Reauthorize the Violence against women act –

You would think this is given – but the right wing has a problem protecting all human beings – really?

Democrats

Friend –

This week, the Senate may not reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act.

Since this bipartisan legislation first passed in 1994, it’s been reauthorized twice without a hitch. And it’s been tremendously successful in helping to combat domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.

So it should be a no-brainer, right? Not to the Senate GOP, not in an election year, apparently.

Republicans are willing to throw away the entire law now that it helps protect lesbians, gay men, undocumented immigrants, and Native Americans. Do they believe acts of violence committed against these groups don’t matter as much?

The Senate’s voting on the Act any moment now, and we need to put pressure on the GOP to pass it.

Before the vote, stand with me for all victims of domestic violence — no matter who they are: Add your name in support of reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act.

Since this law passed, it has helped reduce the annual rate of domestic violence by an astounding 53 percent. The rate of women killed by an intimate partner has dropped 34 percent.

Its programs, including violence prevention programs, shelters and rape crisis centers, and funding for the investigation and prosecution of violent crimes have made a world of difference in giving victims of violence a safe place to turn.

It has without a doubt saved thousands of lives.

And Senate Republicans are ready to roll back all our progress.

This year’s Act would make sure that LGBT Americans receive equal treatment for services, it would make it easier for undocumented immigrants to come forward as victims and provide temporary visas in certain cases, and let Native Americans on reservations go to tribal courts for abuse cases. With these additional protections, the GOP has promised to fight it every step of the way.

If Congress votes against reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act, all of these programs could grind to a halt, and the hundreds of thousands of women who rely on them will once again be left on their own.

Unfortunately, the GOP’s resistance is just another example of putting women’s health and well-being on the line in order to score a few cheap, political points with their base.

We can’t stand by and let them take away this critical legislation.

Before the Senate votes this week, add your name in support of protecting all victims of domestic and sexual violence, no matter who they are:

http://my.democrats.org/Reauthorize-the-Violence-Against-Women-Act

And keep an eye on when they do vote — because we’ll be keeping the pressure on.

Thanks for your help,

Debbie

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz
Chair
Democratic National Committee

Political Update

New York Times // Nicholas Confessore and Derek Willis
President Obama raised a total of $29.1 million for his re-election campaign and for the Democratic National Committee in January, he told supporters over Twitter early Friday morning, with most contributions coming in checksof $250 or less. Mr. Obama’s numbers marks the starting gun for fund-raising in 2012, as the candidates for president begin filing monthly reports of their finances with the Federal Election Commission, along with those “super PACs” that have opted for monthly filing schedules in the election year. Formal filings are due by midnight on Monday.

Partisan Split on Party Direction
New York Times // Dalia Sussman
Republican voters are far less content with the direction of their party than Democrats are with theirs, the latest New York Times/CBS News pollfinds – a potentially important disadvantage in an election year when the political parties aim to motivate their bases.  Overall, most registered voters are dubious that either major political party is headed in the right direction. Just 26 percent of all voters say the Republican Party is, while 60 percent say it’s not. The Democratic Party gets a somewhat better assessment, though it’s still negative on balance – 35 percent say it’s headed in the right direction, 50 percent disagree.

LA Mayor Villaraigosa to Chair Democratic National Convention
Washington Post // Felicia Sonmez and Ben Pershing
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosawill be the chairman of the Democratic National Conventionin Charlotte, DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Fla.) announced Tuesday.  The move is a further step onto the national stage by Villaraigosa, 59, who in 2008 was a national co-chairman of then-senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s (D-N.Y.) White House bid and later served as a memberof President Obama’s Transition Economic Advisory Board.

Actually, Obama has made the economy better
Madison Capital Times // Dave Zweifel
How many times have you heard it? Barack Obama’s policies have made the nation’s economy worse.  That’s been the standard pitch from the Republicans in Congress. It’s been the battle cry against Obama from the likes of Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich in their campaigns for the GOP nomination for president.  It seems they are trying to say it often enough that it becomes the perceived reality.

Obama’s ‘truth team’ aims to network its way to re-election win
Washington Post // David Nakamura
With his decision to embrace an independent super PAC last week, President Obama issued a plea for deep-pocketed allies to help his campaign fight back against Republican rivals in the increasingly expensive and sophisticated arena of television attack ads. Now, the Obama campaign is putting out a call for its grass-roots network to join the battle for free.  On Monday, the president’s reelection team will unveil a trio of Web sites dedicated to providing supporters with information on the president’s record — and more than a little dirt on his Republican rivals. The campaign has named it Obama’s “Truth Team,” and the goal is to arm millions of surrogates with the facts, figures and talking points they need to engage in ground-level political combat — on their Twitter and Facebook feeds and in old-fashioned conversations with friends and neighbors.

It’s not just national, Obama improve in swing states too
Talking Points Memo // Kyle Leighton
President Obama’s improving national approval numbers are certainly helpful to his re-election efforts — they drive a positive narrative after years of disappointing news on the economy.   But while nationwide numbers provide a snapshot of the country’s mood, the battle for the presidency will be fought state by state. So are Obama’s numbers also looking up in the all important swing states? It sure looks that way.

Administration Won’t Defend Blocking Gay Military Couples from Sharing Benefits

The Atlantic // Elspeth Reeve
At least as recently as 2005, new Army recruits watched videos instructing them, “Do not attempt a gay marriage.” But in a sign of progress on Friday, Attorney General Eric Holder said the Obama administration would no longer defend in court legislation that forbids giving benefits to the legal spouses of gay military members. In a letter to Congress, Talking Points Memo’s Ryan J. Reillyreports, Holder said the law violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fifth Amendment. A year ago, the administration saidit would no longer defend the Defense of Marriage Act, but legally married gay military couples still couldn’t get benefits.

CNN poll finds GOP enthusiasm for Santorum
Wall Street Journal // Neil King Jr.
A new CNN pollfinds Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum basically caught in a dead heat nationally, with Mr. Santorum pulling in 34% and Mr. Romney 32%.  But by one key measure, there’s a large gap between the two. Just 38% of Mr. Romney’s supporters say they support him “strongly,” while the rest say they back him “only moderately.” For Mr. Santorum, 55% of his backers say they support him “strongly.”  It is telling that Mr. Romney—the race’s on-again, off-again front-runner for nearly 10 months—still has such tentative support among his own supporters, while the surging Mr. Santorum appears to have more durable backing.

Romney struggling to attract white working class
Associated Press // Alan Farm
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Mitt Romney is faltering with white working-class voters crucial to his party’s drive to capture the White House, even as he tries to fend off a rising GOP challenger, Rick Santorum, who wields strong blue-collar appeal. The wealthy former Bain Capital chief has led his rivals by comfortable margins among white college graduates, according to combined polls of voters in the first five states that held presidential nominating contests. But the exit and entry surveys showed only a modest Romney advantage among whites who lack college degrees, the yardstick analysts typically use to define the working class.

Maine GOP Caucuses: Drama Continues
Wall Street Journal // Janet Hook
The Maine Republican Party said Friday that a recount of the state’s disputed GOP presidential preference poll showed that Mitt Romney still has more votes than any other candidate – but that the final outcome may not yet be known.  Under heavy criticism for mistakes and omissions from its straw poll tally of the state’s caucuses last Saturday, the Maine GOP Friday concluded a recount and moved to eventually include the results of a delayed caucus in Washington County, where the poll had been delayed because of a snowstorm.

NESC Weekly Update December 9, 2011

Dear New England Steering Committee,

Thank you to everyone who came to the Steering Committee on Monday with Director of Opinion Research, David Simas. David gave an inspiring presentation and analysis of the Republican field and current polling trends.

This Week – President Obama gave a defining speech on the economy at Osawatomie High School in Kansas this week. If you have not already seen it, please click HERE  for the full video.

Our next Steering Committee Meeting will be on Friday, December 16th at 8:30 a.m.  The meeting will be held at the Law Offices of Foley Hoag located at 155 Seaport Blvd, World Trade Center West, Room 16A, Boston, MA.

Please see below for a list of all upcoming regional events.

See you soon,

Kathy, Justin, Ryan and Rachel

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Strong Start
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Please use the links below to find out more about Strong Start and how to get involved:

One pager

Strong Start PowerPoint

Strong Start Talking Points

To contribute to building a Strong Start for the field operations in New Hampshire, please use this link http://my.barackobama.com/StrongStart-NESC
If you would like to have a personalized fundraising page set up please contact Justin Brennan at jbrennan@barackobama.com.

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NEW ENGLAND EVENTS CALENDAR
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Dinner with Debbie Wasserman Schultz -  December 13, 2011
Boston, MA
Tickets: $2,500
Contact Ryan Fleury at rfleury@barackobama.com for more information.

Reception and Diner with Governor Deval Patrick and President Barack Obama – December 14
Washington, DC
$17,900 per person – SOLD OUT
Contact Kathy Gasperine at kgasperine@barackobama.comfor more information.

Chefs for Obama – January 31, 2012
Boston, MA
Click here to purchase tickets
Contact Ryan Fleury at rfleury@barackobama.com for more information.

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THIS WEEKS POLITICAL ADS
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Priorities USA  – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3YYP3pqrGcQ&feature=youtu.be

Newt Gingrich – http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=brdrjLavTzU

Rick Perry – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0PAJNntoRgA

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News Articles
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In race for campaign funds from billionaires, Romney outpaces Obama
Washington Post // T.W. Farnam
The Republican presidential primary contest isn’t over, but in the race to line up the richest donors, it’s Mitt Romney vs. President Obama. Romney has drawn the most support from billionaires, with at least 42 donating to his campaign. Obama is not far behind, with at least 30 billionaire supporters. Rick Perry and Jon Huntsman Jr. follow with 20 and 12, respectively, according to donor rolls and the current Forbes magazine list of 412 American billionaires. Very wealthy donors are likely to play a greater role in this election cycle in the wake of recent court decisions that have loosened rules for campaign contributions.

Fight for Senate Hinges on Six White House Battlegrounds
Roll Call // Stuart Rothenberg
With 11 months to go until the 2012 elections, the fight for control of the Senate already seems to boil down to a dozen states. If, as many believe, we have entered a new era of parliamentary-type voting, when ticket-splitting becomes increasingly rare and the top of the ticket defines downballot choices for most voters, six of those 12 contests start to take on a more partisan tinge. President Barack Obama is likely to carry Hawaii and Massachusetts comfortably, giving a leg up for his party’s Senate nominees in each state.

President Obama’s road to reelection runs through Pennsylvania
The Los Angeles Times //  Peter Nicholas
In his first run for president, Barack Obama won every state he was expected to win and carried a few more he didn’t need to get comfortably over the top. This time, amid a sluggish economic recovery and high unemployment, the race is shaping up to be much closer — so close that Obama’s showing in one state might foretell his chances across the electoral map. That would be Pennsylvania. Strategists say a loss in Pennsylvania would all but doom the president’s reelection hopes.

The Perception Dilemma
National Journal // Reid Wilson
President Obama is embarking on the campaign trail alongside his best friend and his worst enemy: good economic news. Positive reports like the administration received last week from the Bureau of Labor Statistics hint at an economy that is turning the corner. But the pace of that recovery is painfully slow, and perceptions of a course correction have been slow to take hold among the very voters Obama needs to win reelection. In the next 11 months, the White House will aim to convince voters that the administration’s policies are working.

Romney Attacks Obama For Being A Socialist Without Calling Him A Socialist
Talking Points Memo // Evan Santoro
Mitt Romney has promised not to call President Obama a socialist on the campaign trail. But in a speech in Washington Wednesday, Romney got about as close to suggesting the current president wants to bring pure socialism to America as one can without actually saying the word. “He seeks to replace our merit-based society with an entitlement society,” Romney told an audience at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s candidate forum.

GOP
Gay half-sister of Republican Gingrich backs Obama
Reuters // Alex Alper
The gay half-sister of Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich slammed his position on gay rights on Wednesday and said she will support President Barack Obama, a Democrat, in the 2012 election. Candace Gingrich-Jones, a gay rights activist, told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow that she and her older half-brother, the former speaker of the House of Representatives, were “mutually respectful” but disagree on gay rights. “He is definitely on the wrong side of history when it comes to those issues,” Gingrich-Jones said.

Mitt Versus Newt Won’t Be Like Hillary Versus Barack
The Atlantic // Elspeth Reeve
The 2012 Republican primary probably won’t be much like the 2008 Democratic primary, but Mitt Romney’s campaign is organizing just in case the nomination fight against Newt Gingrich lasts all the way into the spring. The New York Times’ Trip Gabriel and Jeff Zeleny report that if neither Romney or Gingrich have decisive victories in the early voting states, “Gingrich could be faced with the ultimate challenge to his campaign: the need to survive a war of attrition of the sort for which he is unprepared at the moment.” Romney is organized in Alabama, Indiana, Delaware, and lots of other later-voting states, while Gingrich’s campaign didn’t file the paperwork in time to get on the Missouri caucus ballot.

The Gingrich Tragedy
The New York Times // David Brooks
Of all the major Republicans, the one who comes closest to my worldview is Newt Gingrich. Despite his erratically shifting views and odd phases, he continually returns to this core political refrain: He talks about using government in energetic but limited ways to increase growth, dynamism and social mobility. As he said in 2007, “It’s not a point of view libertarians would embrace, but I am more in the Alexander Hamilton-Teddy Roosevelt tradition of conservatism.”

Paid for by Obama for America


Michelle Obama and Debbie Wasserman Schultz will host conference call tomorrow at 4est to launch Women for Obama

sign up HERE

JOIN WOMEN FOR OBAMA

Posted by Melanie on November 15, 2011

First Lady

“In the end we’re not fighting these battles for ourselves. We’re fighting for our daughters and our granddaughters. We’re fighting for the world we want them to have.”

—First Lady Michelle Obama

Have you signed up to join Women for Obama yet? Say you’re in now andjoin a special conference call with First Lady Michelle Obama this Thursday about why women have an important stake in this election.

ARE YOU IN?  Sign up for WFO HERE

 


Political Corner

DNC Chair uses debate moment to pounce on GOP

CNN // Shannon Travis
The woman working to ensure President Obama’s re-election entered the political equivalent of the lion’s den – and pounced on a debate moment to blast the Republican presidential candidates late Monday. Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz stood in the “spin room” at the Florida State Fair Grounds in Tampa following the Republican Tea Party Debate broadcast by CNN and countered the Republican candidates’ slams of President Obama with some aimed back at them.

With Doubts, Voters Prefer Obama Jobs Plan
National Journal // Ron Brownstein
Despite deepening doubts about President Obama’s economic agenda, Americans generally prefer the proposals he offered last week for reviving the economy to the competing ideas advanced by congressional Republicans and the GOP’s 2012 presidential field, a United Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll has found. The poll suggests Americans remain unconvinced that either party’s agenda can significantly dent the nation’s longest period of sustained unemployment since the Depression. The share of Americans who said that Obama’s policies have compounded economic difficulties was nearly double the portion who said he has improved conditions.

DNC campaigns for Obama jobs plan
Politico // Tim Mak
The Democratic National Committee is launching a new ad campaign Monday to build public pressure on Congress to back President Barack Obama’s job plan. The television spots feature clips from Obama’s jobs speech to a joint session of Congress last Thursday evening. “The next election is fourteen months away. And the people who sent us here, the people who hired us to work for them – they don’t have the luxury of waiting fourteen months… Members of Congress, it is time for us to meet our responsibilities,” Obama says in the clip

Why the Perry-Romney Slugfest Plays Right Into Obama’s Hands
The New Republic // Ed Kilgore
But if all these implications of the Romney-Perry clash are reasonably clear, there is a more subtle but possibly even more significant additional consequence of Republicans arguing over whether to demolish or merely slash Social Security and Medicare: It will materially aid Barack Obama’s high-stakes effort to make the 2012 presidential election a choice between two very different visions of American government, rather than a referendum on his administration and its handling of the economy.

Poll: Don’t blame Barack Obama
Politico // MJ Lee
Despite his record-low approval ratings, not all unhappy Americans blame President Barack Obama for the problems in Washington. According to a new Bloomberg National Poll released Thursday, 45 percent of those surveyed said they blame Republicans on Capitol Hill for the problems inside the Beltway, while 39 percent said they believe the fault is with Obama or Democrats in Congress. More than a third of those surveyed said they “wish” Obama and the GOP in Congress would compromise — 28 percent said they are “frustrated” by the fighting in Washington, while more than a quarter said they are “angry and want to throw them all out.”

GOP Ties House Wins to President’s Woes
Wall Street Journal // Naftali Bendavid
Decisive Republican wins Tuesday in two House races have Democrats increasingly worried they will face problems in the 2012 elections if the economy and President Barack Obama’s job approval rating don’t improve significantly. Off-cycle elections often have their own dynamics that say little about national trends. But strategists from both parties tied Mr. Obama’s shaky poll numbers to Tuesday’s victory by Republican Bob Turner in a traditionally Democratic New York City district, and to a 22-point win by GOP candidate Mark Amodei in Nevada.

Obama campaign targets Georgia, possibly Savannah, as key battleground
Savannah Morning News // Larry Peterson
President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign is targeting Georgia for extra effort next year, state Democratic chairman Mike Berlon said. Back this week from meetings with Obama operatives in Chicago, Berlon said the Peach State has moved up a notch on their priority list. “There will be a lot of national attention focused in Georgia, starting in January,” he told local Democrats this week. The upgrade comes after Republicans swept every statewide office in 2010, and experts question whether Georgia is fertile ground for Obama.

Obama’s chance to bounce back
The Washington Post // Aaron Blake 
It hasn’t been a good month for President Obama, but beneath it all, the American people are still ready to hear him out when it comes to his jobs plan. And in fact, at first glance, they seem to like it. Two new polls show more Americans like the president’s jobs plan than dislike it. A CNN/Opinion Research poll shows 43 percent favor Obama’s jobs plan, while 35 percent oppose it. And Gallup shows an even wider gap, with 45 percent in favor and 32 percent opposed. With less than majority support, it’s hardly a resounding affirmation of the president’s policies, and much has yet to play out. But the numbers do show that the American people haven’t written off the president’s economic ideas, even as the economy has tanked.

Insurers fought Obama’s health overhaul, but now they aid coalition to sign up uninsured
The Associated Press
Betting that President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul withstands lawsuits and a Republican repeal drive, an unusual alliance of industry, health care and consumer groups Wednesday launched a campaign to lay the groundwork for signing up uninsured Americans. Called Enroll America, the group started its work a day after the Census Bureau reported that nearly 50 million people had no health insurance in 2010, the highest number since the statistic was first collected more than two decades ago.

Obama imitates Truman’s re-election campaign
The Daily Caller // Neil Munro
President Barack Obama took the next step on his road to a 1948-style run for re-election by declaring he is being stymied by a do-nothing Congress. “This Congress, they are accustomed to doing nothing, and they’re comfortable with doing nothing, and they keep on doing nothing,” he told roughly 30 supporters at the first of two D.C. fundraisers held on Thursday evening. That depiction of a do-nothing Congress, which is set to become a feature of his stump speech, echoes President Harry Truman’s come-from-behind 1948 race for the presidency, in which he railed at a Republican-led “do-nothing Congress.”

Don’t Sweat the Jewish Vote
Daily Beast // Eric Alterman
Here we go yet again. Democrats lost a heavily Jewish seat in Brooklyn and Queens that they’ve held for almost a century, and just as they have done now for over 30 years, neoconservatives are predicting an exodus of Jews away from the Democrats into the Republican party. Most enthusiastic on this point is former Bush administration official Dan Senior. Writing in The Wall Street Journal, he insists that “New York’s special congressional election on Tuesday was the first electoral outcome directly affected by President Obama’s Israel policy,” and he blames this on the fact that the president has “a record of bad policies and anti-Israel rhetoric.” Actually, not true.


Wish you were there – Report from DC – Women’s Leadership Forum

Report from guest blogger – Diane R.

REPORT FROM THE FIELD -

I’m just back from the Women’s Leadership Forum conference in DC that was held on Thursday, May 19th.  The consistent message from Valerie Jarrett’s kick-off speech on the current status of women to President Obama’s talk about the women’s conference that he attends at home every night was this: It’s about women!  Women truly have the power to elect the president, to make up the difference in the scales tipping one way or the other. I think that if we, as women, take leadership positions in this campaign, and really speak from the heart to other women, we will absolutely be able to re-elect President Obama. Continue reading