
(8/7/08)
The Minneapolis Star Tribune allowed Sen. Norm Coleman to excrete some Norm-speakTM on their op-ed page today. It seems that Norm has decided to make the Republican lie "Drill Here, Drill Now" a central part of his campaign.
[emphasis mine]
(Star Tribune)
Norm and his fellow Republicans are responsible for making sure that the only energy policy we've had in the last 8 years involved kick-backs and free money for Big Oil. There has been no movement toward a green energy future. After filibustering hundreds of items since January 2007, after opposing increasing fuel efficiency standards until he flip-flopped on them last year, after 5 1/2 years of doing Big Oil's bidding, he wants to solve it all during the August recess?
Minnesotans expect more from their Senator than grandstanding.
Read the rest of my analysis of Norm's lies in the Strib here.
Read the entirety of what Al Franken and Norm had to say here.
TwoPuttTommy has been investigating Norm's sweetheart living arrangements. You can preview what Al will be saying about Norm's apartment right here at mnblue:
Here are the salient points.
At the beginning of July, CREW (Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington) filed a ethics complaint against Norm.
Here are the posts at mnblue on this topic:
This is solid Republican territory. At least it used to be. With fewer and fewer people self-identifying as Republicans in polling, this was the first test of how Al Franken's message would play. This was also a test of how Norm Coleman's ability to cover his *** for 7 1/2 years of supporting President Bush and the corporations that fund him would go over.
Read the rest of my analysis here.
Norm proposed the HOME Act which went nowhere in the Senate because nobody would consider it. Mainly because it was a gift to the mortgage industry which had gotten itself into quite a mess:
(Norm Coleman Weasel Meter's home foreclosure crisis page)
In contrast Al Franken thinks this issue affects the value of everybody's home and wants to help actual people. Plus he's not funded by the mortgage industry. Here's Al's position: 2. Help communities escape the foreclosure spiral. 3. Crack down on predatory lending.
The only problem for this family is if they didn't have health insurance, their son wouldn't have been diagnosed in time if at all. Norm has opposed any real healthcare reform to address the 50 million Americans without insurance. When he introduced his healthcare reform bill I suggested it
It does nothing to address the root of the problem, the health insurance, HMO and pharmaceutical companies. Norm's campaign coffers are filled with their contributions. He's done more to represent their needs in the Senate than Minnesotans.
Furthermore, Norm has opposed embryonic stem cell research (he's pro-life) and proposed his own version which all the scientists oppose.
It would permanently ban federal funding for new embryonic stem cell lines as well as Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer.
This is far more dangerous than a mere "cover-your-tail" vote-- this is a dream law for opponents of research-- and a nightmare for all who want stem cell research to move forward
(StemPAC)
Additionally, Norm opposed Medicare negotiating lower drug prices forcing senior citizens to pay exorbitant prices for their drugs. Then Norm flip-flopped on Medicare negotatiating drug prices as his reelection neared.
His election year conversion into a champion of healthcare reform is pure Norm-speakTM. So observe the Norm-speakTM for yourselves:
Here's the transcript:
Senator Coleman: "I'm Norm Coleman and I approve this message."
(Political Animal)
The leading contenders for that job: Sens. John Cornyn of Texas and Norm Coleman of Minnesota — assuming, of course, that both survive their own reelection challenges this year.
(Politico)
What? He'd have to remain a Senator to be considered for the job? Since when did failure ever stop Republicans from promoting someone to a better position?
So now that Sen. Ted "Tubes" Stevens (R-AK) has been indicted for corruption, Norm still refuses to divest himself of all the money from Tubes and his already convicted or pled out buddies at VECO Corp. BTW, VECO is an oil company.
Does Norm really have any ethical morals guiding his campaign other than the ends justify the means?
Norm's donors in the oil industry keep American addicted to oil -- there has been no movement toward dealing with peak oil under the Bush Administration. The polluters who contribute to Norm have made sure that their biggest advocate outside of the Senate and the White House is the head of the EPA. Our soldiers are eletrocuted and poisoned by the war profiteers who generously donate to Norm's campaign. 50 million Americans have no health care and the cost of prescription drugs increase faster than inflation thanks to the insurance and pharmaceutical lobbies. Big Pharma have given Norm more money than any MN politician in history.
Norm is dirty through and through ... does it really matter if he divests of a paltry $30,000 out of a $13,000,000+ campaign war chest? Let him keep his filthy lucre and let's just make sure that Al Franken beats him in November.
Just another month in the life of a endangered Republican Senator willing to say or do anything to gain reelection.
"I'm so damn unhappy with the Republicans right now," Grams said in an interview. "I'm so unhappy with the candidates that we have I could puke. I wanted to get out there and mix it up."
Grams said he considered challenging Sen. Norm Coleman for the GOP nomination but was too busy in his private life to make a run this year. But Grams said he will ponder a run for governor in 2010, saying he'll make that decision within a year.
(simmobilez.info)
The combination of the demise of the Republican brand, the recession, the most unpopular President in the history of the United States, corruption, incompetence, greed and ... gee ... what else have they got going wrong? How many Republican activists are going to sit this one out? We have a general idea that many Republicans have become Democrats or are self-identifying as Independents. Recent polling indicates that around 40% are DFLers and 25-30% are Republicans.
"Produce more, use less" is the Republican mantra on energy. The only thing that separates this this press release from all the other Republican's talking about energy is that Norm wants to be the Republican Champion of Oversight. Of course, as I have mentioned on many, many occasions, Norm is only interested in oversight on a limited number of subjects. Oil speculation happens to fit his oversight criteria because no Republicans will be hurt.
The truth is Norm Coleman is as independent as his teeth are yellowed and crooked.
Here's Sen. Lamar Alexander's (R-TN) press release on this subject from late June:
June 26th, 2008 - WASHINGTON - U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), chairman of the Senate Republican Conference, today joined other senators to unveil a proposal to lower gas prices by “finding more and using less.” (alexander.senate.gov)
Here's Sen. Pete Dominici's (R-AZ) presser from late June:
WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Pete Domenici, ranking member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, today signed on as an original cosponsor to the “Gas Price Reduction Act,” a measure Republican Senators believe should be passed before the end of the summer to address the American demand for energy.
(domenici.senate.gov)
Here's Sen. Thad Cochran's (R-MS):
“FIND MORE, USE LESS”
Republican Senator Lamar Alexander says, “Our bill can be summed up in four words: Find more, use less.”
(blog.thadforsenate.com)
Sen. George Voinovich'sv (R-OH):
**MEDIA ALERT**
July 10, 2008
WASHINGTON – The Senate Republican Conference will hold an energy forum Friday, July 11, to discuss rising fuel costs and how the Gas Price Reduction Act would lower gas prices by finding more energy while encouraging new technologies that use less. The forum will be chaired by Senator George Voinovich, R-Ohio.
(voinovich.senate.gov)
This "find more, use less" talking point and associated bill work in conjunction with President Bush who has lifted the executive order banning off-shore drilling. The Republicans are pulling their ranks together on energy so that they can give Big Oil even more free money and tax breaks as well as prevent too much investment into alternative energy. Norm is no different, he's gotten his talking points and marching orders. He's doing his part as a Bush Loyalist and Republican trooper.
Norm: Absolutely. Absolutely..."
(MPR's Midday)
Norm is whining that Al's ads are negative, inaccurate attacks. If this race is about Norm's record, Al Franken will win this race. So Norm's campaign roles out the Norm-speakTM to counteract the discussion of Norm's voting record:
(Star Tribune)
If you read the entire article, you will notice that Norm can't point out what specifically Al got wrong. If you read the blog post at Norm's campaign site, they cannot refute any of the points Al makes.
Which part is inaccurate? Norm hasn't rubberstamped Bush's invasion and occupation of Iraq? I think Norm still claims that one. Norm hasn't played cheerleader while Bush drove the economy into the ditch? I'm sure Norm doesn't want to talk about that. Norm hasn't voted for tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans? Norm would like you to think of this as stimulating the economy. Vulgar? I didn't hear any cuss words ... maybe Republicans exist in a parrallel universe?
The sole reason Norm objects is because the claims in these ads are irrefutable.
Do we want a Senator who's been bought and paid for by corporate lobbyists? Do we want a Senator who failed to investigate any of the Bush Administration's greed, incompetence, lawlessness and cronyism? Do we want a Senator who has rubber-stamped the Bush Administration's disastrous economic policies? Do we want a Senator opposed to real healthcare reform? Do we want a Senator like Norm who we can count on when it doesn't matter?
When you frame the questions this way, the answer is "No." But Norm's friends in the media don't want to talk about it in these terms. Watch how the media frames this race ...
Now as a Senator fighting for his political life, he's lying about the Employee Free Choice Act eliminating the secret ballot. The EFCA actually allows the union organizers to do whatever their constituents want ... card check, secret ballot or whatever. The legislation also has harsh penalties for employers who intimidate, harass or interfere with union organizing -- this is what Norm and his buddies really oppose.
But Norm wasn't done. He emitted some Norm-speakTM in defense of his flip-flop:
"The issue is whether or not workers have the right to organize and he's always been a strong supporter of that. He doesn't support the federal legislation -- the card check legislation," said Cullen Sheehan, Coleman's Campaign Manager.
[emphasis mine]
(WCCO)
Norm always reserves the right to weasel out from under anything he says at a later date.
"Don't make any mistake. It's not 'all but called him a liar'. I am calling him a liar,'" said Brian Melendez of the Minnesota DFL Party at a news conference Wednesday.
And Melendez is calling Norm Coleman, R=Lapdog, a liar for the old-fashioned reason: ol' Smokescreen EARNED it. WCCO-TV's Pat Kessler has the report.
Read more here.
However, I just remembered today that I'd heard Norm's EFCA lie before. More than a year ago. May 27, 2007 to be exact.
In his exchange with union members, Coleman repeated the incorrect canard that: This act takes away the right to a secret ballot.
Wrong. The Employee Free Choice Act does not take away the ballot-election process (which all-too often is controlled by the employer). The act would add another option, the majority sign-up process, in which workers seeking to form a union could sign cards indicating their desire to do so. Majority sign-up is much faster than the government-run balloting process and leaves less time for employers to harass and intimidate workers so they will back off from joining a union.
Watch the video and you’ll see how Coleman insists, over and over, the Employee Free Choice Act takes away the right to a secret ballot, despite union members telling him it does not.
Maybe he had only one talking point.
(AFL-CIO blog)
Norm wants to save American taxpayers 2% of what we spend in Iraq each week.
Read the rest of Norm Coleman: faux champion of oversight
People all across the US want Norm Coleman out. They realize that every Senator matters. Also consider that the corporate interests want to keep their man, Norm, in office. They realize that they need Senators in office that they'd bought off.
It comes down to do you want a candidate supported by people or a candidate beholden to the corporations?
By EMILY KAISER
ekaiser@startribune.com
WASHINGTON - Norm Coleman slept here -- but the FedEx box turned nightstand, neckties tossed over the top of an accordion-style closet door and low ceilings aren't much to write home about.
(Star Tribune)
Reporters were not allowed to take photos of Norm's digs ... if you can believe the Norm-speakTM ... because of the possible security issues. Of course, Norm has no problems showing the inside of his St. Paul home ...
Read the rest of OMG! Norm Coleman on front page of Star Tribune
(h/t to Political Animal)
Norm chaired the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations and could have investigated the corruption, greed, lawlessness and incompetence of the Bush Administration. Norm ignored billions upon billions of dollars wasted by contractors. He could have investigated their shoddy workmanship and how they endangered our troops. Our soldiers were eletrocuted, drank contaminated water and live in substandard facilities. But Norm was too busy cheerleading.
Instead he investigated the Oil-for-Food program. He busted on doctors who accept medicare payments, but havent paid their taxes. He cramped the styles of federal employees travel plans by limiting the perks they can get.
For every million he claims to have saved, billions went missing or were squandered.
You can always count on Norm when it doesn't matter.
Read the rest of Norm Coleman introduces another ad
1. Norm (I'm running for Re Election) Coleman who is Ranked as one of the more Independant Republicans (78%). Course this is in a Congress that his party does not control (sort of)
2. Norm (I don't have to Worry about Elections) Coleman who voted with his party 88% of the time.
3. Norm (Thank you RNC) Coleman who voted with his party 98% of the time the First 2 years. Norm was given the Permananent Subcomittee on investigations in 2003. There have been No investigations of any of the spending in Iraq.
Read the rest of what CathMN had to say about the Three Norms.
(h/t to Ollie Ox at Blue Stem Prairie)
Read the rest of my analysis of the state of the Minnesota Senate (MN-SEN) race
Yup. Jeff Larson has it rough. He's got his very own Senator. He's housebroken him, too.
In fact, labor leaders explained this difference to Coleman’s staff before Coleman’s 2007 vote to block the Employee Free Choice Act from coming to a vote in the Senate. Senator Coleman, however, has continued to parrot the false special-interest talking point.
(DFL.org)
But there is another way they've helped out Norm Coleman. Member organizations have given Norm over $300,000:
(DFL.org)
Read more about the EFCA and the Union Busters who have paid for an ad against Al Franken
(7/7/08)
By TwoPuttTommy
OK, Senator Coleman and his hench, er, 'scuse me, "spokes"man claim they've "researched" the matter and Coleman is paying "fair market value" (Star Tribune).
Yeah, "right". Like you can believe Team Smokescreen's "research." So, what kind of research is required? The ol' TwoPutter went online, to find out! Here's what I asked the professionals at AppraisersForum.com:
Stay tuned!
"At the same time, we've got to be producing more -- outer continental shelf exploration," Coleman said. "The Chinese are able to begin operating 90 miles from our shore by working for Cubans. American companies should tap into those resources."
The Coleman campaign has not responded to our request for confirmation. The Mankato Free Press published an article yesterday about the event, featuring a photo of Coleman wearing the same outfit and standing next to what looks like the same green tractor -- making it all but certain this video was shot yesterday.
(TPM Election Central)
Read more here.
(7/1/08)
And if he was, would it surprise anyone? Now, some people are going to wonder why the ol’ Twoputter might suggest such a thing, so I’ll say this right now: the online D.C. Property Tax Records indicates that Norm Coleman’s crash pad has the “Homestead” tax classification. But, wait – didn’t ol’ Smokescreen claim he’s renting the basement? And didn’t Larson claim he was renting out the top? So how exactly does this property qualify for a Homestead Exemption? Let’s look!!!
Read the rest of TwoPuttTommy's post Is Norm's Pal Jeff a Tax Cheat?
Way to bury the story, Strib editors. To have a look for yourself, just click on the screen capture of the Strib from this morning.
There has never been a President in the history of the United States who has lowered taxes during wartime. And Norm Coleman went right along with all of it.
He wants you to forget that. He wants you to know that he "cares deeply" about your problems.
Read the rest of my analysis of the ad here.
“Senator Coleman’s deal may violate the Senate’s clear ethics rules — and it definitely doesn’t pass the smell test.
“This cozy relationship between a United States senator and one of the most high-powered, well-connected operatives in Washington raises serious questions, not only about Norm Coleman’s ethics, but about his independence as an elected official and a legislator.
“Senator Coleman owes Minnesotans a full accounting of his sweetheart deal and at a minimum must provide a copy of his lease and any other written agreements he has made with Jeff Larson about this peculiar living situation. Minnesotans deserve nothing less.”
(dfl.org)
Read more about the highlights of Melendez's case against Norm.
Under California law, once a residential property is in default for five years, it can be sold at a tax sale to recover the unpaid taxes for the taxpayers.
(Huffington Post)
Will Norm condemn Grandpa McSame as he did Al?
According to the National Journal article Friendly Dealings...
Hmmm ... maybe she doesn't really visit him all that often?
However, Norm's recent flubs haven't yet percolated through the MN voters, yet. Norm's campaign has done a fantastic job of taking the focus off of Al recently. Any polling done after the July 4th weekend would take into account the questions we bloggers have raised about Norm's marriage, his subsequent attempt at a satiric response and the revelations about Norm's sleeping arrangements in Washington, DC.
“Late Fees” doesn’t appear to be in Landlord Larson’s vocabulary (at least as far as Coleman is concerned). Then again, I never did business with my landlord, and my landlord wasn't Jeff "Landlord" Larson. And my landlord insisted I pay rent, each and every month. Ol’ Smokescreen’s landlord, Landlord Larson, apparently doesn’t. I guess that’s why Smokescreen’s landlord, Landlord Larson, wasn’t in any hurry to cash Coleman’s rent checks, even when paid late. I wonder if Landlord Larson even bothered to remind the ol' Smokscreen that rent was due on the first, A COUPLA MONTHS AGO? But, hey! What’s the big deal, when you’re renting from a guy you do business with?
Read more of TwoPuttTommy's analysis here.
Here was someone trying to save American taxpayers billions of dollars -- something Norm claims to be a champion. All the while Norm was busy cheerleading a war we were lied into and an occupation planned by idiots and executed by political hacks with no experience.
Read more about Someone was trying to provide oversight of Halliburton
How dare Al Franken bring up the disastrous Iraq War and Norm's unfailing support for it. Franken has such gall to remind Minnesotans that Norm has performed virtually no oversight of the Bush Administration's corruption, incompetence, hubris and greed. Why can't Al play MN-Nice and not remind Minnesotans that the economy stinks as a result of Norm's support of Bush Administration economic policies. It simply isn't fair for a Democrat to bring up all the insurance companies, HMOs and pharmaceutical companies donating to Norm's campaign and how he has pushed their agendas to the detriment of Minnesotans healthcare needs.
Al should be talking about how many Guatemalan adoptions Norm has smoothed. Franken should talk about how hard Norm worked to help rebuild the I-35W bridge in Minneapolis (without discussing how Republicans like Norm are responsible for underfunding our transit system causing the collapse in the first place). Or Al should talk about how many healthcare forums he has held once he read the polling data that healthcare was one of Minnesotans top three issues (Without, of course, mentioning Norm's reelection year flip-flops ... it is not MN-Nice to talk about this voting record ... sheesh) or ...
Read more about Norm's Press Secretary lying in the Fergus Falls Journal.
That's why the Republicans want to keep the focus on Playboy, and appear poised to run one of the most dispiriting and depressing political races in Minnesota history.
The timing for such an effort probably couldn't be worse for Republicans. Barack Obama, who drew unprecedented support during Minnesota's February caucuses and maintains a comfortable lead in the polls over rival John McCain in the state, has made much of the politics of distraction. While the dustup over Obama's former pastor soured some on the Illinois senator, it also served as a teachable moment on the many ways that the corporate-run media and some politicians use fear, along with divisive and incendiary events and attacks, to push ratings or keep the public's mind off of real issues.
The fact that Obama's support remains relatively strong despite the endless reruns and rehashing of the Rev. Wright, suggests that Americans, and Minnesotans, may finally be seeing this kind of thing for what it is— a political shell game that has conned voters into voting against their own interests for too long.
All of which puts Coleman in a tough spot. On the one hand, he knows that if this race is decided on whether America needs a change from the Republican policies he's supported for the past six years, he can't win.
But if he relies too heavily on the over-the-top attacks we've seen so far, he's likely to turn off many of those in the middle. If they see Franken talking about the issues that really matter to them this year, while Coleman runs around waving Playboy, it could be a tough November for the incumbent senator.
[emphasis mine]
(Ely, Cook & Tower Timberjay)
(6/13/08)
Sen. Norm Coleman (R-MN) claims to be a Senator who "brings people together to get things done." I discovered a perfect example of the kind of leader that Norm Coleman is, but it requires a bit of splainin' or back story so that you can understand the entire context in which Norm took this bold stand which I will eventually get to. I think after I am done explaining, you'll agree with me that Norm is a brave man who takes bold stands based on principles.
Not.
Norm uses this phrase "brings people together to get things done" to distract Minnesotans from his divisive partisanship and lack of leadership on any of the most important issues for Minnesotans. I call this Norm-speakTM. He's blindly supported President Bush's Iraq War and economic policies (tax breaks for the richest Americans). He only started talking about healthcare reform in 2007 when polls showed it was a top three issue for Minnesotans.
When the Republicans controlled Congress, Norm state that he "philosophically opposed" the filibuster. At the time it was the Democrats only means to block knuckle-dragging, mouth-breathing, right-wing trolls from becoming Federal or Supreme Court judges.
(Norm Coleman's 12/21/2005 Press Release)
Once the adults got control over the Senate after the 2006 elections, the Republicans began filibustering everything. The pusillanimous Harry Reid (alleged Senate Majority Leader ... though calling him a leader is a bit of a stretch) allowed the mere threat of a filibuster to be enough to stall bills or amendments or anything the Republicans wanted to stop, actually. Norm flip-flopped on filibustering and voted along with his party well over 100 times to block almost everything the Democrats were trying to do. In the first 6 months they easily broke the record for the most filibusters in any 2 year congressional cycle.
Now don't forget, Norm is a leader. He's a leader who brings people together. He's a leader who gets things done. Here's his act of bravery (from the subscription only Roll Call):
"This morning, one of the Republican Senators, whose name I won't mention, said at a meeting with a number of people downtown ... 'There's a lot of frustration within the Republican Caucus about blocking motions to proceed'" to legislation, Reid said on the Senate floor.
Coleman acknowledged to Roll Call that he was that unnamed Senator but indicated that he did not intend to give Reid a talking point for why Republicans should end their record-breaking string of legislative filibusters.
(Roll Call)
Wow. Now that is bravery in the face of his party leadership. That is leading America and Minnesota to a better tomorrow. He stood up to his Party's leadership because he's philosophically opposed to what they are doing. Remember, he came to Washington "to get things done."
This is the sad reality that is Norm Coleman: The Senator you can count on when it doesn't matter.
DFL Party Chair Brian Melendez responded to the news that Norm is suddenly now concerned about Republicans abusing the filibuster:
“Worse, Coleman has voted time and time again to filibuster middle-class tax relief, housing assistance, comprehensive immigration reform and ending the war in from Iraq — showing that when push comes to shove, he will always put George Bush’s wishes and the Republican Party line over Minnesota families.
“And Senator Coleman has been a cheerleader for the Senate Republican caucus, which in this Congress has broken the all-time record for filibusters. Just last year, Coleman wrote an entire op-ed piece praising the filibuster!
“It’s all too predictable that in an election year, when Minnesotans want solutions to the problems that they’re facing, Senator Coleman pretends that he’s in favor of actually getting things done. But Coleman’s sorry record tells a very different story: of consistently blocking progress for hardworking Minnesotans in order to protect corporate special interests and the well-connected lobbyists who fight for them.”
Norm is to making a difference for Minnesotans what Heckuva Job Brownie is to competent disaster relief. Norm is to bridging the partisan divide what Karl Rove is to bi-partisanship. Norm is to not tearing things down what Swift Boat Veterans for Truth were to John Kerry. As a bonus, here's a great pic of Norm from the vid ... flattering ... wouldn't ya say?
. . 
(h/t MN Campaign Report)
Transcript (with stammering):
Jack Abramoff is currently sitting in Club Fed, convicted for fraud in Miami; he’s got another date before a judge in September for more convictions. And he’s singing like a canary, to make sure he stays in as nice of a Club Fed as he can, for as short of a stay as he can. And to do that, Abramoff has to reach out and get other people. One such person is John Albaugh, former Chief of Staff for Republican Congressman Ernest Istook of Oklahoma, who just pled guilty due to the songs Abramoff is singing. Make no mistake, this is a GOP scandal and it's not going away until at least September, when Abramoff finds out how much longer he stays in Club Fed. Oh - and it’s Senator Smokescreen’s scandal, too – because he never investigated Abramoff in any way, shape nor form.
Read the rest of what TwoPuttTommy had to say.
And Smokescreen continues to rely on Bush for support; less than a year ago, Bush campaigned for Coleman at the Eden Prairie home of William and Tani Austin for an estimated million dollar payday. So, how did Coleman reciprocate for all the misAdministration largesse? By ignoring any and all investigations into anything that might possibly embarrass his benefactors – including Jack Abramoff.
Read more of what TwoPuttTommy had to say about Norm and Jack Abramoff.
People For the American Way President Kathryn Kolbert issued the following statement:
“And that’s just the Supreme Court. Norm Coleman has supported each and every nominee President Bush has sent to the Senate for a lifetime appointment to the federal bench. And many of them are far out of step with the values of ordinary Americans. The more Minnesotans learn about Norm Coleman’s support for Bush’s judges, the less they’re going to like it.”
(People for the American Way)
Of course Norm sees it differently. Norm is out of touch with mainstream American values. Where most people see a Supreme Court that denies a woman's right to fair pay and votes to end protections for whistleblowers as wrong, Norm sees a Chief Justice with these characteristics:
(9/5/05 Press Release after Bush nominated Roberts)
No kidding? A judge who is a man of jurisprudence, Norm? That's deep.
Where Judge Roberts has no concern for the health of pregnant women, Norm sees a chance to get a Supreme Court Justic who will be an activist judge on the most divisive issue in America today. What Norm an everyone knew with Roberts is that he would be a activist, partisan justice ruling conservatively on the important issues of the day. Of course, Norm used Norm-speakTM to make people Roberts wasn't what we all knew he'd be.
(Press release during Roberts' confirmation hearings)
President Bush chose an arch conservative. The Democratic Leadership co-opted enough Senators who claim to be pro-choice. So we get a conservative activist judge running the SCOTUS. But Norm spouts more Norm-speakTM:
(Press Release upon Roberts' confirmation)
For the country's economic ills, he prescribed permanent tax cuts and smaller government, going so far as to rank "cutting wasteful Washington spending" one of the "great issues of our time." He faulted GOP leaders for budget-cutting timidity. But he offered no hit list of what should be cut -- though he said he'd assign an appointed commission to take a crack at shrinking future Social Security and Medicare commitments.
(Star Tribune)
Their analysis doesn't quite show how difficult Norm's position is. Read my analysis here.
When the 35 W bridge fell down or flood waters poured into Roseau or Browns Valley or Rushford, people don’t need an ideologue or a divider: they need someone who can make government work for them.
(Star Tribune)
Norm has done a good job of helping Minnesotans get their passports expedited, helping parents adopt a child from a foreign country, helping provide funding to rebuild a certain bridge in Minneapolis that Republican neglected and ignored until it collapsed. However, Norm is a Senator you can count on for the minor things. For the things that any Senator should do regardless. On the major issues, Iraq, healthcare, subprime home foreclosures and oversight of the worst administration in the history of the United States, Norm has been a collaborator, an enabler and a stooge.
Read my analysis of Norm's convention speech
Sen. Norm Coleman (R-MN) likes his cigars. Norm also likes to say just about anything he thinks will ingratiate himself to whomever he's addressing. This time he unleashed his Norm-speakTM on innocent, unsuspecting children in Bemidji, MN. With hypocrisy glistening from his pearly white teeth, he talked about how stealing is bad, don't succumb to peer pressure and ...
don't smoke.
This makes me sick.
“This is a great country,” he said. “If you study hard, love the things you do, you love your country, you love to serve … you could be a U.S. senator some day. I have no doubt, whatsoever.”
Coleman said he “would love, sometime in the future, when I’m really old, to come back here with a senator from this school. That would be a wonderful thing for me.”
Starting right is key, he said, with eating the right food, exercising and not smoking.
Those three lifestyle guidelines were reinforced by Nick Mueller of the American Heart Society in Duluth who participated in the school’s program for Coleman.
“Heart disease is the No. 1 reason for death,” said Mueller, who had everyone doing jumping jacks before he started speaking. “Three things to do are physical exercise, eat healthy foods and don’t smoke.”
The key, he said, “is living healthy lifestyles.”
[emphasis mine]
(Bemidji Pioneer)
Not like your Senator here, Mr. Coleman. Mr. Coleman smokes cigars. But you kids shouldn't do that. Do as me and the Senator say not as your Senator does.
Read about Norm's ironic advice about stealing and peer pressure
He also provided a perty picture to help us all visualize it. Read and see more here.
Franken also receives a boost from the top-of-the-ticket—Barack Obama enjoys a double-digit lead over John McCain. However, just 70% of Obama voters say they'll vote for Franken. Eighty-four percent (84%) of McCain voters support the Republican incumbent.
(Rasmussen Reports)
Read my analysis here.
In actual fact, Norm has never taken any substantial action to force the Bush Administration to begin any sort of transition of US troops. Norm just wants MN voters to think he does so he will get reelected. The few instances he has elaborated on his idea of "transition", it becomes apparent that his position is incoherent.
Feels the incoherence for yerselves right here.
O'Brien calls himself an "attentive voter." Like many Democrats and others who oppose the leadership provided by Coleman, however, he indulges in fantasy and speculation.
(Strib)
Of course, he demeans and insults Democrats. Typical.
But let's take a closer look at how Sheehan will defend Norm's most glaring political weakness...
They were waiting for the Republican Schlockmeister to feed them some copy. There are just too many cases where there is a direct linkage between what the Republican Schlockmeister spews forth and what the Star Tribune publishes. Today is another example.
Meanwhile, DFLers are calling on Republican incumbent Norm Coleman to divest his reelection campaign of nearly $10,000 received from the political-action committee and employees of a lobbying firm that represented Myanmar's military regime.
(Star Tribune)
I have previously noted that the Strib is in a death-spiral of declining readership, newsroom cutbacks and the resulting shoddy journalism. Their reporters are stretched so thin that they can do little independent reporting of their own. Furthermore, considering the Republicans running the paper, this intertwining of a real issue with a ginned-up congtroversy is a classic Republican maneuver too lower the negative impact on Norm.
The Strib, channeling the Republican Schlockmeister, bring the titillating news to their readers that a porn empress helped Al raise money. They relegate Norm's connections to the Myanmar dictatorship to the inside pages knowing full well that fewer people will read the inner pages and learn about Norm's connections to DCI.
They conflate a fundraiser held by Hugh Heffner's daughter, a prominent progressive activist, Democratic fundraiser and philanthropist married to a former Illinois State Senator, to somehow being on the same level as receiving money from a group that lobbies for a brutal dictatorship. Whenever Republicans accuse Democrats of anything, they are doing it themselves and usually way worse.
Hefner has used her filthy lucre made running Playboy Enterprises for many good causes. She helped start EMILY's List which is dedicated to getting pro-choice women elected to office. She was instrumental in raising $30 million to build the CORE Center in Chicago, the first outpatient facility in the Midwest for people living with AIDS. She's on Obama's national fundraising committee.
Myanmar's dictatorship ruthlessly kills its own citizens. They are in the process of neglecting to help millions impacted by last month's typhoon. Their incompetence and unwillingness to help is reminiscent of the Bush Administration's neglect of New Orleans.
(5/13/08)
Joe Bodell at MN Campaign Report has done a little digging after it came out that Sen. Norm Coleman (R-MN) received campaign contributions from the lobby group for the brutal dictatorship that rules Myanmar. It's not just that he's received thousands of dollars in contributions from this lobby group, a branch of it officeshares with Norm's campaign.
FLS is closely linked with DCI, the same firm that's involved with the Myanmar junta.
Yep, that's right -- FLSConnect.com is registered to an entity called "FLS-DCI" located in Oakdale, MN. Sourcewatch indicates that those first three letters stand for "Feather Larson Synhorst" -- Synhorst refers to the chairman of DCI, Thomas Synhorst, and Sourcewatch notes one of their specialties: "creating phony front groups to make it appear as if there's a groundswell of support for its clients' issues."
(MN Campaign Report)
So when Brian Melendez, Chair of the MN DFL Party, asks Norm to return the filthy lucre, Norm declines. But he's Norm freaking Coleman. And as the prototypical political weasel that he is, he just cannot simply decline to return the money...
Read more about Norm Coleman and the Myanmar dictatorship.
Read more about Norm Coleman's favorite example of oversight is corrupt
Coleman makes the charge in a fundraising e-mail sent out this week with the subject line, "It's Hard to Deny this Kind of Evolution."
"After decades of carrying the flag for radical left-wing causes, his extremely liberal viewpoints are couched in softer, more acceptable terms," Coleman writes of the former "Saturday Night Live" star. "And for the most part, he's stopped using curse words in public."
The e-mail prompted dropped jaws in Democratic circles Thursday. Franken campaign spokesman Andy Barr responded that Coleman himself has been all over the political map in his career.
"What's most troubling about Norm Coleman is what he has evolved into since he came to Washington," Barr said. "And that's someone who always puts special interests first and doesn't look out for Minnesota families."
(AOL News)
Isn't it interesting that Norm is attacking Al Franken for what he's most famous for?
Read more about Norm Coleman slimes Al Franken from Teh High Road II.
According to OpenSecrets.com, Coleman has received a total of $477,000 from the real-estate industry (PACs and individual donors) during this election cycle. That makes him seventh in the Senate when it comes to getting bought out by the real-estate/mortgage industry.
Yet Coleman is actually the No. 1 Senate recipient who isn't running for president of contributions from the combined mortgage, finance, and insurance sector. Those industries are Coleman's biggest backers, with donations totaling $2 million. That's double the amount received from his second-biggest contributor of "miscellaneous businesses" and four times as much as he's received in contributions from agribusiness.
(Minnesota Monitor)
Read more about Norm's stances on this issue on the Norm Coleman Weasel Meter'sforeclosure page
(5/4/08)
Republican-owned KSTP runs push poll against Al Franken
Late last week, the television station that Stan Hubbard owns ran push-polling against DFL US Senate candidate Al Franken. Tonight, KSTP reported on it. What is the significance of this push poll? Ron Hubbard is a major donor to all things Republican and a major donor to Norm Coleman's reelection campaign. His station runs a factually incorrect poll then uses it to influence the US Senate race. Norm Coleman owes Ron Hubbard a big thanks for running this push poll and getting inaccurate information to the voters.
Here are the two questions they asked in the push poll.
Do you think Al Franken should remain in the race for US Senate? Or do you think Franken should withdraw from the race?
(SurveyUSA)
First of all, this poll insinuates that Al Franken either didn't pay his taxes or was trying to evade them. The fact that KSTP fails to mention is that Franken reported ALL of his income in the states he lived, MN & NY. The fact is he overpaid to the tune of about $70K in MN & NY and underpaid in the other 17. The only difference is the fines he paid for filing in the wrong states.
Misinformation is an important facet of push-polling. The goal of push-polling is to first get incorrect facts into the minds of the voters then ask if based upon these incorrect facts, do you like this particular candidate less.
See the hit piece or read the transcript here
I've also come to suspect that he doesn't know either.
When newly elected as senator, he said he wanted most to reach across the aisle, to forge a more cooperative spirit in Washington. He said that bi-partisanship was his first priority. He says that still in his reelection campaign. But there's very little in his Senate performance that has demonstrated real commitment to that espoused principle.
Read the rest of Mr. O'Brien's commentary at the Star Tribune. Since the Strib doesn't keep their links alive forever, you can read the rest here once their link goes dead.
(4/16/08)
Sen. Norm Coleman (R-MN) wants oversight of Iraq reconstruction spending. Unfortunately, Norm is five years too late. Oversight would have been helpful in 2003, but Norm was too busy cheerleading. Norm has always opposed real oversight of Bush Administration policies.
The Minnesota Republican, facing what could be a tough reelection battle this year, joined a bipartisan group of senators Tuesday who are drafting a "sense of the Senate" resolution that would restrict future reconstruction dollars to loans instead of grants.
"I do think it's important with the changing circumstances in Iraq," he said. "This is something that needs to be done."
(Star Tribune)
I have no idea how Republican keep their heads from exploding when they talk about fiscal accountability after lying us into a war we didn't need to fight, bungling winning the hearts and souls of Iraqis and flushing billions of dollars down the Iraqi reconstruction black hole for 5 years now.
Even if this bill were to become something more than a non-binding resolution, it's still merely a drop in the bucket. We're spending $10,000,000,000 per month and Norm is concerned 5 years after the invasion about the efficient use of our tax dollars? Let's do a little math ... thats 60 months times $10b = $600,000,000,000! BTW, I'm ignoring the billions wasted on reconstruction in my calculations.
Also, is this an indication of what Norm can get done in the Senate? Sheesh. And what about these changing circumstances, Norm? Have we finally turned the corner? Is victory assured?
Read the rest of what my analysis here
Norm has voted for all of President Bush's tax cuts for the wealthiest 1% of Americans. For every $1 tax break you get, millionaires get $108. Norm wants to make Bush's tax cuts permanent, but he's voted against tax breaks for average Americans.
Whether its the marriage penalty relief, child tax credits, tax breaks for families sending kids to college or Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT), Norm has not been on our side. He's opposed these things on many occasions.
And all this aside from the fact that Norm has been a cheerleader for the Bush Administration's fiscal policies (i.e., paying for the Iraq War with loans from China) that are steadily devaluing our currency. Taxes might hurt a little more this year as that dollar doesn't quite buy as much as it once did.
As Chair of the PSI, Norm could have investigated a myriad of things like no-bid contracts, warrantless wiretapping, overcharges by Halliburton, the Attorney General scandal, torture, and the corruption and incompetence of the Bush Administration among many, many things. However Norm never investigated a Republican in good standing or followed any lead where a Republican might get hurt. His only investigation of Republicans are of ones, like Heckuva Job Brownie, who had already been thrown under the bus.
As chairman, Coleman focused the subcommittee like a laser beam on three major problems: fixing weaknesses in America’s homeland security; rooting out fraud, waste and abuse in government; and bolstering consumer protection for vulnerable Americans citizens.
In each of these areas, Norm Coleman has a distinguished record of success.
On homeland security, he identified weaknesses in the system and proactively worked to fix them. Improving border security, pushing for more regulation of radioactive materials and focusing on better detection methods of cargo coming into our country were key outcomes of his investigations.
(Bemidji Pioneer)
The only person lying is Cullen Sheehan. Norm has done little to nothing to improve security at our nation's ports. He never investigated why the Bush Administration refused to improve our port security.
Fraud? What fraud. Norm never investigated the no-bid contracts given Halliburton in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the contaminated water that Halliburton provided US troops in Iraq, the overcharging that all private contractors in Iraq are probably guilty of. None of these things were investigated because these contractors are large Republican donors. Furthermore, we lost pallets of greenbacks -- $8 billion has gone missing and Norm never investigated that either.
(Bemidji Pioneer)
As Chair of the PSI, Norm could have called anyone before the committee and placed them under oath. During the Republican Congresses between 2003 and 2007, there was no substantial investigations into the Iraq War. Republicans like Norm made sure of that.
Mr. Sheehan seems to be trying to equate the investigations once the Democrats took control of the Senate as happening under Norm's watch. Maybe he's trying to inflate the sham investigations under the Republican Congress as real investigations. Or perhaps he's just lying.
Norm Coleman is Bush Loyalist and has done his job protecting and (as Al Franken says) enabling the Bush Administration. The Bush Administration has engaged in over 935 lies of which Norm investigated none:
(Center for Public Integrity's 'The War Card')
The essence of Norm-speakTM is distraction. Distraction from the real issue which is the legacy of the Bush Administration and Norm Coleman's part in that legacy of lies, corruption, torture, greed, abuse, corruption, hubris and more lies.
(Dump Michele Bachmann)
This contrasts with Norm's statements from when Congress was debating Bush's immigration policy last May and June of 2007. He used to be for police checking for immigration status at traffic stops. Norm was taking significant heat from the Republican base. They were worried that he'd be for "amnesty." Norm came out against "sanctuary cities" where police don't check for immigration status.
As Chair of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations Norm failed to investigate no-bid contracts, torture, pallets of greenbacks disappearing, contractor abuses and much, much more. He has utterly failed his responsibilities to oversee the Bush Administration but now wants to claim otherwise.
(COLEMAN APPLAUDS STATE DEPARTMENT REVERSAL ON IRAQ OVERSIGHT DECISION
This paragraph was the last in the press release. Norm saved the biggest lie for last. I'll analyze the Norm-speakTM in light of what Norm actually done in terms of oversight.
This was picked up by MPR and Norm quickly apologized:
(MPR)
Head on over to MN Publius to read about the fallout!
Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine), ranking member of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, and Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), ranking member of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, sent letters to 24 Cabinet agencies Feb. 22 requesting a written timeline for when they will meet all four requirements laid out by the Office of Management and Budget in a June 2006 memo.
(Federal Computer Week)
Read more about Norm's privacy disconnect
In the U.S. Senate, Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar received a score of 83 out of a possible 100 percentage points, and Republican Sen. Norm Coleman scored a 33.
(Minnesota Monitor)
Read the details and get all the scoop on Norm's flip-flopping ways at Norm Coleman flunks environmental report card.
(Political Animal)
Like many Republicans, Grams is unhappy with Coleman, unhappy with the Bush Administration and unhappy with the presumptive Republican nominee John McCain.
Why?
For several reasons. First, the party is splintering and the vaunted unity they have prized for so long is beginning to finally fray. Secondly, many conservatives don't like Coleman and would prefer to have a real conservative (not man they consider a RINO) as their Senator. Thirdly, Coleman is doing rather poorly against Al Franken. Finally, many conservatives may be willing to purify the party at the expense of a Senate defeat.
I translate the Norm-speakTM into plain English
Read about Norm's statement and voting record on torture.
John McCain thanked Senator Coleman for his support, saying, "Norm Coleman is a friend with whom I enjoy working in the senate. He is a results-oriented leader who has served the people of Minnesota with honor and integrity. I am honored to have his support."
(race 2008)
So Norm switched from front-runner to front-runner and is anyone surprised? He switched from a man who placed NYC's emergency management center in WTC7 building despite many warnings from his advisors to a man who sing's "Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran." He switched from a candidate legendary for his petty resentments to a man legendary for his mendacity. He switched from a a man whose campaign theme was "noun, verb and 9/11" to a man who named his campaign bus the "Straight Talk Express" yet stretches the facts beyond any plausibility on a regular basis.
Actually, McCain probably is a better match. Both men will say anything to win an election. Both men regularly contradict previous statements they've made. Both men state some amazingly laughable lies and expect people to believe them. Here's a few of McCain's lies. You may seem some parrallels.
Read about those parrallels here
Here's the translation from Norm-speakTM into plain and only slightly snarky English:
This is not the uber-confident Norm from SOTUs past. He admits we as a country are in trouble. He admits that Republicans will have to work with the Democrats to accomplish anything! What do you think the chances are of that?
What a difference from the preening, full-of-himself Norm at previous SOTUs.
Read about Norm's SOTU remarks past...
Read about how a recession will hurt Norm and his fellow Republicans up for reelection in 2008.
(1/11/08)
Sen. Norm Coleman (R-MN) dropped a few be-oots on the MPR audience during Midday today.
"I try to be Minnesota's mayor in Washington."
"More people ask me about healthcare than about the war."
"During the Republican years in control of Congress, we kept the spending under the rate of inflation."
Read my analysis of Norm's statements at Norm on MPR 1/11/2008.