Mojo - September 2011

Christie for President?

| Wed Sep. 7, 2011 3:45 AM PDT
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie.

No matter how many times he insists he isn't running for president, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie invariably ends up back in the 2012 conversation. As Part 2 of our report on the ultra-secret Koch brothers retreat in late June indicates, Christie isn't lacking for supporters in high places, including among the elite right-wing donors and influence peddlers who lapped up his keynote address at the Ritz-Carlton outside Vail. He demurred when pressed by an audience member to reconsider his decision not to run, but Christie sure sounded like he had ambitions beyond the Garden State; he waxed poetic on themes of American greatness and proposed deep cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. Indeed, Christie bookended his secret appearance before the Koch audience that Sunday night with national television cameos on Meet the Press that morning and on Morning Joe, Fox & Friends, and Imus in the Morning the next.

Though Christie continues to deny that he has any intention of seeking the Republican nomination, the speculation won't die. In part, that's due to a steady drumbeat from conservatives dissatisfied with the current crop of candidates. A few weeks ago, conservative New York Times columnist Ross Douthat wrote that "the looming Romney-Perry showdown throws Christie's strengths into sharp relief." Formerly rumored presidential aspirant Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) also told CNN last week he'd like to see Christie get in the race. And we know that Christie has an unabashed admirer in at least one of the country's most influential Republican kingmakers, David Koch, who labeled Christie "a true political hero" at the Colorado event.

But Christie hasn't exactly been a passive bystander to the buzz surrounding his possible candidacy. On Sunday, former George W. Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson told ABC's Christiane Amanpour that Christie was in Chicago just last week for "two meetings with serious Republican groups from the Midwest." Gerson added, "He’s actively, I think, considering getting in this race, which would throw things open once more." 

Should Christie decide to get in, it would be quite the about-face for a man who complained to reporters last year in exasperation, "Short of suicide, I don't really know what I'd have to do to convince you people that I'm not running. I'm not running!" And as The New Republic's Jonathan Chait argues, it is highly improbable Christie will emerge as the GOP's knight in shining armor. But with Republican nomination fight increasingly shaping up as a two-horse race between Mitt Romney, whose entreaties to the tea party have failed to win many converts, and Rick Perry, whose baggage as a 1980s Democrat (an Al Gore-supporting one at that) and penchant for saying crazy things are worrying many establishment Republicans, Christie may be tempted to jump into the fray. If neither Romney nor Perry does enough to ease conservative angst in this month's three GOP debates, that temptation is only likely to grow—as no doubt will the speculation.

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BP Hires a Pentagon PR Warrior

| Wed Sep. 7, 2011 3:00 AM PDT
Geoff Morrell, in his previous life as the Pentagon spokesman.

Back in April 2010, when BP's Deepwater Horizon well was gushing crude oil all over the Gulf of Mexico, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell was coy about a possible military response. "You want to work, I believe, hand in glove with industry here because in some cases they're going to have...better assets than we would," he told reporters.

A year and a half later, Morrell is enjoying those better assets firsthand: He has joined BP America as its new spokesman. Morrell "will oversee external and internal communications for BP in the United States," according to an internal memo from company honchos quoted in The Hill. The memo added: "He will be responsible for leading our communications efforts in the US, as well as playing a critical role with our broader global communications and reputational activities."

We're Still at War: Photo of the Day for September 7, 2011

Wed Sep. 7, 2011 2:57 AM PDT

Soldiers from 172nd Infantry Brigade, work at dislodging their M-777 155mm howitzer from the three-foot deep hole it dug its spades into after firing several rocket assisted projectiles Sep. 3. The huge weapon weighs 9,000 pounds. Photo by Spc. Ken Scar, 7th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment.

Corn on "Hardball": Rick Perry's Tea Party Bump

Tue Sep. 6, 2011 7:20 PM PDT

David Corn and Michael Steele joined Chris Matthews on MSNBC's Hardball to discuss Rick Perry's leap to the top of the GOP presidential field and the role the tea party has played in Perry's popularity.

David Corn is Mother Jones' Washington bureau chief. For more of his stories, click here. He's also on Twitter.

Mitt Romney's New Economic Plan: Same As His Old One

| Tue Sep. 6, 2011 3:25 PM PDT
Mitt Romney.

As he unveiled his plan to jumpstart the American economy at a North Las Vegas trucking company Tuesday afternoon, GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney kept brandishing his iPhone 4. The smartphone symbolized America's global, 21st-century economy, while President Obama's economic policies, Romney explained, were backward, ineffective, stuck in the past. "President Obama's strategy is a pay phone strategy," he said, "and this a smartphone world."

But unlike Apple's innovative and regularly revamped iPhone, Romney's new economic plan, "Believe In America," is pretty stale. The 160-page proposal consists largely of stripping away federal regulations, slashing taxes, amping up domestic oil drilling, and embracing free-market principles. In other words, pretty much the same stuff he advocated during his last presidential campaign. Of the ten actions Romney says he would take on day one of his would-be presidency, six appeared in near-identical form in his old plan. (The list includes repealing Obama's health care reform bill, which obviously wasn't possible in 2007. So really call it six out of nine.)

Romney's Chart Fraud

| Tue Sep. 6, 2011 1:54 PM PDT

On Tuesday, Massachussetts Governor Mitt Romney unveiled his "jobs plan," which unsurprisingly mostly involves tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy. Oliver Willis catches Romney engaging in a pretty blatant example of chart fraud, highlighting job loss during 2007 and 2008, the last two years of the Bush administration, as part of the "Obama recovery."

Here's the thing: With employment still hovering around nine percent, it's not like Romney needs to lie in order to go after Obama's record on the economy. Recent polls have shown nothing but grim news for the president on this front. Why be so conspicuously dishonest about it?

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American Muslims: Incredibly Normal, Also Trusting Of Obama

| Tue Sep. 6, 2011 1:38 PM PDT

Last week Jen Quraishi wrote an excellent summary of Pew's latest study on American Muslims, aptly titled "Report: Muslim Americans Are Incredibly Normal." The Washington Times did a largely straight write-up of the study, except for this paragraph:

When asked to choose, nearly half of Muslims in the U.S. say they think of themselves first as Muslim, rather than as American. Roughly 60 percent say that most Muslims come to the U.S. to adopt the American way of life and see no conflict between being a devout Muslim and living in a modern society.

Nearly half of American Muslims think of themselves as Muslims first! Sounds sinister—until you consider that description applies to "nearly half" of American Christians as well, with the percentage of Muslims identifying themselves by religion before nationality (49 percent) being only three points higher than the number of American Christians who say the same (46 percent).

The Times writeup also flags an interesting statistic from the Pew report I haven't seen highlighted elsewhere: a plurality of Muslim Americans, 43 percent, now see American efforts to combat terrorism as "sincere," up from 26 percent in 2007. That's in spite of the Obama administration's aggressive FBI sting operations, its asserting the authority to kill Americans suspected of terrorism abroad, its failure to close Guantanamo and the perpetuation of a litany of Bush-era national security policies. When it comes to drone strikes or escalating troop levels in Afghanistan, Obama has actually out-hawked his predecessor. 

Despite all that, Muslim Americans like and trust Obama more than they trusted Bush, with 76 percent approving of the president's record. Obama's effort to "reset" U.S. relations with Muslims abroad doesn't appear to have worked. At home, though, Obama's outreach seems to be working pretty well. That's despite the fact that, as the Washington Post reported Tuesday, Obama has avoided certain personal public gestures that his predecessor willingly made (like visiting a mosque, for example).

I can't help but wonder if part of the difference has to do with the persistent conspiracy theories about the president being a secret Muslim—on some level, obviously, the president gets what it's like to be singled out for being "different." But perhaps it's also that Obama's gestures of tolerance, such as his support for the so-called Ground Zero Mosque, represent much more of a political risk for him than they did for Bush. Or it might just be that Democrats, the Dubai Ports World fiasco aside, never completely succumbed to the kind of anti-Muslim rhetoric common in the Republican Party today. The bigger difference may simply be that in the age of full-blown Sharia panic, the contrast between the president and the opposition makes Obama's inclusive rhetoric all the more meaningful.

Quote for the Day: "Political Matters"

| Tue Sep. 6, 2011 1:10 PM PDT

On Wednesday, the Obama Justice Department filed an antitrust suit to block AT&T's merger with T-Mobile. On Thursday, the New York Times reported that the telecom giant was "caught off guard" by the government's decision to sue. The Times' Michael de la Merced interviewed  law professor Susan Crawford for his story on the lawsuit. Here's what she told him:

"Justice has done a thorough job," said Susan Crawford, a professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. "AT&T's surprise shows they took this as political matter and not a legal matter."

Determining whether the AT&T/T-Mobile merger is anti-competitive is a legal matter, however AT&T "took" it. There is a whole body of case law on these sorts of issues and the courts will use that, along with the facts in this particular case, to decide whether the merger violates anti-trust rules. In Crawford's telling, AT&T execs thought that if they could win the political fight, the law wouldn't matter. The telecom honchos were wrong, but the fact they convinced themselves that winning the political fight is all they would have to do says a lot about just how much power corporations think they wield (and often do wield) in Washington.

Report: Perry Super PAC Expects to Raise $55 Million

| Tue Sep. 6, 2011 11:31 AM PDT
Texas Governor Rick Perry is the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination.

MSNBC's Michael Isikoff gets a hold of internal communications from Make Us Great Again, a new Super PAC set up by supporters of Texas Governor Rick Perry, and reports that it expects to raise and spend $55 million during the Republican presidential primary:

The new super PAC backing Rick Perry has drawn up plans to spend $55 million as part of an ambitious campaign strategy aimed at blowing away the Texas governor's rivals in early primary states and securing him the Republican nomination by next spring, according to internal committee documents obtained by NBC News.

The documents underscore the central role that such super PACs — or super political action committees unconstrained by any limits on how much they can collect from wealthy donors and corporations — will play in the 2012 presidential election.

They also show that the strategists behind the new Perry super PAC, led by a longtime Perry confidant and backed with infusions of cash from major Perry donors, are preparing to mount a full service political operation — complete with TV advertising, direct mail and social media outreach.

Super PACs can accept unlimited contributions but most disclose donor information and cannot coordinate in any way with candidates. In the post-Citizens United climate, super PACs have become the hottest new accessory for presidential candidates, and all of the serious GOP contenders have at least one. Make Us Great Again was organized by Mike Toomey, Perry's former chief of staff, who has remained close with the governor as a lobbyist in Austin and contributed generously to his most recent re-election bid.

NATO Head: Libya Mission Kinda Accomplished (VIDEO)

| Tue Sep. 6, 2011 10:48 AM PDT
NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen declared a victory of sorts in Libya yesterday, saying that "we can already draw the first lessons from the operation, and most of them are positive."

"We will continue military operations under our United Nations mandate for as long as necessary to protect the people of Libya," he cautioned, "but no longer than necessary." Nonetheless, Rasmussen left the door open for continued NATO bombing: "If requested, NATO stands ready to play a supporting role so that Libyans can move forward safely."

Rasmussen, a dynamic Danish politician with a polished silvery coif, made the comments in a video (see below) on his blog. His posting on serious trans-Atlantic affairs has been somewhat sparse of late—this gingerly triumphal post, titled "Libya operation coming to an end," is his first since July 15, when Western nations including the US formally recognized the Libyan rebels' Transitional National Council as the country's legitimate leadership.

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