A Big “No!” In Georgia

Though it was overshadowed nationally by the Texas Senate runoff, Georgia held its primary elections yesterday. But the elected-official campaigns (including two highly competitive GOP congressional primaries which produced runoffs) were almost entirely eclipsed–and were in some cases affected–by a complex set of regional transportation sales tax referenda that mostly went down to resounding defeat.

The so-called TSPLOST (for Transportation Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax) referenda were the unwanted child of a state desperately in need of transportation money (particularly in the famously gridlocked metro Atlanta area) and a Republican-controlled legislature unwilling to increase taxes for any purpose (other than maybe to raise income tax rates for poor people, as it did in 2011). In a scheme engineered by former Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue, the legislature authorized twelve regional votes to self-impose a temporary penny sales tax dedicated to a list of specific transportation projects agreed to by local elected officials.

Even though the “Yes on TSPLOST” campaign was backed by current GOP Gov. Nathan Deal and other GOP leaders, and by most prominent Georgia Democrats (most notably Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and former Gov. Roy Barnes), not to mention virtually every business group in the state (who paid for a lavish and virtually unopposed $8 million ad budget) it went down to flaming defeat in nine of the 12 regions, including Atlanta, where it lost by a 63-37 margin. The regions encompassing the mid-sized cities of Augusta and Columbus did narrowly approve TSPLOST, but it was mostly just a disaster.

The results in Atlanta exhibited a rare liberal/Tea Party coalition, with the Tea Folk opposing the referendum vociferously (some on grounds that it would foster the communistic idea of “planning”, and some on the quasi-racial grounds that expansion of rail service would boost crime in the suburbs) while the Sierra Club and the NAACP rejected it late in the campaign for diametrically opposed reasons (not enough emphasis on rail and/or the regressive nature of sales taxes).

The net effect of the referenda beyond very bad publicity for Atlanta will be to give Gov. Deal a lot of centralized control over transportation projects in the state. But more generally, it showed the continuing price Republican pols in many parts of the country are paying for their relationship with the Tea Folk, whom they alternately pander to and then ignore. You can’t endlessly demagogue about taxes and Big Government and the urban “looters” seeking to despoil virtuous middle-class suburbanites and then turn around and expect said suburbanites to support sensible regional transportation policies. The TSPLOST vote gave Georgia Tea Folk the opportunity to simultaneously stick it to cowardly GOP leaders, the minority-dominated City of Atlanta, and untrustworthy business leaders (who should have been out there creating jobs instead of asking for tax dollars), and they took it with both hands.

via Political Animal http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/political-animal-a/2012_08/a_big_no_in_georgia038947.php

Apple’s Quiet Deal for AuthenTec

When Apple acquired AuthenTec last week, neither company issued a statement or a news release on the deal, which underscores the hard bargaining tactics of the technology giant.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/08/01/apples-quiet-deal-for-authentec/

Did ‘Solar Storms’ Cause India’s Massive Blackout?

Could India’s power outage have been caused by magnetic eruptions on the sun?

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://india.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/01/did-solar-storms-cause-indias-massive-blackout/

Gingrich ‘Very Comfortable’ Not Speaking at Convention

Newt Gingrich likely won’t speak at the Republican National Convention later this month, but the former GOP presidential candidate doesn’t mind — and he still expect to play a role, by organizing a series of training workshops on “major issues.”

“I’m very comfortable not speaking in the evening convention,” he said on CNN on Wednesday. “We’re working on a project right now to have two hours a day every day for training workshops on major issues, including energy, economic growth, and i think that I’ll probably play the lead role in putting together.”

This is Gingrich’s first expansion on what his role might be at the convention, though he’s said previously he wouldn’t mind having a speaking slot. Spokespeople for both Gingrich and the convention were not aware of any plans to hold workshops, but said it was possible.

Gingrich explained that he’d like to leave more room for “a new generation of Republicans” to rise at this year’s convention, which is part of the reason he’s okay with not speaking.

“We have so many bright young new republicans around the country that I think we really want to make sure that we maximize their appearance in prime time. and show people what a diverse and what a broad party we are,” he said.

Gingrich has supported Mitt Romney, and he defended Romney’s performance overseas on CNN, particulatly his controversial comments on culture.

Romney said in a speech in Jerusalem and at one point appeared to connect Israeli culture with economic progress and gross domestic product, making a comparison to less prosperous areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority. A top Palestinian official called the comments racist and Romney has addressed the issue several times since to clarify his remarks.

Read More

via Homepage http://www.nationaljournal.com/2012-conventions/gingrich-very-comfortable-not-speaking-at-convention-20120801

Full trailer for Skyfall

Full length trailer for the new 007 film, Skyfall.

via Coudal Partners Blended Feed http://coudal.com/archives/2012/08/full_trailer_fo.php?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+CoudalFreshSignals+%28Coudal%3A+Fresh+Signals%29

Whiff of Fresh Trouble Sets Olympus Shares Tumbling

The company disclosed it might have broken a U.S. law that bars corporations from offering bribes to win business in overseas markets.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/02/business/global/whiff-of-fresh-trouble-sets-olympus-shares-tumbling.html

Mysterious Author Scores Seven-Figure Deal for ‘Fifty Shades’-esque Novel


Similar to E.L. James’ hit, “Dante’s Inferno” also started as “Twilight” fan fiction before a reworked version was published as a book.

read more

via Hollywood Reporter http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/gabriel%27s-inferno-sylvain-reynard-book-deal-356544?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thr%2Fnews+%28The+Hollywood+Reporter+-+Top+Stories%29

White House aide Pfeiffer apologizes for Churchill bust controversy

After lampooning Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer last week for getting his facts wrong on the controversy surrounding the Winston Churchill bust at the White House, White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer has apologized. On Friday, Pfeiffer slammed Krauthammer for repeating “this ridiculous claim” that…

via Yahoo! News – Latest News & Headlines http://news.yahoo.com/white-house-aide-pfeiffer-apologizes-churchill-bust-controversy-005034470–abc-news-politics.html

Cruz Defeats Dewhurst, Will Face Sadler in Fall

By Aman Batheja

Defying all early expectations and upending long-standing conventional wisdom in Texas Republican politics, former Texas Solicitor General Ted Cruz handily won the Republican runoff for an open U.S. Senate seat Tuesday night.

He moves on to the general election against former state Rep. Paul Sadler, who defeated retired educator Grady Yarbrough in the Democratic runoff.

Cruz defeated Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst after a lengthy, contentious political battle in which Cruz painted a longtime statewide elected official backed by Gov. Rick Perry as a moderate.

“Tonight is a victory for the grass roots,” Cruz said Tuesday night. “It is a testament to Republican women, to Tea Party leaders and to grass-roots conservatives.”

In a short concession speech, Dewhurst said he was proud of the race he had run.

“We got beat up a little bit, but we never gave up,” Dewhurst said. “And we stand tall in knowing that we never compromised any of our values.”

In a statement, Sadler made clear that he will fight for Dewhurst’s supporters ahead of the Nov. 6 general election.

“Tonight, I stand alone as the only nominee of a major political party in Texas because the Texas Republican Party has been hijacked by the Tea Party,” Sadler said in a statement.

The fight for the GOP nomination to replace U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison drew strong national interest and more than $45 million in spending, making it the nation’s most expensive nonpresidential race of the election cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

From the start, the race appeared to be Dewhurst’s to lose, as he had held statewide office for more than a decade and had millions of dollars in personal wealth at his disposal to outspend any opponents. But many influential activists aligned with the Tea Party were unimpressed with Dewhurst’s record and could not shake the feeling that he would crumble to pressure from moderates once in Congress.

Cruz also benefited from protracted legal fighting over last year’s congressional and legislative redistricting maps that pushed the Texas primary from March to May and the subsequent runoff to July. The longer primary gave Cruz more time to introduce himself to the state’s Republican voters. 

Though Dewhurst and Cruz agreed on practically every major issue, the race still managed to draw passions on both sides as the race turned largely on the candidates’ temperaments and records. 

Cruz, a Cuban-American, Harvard-educated lawyer who worked on George W. Bush’s 2000 presidential campaign and later for the Bush administration, centered his Senate campaign on his five-plus years as Texas Solicitor General under Attorney General Greg Abbott. In fiery speeches, he cited his work on cases dealing with states’ rights, gun control and religious freedom as a “proven record” of “fighting for the U.S. Constitution.” Conservative stars including former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., endorsed Cruz’s campaign.

Dewhurst, who has served as lieutenant governor since 2003, pointed to a long list of conservative legislation passed under his watch, as well as his experience as a businessman and service in the Air Force and CIA.

Cruz relentlessly criticized Dewhurst as “timid” and a “moderate,” accusing him of raising state spending and blaming him for conservative measures not becoming law.

Texas Republican leaders including Perry and more than half of the Texas Senate endorsed Dewhurst and accused Cruz of distorting Dewhurst’s legislative record and, simultaneously, their own records as well. 

Dewhurst attacked Cruz for some of the clients he has taken on as a private lawyer and painting him as a “Wasington insider.” He described millions spent by the Club for Growth and other anti-tax groups to boost Cruz’s campaign as out-of-state meddling from people who didn’t care about Texas. None of the attacks seemed to blunt momentum for Cruz.

On the Democratic side, Sadler adopted some of Dewhurst’s criticism of Cruz on Tuesday night, describing the Republican nominee as  “untested, untried and unknown to the vast majority of Texans.”

Yarbrough, who has never held elected office, said he would support Sadler in November. The perennial candidate surprised many by making it into the Democratic runoff. Though he invested much of his personal savings into his campaign, he said he didn’t regret entering the race. 

“I enjoyed it quite a bit, tremendously,” Yarbrough said. “You never know how elections are going to go. Sometimes they go the way you think they’re going to go and sometimes they don’t.”

via The Texas Tribune: Main Feed http://www.texastribune.org/texas-politics/2012-elections/cruz-defeats-dewhurst-will-face-sadler-in-fall/?utm_source=texastribune.org&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=Tribune%20Feed:%20Main%20Feed

Mike Bloomberg’s Nanny-State Extends Tackles Breast Feeding; Mayor Plans To Hide Baby Formula

www.funny.sgMayor Mike Bloomberg’s nanny-state has officially made the jump from figurative to literal — the mayor now actually wants to play nanny (sigh).Starting September 3, the city will encourag

via Runnin' Scared http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2012/07/mike_bloombergs_12.php