Cliff DivingMaureen Dowd fist bumps Barack Obama’s Democrats:

One minute they were legislative losers, squabbling and scrambling for the off-ramps. The next they were history-makers, sharing chest bumps and goose bumps at the White House. How had the lofty president and the wily speaker suddenly steered them off Jimmy Carter Highway and onto F.D.R. Drive?

One gleeful and relieved White House aide called the bill-signing ceremony in the East Room, packed with Democratic lawmakers snapping pictures and acting like obstreperous children, “an Old Spice moment.”

“You could see it in their faces,” he said. “It was kind of like that Old Spice ad where the guy smacked himself on the cheeks and said, ‘Wow, that feels good!’ It was like they smacked themselves on the cheeks and said, ‘You are a member of Congress and now you can start doing things. Wow, that feels good!’ ”

David Axelrod agreed: “It was incredibly moving to be in that room today. This was such an emotional high that I actually saw congressmen hugging senators. People are so used to low expectations around here that the idea that you could do something big and meaningful is exhilarating.”

The Democrats held hands, held their breath and jumped over the cliff — not that it was a radical bill. And, mirabile dictu, nothing awful happened. The markets went up. The polls went up. Their confidence went up.

I think you can hear Tennessee Democrats jumping over some cliffs too these days. #clang

T/F/B: Julie Rants and Raves

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Summary: Featuring guests Tony Garr, Executive Director of Tennessee Health Care Campaign and Karl Frish Senior Fellow for Media Matters for America.

Part 1: Yes We Did (Part 2 in a Series) There’s really one one news story this morning – woohoo! health care reform legislation! – and really one “to do” item – call and thank your congressperson who voted for woohoo! health care reform legislation. And then there’s the congressmen from Tennessee who didn’t vote for it. Call those guys too. Plus, what’s good about the legislation and Tony Garr, executive director for Tennessee Health Care campaign joins us to talk about why it’s specifically good for Tennesseans. [27.47MB download mp3]

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Part 2: Yes We Did (Part 2 in a Series) So just what was the contemporary Republican party’s agenda during this health care reform debate? Freddie’s got a few ideas. Plus, we take your calls, don’t answer a few questions, and talk to Karl Frisch of Media Matters (who bought Limbaugh not one but TWO plane tickets to Costa Rica) and Mark Naccarato of SEIU Local 205.” [24.14MB download mp3]

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A PR Disaster for the Farm Bureau

Abused HorseLiz Garrigan tells us that the Farm Bureau is using “all their might to oppose proper penalties for animal abuse” and Aunt B wants to know, how could this NOT be a PR disaster for them?

How is this not a PR disaster for the Farm Bureau? “We can’t bother to have some basic protections for livestock we know are being harmed because it might inconvenience a few people.” That’s their stance? People who abuse animals also abuse their families. There is a direct correlation. Stepping in and identifying them and punishing them in a way that has some weight behind it just makes sense. Almost all of the farmers in Tennessee are not abusive assholes. They have nothing to fear from this legislation. But it makes you wonder about the people who make up the lobby, doesn’t it? If regular farmers have nothing to fear and tons of people in the state are clamoring for this, a gal starts to wonder about what’s going on with the people working against this.

From Liz’s report on the last hearing:

That’s when a Sumner County Animal Control officer, in attendance to testify in favor of the legislation, offered the money retort: “A lot of the people who are abusing their animals are also the ones who are abusing their children.”

The House Ag Committee will be voting on this bill. Like Liz says, call’em up:

Stratton Bone, 741-7086
Dale Ford, 741-1717
Willie Butch Borchert, 741-6804
Eddie Bass, 741-1864
Chad Faulkner, 741-3335
Curtis Halford, 741-7478
John Litz, 741-6877
Steve McDaniel, 741-1980
Frank Niceley, 741-4419
Johnny Shaw, 741-4538
Terri Lynn Weaver, 741-2192
John Mark Windle, 741-1260

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Sen. Andy Berke, a Chattanooga Democrat, discusses the Green Jobs Bill (SB 3120 – HB 3654 by Rep. Mike Stewart) he is sponsoring in the Tennessee legislature.

Tennessee has a great opportunity to be first in the U.S. in providing good paying, long-lasting jobs that will help to create a better future for ALL Tennesseans.

Money quote: “We CAN do well by doing good.”

More from TAPTN and TN Conservation Voters on their magically delicious Green Jobs / St. Patrick’s Lobby Day.

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Billie HolidayFor the prize of one “Honk! If you’d Rather Check My Birth Certificate than Govern” bumper sticker, can anyone tell me (enter in the comments section) in what century the above statement was made by a Tennessee State House representative?

Was it:

A) 18th
B) 19th
C) 20th
D) 21st
E) All of the above

Anarchival has both the date, the name and the context:

This statement was why I went to bed thinking about the biker gang who roams around Tennessee hunting down sex offenders. The legislative purpose of a sex offender registry is to notify the public of the presence of this certain type of criminal, so that hopefully they can take steps to protect themselves and their families. Very few people in the total population of Tennessee take advantage of this information. Even fewer are actually protected by it. However, there are plenty of sadistic people in this state who are happy to use the registry to find people no one really cares about to bully and victimize. Of course, for people like Eddie Bass (D-Prospect), that’s OK. As a good ‘ole boy from a rural county, he still believes that justice is best executed by lynching, not by the constitutional protections he has sworn to uphold. He will happily stand by shouting “Burn, Baby, Burn!” as Rep. [Debra] Maggart [R-Hendersonville] sets fire to that Constitution, because he believes all alleged criminals deserve is a stout oak tree and a sturdy rope…until he, of course, is accused of a crime. Then I’m sure he’ll want all the constitutional protections he can get. As the saying goes, “No one escapes when freedom fails. The best men rot in filthy jails. And those who cried, ‘Appease! Appease!’, are hanged by those they tried to please.” Luckily, we’re not to that point yet, even if this Bill passes. The worst that might happen is that a fifteen year old boy who was raped and beaten for eleven years by his stepfather, and then took out his own frustration on the neighbor kid, ends up being bludgeoned to death and left to die in a field by a biker gang. And who will care if they did? Not Eddie Bass.

Rep. Maggart and Rep. Bass are rapidly becoming members of Rep. Campfield’s “It’s my State, you just live in it” club where they get to decide – based on their whims – when Tennesseans abide by the U.S. Constitution and when we don’t. Tsk.

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No CheatingLet’s leave aside for a moment the fact that the Tennessee Report doesn’t yet have “Elections” listed under the “Department” section of their website when clearly they should and instead focus on the little gem they uncovered about Rep. Debra Maggart.

From a story yesterday about the Juvenile Sex Offender Registry:

House lawmakers heard more than three hours of testimony last Tuesday on a piece of legislation introduced by Rep. Debra Maggart, R-Hendersonville, who says it is necessary both to protect the public as well as line Tennessee up to receive a bigger chunk of federal law enforcement subsidies.

From a story posted in December 2009 about Maggart as “State Sovereignty” supporter:

Earlier this year, Republican state Rep. Debra Young Maggart co-sponsored a resolution demanding that the federal government refrain from further burdening Tennessee with unwarranted and potentially unconstitutional policy mandates.

But earlier this month, Rep. Maggart and Sen. Diane Black, R-Gallatin, expressed their interest in legislatively obligating the State of Tennessee to embrace an as-yet unfulfilled federal mandate, signed by George W. Bush, that critics say violates just the sort of constitutional principles lawmakers like Maggart saw fit to reiterate in their state sovereignty resolution last session.

It’s not the hypocrisy that is so bothersome, it’s the hubris and the posturing and it goes back to this:

We’re finding more and more evidence that Republicans – on both the state and federal level – love to take credit with their constituents for all the good government can do while at the same time pandering to their base with language that is strikingly opposite.

Listen closely the next time a Republican talk about health insurance reform. Every health care discussion they have is prefaced with “We think there needs to be health care reform” or “We’re not saying there doesn’t need to be reform….”

Democrats can have these conversations with their constituents – one-on-one conversations or in town hall meetings – and take credit for the good that government does (and can do!) because their constituents value the exact same things Democrats value – good jobs, affordable health care, infrastructure development that creates good jobs, quality education, access to quality education, etc.. Democrats should really go to this place instead of trying to appeal to the people who would never vote for anyone with a “D” beside their name anyway.

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Long Lines to VoteI am so confused about what makes one a patriotic American. I always thought it was things like participating in the democratic process by voting and encouraging other voting-like activities.

So if that’s the case then the opposite of being a patriotic American would be not voting or discouraging other not-voting-like activities in others, right?

HB1770, a bill sponsored by Rep. Curry Todd that comes before the House Elections Subcommittee tomorrow afternoon proposes to make “various revisions to the election laws including allowing a person to email a transfer of voter registration with a scanned signature and increasing maximum size of precincts from 5,000 voters to 7,500 voters.”

Basically, Todd’s bill is Step 1 in a 2-step process that could – if we don’t monitor county election commission meetings very closely – artificially manufacture long lines on election day.

Step 1, let’s load precinct with 2,500 more voters than we allow now. Step 2, let’s allocate fewer voting machines in each of these precincts with the 2,500 more voters. Mix together and then, Viola!, long lines!

And longs lines = discouraged voters who don’t have time to wait. We saw these longs and discouraging lines during the 2004 and 2006 elections and the hope was that we would never see them again.

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Mumpower Website Links PageOr perhaps leaving both Johnson County and Mountain City off his campaign website was simply an “oversight.” From a letter to the editor of The Tomahawk in Mountain City:

I have recently visited the 2010 re-election campaign web site for Rep. Jason Mumpower [R-Bristol, Johnson and part of Sullivan Counties] and noticed while the Tennessee General Assembly House Majority Leader from Bristol has posted hyperlinks to both the City of Kingsport (Sullivan County) and the City of Bristol (Sullivan County) that for some reason Mumpower has neglected to include hyperlinks on his campaign web site to either The Town of Mountain City and the Johnson County, Tennessee web pages. I find this rather ironic because Rep. Mumpower is himself employed by a Bristol based media and public relations firm owned by Rep. Jon Lundberg (also of Sullivan County) that produces web content for Corporate Image clients.

I imagine that it must be nice for Johnson County residents to apparently be held in such high regard by Rep. Mumpower, even though he has thoughtfully provided visitors seeking information at the Mumpower 2010 election web site with hyperlinks to two different comic book publishers.

Oh, well – if the hopeful TNGA House Speaker Mumpower doesn’t share the passion of struggling Johnson County residents with finding employment, preventing foreclosure on their homes, or even in securing affordable health care, at least the many hurting families in Johnson County can at least share in Rep. Jason Mumpower’s childlike delight and passion that he apparently finds both collecting and reading comic books…after all, this 2010 election is all about Jason Mumpower.

‘See you in the funny papers, Johnson County’

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Money in MousetrapI’m still driving around East Tennessee admiring the landscape…dotted with Payday and Title loan storefronts. You probably have one around the corner from where you live or drive by one on your daily commute. And if you haven’t noticed one yet, you will now. They are everywhere.

Next week, Rep. Jeanne Richardson (D-Memphis) will bring four bills to the Utilities & Banking subcommittee in an effort to reign in the excesses of the Payday loan business.

What are the excesses? 400% interest rate “loans” given to 19 million people per year, 12 million of whom get trapped in a debt cycle.

A couple of days ago we linked to a Harper’s Magazine must-read article about East Tennessee, the “birthplace” of this usurious practice, but their was one obvious piece of info missing – just what is the difference between “legitimate” lenders and the payday loan people?

The Center for Responsible Lending spells it out, “legitimate lenders assess the ability of potential borrowers to repay it. Payday lenders do not.”

In other words, the process behind the business of payday loans is configured purposely as a trap for borrowers. And not just a trap where it’s impossible to pay back the first few months of a loan (when the interest is higher than the principle) or keep up with a balloon payment. The Payday loan process is a trap that keeps the borrower paying what amounts to interest only month after month after month in a yearly cycle that adds up to 400%.

From the CRL:

To obtain a loan, a borrower gives a payday lender a postdated personal check or an authorization for automatic withdrawal from the borrower’s bank account. In return, he receives cash, minus the lender’s fees. For example, with a $350 payday loan, a borrower pays an average fee of about $60 in fees and so gets about $290 in cash.

The lender holds the check or electronic debit authorization for a week or two (usually until the borrower’s next payday). At that time the loan is due in full, but most borrowers cannot afford to pay the loan back and still make it to the next payday.

But if the check is not covered, the borrower accumulates bounced check fees from the bank and the lender, who can pass the check through the borrower’s account repeatedly. Payday lenders have used aggressive collection practices, sometimes threatening criminal charges for writing a bad check even when state law prohibits making such a threat. Under these pressures, most payday borrowers get caught in the debt trap.

To avoid default, they pay another $60 to keep the same loan outstanding, or they pay the full $350 back, but immediately take out another payday loan, with another $60 fee.

In either case, the borrower is paying $60 every two weeks to float a $290 advance – while never paying down the original amount of the principal. The borrower is stuck in a debt trap – paying new fees every two weeks just to keep an existing loan (or multiple loans) outstanding.

The Center is suggesting a 36% cap on annual interest to spring the trap. Here in Tennessee, the birthplace of this awful practice, we are asking only for a 100% cap.

Rep. Richardson’s bills are up next Tuesday, please call the members of the Utilities & Banking subcommittee and ask them to support reigning in the excesses of the Payday loan industry.

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Red PhoneNotice was given that tomorrow’s State Election Commission meeting will be held at 10 am Central Time by “telephonic communication.”

Because this particular meeting will be held via the telephone, this is a rare opportunity to monitor State Election Commission business without having to get out of your pajamas. (Not that you would get kicked out of the Tennessee Tower for attending a meeting in your PJs, but a day without any weird looks is always a plus.)

Within Nashville call 615-253-5120. Outside Nashville call 1-877-385-1979.

I’ll be driving to East Tennessee – also known as “God’s country” – during the meeting so Tweet me and let me know what I missed.

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