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Apr 29, 2018 14:26:00   #
Twardlow Loc: Arkansas
 
Blurryeyed wrote:
Excuse the manner in which I say this but this is nothing but a piece of shit article, it completely takes what he said out of context and gives his words that have the opposite effect of what he was telling the group of business persons from his home state.

Here is the full context of what Mulvaney said as he implored folks from back home to visit their congressmen and advocate for their needs. Of course fake news CNN does not have the credibility to report this as it was said.

From Axios....

“We had a hierarchy in my office in Congress. If you’re a lobbyist who never gave us money, I didn’t talk to you. If you’re a lobbyist who gave us money, I might talk to you. If you came from back home and sat in my lobby, I talk to you without exception, regardless of the financial contributions. People coming from back home, to tell people in Congress what issues are important to them, is one of the fundamental underpinnings of our representative democracy, and you have to continue to do it.

It is time to wake up, it is not only Fox News setting us against each other, CNN has no credibility, nor do the others reporting on this issue as if Mulvaney is some kind of grifter, he was saying that the lobbyists were really less important than his constituents, if they had contributed they MIGHT get an audience, if you were from back home you always got an audience regardless of contributions. How screwed up is CNN's reporting on this?
Excuse the manner in which I say this but this is ... (show quote)





NEWS
 
Mick Mulvaney Is Our Duke Of The Week
By John Light | April 28, 2018 1:24 pm

“We had a hierarchy in my office in Congress,” Mick Mulvaney, the acting head of an agency that regulates banking told a room full of bankers this week. “If you’re a lobbyist who never gave us money, I didn’t talk to you. If you’re a lobbyist who gave us money, I might talk to you.”

Mulvaney, of course, is the man who is attempting an about-face for the agency he helms, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. That includes rebranding the consumer watchdog by scrambling the letters in its name (Mulvaney suggests “BCFP”) and ending its practice of logging consumer complaints.

As a former member of Congress from South Carolina, Mulvaney’s campaigns raised at least half a million dollars from the investment and banking industries, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. He is now overseeing the agency tasked with keeping these same industries in check. The New York Times noted that he received $63,000 from payday lenders alone, an industry that, under Mulvaney’s predecessor Richard Cordray — now a Democratic candidate for the governor of Ohio — the industry cracked down on for its predatory practices. Mulvaney famously called the CFPB a “sick, sad joke” while it was under Cordray’s stewardship.

Following his speech to the American Bankers Association, Mulvaney’s spokesperson claimed that his words had been misinterpreted, noting that Mulvaney also said he would listen to his constituents regardless of whether they donated. His money-talks “hierarchy” only applied to lobbyists.

Nonetheless, his honesty provoked outrage. Some Democrats called for him to step down. “Let’s call it what it is: corruption,” wrote the Washington Post’s ostensibly conservative blogger Jennifer Rubin.

What Mulvaney laid bare, of course, doesn’t even rise to the level of an open secret. Members of Congress can spend up to half their time “dialing for dollars,” soliciting donations like these to fund their reelection efforts. In return, they have to offer something. Usually, that something is access. This is the sort of thing the Supreme Court acknowledged and affirmed with its 2010 Citizens United decision. As election law expert Rick Hasen notes, Justice Kennedy explicitly wrote that “ingratiation and access, in any event, are not corruption.”

So by the Supreme Court’s definition, Mulvaney did not admit to anything corrupt. Mulvaney went further. Lobbyists’ efforts to sway him with donations were, in fact, one of the “fundamental underpinnings of our representative democracy,” he said in his speech. “And you have to continue to do it.”

It may not be corruption. But it also doesn’t seem on message for an administration that promised a fully drained swamp.
For saying the quiet part loud, Mick Mulvaney is our Duke of the Week.


((And a comment from one of the readers....)):

I'm so happy for Mick winning this award! (referring to TPM’s “Annual Golden Duke Awards recognizing the year’s best purveyors of public corruption, outlandish behavior, The Crazy, and general nonsense in this fine nation’s political arena. The awards are named in honor of former Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham, the poster boy of the wacky modern scandal (for now, at least).

So richly deserved!

There's something about him that makes him even more contemptible than Pruitt. In 1930s Germany, he would have been a very good Nazi -- I know I know, Goodwin's law and all that, but he even looks like a Hollywood Nazi, and, more important, he has the makings of the real thing.


https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/mick-mulvaney-is-our-duke-of-the-week

Reply
Apr 29, 2018 14:35:28   #
Blurryeyed Loc: NC Mountains.
 
Twardlow wrote:
NEWS
 
Mick Mulvaney Is Our Duke Of The Week
By John Light | April 28, 2018 1:24 pm

“We had a hierarchy in my office in Congress,” Mick Mulvaney, the acting head of an agency that regulates banking told a room full of bankers this week. “If you’re a lobbyist who never gave us money, I didn’t talk to you. If you’re a lobbyist who gave us money, I might talk to you.”

Mulvaney, of course, is the man who is attempting an about-face for the agency he helms, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. That includes rebranding the consumer watchdog by scrambling the letters in its name (Mulvaney suggests “BCFP”) and ending its practice of logging consumer complaints.

As a former member of Congress from South Carolina, Mulvaney’s campaigns raised at least half a million dollars from the investment and banking industries, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. He is now overseeing the agency tasked with keeping these same industries in check. The New York Times noted that he received $63,000 from payday lenders alone, an industry that, under Mulvaney’s predecessor Richard Cordray — now a Democratic candidate for the governor of Ohio — the industry cracked down on for its predatory practices. Mulvaney famously called the CFPB a “sick, sad joke” while it was under Cordray’s stewardship.

Following his speech to the American Bankers Association, Mulvaney’s spokesperson claimed that his words had been misinterpreted, noting that Mulvaney also said he would listen to his constituents regardless of whether they donated. His money-talks “hierarchy” only applied to lobbyists.

Nonetheless, his honesty provoked outrage. Some Democrats called for him to step down. “Let’s call it what it is: corruption,” wrote the Washington Post’s ostensibly conservative blogger Jennifer Rubin.

What Mulvaney laid bare, of course, doesn’t even rise to the level of an open secret. Members of Congress can spend up to half their time “dialing for dollars,” soliciting donations like these to fund their reelection efforts. In return, they have to offer something. Usually, that something is access. This is the sort of thing the Supreme Court acknowledged and affirmed with its 2010 Citizens United decision. As election law expert Rick Hasen notes, Justice Kennedy explicitly wrote that “ingratiation and access, in any event, are not corruption.”

So by the Supreme Court’s definition, Mulvaney did not admit to anything corrupt. Mulvaney went further. Lobbyists’ efforts to sway him with donations were, in fact, one of the “fundamental underpinnings of our representative democracy,” he said in his speech. “And you have to continue to do it.”

It may not be corruption. But it also doesn’t seem on message for an administration that promised a fully drained swamp.
For saying the quiet part loud, Mick Mulvaney is our Duke of the Week.


((And a comment from one of the readers....)):

I'm so happy for Mick winning this award! (referring to TPM’s “Annual Golden Duke Awards recognizing the year’s best purveyors of public corruption, outlandish behavior, The Crazy, and general nonsense in this fine nation’s political arena. The awards are named in honor of former Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham, the poster boy of the wacky modern scandal (for now, at least).

So richly deserved!

There's something about him that makes him even more contemptible than Pruitt. In 1930s Germany, he would have been a very good Nazi -- I know I know, Goodwin's law and all that, but he even looks like a Hollywood Nazi, and, more important, he has the makings of the real thing.


https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/mick-mulvaney-is-our-duke-of-the-week
NEWS br   br Mick Mulvaney Is Our Duke Of The Week... (show quote)


Blah Blah Blah.... TMP award? Sure, they're not biased, they're not going to hold the Schumers and the Schiff's of our government accountable, so you found a nice opinion piece to back your shitty attitude towards your political opponents up. I could do the same for just about everything you post but I would rather use my own intellect than to rely on that of others.

Reply
Apr 29, 2018 14:36:36   #
Twardlow Loc: Arkansas
 
Blurryeyed wrote:
Blah Blah Blah.... TMP award? Sure, they're not biased, they're not going to hold the Schumers and the Schiff's of our government accountable, so you found a nice opinion piece to back your shitty attitude to your political opponents up. I could do the same for just about everything you post but I would rather use my own intellect than to rely on that of others.


I must say you responded quickly; you must live online.

Be happy with your Nazi....tom

Reply
 
 
Apr 29, 2018 14:51:39   #
Blurryeyed Loc: NC Mountains.
 
Twardlow wrote:
I must say you responded quickly; you must live online.

Be happy with your Nazi....tom


Yes, well I was posting in the photography forum, have you ever tried that?

Reply
Apr 29, 2018 15:20:56   #
Twardlow Loc: Arkansas
 
Blurryeyed wrote:
Yes, well I was posting in the photography forum, have you ever tried that?


I took a photograph once.

Reply
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