John McCain’s approval rating has plummeted into deep negative territory in the latest poll out of Arizona. I mean really bad.
When the Ohio GOP photoshopped a fake pro-Steve Stivers sign into a photo of a recent Tea Party rally, it probably wasn’t a good idea to make the sign appear to be well over thirty feet tall.
Okay, it seems I was right. Whatever Iowa congressional hopeful Pat Bertroche thinks, you wouldn’t be able to track illegal immigrants if you actually followed through on the idea of forcibly implanting them with microchips. As I suggested, the kind of microchips we’re talking about here aren’t transponders. They’re passive beacons. You have to run a decoder gizmo over them to get any info from them. In other words, it’s not going to turn into an illegal immigrant LoJack system — a Bertroche fantasy simultaneously comical and grotesque.
TPM Reader UF gives us some background on how these gizmos actually work … Read More
The Republicans have folded in the Senate. Throughout the afternoon, every indication was that the GOP’s filibuster effort had crumbled and that several, perhaps many, Republican senators would cross over and vote to bring financial reform to the floor for debate. We were expecting a vote at this hour. But the Senate is dispensing with a vote entirely, and will bring the bill to the floor by unanimous consent (meaning everyone agrees and there’s no need to even vote on it).
That doesn’t mean the fight is over. There will be another 60 votes needed now to cut off debate and actually vote on the bill. That is another opportunity for the GOP to delay and posture. But that is appearing less likely as time goes by. Â What we anticipate is several days of Senate debate, with a long series of votes on various amendments to the bill, followed by a cloture vote that a handful or more of Republicans join Democrats on, then a final vote passing the bill along roughly the same margins, maybe late next week, probably the week after.
Robert Reich denounces the astroturfers behind ‘Stop too Big to Fail’ for using his name and likeness in their campaign to fool people into thinking they’re for financial reform when in fact they’re trying to kill it.
President Obama: Congress may not have an “appetite” for immigration reform this year. That and the day’s other political news in the TPMDC Morning Roundup.
With Charlie Crist’s expected announcement this afternoon that he’ll run as independent in the Florida Senate race, we now have two major candidates in the general election facing serious political and legal blowback over the spending and self-dealing scandals rocking the Florida Republican Party.
Jillian Rayfield, with help from TPM readers, uses the crazy immigration law in Arizona as a springboard to look at some of the most-off-the-wall legislation to come out of the states recently. Fun stuff.
At a Washington breakfast this morning, NRSC Chairman John Cornyn (R-TX) told reporters that when Charlie Crist quits the GOP primary later today, the NRSC and Cornyn’s own PAC will demand Crist return their contributions.