You may have seen this morning, Steve Kornacki released a blockbuster story on the BridgeGate front. It’s not narrowly tied to the George Washington Bridge lane closures. But it involves nearby Hoboken, where the city’s Mayor, Dawn Zimmer, says the Christie administration refused to provide Sandy Relief until the city approved a separate real estate project tied to Christie confidante, David Samson. Samson of course is Chairman of the Port Authority and currently eye deep in the BridgeGate story. Kornacki has been collaborating and reporting on this story for the last week with Brian Murphy, former NJ political reporter and now historian of US political economy at Baruch College. Brian has written up a deep look at this new story up at TPMCafe and what it in terms of the politics of New Jersey and the history of deep ties between tri-state politics and major development projects like this. Always a ripe ground for strong arm politics, bad acts and corruption. Read it here.
Lifetime appointments to the bench, the legitimate need to keep judges apart from the political hurly burly, and their own institutional insularity combine to make the conduct of the federal judiciary extremely opaque and difficult to hold to account. So it’s worth noting that on Friday, the Judicial Conference’s Committee on Judicial Conduct and Disability, which reviews cases of misconduct by federal judges, published two different decisions involving judicial misconduct where the essential issue before the panel was whether to make public the alleged misconduct or keep it cloaked behind the judicial trappings of secrecy and confidentiality.
In both cases, the committee opted in favor of openness. How it got there — and the backstory on both cases — is fascinating.
Got a very special email this morning from TPM Reader PM. Really kind of made my day. Hope it brightens yours too.
Hi Josh ,
Did you know there’s a whole person who owes his existence to you and TPM? You probably get stories like this all the time, but we thought you might appreciate this one anyway…
My part of this story began with Barack Obama’s keynote address at the 2004 DNC. I was blown away by Obama’s energy, clear speech, and pragmatism and started following his career (and later, his presidential campaign) closely. During the hotly contested 2007 primary season, a friend of mine referred me to TPM, and I was hooked.
Now that New Jersey’s Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno (R) is in the news, it’s worth revisiting the profile our own Hunter Walker wrote about her last year. Turns out she’s something of a mystery even to New Jersey political insiders. But she’s the person who will inherit the governor’s office if Chris Christie leaves to run for president.
Meanwhile this morning, Guadagno strongly denied allegations that she threatened to withhold Hurricane Sandy aid from Hoboken, N.J. unless the mayor there approved a development project favored by the governor.
Most of our memories of Martin Luther King, Jr., are in black and white, making his life and work seem longer ago and almost quaint, like the horn-rimmed glasses and skinny dark ties of the era.
So this morning I culled some of the color photos of King from our AP archives. There aren’t many of them, but they’re bracing. Take a look:
Read MoreMSNBC hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski spent a big chunk of their show this morning attacking the local mayor who made allegations this weekend against Gov. Chris Christie’s administration.
Gov. Chris Christie’s administration plans its second event of the day to push back against the allegations from the mayor of Hoboken, N.J. This one is scheduled for 2 p.m. ET and involves the director of the Governor’s Office of Recovery and Rebuilding. Stay tuned.
Chris Christie says he’s “readier” now to be president than he was in 2011.
Sarah Palin takes a moment on Martin Luther King Jr. Day to tell President Obama to honor the late Civil Rights giant by not playing the “race card.”
The phrase of the day is courtesy of ex-Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour.