Sanders Delivers ‘Huuge’ Ypsilanti Michigan Rally

20160216_2043 Sanders in Michigan talks ecomony, trade, environment (Detroit Rree Press).jpg Sanders in Michigan talks economy, trade, environment
By Kathleen Gray and Niraj Warikoo, Detroit Free Press
YPSILANTI (Feb. 15, 2016 20:43 ET) — The line snaked for several blocks as more than 9,000 people crowded into the Convocation Center at Eastern Michigan University to see Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders during his first visit to Michigan this election season.

The crowd, mostly young people, came to hear his messages on income inequality, the need for campaign finance reform and aggressive action to protect the environment. And Sanders did not disappoint.

Read more.

While Republicans, Obama Duke It Out, Supreme Court Justice Confirmation History Tells All

20160213_1500 How Long Does It Take to Confirm (NYT).jpg(Feb. 15, 2016 07:25 ET)–There were several issues created when Justice Antonin Scalia died Saturday. Mainstream media reports for the most part focused on how the GOP would interfere with any nominee submitted by President Obama being that this is his last year in office.

Then there were the reports that mentioned President Obama’s intention to not delay moving forward with nominating a replacement.

Eventually, the reporting broke away from that rut, broadening into more substantive areas such as; 1) what the usual length of time was for nominations to be confirmed; and 2) what was the history of nominees submitted during the last year of a presidents term.

Below is a breakdown prepared by The New York Times which begins to address the first question regarding the length of time to confirm. The other question, regarding the practice and history of last year nominations, was not fully discussed, “. . . few presidents have successfully filled vacancies announced in their final full year.”

Related Articles:

How Long Does it Take to Confirm a Supreme Court Nominee? (Feb. 13, 2016), The New York Times

What to Know: Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, No. 08-205, 558 U.S. 310 (2010)

20100121_0000 CITIZENS UNITED v. FEDERAL ELECTION (US 08-2015) Opinion.jpg(Feb. 13, 2016 21:45 EST) Because the US Supreme Court case, Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, (2010), has been receiving so much attention throughout this presidential election cycle, here is a consolidated list of links which help those wishing to understand the case more than just its title.

Hillary Clinton has advocated, for unknown reasons, that the Citizens United case became to be because it involved an attack campaign against her.

Why she would want to take credit for something which drastically caused our campaign finance system to become corrupted, is unknown.

The gist of the case involves a movie produced by an anti-Hillary-Clinton entity. The movie was to cause people to not want to elect Hillary Clinton.

There were provisions in a law which required various disclosures when campaign related speech was being paid for and used against a political candidate. That, is what Hillary Clinton was at the time.

The producers of the movie then filed an action in court seeking an injunction to keep the law requiring disclosure from being applied to them.

Accordingly the case, originally launched in 2008, eventually cycled its way through the courts system all the way to the Supreme Court. When in 2010, the court, in a 5-4 split decision, ruled in Citizens United’s favor.

Below are some interesting links for reference.

Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, No. 08-205, 558 U.S. 310 (2010)

Wikipedia Overview

Opinion of the Court.

Taking Back Our Democracy: Responding to Citizens United and the Rise of Super PACs, ACLU, Washington, DC, (July 24, 2012)

Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA, McCain–Feingold Act, Mar. 27, 2002)

The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA, McCain–Feingold Act, Pub.L. 107–155, 116 Stat. 81, enacted March 27, 2002, H.R. 2356) is a United States federal law that amended the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, which regulates the financing of political campaigns. Its chief sponsors were Senators Russ Feingold (D-WI) and John McCain (R-AZ). The law became effective on 6 November 2002, and the new legal limits became effective on January 1, 2003.[1]

Erica Garner Supports Bernie Sanders While Sharing Father’s Loss (Video)

20160213_1500 Bernie Sanders Gets Dramatic Endorsement From Eric Garner’s Daughter (Yahoo).jpg (Feb. 13, 2016 17:00 PM EST) In a YouTube video, “Erica Garner endorsement of Bernie Sanders for President,” posted by Erica Garner, the daughter of the late Eric Garner who died at the hand of the police in 2014, speaks out about her loss.

The four minute video takes you through the personal journey Erica Garner has taken since her father was killed.

“He is not scared to go up against the criminal just system. He’s not scared,” Garner says in the video. “That is why I am for Bernie.”

Official Erica Garner Website

Related Stories:

20160211_1200 Erica Garner endorsement of Bernie Sanders for President (YT erica garner).jpg Bernie Sanders Gets Dramatic Endorsement From Eric Garner’s Daughter (Video)
By Matt Donnelly, The Wrap (Feb. 13, 2016) Read more.

John Lewis Back Pedals on Sanders Rebuke

20160213_1515 Civil Rights Leader Lewis Softening Dismissal of Sanders (AP).jpgCivil Rights Leader Lewis Softening Dismissal of Sanders
By Meg Kinnard, AP Greenville, S.C. (Feb. 13, 2016, 3:15 PM ET)

Civil rights leader John Lewis on Saturday softened his dismissal of Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders’ work in the 1960s on behalf of racial equality.

Lewis, a Georgia congresswoman who has endorsed Hillary Clinton in the 2016 race, had said about Sanders’ role in the movement: “I never saw him. I never met him.”

Two days later, he felt compelled to clarify his remarks “in the interest of unity.”

“The fact that I did not meet him in the movement does not mean I doubted that Sen. Sanders participated,” Lewis said, and “neither was I attempting to disparage his activism.”

Read more.

20160213_1222 John Lewis clarifies comments on Bernie Sanders (MSNBC).jpg John Lewis clarifies comments on Bernie Sanders
By Alex Seitz-Wald (Feb. 13, 2016 12:22 PM)

Civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis on Saturday clarified comments he made earlier this week questioning Sen. Bernie Sanders’ involvement in the civil rights movement. Lewis, who is supporting Hillary Clinton over Sanders in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, had said he never met Sanders.

Read more.

What to Know: Delegates, Unpledges Delegates, and Superdelegates

20160211_2300 Why superdelegates Don’t Matter (CulturallyCurious).jpg Why Superdelegates Don’t Matter by Matt Adler, Former Barack Obama Delegate DNC 2008

(Feb. 12, 2016) Matt Alder a former Barack Obama Delegate, DNC 2008, explains the differences between delegates, unpledged delegates, and superdelegates in a short and concise manner.

Read more.

 

Bernie Sanders Is Intrepid According to the Secret Service

20160211_2309 Bernie Sanders Gets His Secret Service Code Name (HuffPost).jpg (Feb. 12, 2016) — Bernie Sanders has been called many things, but this time it’s personal. His very own secret service detail is calling him by names now, “Intrepid.”

According to news reports already spreading over the internet, “The Bill Press Show” broke the news Thursday morning.

Upon reflection, #FeeltheIntrepid doesn’t quite sound as good as #FeeltheBern.

However, who can complain with what the word “Intrepid” actually means:

Intrepid – resolutely fearless; dauntless.

Nothing wrong with that.

Voters of All Demographics Moving Toward Sanders

20160211_2300 Voters of All Demographics Moving Toward Sanders (The Inquisitr).jpg Voters of All Demographics Moving Toward Sanders
by Nathan Francis (The Inquisitr)

(Feb. 11, 2016)– Bernie Sanders delivered on his strong polls in New Hampshire, and though he faces big challenges ahead in Nevada and South Carolina there is new evidence to suggest he could ride a wave of momentum and grassroots support through these difficult, Hillary Clinton-leaning states.

Recent polling suggests that voters of all demographics — including those dominated by Clinton so far — are moving toward Sanders in recent days. This could be key if he aims to pull off upsets, or even better-than-expected performances in these states to fuel his upset bid.

Read more.

Harry Belafonte Endorses Bernie Sanders for President

20160211_1730 Harry Belafonte Endorses Bernie Sanders for President (Bernie2016).jpg (Feb. 11, 2016 17:30 EST) Civil rights icon and entertainer Harry Belafonte has posted a video on YouTube explaining why he has endorsed Bernie Sanders for president.

“I think he (Sanders) represents opportunity. I think he represents a moral imperative. I think he represents a certain kind of truth that is not often evidenced in the course of politics.”

(Source: Bernie 2016, YouTube 2/11/16)

Related Articles:

Harry Belafonte Endorses Bernie Sanders (Feb. 11, 2016)

Video:



Delegate System Stirs Brouhaha After Sanders’ Slam Dunk in New Hampshire

20160211_1507 Bernie super delegate panic is based on lazy reporting (RawStory).jpg(Feb. 11, 2016 16:45 EST)– It appears there is more to the delegate system than meets the eye when calculating who may win the democratic nomination for president in this year’s primary election cycle between Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

If the brouhaha following Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary is any indication, the Democratic Party’s delegate system has got some voters in an uproar.

Mathematically speaking, there are any number of ways primary state election results can be used to determine the delegate distribution as well as the projected overall standing the candidate may have down the campaign road.

It gets interesting when the superdelegates are taken into consideration, especially when many of which have already pledged their support for Hillary Clinton.

The idea that many delegates have already been spoken for by way of the super-delegate system appears very undemocratic at best. However, when one steps back and reviews the big picture, it is highly unlikely that the democratic party’s super-delegates will cast their final votes against the will of the people’s popular vote.

The effects, however, of the super-delegate system have already made an impact just days after Tuesday’s primary in NH. Even though the projections and tabulations are mere statistical calculations, they can influence the course of people’s attitudes about voting.

This does not play too well with votes who already have the words “rigged-system” at the tips of their tongues mostly due to Sanders’ campaign rhetoric on economic and societal inequality.

How the super-delegate system effects the primary election process during this cycle has yet to be seen. In any case, given how Sanders’ supports already have “rigged-systems” of government processes on their minds, it is expected any election discrepancies will be watched very closely.

superdelegate

A “superdelegate” or an “unpledged delegate” is a delegate to the Democratic National Convention or Republican National Convention that is seated automatically, based on their status as current (Republican and Democratic) or former (Democratic only) party leader or elected official. Other superdelegates are chosen during the primary season. Democratic superdelegates are free to support any candidate for the nomination. This contrasts with convention delegates that are selected based on the party primaries and caucuses in each U.S. state, in which voters choose among candidates for the party’s presidential nomination.

(Source: wikipedia, Accessed Feb. 11, 2016 16:45 EST)

Terms:

Brouhaha
[broo-hah-hah, broo-hah-hah, broo-hah-hah]
noun
1. excited public interest, discussion, or the like, as the clamor attending some sensational event; hullabaloo:

Delegate
noun
1. a person designated to act for or represent another or others; deputy; representative, as in a political convention.

2. A delegate is someone who communicates the ideas of or acts on behalf of an organization at a meeting or conference between organizations of the same level.

Related Stories:

Bernie super delegate panic is based on lazy reporting (Feb. 11, 2016)

Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On TwitterVisit Us On Youtube