you confused. The shortage started with the cuts to Medicare reimbursements that Obama instituted. Obama care has been in affect for almost 3 years now. It has been enacted in stages and each stage that comes on line has caused more problems. Now Obama wants to take another $400 Billion out of Medicare reimbursements. Hospitals and physicians are already turning away Medicare patients. I know because I live it every day.

Comment_arrow

Laurie

3:07 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

I think that the shortage of doctors can be attributed to HMOs. I had a really good doctor for 25 years who ended up going totally private. One of the concierge doctors. He was going to charge $3500.00 for a family plan per year, that was on top of my insurance and co-pays in order to see him. I had to change.

linita

2:10 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

MA care did not raise the taxes on the rest of American taxpayers.

Reply
Comment_arrow

quasimodo

6:17 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Right, linita, and it did not raise the Mass State taxes either!

Comment_arrow

Bob

10:03 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Quasi, you are wrong! It is taking money out for city and town aid. It is cutting aid to towns to build new schools. It is stopping towns from hiring police, fire and teachers. It has become a budget buster Towns and cities are raising property taxes, meals taxes and hotel taxes to replace the lost aid.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

12:37 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Bob: it's not about YOU. The country, dude, needs to reign in healthcare costs including Medicare recipients doctor's visits. Nana goes to the doctor with her daughter. the doctor asks if she id feeling fine, then schedules a "follow-up" for 3 weeks. Cost $300 for 5 minutes.Get in now, dude?

Comment_arrow

Bob

6:47 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Tyler, dude! Not about me but abut my kids and grand kids! You have no idea! Average cost of a routine "sick" visit in Massachusetts is @$150 and ER visit is @$600. Sick visits are scheduled in 30 minute increments. That $150 pays for nurses, NP's, doctors and office staff. Also heat, rent, electricity and malpractice insurance. If you think that is a lot, you are nuts.
Medicare pays @$93 for that same visit. If you have to pay all those bills, which patients will you want to service?

Tom Jeffords

4:08 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Alfred E. Neumann If he puts a D behind his name, he is a shoo-in!

Reply

Gone4Now

5:00 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

It is the PEOPLES seat, not Kerry's

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

7:12 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Lady S: Ed Markey (D) by 4 points. Brown has got nothing left

Comment_arrow

Harry C.

8:09 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Scott Brown is an empty suit. Lots of men seem to have a "boy crush" on him because he claims to like sports and wears his nice barn coat while driving a truck. Scott Brown...he's for us!...yeah, right.

Rick Catino

8:20 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Ed Markey is the best candidate to run of the Democratic ticket. I've known Ed since his first run for State Rep and believe him to be honorable and dedicated. He has my support.

For the Republicans, Brown will likely run again and if elected, will continue to be irrelevant and mediocre; the baseline for his entire political career. Since he actually does so little, he probably wouldn't cause too much harm.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Bob

10:05 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Rick, you have guts to put call anyone irrelevant in the same post you claim Markey superiority! Truly oblivious!

saul glick

8:32 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

@Ron Powell. There is a debate about whether masshealth care will trump OBcare, or vice versa. No one seems to know which one will take over in Massachusetts.

Reply

Steve McMahan

9:14 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

I'd say Kevin MacDonald should go for the seat!!!

Reply

Mark

9:32 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

Ed Markey is a member of the Congressional Progressive (code word for Communist) Caucus. Members include among some of the most fascist crazies who have ever stained the halls of Congress.
Among the certifiable are:
Keith Ellison
Sheila Jackson Lee
Bernie Sanders
John Conyers
Chaka Fattah
Barney Frank
James McGovern
Charles Rangel
John Tierney
Maxine Waters
Besides being addicts, crooks and scoundrels they are all mathematically illiterate.
Their Caucus Whip is the cuckoo Hank Johnson. Yes, that Hank Johnson who thinks Guam will capsize.
For Ed Markey to be associated with these stooges and loons tells one a lot about his character and judgement.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Harriet

9:50 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

communist's aren't fascists. Communists are far left, fascist are far right. You've been listening to Rush and Reilly too much to be taken for anything but a right wingnut tool. If you think that a ultra right fascist is left wing, then you are the most extreme uber far right wing. No talking sense with you, you're gone, a traitor to this country.

Comment_arrow

Harriet

9:53 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

and since Massachusetts is one of the most educated states in the union, it's no wonder that the GOP only represents 16% of the population. Honestly, it's stranger that it's that high, but I guess that there will always be low or no information voters out there.

Comment_arrow

Pete N

10:31 am on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Hank Johnson is my favorite. Have you ever seen the video of him on Youtube?

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

6:48 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

MARK: WITH THIS LATEST POST, YOU TURNED OUT TO BE QUITE THE WHACKO

Brendan

11:19 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

The term "second most bipartisan senator" holds no weight when you've signed the Grover Norquist pledge.

Brown actually said if it were 12/31 and the only solution on the table was tax cuts on only those making less than $250,000 while those above that threshold would see their rates increase, he'd vote against it. This guy would let my taxes increase because his rich friends didn't get the same tax cuts?

If thinking the rich should pay more taxes like they did when all you boomers were growing up is communist, then call me Karl Marx.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Brendan

11:24 pm on Saturday, December 29, 2012

But I'd like to see Capuano run.

Percy

8:03 am on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Scott Brown is, fundamentally, a nice guy with a good personality who eagerly allowed himself to get completely co-opted by Wall Street. As was said on election night, "Scott Brown was so stuffed with hedge fund dollars that he burped credit default swaps." Until he decisively repudiates being that front man (in deeds and words), he has no business representing the people of Massachusetts.

Reply

Pete N

10:33 am on Sunday, December 30, 2012

!00% not true. What was Lizzie burping on? Lies and elitists' money? If not for the giant D next to her name she would have never been in the race.

Reply

Dirk Anderson

11:38 am on Sunday, December 30, 2012

I voted for Scott Brown. But I believe he lost not because he was republican but because his campaign was just awful. His entire platform was "Liz Warren said she was a native American and she was a lawyer who represented a couple of businesses" Virtually nothing about what he would do with a full term as Senator. His complete lack of a campaign reminded me of Martha Coakley's.

Reply

Rick Catino

11:58 am on Sunday, December 30, 2012

I voted for Brown the first time and I agree with you, his behavior toward Warren was nothing less than rascist this last time around. He should go back to underwear modeling.... less speaking parts.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

4:25 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

"Racist?" Hilarious.

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

Comment_arrow

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

5:04 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Naw, Brown criticized Warren because of her being an on-again-off-again Native American, and her leaning on race to get hired at Harvard. Note that she refused to meet with her fellow Indians during the campaign. A little DNA testing would go a long way.

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

#1T-bury Resident

12:06 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

The big D next to e. Warrens name should stand for Douche, because that's what she is... She will vote for her party every single time... She is for amnesty for illegal immigrants... She is all for giving taxpayer money to the welfare recipients...

We all know that some Kennedy that just graduated from high school and just got back from 3 month humanitarian mission in Africa will end up running for Kerry's seat. This is only a race until a Kennedy throws there hat into the pot. One that happens... The race is over. Mass voters vote for the name, not the candidate.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

6:53 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Pimperton: trivial stuff, man. Nothing to do with politics or government. Buster Brown was running for US Senator, not Cherokee Chief, or CEO of an insurance company, or asbestos company. Focus, man, focus. Praise the Lord, dude.

Rick Catino

1:30 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

To Pete N. His continual references to her as "Professor" were obviously not meant to be a title of respect but rather a demeaning reference and, as annoying as that was to me, I ignored it. The turning point for me was “Professor Warren claimed that she was a Native American, a person of color, and as you can see, she’s not,” I don't know how else that could be labelled other than racist. Brown lost my vote with that comment and his whole condescending approach to his opponent.

Reply
Comment_arrow

GROOVIN

1:51 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

whether she is an Indian or Not I think it just doesnt matter. I didnt vote for Brown for the same reasons

Comment_arrow

Bob

10:09 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

I agree Rick! Warren was a racist! She was not a Native American and filled out applications claiming such. She stole jobs from real minorities and therefore a racist!

saul glick

2:28 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Groovin: Lying does not matter with liberal democrats. Ex. Bill Clinton (no affair), Kerry (i am part jewish) and Warren (i am a indian) and H Clinton (i have a concusion) . And countless others.
Do you have any morals? And do they play a part in your voting choice? NO, as long as a D is after the name it doesn't. I teach my kids that lying is wrong. Do you do the same?

Reply
Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

8:02 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Aron, Elizabeth Warren is not part Native American. The Boston Globe conducted extensive interviews with her family, and although there is a family legend among her brothers and sisters, her cousins, aunts, and uncles had no knowledge of any native American ancestry. The best that someone could come up with was that a second cousin once remove MIGHT have been half Delaware or Cherokee. Which would make her 1/32nd Cherokee or Delaware ancestry, assuming the family legend is true, which the Globe could not find any evidence to support.

Rick Catino

3:16 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Saul, while I haven't had the opportunity you obviously have to review Hillary's medical records or research Warren's and Kerry's ancestry (and that appears important to you for some reason), you could be correct that all Dems are liars. I guess what we need is morale high ground from Rep leaders such as Nixon (Watergate), Regan and Bush Sr. (Iran-Contra). "W" (pick one - lol), etc., etc., etc. (the list is endless). It's good that you teach your children not to lie; I do too. I hope they are also learning how to think, and not let sound bytes get convoluted into made-up facts. Are your major sources of news Glenn and Rush, or just Fox News?

Reply

saul glick

3:21 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Mine is Bloomberg. Is yours The ladies of the view, Rachel Minnow, (he is great) or Ellen degenerate?

Reply

Rick Catino

3:29 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

I was taught not to have a battle of wits with someone who is unarmed... so you get the last word - lol.... I think the topic was - who should run for Kerry's seat.

Reply
Comment_arrow

saul glick

3:37 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Well rick, i named my source. You didn't.

Comment_arrow

Who Me?

3:42 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Hey...that's way cool...the positive thing about that is that it prevents you from having discussions with yourself......

Rick Catino

3:52 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Who me? - now that is a witty come-back - lol....

Reply

Rick Catino

5:07 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Reverend, there is a great book entitled “Passing for White” written by James O’Toole that talks about the Healy family from 1820 to 1920. These Black siblings were highly successful (i.e. one eventually a Catholic Bishop, one President of Georgetown University, etc.) in a segregated US environment. In that case, racism did not work against the Healy children because “they looked white”, but a clear message was that someone’s ethnicity, religious beliefs, sexual preference, etc., is not tattooed on their forehead for all to see. This is why we teach our children (or should) that jokes about any of those topics are never appropriate because you never really know the background of those present or who you may be offending.

To make a comment such as Brown made “as you can see, she's not” is an extreme form of racism. Brown and I have a different set of values, just as your values are your values.

Reply

Hedley Lamarr

9:31 pm on Sunday, December 30, 2012

I'd rather have Ronald McDonald "reporting for duty"

Reply

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

6:59 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Native Americans were doing quite well until they instituted a liberal immigration policy. They've had nothing but trouble since.

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

Reply

Mike G.

9:12 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Well, awesome, our taxes are about to go up by about $3-4k per year, but here we are, arguing about the heritage of someone who was already elected.

I weep for the future.

Reply

Who Me?

9:36 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Well....realizing the best way to confuse a Liberal is to hit them with facts I’ll try none the less.

The New England Genealogical Society HAS STATED REPEATEDLY
“They can find no evidence that Elizabeth Warren has ANY Native American Ancestry”

Period

Elizabeth Warren herself has checked the box many times identifying herself as a “Minority”

Please imagine for a minute how the Left Wing Fruit Loops would have reacted if Scott Brown would have been caught telling the same lie....we all know that answer.

This is no different than those who lie on resumes, lie about fake military credentials..

Yet...many were willing to say this wasn’t a “real” lie....willing to play semantics over rationalizing one lie over another....failing to understand, or care, that a lie is a lie and supporting a liar is to be a liar to ones self.

And to those who claim that those who attacked Warren’s lie were actually racist were, are and will always be racists themselves.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/post/everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-controversy-over-elizabeth-warrens-claimed-native-american-heritage/2012/09/27/d0b7f568-08a5-11e2-a10c-fa5a255a9258_blog.html

Reply
Comment_arrow

John Mc

10:19 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

It's amazing the media and supporters actually believe themselves. She should have been laughed out of Massachusetss but these people make excuses and vote for them. Same with Deval and his support of the rapist. But we're probabally just being racist.

Comment_arrow

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

10:24 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Quote for the day:

"The best way to confuse a liberal is to hit them with facts..." Liberals feel, conservatives think.

Happy New Year to Pocohantas Warren and her tribe,
Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

6:12 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

This is the most thorough review of the geneological record, with commentary from http://www.pollysgranddaughter.com/p/elizabeth-warren-information.html. If you do any amount of research into this topic, you will see that this is a very important issue to Native American bloggers and writers.

"I am the wife of a career soldier and the mother of four. I am registered with the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and, like my ancestors, have always been proud of my Cherokee heritage. I have been studying Cherokee history and genealogy for a long time and I am interested in anything Cherokee, whether it involves the historical Cherokee Nation or the Cherokee people of today. I have been fortunate to have been mentored in Cherokee history and genealogical methods by David Cornsilk and the late Jerri Chasteen and I hope to pass on what I have learned to others. I adhere to the Standards for Sound Genealogical Practices and believe one should only claim what they can prove through solid historical documentation."

Who Me?

9:51 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Stand and be counted Aron, stand and be counted.

Reply

Who Me?

9:54 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

Please take a minute to follow the "hate"
You will read and be shocked at the hate speech some of the Left Wing Fruit Loops say.....by their own words...not mine....

http://woburn.patch.com/articles/remembering-officer-maguire#comments

Reply

Who Me?

10:03 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

No Steven....it's called "Brand Recognition"

Reply

david mokal

10:52 am on Monday, December 31, 2012

EH ! Dont worry about it we are all DOOMED ..The Government wants to take everything away from you that you have worked so hard for. Allways has and allways will be. There is no such thing as a Bipartisan it's a lie. They cannot wear 2 hats. Its a brand to get votes from both sides. This stalemate in Washington is a shame and their just playing with the people. HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYONE

Reply

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

12:45 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Tyler likes the Post Office, and he's going to love ObamaCare.

Reverend E. Raleigh Pimperton III

Reply

Mike G.

12:47 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

I don't know who to be more afraid of, the government, or the fanatics on either side.

Reply

Rick Catino

12:54 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

One of life's little instructions passed down from my Dad was to always beware fanatics, even if they support your position. Fanaticism is always dangerous.

Reply

Who Me?

1:09 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Self assessment is always a good thing Rick. It's actually the first step in healing one's mind.
The second step will come when you can admit that you danced with fanatics when you called Scott Brown a racist.
Keep up the program Rick, I'm proud of you and have high hopes that you will make a full recovery.

Reply

Rick Catino

1:34 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Brown's "just look at her" comment was racist. It has nothing to do with Native Americans. To characterize someone such as he did in that single statement lost him a number of votes, including mine. Beware racists and fanatics. End of discussion from this kid.

Reply

saul glick

1:43 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Everything is racist, and offensive with liberals. please.

Reply

Rick Catino

1:57 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Lol - interesting enough, I'm neither a democrat or a liberal. I'm a registered republican. My posts here started on topic suggesting Markey run against Brown. Brown was a major disappointment but I know I set my expectations too high in the first place. The Character Flaws that surfaced in the debate show a set of values for which I'd reprimand my children. As far as the personal shots made toward me by some, I could care less. People without substance typically rant.

Reply

Bill Scaglione

3:49 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Scott Brown tried to pass a jobs bill that would have allowed job creators like myself to raise capital from ordinary people. Since 1933, securities laws have prevented companies from having more than 35 non-millionaire shareholders. The bill passed the house by over 400 yea to 17 no. (all Dems). 5 MA congressmen voted no.

When it got to the Senate, Harry Reed and the boys killed Brown's bill with concerns over fraud without one iota of evidence. We are now waiting 270 days+ for the SEC to add more restrictions. 30% of today's new jobs did not exist in 1980. Startup funding is way down. Meanwhile we keep bailing our failed corporations and fraudulent bankers to the tune of $5 trillion and counting.

Within the next 3 years, the nation is going to experience tremendous financial upheaval. While both parties have sold out to the big money, it is important to reward those who are trying like Sen Brown. This will be liberalism's last stand, A national economy based solely on money printing and debt creation cannot survive. Laugh if you want but mark June 2015 on your calendars. Real change is coming. - Happy New Year from A former resident.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

4:34 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Wasn't that the Crowd funding bill? I thought that it passed.

Comment_arrow

Bill Scaglione

11:45 am on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Crowdfunding is still being held up by the SEC while millions more lose their jobs. It will do nothing to help high potential, job creating startups that need to raise larger amounts. I personally believe it is unconstitutional to restrict investments on the basis of wealth.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/27/business/smallbusiness/why-the-sec-is-likely-to-miss-its-deadline-to-write-crowdfunding-rules.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

Comment_arrow

Bill Scaglione

11:53 am on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

See Wikipedia SEC Regulation D non accredited investors: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regulation_D_(SEC)

Rep Patrick McHenry NC sponsored the bill in the house. Scott Brown was the Senate Sponsor. The final bill was cobbled together from about 4 other bills. The house bill would have allowed companies like ours to raise up to $10k from non-accredited investors. So the pols chant "middle class" while they continue to screw the working public. And the financial industry maintained its stranglehold on investing thanks to Harry Reid and company. Scott did what he could to get something passed.

Comment_arrow

Bill Scaglione

4:25 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

To "binderful of ...." : One more try to communicate with a person with comprehension difficulties. Another reader kindly inquired about securities laws in general. Instead of Wiki, here is the same info straight from the SEC. http://www.sec.gov/answers/regd.htm

And no - I don't want to raise money on the /iternet for fear of attracting a bunch of wacko shareholders.

The message is clear. We can keep regulating the economy into oblivion while we let proven criminals escape with minor fines and no jail time or we can some to our senses and let the free markets return America to its former greatness.

Yes, there will be fraud on the Internet as there is in daily business, but stopping crowdfunders from creating jobs with unreasonable regulations makes as much sense as trying to prevent auto fatalities by outlawing all automobiles.

The most amazing thing about the stupidity of the average American voter is recognizing that half of them are even dumber than the average.

Comment_arrow

Tyler Jozefowicz

9:36 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

ya Bill: the sky is falling and Scott Brown is a misunderstood brain surgeon with a barncoat.

saul glick

5:30 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Aron: Do you agree with the liberal giveaways, that buy votes? ex. EBT CARDS. and welfare for illegal aliens?

Reply

BD

6:17 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Anyone who will vote to impeach Obama for his handling of Bengazi.
Yes, I know he is not the only one, but he is supposed to be "the comander in chief" even if he has never served and doesn't act as a "comander in chief"

Reply

saul glick

6:59 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

OK aron. LIberals don't answer questions. They just ask the question back to the person who asked it. Typical liberal response.

Reply

saul glick

7:15 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Aron: Do you think the liberal giveaways buy votes? ex. EBT CARDS. and welfare for illegal aliens?
Hows that aaron?

Reply

quasimodo

7:34 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

saul glick, I hope you wont forget to send McConnell and his ilk a thank you note for their excellent work in making the Obama Administration a failure. Too funny for words...

Reply
Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

8:04 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

It might be too funny for words because, and this is kind of important, McConnell never said those words. You really need to stop getting all of your news from Daily Kos. His actual quote, in context was this:

"It is possible the president’s advisers will tell him he has to do something to get right with the public on his levels of spending and [on] lowering the national debt. If he were to heed that advice, he would, I imagine, find more support among our conference than he would among some in the Senate in his own party. I don’t want the president to fail; I want him to change. So, we’ll see. The next move is going to be up to him."

So not only did he NOT say that he wanted the President to fail, he specifically said that he did NOT want the President to fail.

saul glick

7:53 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Aron: I don't know anything about your father, or your personal status, and i don't care. But i probably think you should bow out of these social comment forums, and seek a shrink? . If this forum is your outlet to vent, about you personal stuff, and family stuff, then i am done.
good luck, aron

Reply

saul glick

8:10 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

Thanks Ron. Quasi is irrelevant

Reply

Ron Powell

11:19 pm on Monday, December 31, 2012

I'm signing out for the rest of 2012. I want to wish all of you a happy and prosperous 2013. I leave you with this quote from David Foster Wallace:

"A Democratic Spirit is one that combines rigor and humility, i.e., passionate conviction plus sedulous respect for the convictions of others. As any American knows, this is a very difficult spirit to cultivate and maintain, particularly when it comes to issues you feel strongly about. Equally tough is a D.S.'s criterion of 100 percent intellectual integrity — you have to be willing to look honestly at yourself and your motives for believing what you believe, and to do it more or less continually.

This kind of stuff is advanced U.S. citizenship. A true Democratic Spirit is up there with religious faith and emotional maturity and all those other top-of-the-Maslow-Pyramid-type qualities people spend their whole lives working on. A Democratic Spirit's constituent rigor and humility and honesty are in fact so hard to maintain on certain issues that it's almost irresistibly tempting to fall in with some established dogmatic camp and to follow that camp's line on the issue and to let your position harden within the camp and become inflexible and to believe that any other camp is either evil or insane and to spend all your time and energy trying to shout over them."

Irrespective of whether you often agree or disagree with me, thank you for helping to build community.

Reply

SomervilleGirl

9:29 am on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Scott Brown didn't have the courage to vote in favor of extending unemployment to millions across the state who were devastated by layoffs perpetuated by the WS Brood who have conspired with thieves in banking to tank the global economy. When he had 100 protestors at his state house door, he reconsidered. Now that's what I like --a man who stands behind his convictions. He was a trained flipp-flopper from his mentor--

Of course, Mitt Romney the Bain Capital Grim Reaper, as we all know was Scott's
buddy. They all sing the same tune--"It's all about me" and distorted, overly inflated egos to match.

This is no longer a two party system--the ruling class have stolen all the taxpayer's money and run off to foreign lands. How's that for loyalty. It's possible they feared a repeat of the French Revolution if they remained. The working class have every right to be dissatisfied with events which have led to increased instability of our nation, our families, jobs, homes and lives. This is a global issue with no end in sight. The more they take, the more they want and who's going to stop the too big to fail chain gang?

Three entities now rule--predatory banks, WS and Military. Everything else is a fairy-tale.

Reply

quasimodo

11:17 am on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Nice try, Ron Powell, but you only reported HALF of McConnell’s remarks he made in an interview that appeared in the National Journal on Oct. 23, 2010 — nearly two years after Obama was elected president.

[…]

“NJ: What have you learned?

McConnell: After 1994, the public had the impression we Republicans overpromised and underdelivered. We suffered from some degree of hubris and acted as if the president [Bill Clinton] was irrelevant and we would roll over him. By the summer of 1995, he was already on the way to being reelected, and we were hanging on for our lives.

NJ: What does this mean now?

McConnell: We need to be honest with the public. This election is about them, not us. And we need to treat this election as the first step in retaking the government. We need to say to everyone on Election Day, “Those of you who helped make this a good day, you need to go out and help us finish the job.”

NJ: What’s the job?

McConnell: The single most important thing we want to achieve is FOR PRESIDENT OBAMA TO BE A ONE-TERM PRESIDENT.”

I guess you conveniently missed this part of McConnell’s comments, but that’s OK, we understand, it’s the way Republicans usually deal with facts.

Reply
Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

12:01 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

He made those remarks earlier in the interview. When asked what he meant by "The single most important thing we want to achieve is FOR PRESIDENT OBAMA TO BE A ONE-TERM PRESIDENT." he responded by saying, "It is possible the president’s advisers will tell him he has to do something to get right with the public on his levels of spending and [on] lowering the national debt. If he were to heed that advice, he would, I imagine, find more support among our conference than he would among some in the Senate in his own party. I don’t want the president to fail; I want him to change. So, we’ll see. The next move is going to be up to him."

Your precise comment was, "I hope you wont forget to send McConnell and his ilk a thank you note for their excellent work in making the Obama Administration a failure." Your implication was that McConnell goal was to make the Obama Administration a failure. It is intellectually dishonest to represent McConnell's remarks as a desire for President Obama to fail, which is what you were doing. You were the one who intentionally or unintentionally omitted an important part of McConnell's comments to change its original meaning, not me. I have nothing to apologize for.

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

12:10 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Your comment rated two pinocchios (on a scale of 1 to 4) at the Washington Post. So it wasn't a totally bold-faced lie, but it was false and misleading. I have my own scale from 0 to 10 (0 is a false statement that is known to be false and deliberately repeated in an attempt to discredit; 10 is a true factual statement that can be verified by two or more different sources and is not an opinion). Your statement rates a 4.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/post/when-did-mcconnell-say-he-wanted-to-make-obama-a-one-term-president/2012/09/24/79fd5cd8-0696-11e2-afff-d6c7f20a83bf_blog.html

Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

12:14 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

My statement, on the other hand was, "So not only did he NOT say that he wanted the President to fail, he specifically said that he did NOT want the President to fail." I also stated, "It might be too funny for words because, and this is kind of important, McConnell never said those words."

Both statements are true, factual statements that are not an opinion and which can be verified from two or more sources. They rate a 10.

My statement, "You really need to stop getting all of your news from Daily Kos," was hyperbole. It cannot be confirmed or disproved, but it was not a statement of fact.

quasimodo

12:23 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

For four years, McConnell has led the charge in the Senate against President Obama's each and every moves, opposing by any means every single proposal the President made. Nowhere, has Mitch even collaborated to achieve any of the President's goals, which could have presented him in a favorable light, while at the same time being beneficial to the nation. It became a joke, albeit a sad one, that the Republicans' platform under McConnell's leadership was and still is simply "Niet!"

Reply

quasimodo

1:35 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Come on, Ron, as you, yourself, claims above that McConnell never said that he wanted the President to fail, when in fact by the transcript of the WP (as I reported), Mitch actually stated that,
“The single most important thing we want to achieve is FOR PRESIDENT OBAMA TO BE A ONE-TERM PRESIDENT.”
That is not exactly a wish for the Presidential success, was it?

Reply
Comment_arrow

Ron Powell

1:46 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

I will leave it for other readers to draw their conclusions; however, I stand by what I wrote. What I wrote is 100 percent true and verifiable. What you wrote? Not so much.

Comment_arrow

Bob

7:12 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Quasi, you keep forgetting the rest. That this was after he said if Obama wouldn't meet the Republican's half way.

saul glick

7:19 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Aron. Sober up and go to bed. You are making a fool of yourself. Get a job too.

Reply

saul glick

7:31 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

I didn't say that Aron. You are now a slacker after your familys downfall. I never said you had anything to do with your fathers issue. And i don't have an opinion on what your tather did.
Get a job, and become a productive memebr of society. It beats laying on the couch all day and feeling sorry for yourself.

Reply

saul glick

7:44 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Are you a magician?
And you said: "I would hate to think what would happen if anyone you loved got sick..." I don't know what you mean by this?

Reply

Rick Catino

7:45 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

If ever a thread needed a moderator's intervention, this is the place. Not only has this gone way off topic, the hostility, name-calling and general animosity is likely not how most of you behave on a day to day basis, Perhaps this might be more informative if some folks started to act like adults. Okay, I'm done with the lecture.... just had to post this thought.

Reply
Patch_comments_icon

Andrew Sylvia

9:50 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Deleted multiple comments. Take a step back, people.

Reply

Anna Bucciarelli

10:13 am on Saturday, January 5, 2013

Tyler ... was it not you who reprimanded me on another post for taking whacks at you (which I still think I did NOT) ... and here you go, calling Mark a Whacko. ??? Ignore me if you will, but recognize your own duplicity. Gotta say, you repeat yourself in all of these posts ... samo, samo. I do see the logic in some of your points but suggest you take a turn at understanding where others thoughts come from and engage in proper dialogue, not name calling.

Reply

Leave a comment