• Dick Durbin,  Harry Reid,  Roland Burris

    When Will Harry Reid Capitulate and Seat Roland Burris In Obama’s Senate Seat? How About Tomorrow?

    Roland Burris Testifies January 8 2009

    U.S. Senate appointee Roland Burris, left, speaks as his attorney Timothy Wright III listens during the Illinois House Impeachment Committee hearing at the Illinois State Capitol Thursday, Jan. 8, 2009, in Springfield, Ill.

    Answer: Sooner than later and tomorrow works.

    Does Democrat Senate Majority Leader really want a lawsuit and a confrontation in the United States Supreme Court over this matter?

    Roland Burris may return to Washington next week to demand that he be accepted as the legitimate Senate appointee to replace President-elect Barack Obama and be sworn into office, according to a Burris adviser.

    If Burris’ appointment is not accepted, he will file a lawsuit challenging Majority Leader Harry Reid and the Democratic leadership’s refusal to seat him, the adviser said.

    “Unlike last time, there’s now a sense that we’ve been forced into a corner and must be more direct with Senate leaders,” the adviser said. “They’re breaking the law and act as if they have the upper-hand and can dictate terms for an entire state. There is nothing left to negotiate, they must seat the legally appointed senator.”

    Reid and Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) have refused to seat Burris, arguing that his appointment by Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was not certified by the Illinois Secretary of State, Jesse White.

    But on Friday night, White submitted a document to the Senate certifying Burris’ appointment. White’s action followed an earlier decision by the Illinois Supreme Court, which ruled that Blagojevich’s approval alone was all that was needed for Burris to take the seat.

    Reid’s office said that the Democratic leadership was consulting with its own legal team and made no decision yet on its response to this latest development.

    Harry Reid and his second in command Illinois Senator Dick Durbin have until Sunday PM to cut a deal with Burris.

    Otherwise, why would Burris wait?

    Stay tuned……


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  • Day By Day

    Day By Day by Chris Muir January 10, 2009 – Gun Play

    Day By Day 011009

    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    What a beautiful day here in Thousand Oaks, California – warm (70’s and 80’s), and clear with a slight breeze.

    Being a native Californian the weather here in winter never ceases to amaze me and the miilions more folks who have made California there home.

    Now, as to the blue politics of the state – conservatives will have to work on this.

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    The Day By Day Archive


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  • Del.icio.us Links

    links for 2009-01-10

    • But few remember that 32 years ago, when Brown was governor of California, he played a crucial role on the same issue – he signed the landmark bill that changed the state's definition of marriage from a contract between two persons to one specifically between a man and a woman.

      At the time, proponents of the bill praised it as one that would "outlaw marriages between homosexuals."

      The author of that bill, former Republican Assemblyman Bruce Nestande of Orange County, told The Chronicle this week that he wrote AB607 to specifically limit marriage to being between a man and a woman. He won support from conservatives such as state Sen. John Briggs of Fullerton, who would later author the notorious but unsuccessful Briggs Initiative that attempted to ban gays from working in public schools. Briggs carried Nestande's bill in the Senate and said it would "restore some sense of morality to the state of California."
      ++++++
      Jerry Brown reflects what is politically expedient

    • Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin expressed displeasure Friday with media reports of her recent comments about Caroline Kennedy.

      “I was not commenting at all on Caroline Kennedy as a prospective U.S. senator, but rather on the seemingly arbitrary ways in which news organizations determine the level and kind of scrutiny given to those who aspire to public office,” Palin said. “In fact, I consider Ms. Kennedy qualified and experienced, and she could serve New York well.”
      “I’ve been interested to see how Caroline Kennedy will be handled and if she will be handled with kid gloves or if she will be under such a microscope,” Palin said during the interview. “It’s going to be interesting to see how that plays out and I think that as we watch that we will perhaps be able to prove that there is a class issue here also that was such a factor in the scrutiny of my candidacy versus, say, the scrutiny of what her candidacy may be.”
      +++++++
      Caroline Kennedy is a weak candidate and the GOP should welcome her

    • Citing a lack of experience, Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) is leading an effort to thwart Barack Obama’s expected nomination of CNN’s Sanjay Gupta to become surgeon general.

      But there are also indications that Conyers’s opposition is linked to a 2007 public clash between Gupta and the liberal filmmaker Michael Moore.
      ++++++
      Michael Moore continues to be a MORON

    • The dust had barely settled on Sen. Kit Bond's (R-Mo.) announcement that he would not seek a fifth term in 2010 when word came out of Ohio that Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio) was also weighing retirement.

      The Columbus Dispatch headlined its piece "Voinovich said to be iffy about running in 2010"; Cleveland Plain Dealer columnist Brent Larkin offered this assessment: "Running in 2010 remains an option but my guess (actually, it's more than a guess) is that Voinovich is giving serious consideration to stepping aside."
      ++++++
      Rob Portman or John Kasich would be better candidates than Voinovich.