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The Top 10 Republican Presidential Candidates – The Cast of a New Reality TV Show?

 

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By Steven Gan

One of the things I like about Facebook is that it gives me a wonderful opportunity to debate with my conservative friends all the issues that we so passionately disagree on. Whether the topic is gun control, women’s reproductive health, marriage equality, immigration, climate change, my days and weeks can be filled with exhausting and pithy back-and-forth banter. With a few of my conservative FB friends, at least the ones who haven’t unfriended me yet, the debate threads sometimes go on and on: we’re like two boxers who are barely standing by the 10th round.

But when, recently, one of my stalwart opponents made a final comment to me, for perhaps the first time we found ourselves standing on common ground. “Unfortunately, the GOP doesn’t have a single, clear, and popular candidate who can really enthuse and rally the party and its supporters,” he said.

To read my Facebook antagonist’s honest assessment was almost shocking, but anyone who follows the silly antics, outlandish comments, and bizarre perspectives of the GOP candidates can easily come to the same  conclusion. Let me take a moment to give you a quick rundown on my top 10 Republican candidates for 2016 and point out why they’re nothing but part of the cast of the next new reality TV show.

1) Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker

According to a nationwide Quinnipiac poll released in early March, Walker has recently been leading the GOP pack with 18 percent of Republican primary voters. That’s impressive, considering that he’s really not well-known nationwide.

In February, Walker went off to England to obtain some semblance of foreign policy credentials.  When asked by one UK reporter whether he believed in evolution, he responded…. well, actually, he had no response. I suppose he just didn’t want to go down a path that could alienate the religious conservatives of his party.

But I got more insight into how Walker’s mind works when he was asked recently at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference how he would handle ISIS.  His coy response was, “If I can take on 100,000 protesters, I can do the same across the world.” Comparing the teachers, firemen, policemen, and other union supporters who were peacefully protesting to radical terrorists who commit heinous, violent crimes just makes me cringe.

2) Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee

While the rest of the country is moving forward, accepting marriage equality and being open-minded about other social issues, Huckabee is digging in his heels. His new book, God, Guns, Grits, and Gravy, is nothing but camouflage for his religious liberty crusade.

I was watching one of Huckabee’s comical interviews when he declared, “Forcing people opposed to same-sex marriage to accept it is the same as telling Jews they have to serve bacon-wrapped shrimp in their deli.”

Mike, if you’re reading this, just for the record, no one is forcing any kosher deli owner to sell shrimp wrapped in bacon.  Just as you can marry someone of the opposite sex, if you prefer.  However, if you were to walk into a kosher deli, you could not be refused service, no matter how repugnant your ideas.

3) Former Texas Governor Rick Perry

Talk about delusional.  When you’re under federal indictment for abuse of power and you still think you have a chance to become President of the United States, something upstairs is amiss.

I know Rick Perry is very good at leading thousands in prayer, and maybe he thinks that this talent will somehow save him from going to trial, but the reality is that he’ll drop out of the GOP race as soon as the Feds set a trial date, most likely once the campaign season gets underway. It’s all about perfect timing.

4) New Jersey Governor Chris Christie

The George Washington Bridge traffic rerouting scandal is probably not going to matter all that much anymore. What will probably hurt Christie is not anything to do with his policies or the fact that New Jersey’s bond rating has been downgraded a few times since he’s been governor. Instead, he’ll pander to the Tea Party element of the GOP telling them that he’s the “real conservative,” while the other candidates keep showing pictures of him embracing President Obama right after Hurricane Sandy.

5) Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal

I once thought Jindal was not as entrenched in GOP ideology as the others, but since he’s been thinking of throwing his hat into the ring, I hear him espousing the conservative line more and more. Jindal is currently fighting with his own party over how to, on the one hand, fill a $1.6 billion budget hole and, on the other hand, maintain his anti-tax bona fides. Republicans like to think of each state’s economy as a microcosm of the U.S. economy.  If you can’t balance the budget in your own little corner of the world, then what makes you think you would be able to balance the budget of the entire nation?

6) Kentucky Senator Rand Paul

For several months, Paul was kind of leading the GOP pack. His “outreach” to the African-American community and his anti-interventionist foreign policy seemed to make him a little more palatable. Then came his statements in support of parents who withhold vaccination from their children. Followed by rapid back-pedaling.

Paul has had a history of making outlandish and highly provocative comments, only having to explain them later. That said, he seems to be probably the only one who can appeal to the hardline conservatives and then try to soften up his libertarian and Tea Party credentials for the general election.

7) Texas Senator Ted Cruz

You may be surprised to learn that I didn’t think Cruz would run for President.  I thought he just enjoyed letting everyone think he might run.  He should know he doesn’t have a chance. He’s caused way too much destruction to this country (leading the government shutdown) and has fomented endless turmoil within his party. His obsession to repeal the ACA drives him. He has done nothing but be an obstructionist on every issue no matter the damage. His claim to fame is that he knows how to read Dr. Seuss’ sbook, Green Eggs & Ham.

Honorable mentions

8) Dr. Ben Carson

One might expect some scientific insight from a former neurosurgeon.  That’s why Carson’s recent assertion on CNN that men go into prison straight and come out gay, which he offered as scientific proof that being gay is a choice, is so appalling.

9) Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina

Fiorina has been toying around with the idea of running for President since 2008. The problem is that she has never held any public office and seems to think tha,t having been a corporate CEO, she can just waltz right into the presidency. Talk about having hubris.

By the way, wasn’t she forced to resign as CEO of Hewlett-Packard?  And hasn’t she ranked as one of the worst tech CEOs of all time?

10) Former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin & Mogul Donald Trump

I’m lumping these contenders together.  Neither has any real intention of ever running, and both love the attention they get by feeding into any speculation they might give it a try.

As horribly inarticulate as she is, Sarah Palin is probably smart enough to know that she’s way out of her league running for President. As for Donald Trump, it’s all about doing what he can to increase ratings for The Apprentice.

With the above pool of illustrious candidates, no wonder my Conservative FB friend and I agree that this line-up is a television station’s reality show dream team come true.

Local Democrats Express Ambitions for a Bright Future

By Claire Esker

On Sunday, March 8, Democratic supporters from Moraine Township gathered at Lucky Fish in Highwood to meet state and local elected officials and candidates for office.  Moraine Township, one of 18 townships within the 10th Congressional District, includes parts of Highland Park, all of Highwood and Fort Sheridan, and parts of Deerfield and Lake Forest.  As the more than 70 in attendance enjoyed fish tacos and crab quesadillas, they had the opportunity to mingle with fellow activists, elected officials, and candidates.

During the formal program, the importance of Democratic values in a changing society, and, indeed, as a catalyst for change, was emphasized by all speakers, who included Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering, Illinois State Senator Julie Morrison, State Representative Scott Drury, College of Lake County Trustee Amanda Howland, and candidates for local school boards.   As Barbara Altman, one of the Moraine Township Democrats’ vice chairs pointed out, many elected officials who achieve higher office begin their political careers in non-partisan, down-ballot races.  It is important, she noted, that we support those who share our party’s values.

Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rodkin Rotering, who is running unopposed for reelection and has announced that she will be running for Congress in the 10th District in 2016, said that Highland Park has had a balanced budget for four years and that, responding to residents’ concerns, the city has installed new sidewalks in many parts of the community.

Dan Pierce, a former Highland Park mayor and currently a Democratic State Committeeman and President of the North Shore Water Reclamation District (formerly known as the North Shore Sanitary District), noted that Democrats are working toward solutions to global water shortages in our own back yard.

Education at all levels was a topic of concern.  Highland Park’s K-8 schools are slated to undergo a major reorganization that will be on the 2016 ballot for voter approval, and Superintendent Michael Bregy briefly spoke about the issues.   Amanda Howland, the chair of the Board of Trustees of the College of Lake County emphasized the importance of this two-year public college as a resource for so many in our community. Candidates for school boards throughout Moraine Township also addressed the group.

Perhaps the most significant warnings about the urgency of employing our Democratic values came from State Senator Julie Morrison and State Representative Scott Drury.  Senator Morrison noted that changes were coming to the Illinois budget that were extremely worrisome and that she and Representative Drury would be working to make sure that Illinois maintains a morally equitable budget.

Representative Drury warned that in the 2014 elections we saw a demographic shift and a change in the electoral landscape that necessitates a greater unity among Democrats and persistent, powerful campaign tactics.  He also emphasized the importance of reading the electorate based on the 2014 results and of candidates acting accordingly in this new environment.

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Congress Watch: Kirk Again

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Kirk Signs Open Letter to Iran; Goes Along with Republican Leadership on Abortion Restrictions and Anti-Immigrant Homeland Security Funding Bills

By Barbara Altman

It’s early days for the 114th Congress, but already Illinois’ Republican Senator Mark Kirk has made it clear that he does not plan to behave like the thoughtful independent he claims to be.  Nor has he demonstrated any intent to exert a moderating influence on the right-wing controlled Republican caucus.

Three cases in point for this month’s column: 1) the Republicans’ unprecedented interference in U.S. negotiations with a foreign government by writing An Open Letter to the Leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 2) their effort to restrict the right of victims of human trafficking from terminating unwanted pregnancies, and 3) their failed attempt to extort President Barack Obama into abandoning his executive actions on immigration by attaching a poison pill to the bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security.

Kirk and the Open Letter to Iran

“An Open Letter to the Leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran” dominated much of the news in March.  It essentially announced to the Iranian government and the rest of the world that there is no point in negotiating with an American President because the Congress, or a future President, might just abrogate any agreement reached. All but seven of the 54 Senate Republicans signed the letter.  So did Mark Kirk.

Spearheaded by 37-year-old senator-since-January Tom Cotton (R-AR), the letter is childish in both its tone and its content.   It is less than one-fifth the length of this column, so you can read all 271 words and draw your own conclusions.

The letter begins with a decidedly condescending tone:   “It has come to our attention … that you may not fully understand our constitutional system.”  It ends on the same note:  “We hope this letter enriches your knowledge of our constitutional system.”

And what is the main point about our Constitution the letter seeks to convey?  Not that it includes a Bill of Rights that protects the individual rights of our people.  And certainly not that the Constitution gives the U.S. President the power to conduct our foreign policy.  No, the main point about the Constitution is that the current U.S. President, Barack Obama, has only two more years in office:  “For example, the president may serve only two 4-year terms, whereas senators may serve an unlimited number of 6-year terms.  As applied today, for instance, President Obama will leave office in January 2017, while most of us will remain in office well beyond then — perhaps decades.”

Read those two sentences aloud.  Are you hearing in your head a final “nyaah, nyaah, nyaah, nyaah, nyaah”?

Can Mark Kirk really believe that it is in the interest of the United States to tell the world that our nation should not be expected to abide by any international agreement it enters into because our president is term-limited?  It appears that Senator Kirk didn’t give signing onto such a statement much thought.  Shortly after the letter was issued, he was quoted in the March 12 edition of The Washington Post as remarking, “The letter has been a surprising controversy that came up.”

Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) called the letter “virtually unprecedented,” “cynical,” and “a new low.”  He said that it “weakens America’s hand and highlights our political divisions to the rest of the world.”  Durbin continued, “Understand that if these negotiations fail, a military response to Iran developing their nuclear capability becomes more likely. These Republican Senators should think twice about whether their political stunt is worth the threat of another war in the Middle East.”

Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), a sometime critic of the President’s foreign policy, agreed. “We can and should and must disagree with the president… but when war holds in the balance and specifically when nuclear war hangs in the balance should members of the United States Senate be in the position of publicly undermining the president of the United States to our enemies” she said.

Apparently Senator Kirk had no compunction about publicly undermining the President of the United States to our enemies.  After his initial surprise at the “controversy that came up” dissipated, he issued a statement in which he tried to justify his action by expressing concern that the Obama administration, along with an international coalition that includes the U.K., France, Germany, China, and Russia, may negotiate a bad deal: “A better deal, with bipartisan congressional backing, is the best insurance policy against a nuclear Iran, a destructive arms race, and war in the Middle East.”  But the letter Kirk signed has hurt bipartisan efforts in the Senate to assert greater influence on the negotiations, and Debbie Stabenow is not the only senator who has been critical of the President on Iran to say so.  As Tim Kaine (D-VA) said, the open letter to Iran “weakens our president, weakens our country, weakens our credibility.”

Turning from policy to politics, Michael Gerson, a former speechwriter for George W. Bush, called the letter “a stunt rather than a strategy,” positing that many who signed did so unthinkingly, for no other reason than because Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) did.
I doubt that many of the voters in Illinois’ 10th District who supported Mark Kirk when he ran for the Senate in 2010 expected him to do whatever Mitch McConnell does.

The more I think about the irresponsible behavior of these Senators, the more I realize that the scariest sentence in the open letter Mark Kirk signed may be the one that says that he and the other signatories could remain in the Senate for decades.  We should make it our business to make sure that Mark Kirk doesn’t remain in the Senate beyond 2016.

Kirk on Reproductive Rights of Victims of Human Trafficking

In mid-March, Kirk voted to bring to the floor anti-trafficking legislation to which fellow Republicans had added new abortion restrictions.

For decades, Congress has prohibited federally-appropriated funds from being used to pay for an abortion.  However, the anti-trafficking legislation is not funded by appropriations; the money to help victims of human trafficking comes from the traffickers, themselves in the form of court-ordered fines and forfeitures.  Adamant that victims of sexual trafficking should be free to terminate unwanted pregnancies, Democrats have been filibustering the Republican bill, demanding that the abortion restrictions be removed.  On March 17, 18, and 19, Senator Kirk voted five separate times to end the filibuster.

If Kirk were for reproductive choice and against human trafficking, as he often claims, he wouldn’t be trying to get this particular bill to the floor.  Democrats are against human trafficking, but they oppose this legislation because it is anti-choice.  Without the new abortion restrictions Republicans tacked on, the anti-trafficking legislation would pass with a large, bipartisan majority.  By his refusal to break with his caucus on March 17, 18, and 19, Kirk once again showed that he elevates party over policy.

Kirk on Immigration

The big news out of Congress in February was the near-shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security on February 27.  If you wondered where Senator Mark Kirk stood during that crisis, you wouldn’t be alone.  Mostly, he missed votes.

Some quick background.  In 2012, President Obama implemented DACA.  Standing for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, DACA essentially provides legal status for certain undocumented immigrants who arrived in the United States as children and have lived here continuously, are in school or have a high school diploma or an honorable discharge from the armed services, and have no significant criminal record.

A year later, in June of 2013, the Senate passed a bipartisan immigration reform bill that would have codified some of what DACA has done for undocumented young people.   Back then, Senator Kirk voted for the immigration reform bill, and he touted this vote in a press release that began, “U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) today applauded Senate passage of a bipartisan immigration reform bill that first secures the border and then creates a tough but fair path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.”  But the bipartisan bill died when Kirk’s fellow Republicans refused to bring it up for a vote in the House.

Then, last November, the President announced a second program, DAPA (either Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and legal permanent residents or Deferred Action for Parental Accountability).  DAPA (whose implementation is on hold pending further court action) would protect from deportation certain undocumented immigrants who have a child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident, as long as the immigrant parent meets certain criteria, including passing a background check.

We all know what happened next.  With majorities in both houses of Congress, Republicans decided to use the need to fund the Department of Homeland Security as leverage to shut down DACA and DAPA. Although the House easily passed the bill that wed an anti-immigration reform poison pill to funding Homeland Security, filibusters kept the bill from coming to a vote in the Senate.

DACA and DAPA further the same policies as the immigration reform bill that Senator Kirk supported in 2013, support that, at the time, he deemed worthy of a self-congratulatory press release.  So one might think he would stand up in favor of DACA and DAPA.

However, on February 5, the first time Republicans tried to break the Democrats’ filibuster of the DACA/DAPA-destroying Homeland Security funding bill that had passed the House, Mark Kirk was right there, voting with his party.  That is, Senator Kirk joined the Republican effort to get the House bill through the Senate and to the President’s desk, to force the President to kill programs fully consistent with the same immigration reforms that Kirk announced he supported in June 2013.

After that cloture vote failed (despite Kirk’s joining in with his anti-immigrant caucus), there were no fewer than three additional tries as Democrats held firm.  For each subsequent unsuccessful cloture vote, Senator Kirk is listed as “not voting.”

Whether something kept Kirk from the floor during these roll calls, or he simply ducked out to avoid difficult votes, one thing is certain:  Mark Kirk failed to take a principled stand on this important issue.  He showed no support for the immigration reforms he claimed to be for in 2013, and he issued no statement to explain his stance (or lack thereof).

The 10th District—indeed, all of Illinois—deserves better.

 

Two Free Tenth Dems Events in April Focus on the Next Generation

April is the first full month of spring, and spring can be a poetic metaphor for youth.  So it is apt that the upcoming Tenth Dems April events both focus on opportunities for talented and engaged high school students.

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On Monday evening, April 13, at 7:00 p.m., Tenth Dems University presents Civic Action for a New Generation:  The Mikva Challenge and the Stevenson Center on Democracy. The free event, at the Highland Park Public Library, 494 Laurel Avenue, will feature Judge Abner Mikva and former U.S. Senator Adlai Stevenson III.  In addition, students from the Mikva Challenge program at Stevenson High School will share their experiences and reflections.

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Then, on Tuesday evening, April 14, at 7:00 p.m., join us at the Ramada Inn, 200 N. Green Bay Road, Waukegan, for the Fifth Annual Tenth Dems Community Connection Poetry and Prose Competition Awards Ceremony and Open Mic.  The young authors of prizewinning original works of poetry and prose will be honored while all contestants who attend will have the opportunity to read their short pieces aloud.

The competition, which closed on March 23, was open to students attending high schools in Waukegan, North Chicago, and Zion Township.  This year, contestants were asked to write about “hope,” a topic intended to inspire responses from young people facing a variety of challenges as they think about their post-high school lives.  As vaccine pioneer Jonas Salk said, “Hope lies in dreams, in imagination, and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality.”

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Tenth Dems Community Connection Poetry and Prose competition judges Heather Crain, Jacqueline Harris, and Lois Barr join the Tenth Dems planning committee to hammer out logistics for the April 14 Awards Night.

 

The Awards Ceremony MC, Kevin Lampe, is an internationally-known political strategist who has worked with such luminaries as President Barack Obama, former President Bill Clinton, actor Erik Estrada, and civil rights icon Rosa Parks.  In the past, Lampe’s warmth and charm have put the young people at ease, inspiring many to conquer their initial reluctance and come to the microphone to read.  We expect this year to be no different.

The published writers who served on our panel of judges also will have the opportunity to read their own short, original works.

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At the 2014  Poetry and Prose Competition Awards Night, Ayana Merrill accepts her award certificate from Tenth Dems Co-Chair Bonnie Berger-Neel.

Both of these events are free, but space is limited.  To RSVP, go to www.tenthdems.org, or contact us at 847-266-VOTE (8683) or by email at events@tenthdems.org.

The April 13 event appears to be full.  We are still accepting new reservations for our wait list.  The event is general seating; confirmed registrants will be seated on a first come, first served basis.  If you have already registered and your plans have changed, please notify us immediately so that we can give your place to someone on the wait list.

VOTE!

Election Day is Tuesday, April 7.  Early voting is already underway.

To vote is a citizen’s most precious right and most sacred duty.  If we wish to have a voice in the life of our community, our state, and our nation, the very least we can do is vote in every single election – whether it’s for President or a seat on a municipal board.

Let your voice be heard.  Fulfill your duty as a citizen. Learn about the candidates and the issues.

VOTE!

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