Nice: the St. Paul Pioneer Press runs his announcement on the Obituary page.



Oh yes, a system where "party leaders" who have never had to demonstrate any voter appeal or support beyond their own small constituencies, and who are selected to head their parties by a small group of their party cronies based on backroom political deals and interpersonal intrigues (based largely on their having risen methodically through the ranks by knowing who's backside to kiss and when to kiss it) is vastly superior....Another fascinating* thing about American politics. Instead of the party leader making his case for PM/Presidency
This is both the strength and weakness of the American model of democracy. Candidates can "come from nowhere" and generate sufficient support among the public to get elected, making the possibility of holding office much more open to anyone who wishes to try (see Obama, Barack). This results in a structural weakness of the political parties in terms of formulating effective policies and programs based on an actual coherent philosophy of government (see Obama, Barack). As a consequence, government is much more susceptible to lobbying of special pleaders and the influence of moneyed interests.Gob wrote:Instead of the party leader making his case for PM/Presidency, you have these beauty pageants where these people come out of the woodwork/from under a stone, people who I have never heard of before, and suddenly they are potential party Pres candidates.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezr ... _blog.htmlPawlenty, for instance, brags about his success as Minnesota governor closing the state’s budget deficit. Crowley took a closer look:
Critics say Pawlenty used accounting shortcuts, like postponing spending and accelerating revenue collection, to balance budgets. Today, Minnesota is struggling with a projected budget deficit of $5 billion, which some blame on Pawlenty. “I don’t think any governor has left behind a worse financial mess than he has,” says Arne Carlson, a Republican who was Minnesota’s governor from 1991 to 1999. Not my fault, Pawlenty replies, blaming the recession, Democratic spending habits and a state supreme court ruling that restored $2.7 billion he’d slashed from the budget by fiat in 2009. (The ruling, written by a chief justice whom Pawlenty appointed, found that the unilateral cut had exceeded the governor’s authority.) But he tends not to mention the help he got from nonconservative sources — including more than $2 billion from an Obama stimulus bill that he has trashed as “largely wasted” and a 75 cents cigarette-tax hike he swallowed to end that 2005 budget shutdown.
When you read this next paragraph, keep in mind that Pawlenty titled his autobiography “The Courage to Stand”:
Pawlenty will also have to explain to conservatives his stint of activism on global warming, which in 2007 he called “one of the most important [issues] of our time.” He signed bills promoting clean energy and a cap-and-trade system of carbon limits similar to the model envisioned by Obama. He toured the state with the Minnesota-based Arctic explorer Will Steger to “convince the skeptics,” as he put it, and even considered visiting the Arctic. He made a 2008 radio ad urging Congress to “cap greenhouse-gas pollution now!” But he now takes it all back, saying the human impact on climate change is unproven. “It was a mistake, and I’m sorry,” Pawlenty said in a May 6 Fox News debate, leaving it to others to judge whether his mind was changed by the science or by growing skepticism among Republicans.
Courageous!
Where did you see this Guin? I was under the impression that Romney has steadfastly stood by his plan as Governor...Mittens regrets his health insurance mandate
dgs49 wrote:"...
A more poignant example is the current debate about Medicare. It MUST change and it WILL change, because it has been shown to incentivize wasteful conduct on the part of doctors and hospitals, thus driving up the cost to unsustainable levels.
But old people like it. As well they should. Just like the old people who only paid pennies in Social Security taxes while they worked just LOVE IT now, and wouldn't want to see it "threatened." They really don't give a shit about how their grandchildren will have to pay for it through a 30% payroll tax. Fuck 'em.
... "