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The Chris Christie Bridge Scandal, As Explained By "Game Of Thrones"

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Joffrey, Tyrion and the gang help explain the convoluted Chris Christie scandal surrounding the George Washington Bridge.

It was the fall of 2013, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was safely cruising towards reelection, widely expected to retain his seat of power.

It was the fall of 2013, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was safely cruising towards reelection, widely expected to retain his seat of power.

Via gifatron.com

He was crushing his Democratic opponent, Barbara Buono.

He was crushing his Democratic opponent, Barbara Buono.

Via fanpop.com

But Christie was widely assumed to have much grander ambitions, considered by most pundits to be a likely candidate for president.

But Christie was widely assumed to have much grander ambitions, considered by most pundits to be a likely candidate for president.

geeknation.com

As such, Christie didn't want to just defeat Buono...

As such, Christie didn't want to just defeat Buono...

Via mymomwatchesgameofthrones.tumblr.com


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2016 GOP Contenders And Their Biggest Scandals To Date

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No one’s perfect.

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie

Carlo Allegri / Reuters

Biggest Scandal: George Washington Bridge closures

Biggest Scandal: George Washington Bridge closures

Christie's staffers coordinated in the closing of the GW Bridge in September, causing major delays.

Via brightestyoungthings.com

How it turned out: We'll see.

How it turned out: We'll see.

After an apologetic press conference and firing the staff directly involved, the political world will await the findings of the U.S. District Attorney investigation.

Via brightestyoungthings.com

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker

Pool New / Reuters / Reuters


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Fort Lee Mayor Accepts Christie's Apology

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Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich said Thursday he accepted New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s apology for top aides conspiring to shut down lanes on the busy George Washington Bridge to cause traffic as part of a political vendetta against Sokolich.

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Harry Reid Just Made A Whole Bunch Of Republicans Angry Over Unemployment Benefits

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Harry Reid used a procedural tactic to stop Republicans from filing any more amendments on the unemployment extension bill. “This is crassly political,” Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) said. “They want to have something to talk about on the Sunday morning programs.”

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters / Reuters

WASHINGTON — What was shaping up to be a humdrum day on Capitol Hill turned into a firestorm as Majority Leader Harry Reid proposed his own plan to extend unemployment benefits and effectively blocked Republicans from having further say in the matter.

After several days of debate over how to pass a three-month extension of the Emergency Unemployment Compensation program, Reid side-stepped negotiations with Republicans and offered a plan of his own to extend benefits through mid-November. In doing so he used a procedural tactic known as "filling the tree" to block Republicans from proposing any further amendments.

When Reid said at a Thursday afternoon press conference he was "cautiously optimistic," that a long-term deal would soon be announced, what he came up with isn't what Republicans had in mind.

"Sen. Reid announced today that he will obstruct ALL [sic] Republican amendments," Don Stewart, a spokesman for Mitch McConnell, told BuzzFeed in an email. "It's a real challenge to find a bipartisan accomplishment when one person shuts out the entire side of the aisle."

"This is crassly political," Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) said. "They want to have something to talk about on the Sunday morning programs."

The deal will extend unemployment benefits through Nov. 16 and offset the cost in part by extending sequester cuts to 2024.

It also aims to stop "double-dipping" by reducing the amount of Social Security Disability Insurance people get who also received unemployment benefits in the same month. Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) had introduced a similar measure that aimed to go even further than Reid's. Portman said the CBO estimated his plan would save $5.4 billion, while Reid said his would save $1 billion. Reid argued his version was fairer to the disabled.

On the Senate floor Thursday, McConnell asked Reid whether he would allow a vote on any Republican amendment. Ultimately, Reid said no.

To allow for debate on the bill in the first place, six Republicans crossed party lines to vote with Democrats. The Republicans who did so say they did it with the expectation that at least one of their amendments would be accepted to offset the estimated $6.4 billion cost of the three-month extension. Instead, they say Reid shut them out.

"The reason I voted for the motion to proceed was I thought we ought to have some input into this," Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.) said.

Coats added that had Reid had allowed votes on some Republican amendments, the deal might have been made Thursday.

On the Senate floor, Reid said that Democrats had waited for Republicans to make a sufficient proposal to pay for the extension since Monday.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi told BuzzFeed on Wednesday she has had discussions with the White House about how they wanted to handle extending the benefits.

"We're all on the same page in passing unemployment insurance," she said Wednesday. "We don't think it should be paid for."

A spokesman for Pelosi was unable to immediately respond when BuzzFeed asked for a response to Reid's latest proposal.

California's Spending Could Reach Record Heights Under New Budget Proposal

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After years of deficit, Gov. Brown calls for fiscal prudence. But his budget plan has the highest levels of spending from the state’s general fund ever.

Max Whittaker / Reuters

LOS ANGELES — State spending could reach record levels under a budget proposed by California Gov. Jerry Brown Thursday.

"After more than a decade of intractable deficits behind us, California is poised to take advantage of the recovering economy and the tens of thousands of jobs now being created each month," Brown said.

The budget, announced during a daylong statewide blitz with stops in Sacramento, San Diego, and Los Angeles, calls for $106.8 billion in expenditures from the general fund, an 8% increase from the 2012–13 budget. It includes paying off $11 billion in debt and putting away $1.6 billion into the state's Rainy Day Fund, the first deposit since 2007.

"Despite his call for fiscal restraint, the Governor shows little restraint in spending, suggesting billions of dollars in increased spending," said Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, a Republican gubernatorial candidate, in a statement.

But Brown characterized his budget proposal as modest, and pointed to years of deficits that have follow balanced budgets to explain the need for fiscal prudence.

"When you're at at the top of the mountain and you think that's reality, you're wrong," he said.

Brown's proposal will head to the legislature where lawmakers will negotiate until June 15 when it must be passed.

John McCain To Hold January Fundraiser For 2016 Reelection

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The clearest indication the Arizona Republican will seek a sixth Senate term in 2016. He told Jay Leno early this week he was “looking very seriously” at another run.

WASHINGTON — In the clearest indication yet that Sen. John McCain is gearing up to run for a sixth term, the Arizona Republican is holding a Washington fundraiser at the end of January.

McCain is not up for reelection until 2016, but appears to be kicking things off early. An invitation from "Friends of John McCain" bills a Jan. 28 fundraiser as the senator's "first DC re-elect reception" at Johnny's Half Shell in Washington. Requested donations range between $1,000 and $5,200.

In December, McCain hosted a New York fundraiser as he "[considered] running for re-election to the U.S. Senate." McCain said on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno this past week he was "looking very seriously" at another run.

"I think there is a lot going on. I'm at the top of my game so I'm very happy to have the chance," McCain said.

McCain's Communications Director Brian Rogers told BuzzFeed in an email the senator had not yet made a firm decision about running.

"As he's said, Sen. McCain hasn't made a final decision," Rogers said.

Update: This post has been updated to include a comment from Sen. McCain's communications director.

Jennifer Granholm To Join Obama Campaign Manager At Priorities USA

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The former governor and Ready For Hillary surrogate is in talks to co-chair the board of Priorities USA with Jim Messina. Podesta’s replacement.

Isaac Brekken / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Jim Messina, former campaign manager to President Obama, will soon have company at the helm of Priorities USA Action, the big-money super PAC set to support Hillary Clinton should she run for president in 2016.

Jennifer Granholm, the former two-term governor of Michigan and one of the Democratic Party's most spirited principals, is well into talks to join Messina as co-chair of the group's board of directors, BuzzFeed has learned.

Three sources with direct knowledge of the plans said Granholm was tapped for the role after the group's original pick, longtime Bill Clinton adviser John Podesta, fell through. Podesta, originally in line to be co-chair beside Messina, agreed late last year to join the White House senior staff as a special adviser. Messina's move to Priorities USA was first reported by BuzzFeed last month.

For months, Priorities USA officials have discussed how best to reconfigure the group that two years ago bolstered Obama's reelection campaign with high-production-value campaign ads against Republican Mitt Romney.

The group's chief funder, Hollywood producer Jeffrey Katzenberg, has, along with senior advisers Paul Begala and Sean Sweeney, steered the plans for the next iteration of the PAC: a pro-Clinton effort focused on advertising and big-money donors, with a possible analytics element, sources close to Priorities said.

The Messina and Podesta partnership — the joining of two top former aides to Obama and Bill Clinton, respectively — was considered by those involved in the arrangement's development as a symbol of two once-divided camps aligning behind the former secretary of state's possible candidacy.

But Granholm's visibility and early ties to Clinton make her a natural replacement for Podesta. In 2007, the former governor endorsed Clinton over Obama in the Democratic primary, though she later went on to serve on the president's transition team. After a rousing Democratic National Convention speech, and a stint on the now-defunct cable news channel, Current TV, Granholm was reportedly under consideration for a cabinet position early last year.

Last May, Granholm also signed on as a surrogate for Ready for Hillary, another leading super PAC supporting Clinton's would-be candidacy.

It is unclear whether Granholm's spot on the Priorities USA board would very greatly alter her role with Ready for Hillary, for whom she has appeared at fundraisers and events. At the PAC's national finance council meeting in New York City last month, Granholm closed the daylong confab with what attendees remember as a particularly moving speech, titled "Why I am Ready for Hillary."

The Priorities USA board of directors, a handpicked group of Clinton supporters headlined by Messina and Granholm, could be unveiled by the group as early as the end of this month, one source familiar with the rollout said.

The PAC announced two additions to its leadership team in a press release Friday morning. Obama campaign field organizer Buffy Wicks will serve as executive director and Democratic fundraiser Jonathan Mantz as a senior adviser for finance.

Priorities USA's representative declined to confirm Granholm's role. A representative for Granholm did not respond to a request for comment.

Obama Administration To Recognize Utah Same-Sex Couples' Marriages

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“[F]or purposes of federal law, these marriages will be recognized as lawful and considered eligible for all relevant federal benefits on the same terms as other same-sex marriages,” Attorney General Eric Holder says.

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WASHINGTON — The federal government will recognize the marriages of same-sex couples who married in Utah in recent weeks, the Justice Department announced Friday.

Approximately 1,360 same-sex couples married between Dec. 20, 2013 — when U.S. District Court Judge Robert J. Shelby found the state's ban on same-sex couples' marriages to be unconstitutional — and this Monday, when the Supreme Court put new marriages of same-sex couples on hold pending the state's appeal of Shelby's ruling.

In a video released by the Justice Department on Friday, Attorney General Eric Holder announced, "I am confirming today that, for purposes of federal law, these marriages will be recognized as lawful and considered eligible for all relevant federal benefits on the same terms as other same-sex marriages."

Specifically, he noted, "In the days ahead, we will continue to coordinate across the federal government to ensure the timely provision of every federal benefit to which Utah couples and couples throughout the country are entitled — regardless of whether they are in same-sex or opposite-sex marriages."

The move comes two days after Utah Gov. Gary Herbert announced that recognition of those couples marriages is "on hold" in Utah while the appeal of the case is ongoing.

Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes, however, clarified on Thursday that same-sex couples who married during the window in which such marriages were allowed in Utah could still receive marriage certificates from county clerks. Although he did not comment on federal recognition, he specifically mentioned that one purpose for allowing the administrative processing of the marriage certificates was so that such couples could have their marriages recognized by other states.

In the video, Holder says:

Last June, the Supreme Court issued a landmark decision — in United States v. Windsor — holding that Americans in same-sex marriages are entitled to equal protection and equal treatment under the law. This ruling marked a historic step toward equality for all American families. And since the day it was handed down, the Department of Justice has been working tirelessly to implement it in both letter and spirit – moving to extend federal benefits to married same-sex couples as swiftly and smoothly as possible.

Recently, an administrative step by the court has cast doubt on same-sex marriages that have been performed in the state of Utah. And the governor has announced that the state will not recognize these marriages pending additional court action.

In the meantime, I am confirming today that, for purposes of federal law, these marriages will be recognized as lawful and considered eligible for all relevant federal benefits on the same terms as other same-sex marriages. These families should not be asked to endure uncertainty regarding their status as the litigation unfolds. In the days ahead, we will continue to coordinate across the federal government to ensure the timely provision of every federal benefit to which Utah couples and couples throughout the country are entitled – regardless of whether they are in same-sex or opposite-sex marriages. And we will continue to provide additional information as soon as it becomes available.

Update - 12:55 p.m., ET: Human Rights Campaign president Chad Griffin, who on Thursday urged Holder to recognize the same-sex couples' marriages, said in a statement, "Attorney General Eric Holder has once again shown the kind of leadership that earns you a spot in the history books. This is only the beginning of this fight, and this work continues until marriage equality returns to Utah for good, and full equality reaches every American in all 50 states."

Update at 3:30 p.m: Utah Governor's response:

Update at 3:30 p.m: Utah Governor's response:


Brutal New Democratic Video Turns Christie's Personality Against Him

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The Democratic National Committee has released a new video hammering N.J. Gov. Chris Christie for the scandal involving the politically-motivated shutdown of lanes on a busy bridge between New York City and New Jersey. Christie apologized in a press conference Friday, announcing he had fired a top aide connected to the scandal, but insisted he wasn’t involved in any wrongdoing.

youtube.com

The New Yorker Is Having A Field Day With The Chris Christie Bridge Scandal

Senate Reaches Veto-Proof Majority On Iran Sanctions

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“Based on the current counts that I’ve seen, it’s well above 67,” Senate aide tells BuzzFeed.

U.S. Senators Charles Schumer (D-NY) (L) and Robert Menendez (D-NJ) (R) talk before U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew (not pictured) testifies before the Senate Finance Committee on the U.S. government debt limit in Washington October 10, 2013.

Gary Cameron / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Support for the Iran sanctions bill in the Senate has reached a veto-proof majority, according to a Senate aide close to the process.

"Based on the current counts that I've seen, it's well above 67," the aide said.

CNN's Jim Sciutto reported on Twitter that the number of yes votes on the Kirk-Menendez sanctions bill had reached 77. The number is not exactly 77, the aide told BuzzFeed, but is above the two-thirds majority required to override a presidential veto. The aide declined to provide the specific whip count or to say which senators have joined on.

The White House responded to an uptick in support by demanding senators be "up front" about their intentions regarding military action in a strongly worded statement yesterday from National Security Council spokesperson Bernadette Meehan.

"If Congress passes this bill, it will be proactively taking an action that will make diplomacy less likely to succeed," Meehan said. "The American people have been clear that they prefer a peaceful resolution to this issue. If certain members of Congress want the United States to take military action, they should be up front with the American public and say so. Otherwise, it's not clear why any member of Congress would support a bill that possibly closes the door on diplomacy and makes it more likely that the United States will have to choose between military options or allowing Iran's nuclear program to proceed."

Lobbying Talking Points Show Insurer Freak-Out Over Potential Obamacare Provision Repeal

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Blue Cross Blue Shield Association CEO Scott Serota asks members to lobby the Hill against repeal of the “risk corridor and reinsurance program” that Republicans believe is an insurance company bailout. The repeal “jeopardizes the entire private health insurance market and will ultimately lead to a single-payer system,” he writes.

AP Photo

WASHINGTON — A major health insurance company is gearing up to lobby hard against repeal of Obamacare's so-called "risk corridors"— a provision of the law that Republicans deride as an "insurer bailout"— and warning lawmakers that doing so "will ultimately lead to a single-payer system."

BuzzFeed obtained a memo and talking points from the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association's CEO Scott Serota that sound alarm bells over momentum for repeal of the health care law's "risk corridors" — the program that would provide insurance companies with additional funds to cover losses should not enough healthy people enroll in health care plans.

"We are becoming increasingly concerned about momentum that is quickly building among some leading conservatives for elimination of the risk corridor and reinsurance programs," Serota wrote.

Serota specifically cited several high-profile bills introduced in the House and Senate to repeal the programs and a column by Charles Krauthammer calling for immediate congressional action on the bills.

Serota told members that he would be meeting with Majority Leader Eric Cantor and Speaker John Boehner next week to try to convince them repeal of the risk corridors not be "part of their ACA strategy."

A spokesman for BCBSA did not immediately return a request for comment. The company is one of the largest systems of insurance companies in the country.

Unions have also asked for an exemption from the plan fee, a tax that employers must pay to go to the reinsurance fund.

"Their efforts, along with growing support for repealing the risk corridor and reinsurance programs, could combine to create a perfect storm to, at a minimum, dissuade the Administration from modifying risk corridor program rules to provide increased funding in light of the recent 'transitional policy' allowing insurers to offer consumers the option to renew their 2013 health plans for 2014," Serota wrote.

In attached talking points, seemingly directed at Republican lawmakers opposed to risk corridors and reinsurance, BCBSA is asking members to argue that eliminating the risk corridors will lead to the eventual downfall of Obamacare and lead to a single-payer system: "It jeopardizes the entire private health insurance market and will ultimately lead to a single-payer system. Furthermore, it will close the door to pro-competitive health care reform alternatives."

One bolded talking point, "use with appropriate audiences only," charges that "eliminating these programs will result in massive premium increases and could cause private insurers to become insolvent." In Serota's email, however, this point is intended for Democrats only.

Insurance companies are having an increasingly hard time finding sympathetic ears on the Hill as they work to comply with the law.

Sen. Marco Rubio, the lead sponsor of the risk-corridor repeal bill in the Senate, previously told BuzzFeed that he was not anti-insurance company but simply anti-bailout.

"I don't think taxpayers should be bailing them out. It takes a taxpayer bailout to save Obamacare — that alone tells you it's not worth saving," he said.

Read the full talking points below.

19 Breathtaking Pieces Of SWAG Available At The U.S. Senate Gift Shop

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Who knew??

Welcome to the official Senate SWAG shop.

Welcome to the official Senate SWAG shop.

Let veteran Senate SWAG Shop employee Teresa Mulato show you around.

Let veteran Senate SWAG Shop employee Teresa Mulato show you around.

Teresa will gladly show you the Senate flip-flops with a bottle opener in them.

Teresa will gladly show you the Senate flip-flops with a bottle opener in them.

Only $5!

A Senate bathrobe

A Senate bathrobe

$90.


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Scandal Rocks New York City Politics, Mayor Eats Pizza With A Fork And Knife

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New NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio attempted to eat at a Staten Island pizzeria like a regular New Yorker.

Christie Scandal Breaks Through: Leads Local Newspapers And Broadcasts Across Country


Christie Ally Was Told On Day One Lane Closures Were Causing Slow EMS Reponses

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The scandal grows.

Page 163, Exhibit E

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's top ally at the Port Authority appears to have known on the first day that politically-motivated lane closures on the George Washington Bridge were causing slow responses from emergency medical services.

In an email that was included in the more than 900 pages of documents made public Friday by the New Jersey Legislature, Port Authority official David Wildstein was told on Sept. 9 that EMS experienced delays responding to a missing child and a elderly woman who was in cardiac arrest. The lane closures lasted until Sept. 13.

The woman later died, the child was found.

"Wanted you both have a heads up--Peggy Thomas, Borough Administrator called me regarding the increased volume and congestion of AM rush traffic throughout the Borough as a result of the GWB toll lanes adjustment that occurred," Tina Lado, director of government and community relations at the Port Authority wrote Bill Baroni, another official implicated in the scandal and Wildstein. "She mentioned that there were two incidents that Ft Lee PD and EMS had difficulty responding to; a missing child (later found) and a cardiac arrest."

Emails disclosed Thursday implicated Wildstein, and a former top aide to Christie in the scandal.

"Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee," one of Christie's deputy chiefs of staff Bridget Anne Kelly wrote to Wildstein in August. "Got it," Wildstein replied to her.

Three weeks later the unexpected closure of lanes on the George Washington Bridge between Fort Lee, New Jersey, and New York City occurred.

On Thursday, Christie said reports that a 91-year-old woman may have died due to an EMS delay caused by traffic on the George Washington Bridge were "awful."

"It's awful … now I've also seen conflicting reports of cause of death or whatever, but it doesn't matter. It's awful to hear," Christie said. "Listen, all I can do is apologize for the conduct of the people who worked for me. I can't do anything else. I can't reverse time. If I could, believe me, I would. But i'm just going to apologize. I think that's all you can do, and there's really nothing else you can do."

According to a report in The Record, it took EMS seven minutes to reach an unconscious 91-year-old woman who would later die of cardiac arrest at a hospital. An EMS coordinator could not, however, say the death was directly caused by the delays.

Sen. Mikulski: Give The Administration Time On Iran Sanctions

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A key Democratic senator holds out on supporting a push for sanctions on Iran.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid steps out of a Democratic caucus luncheon to speak privately with Sen. Barbara Mikulski at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 7 .

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

WASHINGTON — A key Democratic senator is holding out on the Iran sanctions bill despite pressure from lobby groups.

A spokeswoman for Sen. Barbara Mikulski said the senator was "skeptical" a nuclear deal with Iran could work but that the administration should be given "a limited amount of time and flexibility" to negotiate.

Mikulski "has been a staunch supporter of Israel and sanctions for 37 years," her spokeswoman, Rachel MacKnight, said late on Friday. "She believes sanctions brought Iran to the table. Now that they've come to the table, she believes the administration should have a limited amount of time and flexibility to negotiate with Iran while keeping open the options for additional sanctions."

"Senator Mikulski remains skeptical that Iran can come through," MacKnight said. "She insists that we can accept a deal only if it's good for both the US and Israel -- but believes we have to try."

Mikulski has been one of the most contested votes still up for grabs in the fight over the Iran sanctions bill introduced by Senators Kirk and Menendez. She has the target of an email campaign from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which sent out an action alert on Friday asking members to call her office and ask her to vote for the bill.

As passionate supporter of AIPAC and the U.S.-Israel relationship, there are times that we ask for your help – today is one of those critical moments.

Before leaving for the holiday recess, Senators Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Mark Kirk (R-IL) introduced the Nuclear Weapon Free Iran Act of 2013 with more than two dozen of their colleagues -- you can learn more about the bill by watching this video. This important legislation will strengthen America's effort to prevent Iran from achieving nuclear weapons capability through diplomatic means. At the time of writing this email, the bill has already garnered 59 co-sponsors.

Senator Barbara Mikulski (D-MD), who has long been a friend of the pro-Israel community, has not joined as a co-sponsor yet. I am asking you to take a minute today to call the Senator's office and urge her to join her colleagues in co-sponsoring this bill. It is important that the senator hears from the pro-Israel community throughout Maryland. There is additional information about the bill in the Action Alert below.

Here is the direct line to the Senator's office: Senator Barbara Mikulski: 202-224-4654
Before you make that call take the time to read an important op-ed from today's Washington Post by Senator Robert Menendez: A diplomatic insurance policy against Iran
Thank you in advance for your support and efforts in strengthening the US-Israel relationship,
Deborah

Deborah Adler
Area Director

Sixteen Democrats have signed on to cosponsor the bill as sources close to the process say that the threshhold of 67 votes necessary for a veto-proof majority has been reached. Negotiators have moved closer to implementing an interim agreement on Iran's nuclear program reached in November, the New York Times reported.

The White House released a statement on Thursday that accused Democratic senators who support a new round of sanctions during the latest round of nuclear negotiations of angling for war.

"If Congress passes this bill, it will be proactively taking an action that will make diplomacy less likely to succeed," read the statement from Bernadette Meehan, spokesperson for the National Securit Council. "The American people have been clear that they prefer a peaceful resolution to this issue. If certain members of Congress want the United States to take military action, they should be up front with the American public and say so. Otherwise, it's not clear why any member of Congress would support a bill that possibly closes the door on diplomacy and makes it more likely that the United States will have to choose between military options or allowing Iran's nuclear program to proceed."

Terry McAuliffe Throws His Own Party In Richmond

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Virginia’s new governor’s transition from moneyman to elected official is complete —with an inauguration day ceremony and party just for him. The Clintons weren’t far away, though.

Ruby Cramer / BuzzFeed

RICHMOND, Va. — After his best friend, Terry McAuliffe, was sworn in Saturday morning as governor of Virginia — a title and rank few thought he'd ever have — Bill Clinton left the State Capitol without stopping for reporters' questions.

"It's Terry's day today," one heard the former president say as he walked out onto Bank Street, where he was met with cheers form a gathering crowd.

Later that night, at the inaugural ball in downtown Richmond, the focus was back on McAuliffe. Neither the Clintons, nor Virginia's two U.S. senators, joined the new governor at the downtown Siegel Center auditorium for the black-tie event. The idea, one inauguration staffer offered, was to let "Terry have his night as governor."

McAuliffe, the longtime fundraiser, fixer, and confidante to both Bill and Hillary Clinton, took an oath of public office for the first time, as rain and fog hung heavy over the Virginia statehouse. That McAuliffe — known as "Mad Dog" growing up and the "Macker" in political circles — became "his excellency, the 72nd governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia" on Saturday was enough to put a bemused smile on the faces of even the Clintons, who huddled beneath a large umbrella (held by Hillary) one row behind their longtime friend.

The Clintons, who hosted a private event Friday night for McAuliffe with friends and donors, stayed largely out of focus. McAuliffe did not mention the former first family in his speech — he quoted Thomas Jefferson instead — and neither Hillary nor Bill, who spoke at Mayor Bill de Blasio's inauguration in New York City earlier this month, were featured in the ceremony.

Guests needed no reminder of the Clintons' presence. The stadium-style seating was packed with former Clinton hands, donors, and friends, all decked in blue and green plastic ponchos. Behind McAuliffe, a Virginia state senator wore a black ski cap bearing the logo of "Ready for Hillary," the PAC urging the former secretary of state to run for president.

But the focus Saturday was squarely on McAuliffe.

The former chairman of the Democratic Party, known for his unfailing energy and willingness to do just about anything for a check (once, for instance, wrestling an alligator), just barely won the governorship last year, after many doubted he could parlay his background as a party operative into a career in government.

McAuliffe appeared loose and animated on Saturday from his perch on the Capitol steps. When the ceremony ended, McAuliffe leaned over the curtained ledge of the stage for an impromptu press conference, shouting into the outstretched microphones of reporters. Hanging over the wall, he waved and flashed fans a big thumbs-up.

"Did you have fun?" he yelled out to one attendee.

"Are you ready to dance?" he asked another.

As the inaugural parade brought band after band through Capitol Square, McAuliffe hung over the edge of the wall dancing and clapping. Even as guests, soaked from rain, emptied out of the statehouse, a grinning McAuliffe stayed watching the last band go by.

He was still smiling, hours later, at the inaugural ball downtown, where the high-ceiling auditorium was decked with four full-service bars, three photo booths, two bands, and ramped up security. (Reporters wishing to leave the press bleachers, even to visit the restrooms, required an inauguration staff escort.)

Guests, who numbered in the thousands, danced as the Tams, a five-man band famous in the 1960s and '70s, performed on the stage in front of large signs that showed McAuliffe's name and campaign logo in lights. Finally, the governor emerged with his wife, Dorothy, for the customary first dance. "You have heard enough speeches," he said. "It's time to have fun! It's time to dance!"

When the Tams started up again, McAuliffe shimmied back and forth, moving his arms and hips in opposite directions. The lead singer shouted, "You're the governor now," and pulled McAuliffe into line with the other four singers, all moving in unison to the music. McAuliffe, laughing, tried to imitate them but couldn't fall into step.

McAuliffe and his wife shared their first dance to Beyoncé's "Love on Top." McAuliffe twirled his wife awkwardly and signaled to the audience for approval. He spun her again and again, until finally he lifted her arm in the air and spun himself under it.

By 11 p.m., the crowd in the ballroom had thinned, and McAuliffe was on his way to the next event of the night — the after-party.

As one guest put it at the inauguration, "No one throws a party like Terry."

New York Daily News Publisher Defends Chris Christie

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“He’s a man of enormous talent,” gushes the owner of the tabloid crucifying Christie.

As the New York Daily News continues to brutalize Chris Christie with biting covers and vicious editorials, the wealthy publisher of the Democratic tabloid is standing up for the scandal-plagued New Jersey governor.

In an appearance on the political talk show The Mclaughlin Group, which aired this weekend, Mort Zuckerman struck a markedly different tone from his newspaper as he defended Christie against implications that he was responsible for his aide shutting down two lanes of the George Washington Bridge in an act of apparent political retribution.

"The best case is... that he didn't know anything about it. It's entirely possible," Zuckerman said. "There are many things that happen in any kind of state government that simply do not come across the desk of a governor."

He added, "I did think that in the presentation that he made, in the press conference that he made, I thought he came across very well given what he had to say. It was the best he could do. I still think this is not the end of Gov. Christie because he's a man of enormous talent, I have to say. I worked with him on another matter and I thought he was just fabulous and very direct and very open."

Zuckerman also dismissed the notion that the scandal might be the end of Christie's White House ambitions.

"If what he says is the truth, and I can't imagine at this stage of the game that it wouldn't be the truth, I think it's a bump, it's not the end of his career," he said.

Zuckerman's faith in Christie is apparently not shared by his newspaper's editorial staff. Thursday's edition put Christie on the cover with an illustrated thought bubble containing a picture of the White House, and a scoffing all-caps headline: "FAT CHANCE NOW, CHRIS." The editorial inside began, "In the best possible light, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie built a top staff of lying thugs who threatened lives and safety to serve his political ends. If not, Christie is a lying thug himself."

The next day, the News cover declared Christie's press conference "PATHETIC," with an editorial describing it as a "one-hour-and-forty-seven-minute self-serving, self-pitying display of contrition [that] was a climactic act in a brazen cover-up that threatens to further unravel his political career."

If Zuckerman's assessment of the controversy seems generous, it's likely because he has long cheered the idea of a President Christie. In the campaign book Double Down, the authors report that Zuckerman was among a handful of top-level finance executives and Republican fundraisers who confronted Christie in 2012 as Mitt Romney was flailing in the primaries and urged him to run — pledging to use their fortunes to get him elected.

A spokesman for Zuckerman did not respond to a request for comment.


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Republican Senator Slams Robert Gates For Not "Being Honest With The American People"

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Jim Inhofe takes issue with the former Defense Secretary’s failure to disclose tactical disagreements with the White House to the public.

AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File

Oklahoma Republican Senator Jim Inhofe criticized Sunday former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates for not disclosing his tactical disputes with the Obama administration during his tenure as secretary.

In Gates' memoir Duty, set to be released this week, the former secretary is sharply critical of President Obama's commitment to the war in Afghanistan, as well as what he says is the White House's micro-management of defense issues, something he concedes he never confronted the president about.

"In the military that is a relationship where they have a commander-in-chief just like they have a chain of command is there," Inhofe said of Gates in an interview Sunday with WABC's Aaron Klein. "That is not there with Bob Gates. His responsibility is to advise the president on defense issues and advise our country."

"And I think, yes, we can justly criticize Bob Gates for admitting that he knew these things were going on and he did not reveal these to the American people," Inhofe continued. "If you go back and look at the history of some of the secretaries of defense that we've had, they have been very outspoken in being honest with the American people. And Bob Gates wasn't."

Other lawmakers, including Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), have criticized the timing of the memoir's release — arguing the admissions undermine the foreign policy of a sitting president.

Like others, Inhofe also criticized Gates' admission that Obama and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton included political considerations in their opposition to the Iraq surge.

"I think the admission that both Hillary and Obama were playing a political game [in Iraq] with the lives of Americans and our allies is something that should be a huge wake up call to the American people," Inhofe said.

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