Del.icio.us Links

links for 2009-10-20

  • We wrote in Saturday’s paper that the GOP appears to be building fund-raising momentum heading into the 2010 elections.

    Here’s another data point: the Democratic National Committee said it raised about $8 million in September. That’s less than the Republican National Committee, which raised $8.8 million in the same time period, and the second month running the RNC has pulled ahead.

    Overall, the Democrats are still ahead, with $139.4 million raised to date compared to $125 million for the GOP.

    That edge is attributable in part to the Democratic fund-raising arms for House and Senate candidates, both of which out-raised their Republican counterparts by nearly two-to-one margins last month.

    The GOP resurrection, meanwhile, is being aided by a rise in small donors. In some of the most competitive 2010 Senate races, Republican candidates raised more than the Democrats did in the most-recent quarter.

    (tags: GOP rnc DNC)
  • Former eBay CEO Meg Whitman — who disputed media reports that she had never voted in the 1980's — was a registered Republican voter in San Francisco during that decade, the Chronicle has learned.

    Whitman registered to vote in San Francisco on Sept. 22, 1982, and was still on the city voter rolls as of 1985, according to elections data microfiche stored in the San Francisco Public Library and obtained through a public records act request.

    The records from the San Francisco Dept. of Elections were recovered last week from storage and obtained by the Chronicle today.

    (tags: Meg_Whitman)
  • Alarmed by the spread of the H1N1 flu, local hospitals restricted visitors this week, barring children and capping the number of visitors a patient can see at once.

    Cedars-Sinai Medical Center this week raised the minimum age for visitors from 12 to 18 and restricted the number of visitors for patients at greatest risk of becoming infected with H1N1, including those in labor and delivery, or in pediatric and neonatal intensive care units, according to Dr. Rekha Murthy, medical director of hospital epidemiology at Cedars-Sinai.

    Murthy said restrictions on younger visitors make sense because children are at greater risk of catching the H1N1 flu, and may infect others before they show symptoms.

    (tags: swine_flu)
  • CHICAGO, IL – In a world exclusive, Oprah Winfrey will interview former Alaska
    governor Sarah Palin for an episode of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" to air
    Monday, November 16, 2009. Winfrey and Palin will meet for the very first
    time on the episode, which will mark Palin's first interview to discuss her
    upcoming book, "Going Rogue: An American Life" and her first-ever
    appearance on the "Oprah" show.

    Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin burst onto the national political scene as
    running mate for Senator John McCain in the 2008 presidential election. Now,
    following her decision to step down as governor of her home state of Alaska,
    and on the eve of the release of her first book, Palin will speak first to Oprah
    in a world exclusive interview.

    "The Oprah Winfrey Show: Exclusive – Oprah Talks to Sarah Palin" airs on
    Monday, November 16, 2009

  • The White House and Democratic leaders are offering doctors a deal: They’ll freeze cuts in Medicare payments to doctors in exchange for doctors’ support of healthcare reform.

    At a meeting on Capitol Hill last week with nearly a dozen doctors groups, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said the Senate would take up separate legislation to halt scheduled Medicare cuts in doctor payments over the next 10 years. In return, Reid made it clear that he expected their support for the broader healthcare bill, according to four sources in the meeting.
    +++++
    Obamacare – quid pro quo

  • But I do wonder if it’s the Scozzafava campaign that’s in trouble–with a candidate who supports card check, who is unwilling to say she’d oppose a health care bill that raises taxes or includes abortion coverage, and who is so reluctant to answer questions that she has someone with her campaign call the cops when she’s questioned by a reporter who is (if I may say so) polite–if a bit persistent.
  • The United States cannot wait for problems surrounding the legitimacy of the Afghan government to be resolved before making a decision on troops, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said.

    Gates, speaking to reporters on board a plane traveling to Tokyo, described the situation in Afghanistan as an evolutionary process that would not improve dramatically overnight, regardless of what course is taken following the country's flawed August election.

    "I see this as a process, not something that's going to happen all of the sudden," Gates said.

    "I believe that the president will have to make his decisions in the context of that evolutionary process."

    Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell added that Gates believed the issue of the Afghan government's legitimacy went well beyond the question of whoever would be declared winner of the election,

  • Vic Mizzy, the songwriter who wrote the catchy theme songs to "The Addams Family" and "Green Acres" television shows, has died. He was 93.

    His manager Jonathan Wolfson says Mizzy died Saturday at his home in Bel Air. He didn't know the cause of death.

    Mizzy got his start in vaudeville and wrote songs that were recorded by Dean Martin, Doris Day, Perry Como and Billie Holiday in the 1940s and '50s.

    His hits included "The Whole World Is Singing My Song" and "With a Hey and a Hi and a Ho-Ho-Ho."

    Mizzy has said that he didn't mind if people only remember him for the finger snaps at the start of the "Addams Family" theme song. After all, he said, "two snaps got me a mansion in Bel Air."
    ++++++++++
    Loved both shows and both themes.
    RIP