Archive for September, 2009

NJDC Response to Cantor’s Comment on Obama

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

The NJDC responds to Cantor’s remark

Cantor Plays Partisan Politics with U.S. – Israel Relationship

Aaron Keyak – September 23, 2009 – 11:46 am

Today, Ira N. Forman, CEO of the National Jewish Democratic Council (NJDC), released the following statement in response to Representative Eric Cantor’s (R-VA) remark that President Barack Obama seems not to be a “‘true friend’ of the Jewish state” as reported in Politico today:

Representative Eric Cantor (R-VA) has decided to position himself as the arbiter of who is and who isn?t pro-Israel in this country. Setting aside Cantor?s lack of sterling professional foreign policy credentials, is it wise for him to set himself up as such a figure? This is a particularly salient question considering the fact that President Barack Obama is on the record repeatedly praising Israel and committing himself to its security needs throughout his administration. Moreover, Cantor should understand that these types of partisan attacks damage the longstanding tradition of bipartisan support for the U.S.-Israel relationship.

At least one columnist has speculated that Cantor wants to modify his extreme partisan image to reveal a “newly civil Cantor.” Cantor?s insulting characterization of Speaker Nancy Pelosi as well as his willingness to play the cheapest kind of partisan politics with the U.S.-Israel relationship call into question whether Cantor wants to turn over a more “civil” leaf.

Cantor’s Answer on Israel – Palestine

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

This is from the JTA:

Cantor: Obama not ‘true friend’ of Israel

September 23, 2009

WASHINGTON (JTA) — The only Jewish Republican in Congress said President Obama does not seem to be a “true friend” of Israel.

In an interview with Politico, House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.) said he was opposed to Obama’s “disproportionate focus” on a settlement freeze instead of dealing with the “existential threat” to Israel from Iran.

“If you look at the policy that this White House has followed, it certainly does not seem as if we are dealing with a true friend” of Israel, Cantor said in the interview.

Politico

Eric’s answer to those that lost their health insurance

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

Charity!

At the forum held with Bobby Scott and Eric Cantor, Eric says to appeal to charity if you lose your health care!

Style Weekly reports Charlie Diradour will run in 2010

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

This appeared in Style Weekly today.

Charlie Diradour to Challenge Cantor

by Scott Bass

Charlie Diradour, a longtime Democratic political adviser and self-described fiscal conservative, is running for Congress.

A local real estate developer who became one of the leading opponents to the Shockoe Bottom ballpark proposal earlier this year, Diradour hopes to unseat Republican Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Henrico, the minority party’s whip in the lower house.

Diradour is a Fan resident who got his start working as a volunteer on former Attorney Mary Sue Terry’s political campaign in 1985. He advised former City Council President William J. Pantele in his bid for mayor last year.

More recently, Diradour launched a Web site for supporters of keeping minor league baseball at The Diamond on the Boulevard, and became a vocal critic of Highwoods Properties’ plan to build a $363 million, ballpark-anchored development in the Bottom. Highwoods, facing harsh public criticism and questions about the project?s financing, pulled out of the project in July.

Bringing down Cantor, a rising and well-funded GOP star, won?t be so easy. The 7th District, which stretches from the Richmond?s West End to Rappahannock County in the north, and includes portions of Henrico and Chesterfield counties, is considered a Republican stronghold. Cantor is up for reelection in November 2010.

“It’s always good to have competition, but the climb is steep in a solidly Republican district,” says Daniel J. Palazzolo, professor of political science at the University of Richmond. “I don’t see the kinds of conditions that would make a Republican in the 7th District vulnerable.”

Diradour says he’s up to the challenge. He says he’s already raised “substantial pledges,” and figures he’ll need at least $1 million to mount a credible challenge. A tireless pol with years of campaign experience, Diradour is hitting the campaign trail and has launched a campaign Web site, www.charlieforthe7th.com. He says the reception from regular voters and campaign donors has been encouraging.

Diradour insists that he?s not running a sacrificial campaign. “If I run, I want to see a clear path to victory,” he says, “not just be a token, somebody who gets 35 percent.”

But after an unprecedented presidential election a year ago — after 40 years of Republican dominance in presidential elections, Obama comfortably won Virginia — the pendulum is swinging back to the GOP.

The political environment doesn’t

I dreamt I saw Joe Wilson last night

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Cantor has not joined in the call for a reprimand of Congressman Wilson’s (R SC) disrespect to the president.

Joe Wilson: "Liar"

Joe Wilson: "Liar"

Rep. Joe Wilson’s rude interruption of President Obama’s speech to Congress with the words, “You lie,” when the president said his health care plan would not cover illegal immigrants.

Cantor’s Blackberry

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Cantor issued this statement last night after the president’s address to the joint session:

Tonight the President failed to say anything different or offer clear specifics, and with that in mind the reason for this over hyped speech is strangely unclear. The President has now delivered over 100 speeches where he?s discussed health care and said the same thing. He’s held prime time press conferences, hosted television specials from the White House, and addressed a joint-session of Congress and only thing he?s made explicitly clear is that the status quo is unacceptable, a fact that we all agree on. While the President continues to blame unnamed special interests and Republicans, the fact is that the Democrats overwhelmingly control both the House and the Senate. The President and his party have failed to lead by offering reform that Americans are comfortable with. Families understand that a costly government-run plan will force them to pay more and get less.

Was he paying attention? How could he know what the president said?

Isn’t this disrespect of the president?

Cantor Warns Against Passing Health Care Reform

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Top Republican Warns Against Forcing Through Health Change

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) — A top Republican in Congress warned Monday that using a legislative tactic to pass a Democratic health-care bill opposed by Republicans would increase public anger over partisan politics.

Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, the third-ranking House Republican, told a CNN editorial board meeting that an American public already unnerved by the economic recession wants unified action on major issues such as health care.

Some Democrats are calling for President Barack Obama and Democratic congressional leaders to use a tactic called reconciliation to pass a desired health-care overhaul. While Democrats hold a majority in both chambers of Congress, it is unclear if they control enough seats to overcome opposition from all Republicans and some Democrats.

Under reconciliation, which applies to bills affecting the federal budget and deficit, a measure requires a simple majority of 51 votes to pass in the Senate, rather than the super majority of 60 votes needed to overcome an opposition filibuster.

Cantor said the public anger displayed at some town-hall meetings on health care would worsen if Democrats force through a bill using reconciliation.

“If they use … the reconciliation option, it would necessarily mean that a bill proceeding under those rules is not a bill representing the mainstream of this country,” Cantor said, adding such a move would make it harder for Obama to make further progress. “This president was elected to bring people together, to bring a divided nation back together,” Cantor said. “I don?t think taking that kind of action would really help” reverse the partisanship of recent years.

Cantor complained that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democratic leaders have rejected Republican ideas or participation on major legislation. “The last eight months have been ‘my way or the highway,’” Cantor said.

It appears that the Cantor tactic is to try to obstruct progress in any way possible, deploy the angry “grassroots,” and then blame the Democrats. What “Republican Ideas” is Cantor referring to?