Monday, March 27, 2006

5 Days Left...Can 1$ Make a Difference?

From :
Trupiano for Congress
Sent :
Monday, March 27, 2006 2:30 PM
To :
XXXXXX@msn.com
Subject :

5 Days Left...Can 1$ Make a Difference?


Monday, March 27, 2006
While our next filing deadline is just five days away, and I want to thank those of you who have contributed in the past week, we have to continue to ask you to help us so we can help you. By forwarding this Newsletter on to others who want change and understand the importance of change you can assist us in continuing to grow my campaign and your realistic chances at change in the House of Representatives.

Last Monday evening I was a guest on a national radio show and the guest host asked me how I was planning to raise the money I would need to win this November. I sincerely replied, one dollar at a time. What I didn't expect was that someone would take me literally (fine with me!) and start something of a phenomenon. The text of the e-mail follows; I'll share the result after you read what I believe to be the original e-mail:
From: XXXXXXX @hotmail.com>

Subject: $1 democracy

Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2006 09:38:36 -0500

Hey Jim

$ 1 for Democracy?

I heard this guy on the radio last night. His name is Tony Trupiano and he's running for Congress as a Dem in Michigan. I was impressed, he actually knew what he was talking about. Anyway, he was asked how he was going to be able to raise the money he would need against an incumbent Republican and he actually said one dollar at a time! At first I thought it is was a joke but it made sense the way he put it.

Here's the deal, and you know I don't normally do this stuff, but what the heck
He's asking for people to donate $1 (yes ONE dollar) to his campaign. His argument is that WE need a voice in Congress and need to bring this process back to people not politicians. If people like us invest a buck in the democratic process he can raise $100,000 from 100,000 people instead of from lobbyists and special interests.

I sent him $20 because my son lives in the District but wanted to send you this since I think we can prove that we do control democracy. Consider sending him a $1 and pass this on to your list too! We can win this thing but we have to get friends and activists to take the time to send the buck. Here's his website. He's good! I called the guys office and someone there said it was actually working.
www.tony4congress2006.com

Please take the time to send a buck. This could really work. Please forward this to anyone you can! Think about it, his website made sense and he wants to see real change. Imagine if he actually did this and it worked.
Have a great day!
-Joanne
______________________
On Wednesday last week we received $40 in one-dollar bills on Thursday we received $49, and we continue to get one-dollar bills in the mail. This seems to be taking on a life of its own, so I thought I would share this with you in hopes that you will share it with others. It would be amazing if we could raise a significant amount of money this way. My message is resonating with people of all political backgrounds, mostly because, as I sincerely believe, most of us are just tired of the way things are and they want change now.

I have no qualms at all about the Trupiano for Congress campaign being the beacon of light for the one-dollar donors.

How can you help?

We do need money. Want a bumper stickers or lawn sign? Please help me buy them. Help me put staff on the ground to talk to voters the only people who matter! We will need money for radio, print and television commercials. We need you to consider this your opportunity to bring real change to the political landscape. The more money we can raise through individual contributions the more this eventual win will be about you and me, not special interests.
Your level of contribution, whether it's a minimum of $25 or the legal maximum of $2100, is about believing in the power of the individual to have a direct impact on changing Congress in November of 2006. I can't stress enough how much I need your financial support today!
You can volunteer. Write a letter to the editor or knock doors throughout the District. Bloggers and people with computer knowledge are needed to help keep the website updated and current. No matter what your skills are, we can find a spot for you! Dollars send a message, but so do bodies. To win we need a grassroots army.

If you have not yet donated, please do so now. If you want to consider a continuing contribution you can do so with your credit card here:
https://secure.actblue.com/contribute/entity/8931

Positive change is possible. Thank you so much for your interest. Whether it's one-dollar at a time or whatever you can afford, your contribution is greatly appreciated.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Democratic Congressional Candidate Tony Trupiano to appear on two nationally syndicated radio programs.

111th District Democratic Congressional Candidate Tony Trupiano will be a guest on the nationally syndicated Mike Malloy Show today at 11:30 p.m. ET to discuss his candidacy. The Mike Malloy Show can be heard locally on 1310AM WDTW from 11:00 p.m. – 1:00 a.m. ET, Monday through Friday. To listen to the Mike Malloy Show online simply click here http://www.airamericaradio.com/, and from the home page click “Listen Live”. For more information about Mike Malloy or his show please visit his website at http://www.mikemalloy.com/. Peter Werbe will be the guest host for Mike Malloy. For more information about Peter Werbe please visit his website http://www.peterwerbe.com/.

Tony Trupiano will also be on the nationally syndicated Thom Hartmann Show on Friday, March 24th at 1 p.m. ET. The Thom Hartmann Show is streamed nationally on line at http://www.airamericaradio.com/. For more information about the Thom Hartmann show please visit his website at http://www.thomhartmann.com/.

If you would like more information on Tony Trupiano, his campaign, or would like to donate, please visit his Congressional Campaign website at http://www.tony4congress2006.com/.

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Remarks of Senator Russ Feingold Introducing a Resolution to Censure President George W. Bush

As Prepared

March 13, 2006

Mr. President, when the President of the United States breaks the law, he must be held accountable. That is why today I am introducing a resolution to censure President George W. Bush.

The President authorized an illegal program to spy on American citizens on American soil, and then misled Congress and the public about the existence and legality of that program. It is up to this body to reaffirm the rule of law by condemning the President’s actions.
All of us in this body took an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States and bear true allegiance to the same. Fulfilling that oath requires us to speak clearly and forcefully when the President violates the law. This resolution allows us to send a clear message that the President’s conduct was wrong.

And we must do that. The President’s actions demand a formal judgment from Congress.
At moments in our history like this, we are reminded why the founders balanced the powers of the different branches of government so carefully in the Constitution. At the very heart of our system of government lies the recognition that some leaders will do wrong, and that others in the government will then bear the responsibility to do right.

This President has done wrong. This body can do right by condemning his conduct and showing the people of this nation that his actions will not be allowed to stand unchallenged.
To date, members of Congress have responded in very different ways to the President’s conduct. Some are responding by defending his conduct, ceding him the power he claims, and even seeking to grant him expanded statutory authorization powers to make his conduct legal. While we know he is breaking the law, we do not know the details of what the President has authorized or whether there is any need to change the law to allow it, yet some want to give him carte blanche to continue his illegal conduct. To approve the President’s actions now, without demanding a full inquiry into this program, a detailed explanation for why the President authorized it, and accountability for his illegal actions, would be irresponsible. It would be to abandon the duty of the legislative branch under our constitutional system of separation of powers while the President recklessly grabs for power and ignores the rule of law.

Others in Congress have taken important steps to check the President. Senator Specter has held hearings on the wiretapping program in the Judiciary Committee. He has even suggested that Congress may need to use the power of the purse in order to get some answers out of the Administration. And Senator Byrd has proposed that Congress establish an independent commission to investigate this program.

As we move forward, Congress will need to consider a range of possible actions, including investigations, independent commissions, legislation, or even impeachment. But, at a minimum, Congress should censure a president who has so plainly broken the law.
Our founders anticipated that these kinds of abuses would occur. Federalist Number 51 speaks of the Constitution’s system of checks and balances:



“It may be a reflection on human nature, that such devices should be necessary
to control the abuses of government. But what is government itself, but the
greatest of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels, no government
would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal
controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to
be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must
first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place
oblige it to control itself.”

Mr. President, we are faced with an executive branch that places itself above the law. The founders understood that the branches must check each other to control abuses of government power. The president’s actions are such an abuse, Mr. President. His actions must be checked, and he should be censured.

This President exploited the climate of anxiety after September 11, 2001, both to push for overly intrusive powers in the Patriot Act, and to take us into a war in Iraq that has been a tragic diversion from the critical fight against al Qaeda and its affiliates. In both of those instances, however, Congress gave its approval to the President’s actions, however mistaken that approval may have been.

That was not the case with the illegal domestic wiretapping program authorized by the President shortly after September 11th. The President violated the law, ignored the Constitution and the other two branches of government, and disregarded the rights and freedoms upon which our country was founded. No one questions whether the government should wiretap suspected terrorists. Of course we should, and we can under current law. If there were a demonstrated need to change that law, Congress could consider that step. But instead the President is refusing to follow that law while offering the flimsiest of arguments to justify his misconduct. He must be held accountable for his actions.

The facts are straightforward: Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, known as “FISA”, nearly 30 years ago to ensure that as we wiretap suspected terrorists and spies, we also protect innocent Americans from unjustified government intrusion. FISA makes it a crime to wiretap Americans on U.S. soil without the requisite warrants, and the President has ordered warrantless wiretaps of Americans on U.S. soil. The President has broken that law, and that alone is unacceptable. But the President did much more than that.

Not only did the President break the law, he also actively misled Congress and the American people about his actions, and then, when the program was made public, about the legality of the NSA program.

He has fundamentally violated the trust of the American people.

The President’s own words show just how seriously he has violated that trust.

We now know that the NSA wiretapping program began not long after September 11th. Before the existence of this program was revealed, the President went out of his way in several speeches to assure the public that the government was getting court orders to wiretap Americans in the United States – something that he now admits was not the case.
On April 20, 2004, for example, the President told an audience in Buffalo that: “Any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires – a wiretap requires a court order. Nothing has changed, by the way.”

In fact, a lot had changed, but the President wasn’t being upfront with the American people.
Just months later, on July 14, 2004, in my own state of Wisconsin, the President said that: “Any action that takes place by law enforcement requires a court order. In other words, the government can't move on wiretaps or roving wiretaps without getting a court order.”

Last summer, on June 9, 2005, the President spoke in Columbus, Ohio, and again insisted that his administration was abiding by the laws governing wiretaps. “Law enforcement officers need a federal judge's permission to wiretap a foreign terrorist's phone, a federal judge's permission to track his calls, or a federal judge's permission to search his property. Officers must meet strict standards to use any of these tools. And these standards are fully consistent with the Constitution of the U.S.”

In all of these cases, the President knew he wasn’t telling the complete story. But engaged in tough political battle during the presidential campaign, and later over Patriot Act reauthorization, he wanted to convince the public that a systems of checks and balances was in place to protect innocent people from government snooping. He knew when he gave those reassurances that he had authorized the NSA to bypass the very system of checks and balances that he was using as a shield against criticisms of the Patriot Act and his Administration’s performance.

This conduct is unacceptable. The President had a duty to play it straight with the American people. But for political purposes, he ignored that duty.

After a New York Times story exposed the NSA program in December of last year, the White House launched an intensive effort to mislead the American people yet again. No one would come to testify before Congress until February, but the President’s surrogates held press conferences and made speeches to try to convince the public that he had acted lawfully.
Most troubling of all, the President himself participated in this disinformation campaign. In the State of the Union address, he implied that the program was necessary because otherwise the government would be unable to wiretap terrorists at all. That is simply untrue. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth. You don’t need a warrant to wiretap terrorists overseas – period. You do need a warrant to wiretap Americans on American soil and Congress passed FISA specifically to lay out the rules for these types of domestic wiretaps.

FISA created a secret court, made up of judges who develop national security expertise, to issue warrants for surveillance of suspected terrorists and spies. These are the judges from whom the Bush Administration has obtained thousands of warrants since 9/11. They are the judges who review applications for business records orders and wiretapping authority under the Patriot Act. The Administration has almost never had a warrant request rejected by those judges. It has used the FISA Court thousands of times, but at the same time it asserts that FISA is an “old law” or “out of date” in this age of terrorism and can’t be complied with. Clearly, the Administration can and does comply with it – except when it doesn’t. Then it just arbitrarily decides to go around these judges, and around the law.

The Administration has said that it ignored FISA because it takes too long to get a warrant under that law. But we know that in an emergency, where the Attorney General believes that surveillance must begin before a court order can be obtained, FISA permits the wiretap to be executed immediately as long as the government goes to the court within 72 hours. The Attorney General has complained that the emergency provision does not give him enough flexibility, he has complained that getting a FISA application together or getting the necessary approvals takes too long. But the problems he has cited are bureaucratic barriers that the executive branch put in place, and could remove if it wanted.

FISA also permits the Attorney General to authorize unlimited warrantless electronic surveillance in the United States during the 15 days following a declaration of war, to allow time to consider any amendments to FISA required by a wartime emergency. That is the time period that Congress specified. Yet the President thinks that he can do this indefinitely.

The President has argued that Congress gave him authority to wiretap Americans on U.S. soil without a warrant when it passed the Authorization for Use of Military Force after September 11, 2001. Mr. President, that is ridiculous. Members of Congress did not pass this resolution to give the President blanket authority to order warrantless wiretaps. We all know that. Anyone in this body who would tell you otherwise either wasn’t here at the time or isn’t telling the truth. We authorized the President to use military force in Afghanistan, a necessary and justified response to September 11. We did not authorize him to wiretap American citizens on American soil without going through the process that was set up nearly three decades ago precisely to facilitate the domestic surveillance of terrorists – with the approval of a judge. That is why both Republicans and Democrats have questioned this theory.

This particular claim is further undermined by congressional approval of the Patriot Act just a few weeks after we passed the Authorization for the Use of Military Force. The Patriot Act made it easier for law enforcement to conduct surveillance on suspected terrorists and spies, while maintaining FISA’s baseline requirement of judicial approval for wiretaps of Americans in the U.S. It is ridiculous to think that Congress would have negotiated and enacted all the changes to FISA in the Patriot Act if it thought it had just authorized the President to ignore FISA in the AUMF.

In addition, in the intelligence authorization bill passed in December 2001, we extended the emergency authority in FISA, at the Administration’s request, from 24 to 72 hours. Why do that if the President has the power to ignore FISA? That makes no sense at all.

The President has also said that his inherent executive power gives him the power to approve this program. But here the President is acting in direct violation of a criminal statute. That means his power is, as Justice Jackson said in the steel seizure cases half a century ago, “at its lowest ebb.” A letter from a group of law professors and former executive branch officials points out that “every time the Supreme Court has confronted a statute limiting the Commander-in-Chief’s authority, it has upheld the statute.” The Senate reports issued when FISA was enacted confirm the understanding that FISA overrode any pre-existing inherent authority of the President. As the 1978 Senate Judiciary Committee report stated, FISA “recognizes no inherent power of the president in this area.” And “Congress has declared that this statute, not any claimed presidential power, controls.” Contrary to what the President told the country in the State of the Union, no court has ever approved warrantless surveillance in violation of FISA.
The President’s claims of inherent executive authority, and his assertions that the courts have approved this type of activity, are baseless.

But it is one thing to make a legal argument that has no real support in the law. It is much worse to do what the President has done, which is to make misleading statements about what prior Presidents have done and what courts have approved, to try to make the public believe his legal arguments are much stronger than they are.

For example, in the State of the Union, the President argued that federal courts have approved the use of presidential authority that he was invoking. I asked the Attorney General about this when he came before the Judiciary Committee, and he could point me to no court – not the Supreme Court or any other court – that has considered whether, after FISA was enacted, the President nonetheless had the authority to bypass it and authorize warrantless wiretaps. Not one court. The Administration’s effort to find support for what it has done in snippets of other court decisions would be laughable if this issue were not so serious.

In the same speech, the President referred to other Presidents in American history who cited executive authority to order warrantless surveillance. But of course, those past presidents – like Wilson and Roosevelt – were acting before the Supreme Court decided in 1967 that our communications are protected by the Fourth Amendment, and before Congress decided in 1978 that the executive branch could no longer unilaterally decide which Americans to wiretap. I asked the Attorney General about this issue when he testified before the Judiciary Committee. And neither he nor anyone in the Administration has been able to come up with a single prior example of wiretapping inside the United States since 1978 that was conducted outside FISA’s authorization.

So the President’s arguments in the State of the Union were baseless, and it is unacceptable that the President of the United States would so obviously mislead the Congress and American public.

The President also has argued that periodic internal executive branch review provides an adequate check on the program. He has even characterized this periodic review as a safeguard for civil liberties. But we don’t know what this check involves. And we do know that Congress explicitly rejected this idea of unilateral executive decision-making in this area when it passed FISA.

Finally, the President has tried to claim that informing a handful of congressional leaders, the so-called Gang of Eight, somehow excuses breaking the law. Of course, several of these members said they weren’t given the full story. And all of them were prohibited from discussing what they were told. So the fact that they were informed under these extraordinary circumstances does not constitute congressional oversight, and it most certainly does not constitute congressional approval of the program.

Indeed, it doesn’t even comply with the National Security Act, which requires the entire memberships of the House and Senate Intelligence Committee to be “fully and currently informed of the intelligence activities of the United States.” Nor does the latest agreement to allow a seven-member subcommittee to review the program comply with the law. Granting a minority of the committee access to information is inadequate and still does not comply with the law requiring that the full committee be kept fully informed.

In addition, we now know that some of the Gang of Eight expressed concern about the program. The Administration ignored their protests. One of the eight members of Congress who has been briefed about the program, Congresswoman Jane Harman, ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, has said she sees no reason why the Administration cannot accomplish its goals within the law as currently written.

None of the President’s arguments explains or excuses his conduct, or the NSA’s domestic spying program. Not one. It is hard to believe that the President has the audacity to claim that they do.

And perhaps that is what is most troubling here, Mr. President. Even more troubling than the arguments the President has made is what he relies on to make them convincing – the credibility of the office of the President itself. He essentially argues that the American people should trust him simply because of the office he holds.

But Presidents don’t serve our country by just asking for trust, they must earn that trust, and they must tell the truth.

This President hides behind flawed legal arguments, and even behind the office he holds, but he cannot hide from what he has created: nothing short of a constitutional crisis. The President has violated the law, and Congress must respond. Congress must investigate and demand answers. Congress should also determine whether current law is inadequate and address that deficiency if it is demonstrated. But before doing so, Congress should ensure that there is accountability for authorizing illegal conduct.

A formal censure by Congress is an appropriate and responsible first step to assure the public that when the President thinks he can violate the law without consequences, Congress has the will to hold him accountable. If Congress does not reaffirm the rule of law, we will create another failure of leadership, and deal another blow to the public’s trust.

The President’s wrongdoing demands a response. And not just a response that prevents wrongdoing in the future, but a response that passes judgment on what has happened. We in the Congress bear the responsibility to check a President who has violated the law, who continues to violate the law, and who has not been held accountable for his actions.

Passing a resolution to censure the President is a way to hold this President accountable. A resolution of censure is a time-honored means for the Congress to express the most serious disapproval possible, short of impeachment, of the Executive’s conduct. It is different than passing a law to make clear that certain conduct is impermissible or to cut off funding for certain activities. Both of those alternatives are ways for Congress to affect future action. But when the President acts illegally, he should be formally rebuked. He should be censured.

The founders anticipated abuses of executive power by creating a balance of powers in the Constitution. Supporting and defending the Constitution, as we have taken an oath to do, require us to preserve that balance, and to have the will to act. We must meet a serious transgression by the President with a serious response. We must work, as the founders urged us in Federalist Number 51, to control the abuses of government.

The Constitution looks to the Congress to right the balance of power. The American people look to us to take action, to speak out, with one clear voice, against wrongdoing by the President of the United States. In our system of government, no one, not even the President, is above the law.

Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the text of the resolution be printed in the Record following my remarks. I yield the floor.

Time to let Senator Fiengold know that we got his back. Call your senators now and tell them to support censure.


Thursday, February 16, 2006

Friday, February 03, 2006

CHILI COOK-OFF






WESTLAND DEMOCRATIC CLUB FUNDRAISER

CHILI COOK-OFF




When: Friday, Feb. 10, 2006 6pm - 9pm

Where: VFW Post 3323 1055 S. Wayne Road Westland 48186
(between Cherry Hill & Palmer)



Cost: $10 to submit your crock pot of chili for judging
(please include a ladle)
and get a taste of all chilis too


Or


Cost: $10 to taste all chilis and vote for your favorites
(Pop, coffee & dessert included)

Questions: 734-674-7327

Wednesday, January 25, 2006



This seems to be the question McCotter asks himself each day about the voters in his district.

Now, Democratic Candidate Tony Trupiano is blogging about the your issues and your pain. He understands what his constituents feel and need.

"January 23, 2006 will be a day remembered by thousands of people and working families within the 11th District. It won't be remembered fondly, to say the least. It will be a day that for many is the beginning of something too many working families in our community may have seen coming, but were powerless to stop. The 1,567 employees of the Ford Wixom Plant, a place of historic value and profound workmanship, were told yesterday the plant will close; that their skills, talents, traditions, and loyalty are no longer needed." Read all of Tony's comments about this sad time for Michigan's 11th districts people.

Where is McCotter's voice of compassion and comfort??? No where to be found as usual. Nothing at his congressional website and nothing at his campaign website.

Which of these two men do you really think have your interests at heart? I think the answer is clear.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Tony Trupiano Democratic Candidate for Michigan's 11th District blogs about His Vision for Reform...Do They Dare?

Albert Einstein once said, “The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.”

Small reforms in the giant congressional corruption scandal are not enough.
The mess that the House and Senate Republicans have created is beyond the imagination. And those in the Republican leadership, like my opponent for Michigan’s 11th Congressional District, Assistant Republican Whip Thaddeus McCotter, have no real intention of changing a system that has preserved their power for more than a decade. In some ways, the Democrats are not willing to go far enough themselves.
We all deserve a Congress that stands up for the highest standards of government service and elected officials that take a strong stand against a broken system. Money has too much influence. Our elected officials are spending more time raising money and talking to lobbyists, who themselves almost always come with a check, than studying the issues and spending time talking to their voters back home.

Will you join with me in supporting these fundamental reforms? They are stronger than either the Republicans or the Democrats want, but I bet that they are just the kind of beginning that smart voters are waiting to see.
Go to Tony's blog and read his well thought out plan for reform. Its bold and its dynamic. After you read it let Tony know in the comments what you think of his bold plan. Tony is the candidate with vision and ideas. The 11th district needs a man of his caliber.
Go read his plan for reform Ending a Culture of Corruption

STATE OF THE UNION WATCH PARTY


Watch the State of the Union Address & the Democratic Response
In a Roomful of Democratic Activists!


You know you’re going to watch it (or try to)

So Don't sit at home alone and yell at the TV alone, join us and yell with fellow democrats.

When: Tuesday, January 31st, 8pm

Where: Marvaso’s Italian Grille
6581 N. Wayne Road, Westland
(between Warren & Ford Rd.)

Cost: $15 (Includes light buffet & non-alcoholic beverages.)
Cash Bar Special – buy 1 drink get 1 for 99 cents



Multiple Large screen TV's and many smaller TV's for great viewing from all seating.

Let’s use it as an opportunity.

Help us raise some money
& send Tony Trupiano to Washington to demand accountability!

Because it’s time to send a Democrat to Washington to represent the
11th District & demand accountability

Imagine . . . George W. Bush helping raise money to elect Democrat Tony Trupiano to Congress.

RSVP: NanMelke@Tony4Congress2006.com
Or 734-674-7327

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Some facts about Thaddeus McCotter and his interesting ties to Tom DeLay...



Thaddeus McCotter has taken $20,000 from Tom DeLay's ARMPAC.
And another $5000 from admitted felon Republican Congressman Duke Cunningham.

McCotter has REFUSED to return what may end up being tainted donations to his campaign from aforementioned Republican members of Congress.

Business is clearly good in the culture of corruption.

No surprise that McCotter voted with Tom DeLay 93% of the time between Jan. 1 2004 and March 31 2005.


Thaddeus McCotter voted to weaken the ethics rules in a move that many say served only to protect Tom DeLay.


When Republicans realized it was "impossible to win the communications battle" over the gutted ethics rules, McCotter flip-flopped and voted to put the old rules back into place.

When Democrats offered a solution to clean up the House by strengthening ethics rules, Thaddeus McCotter voted not once, but twice to make sure it never even came to an up or down vote.

Thaddeus McCotter voted to allow Tom DeLay to continue serving as Leader even if he is indicted.

This is what happens when you are a congressman who does not lead.

Help us make the change we need to see in the 11th District.

Tony Trupiano is the candidate who knows how to lead and will be accountable only to his constituants not special interests.

Check out Tony's newest blog post explaining why we deserve a better Congressman than we currently have and why Tony is that man.

Monday, January 09, 2006

The Name the Abramoff Scandal Contest

It's a Scandal -- and This T-Shirt Proves It

By Al Kamen
Monday, January 9, 2006; A17



Loop Fans started submitting entries last week to the In the Loop Name the Abramoff Scandal Contest, confidently assuming there would have to be such a contest.

Actually, we'd thought about having one but decided not to. After all, there was a "Name that Scandal" contest last year, focusing on former House majority leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) and superlobbyist Jack Abramoff .

And yet, the new entries were pretty good and the scandal seems to have broadened since then -- along with Jack's waistline. Abramoff's frontal assault on sartorial decency at his court appearance Tuesday was the last straw.

So . . . okay. The Name the Abramoff Scandal Contest will kick off 2006! Names ending in -gate, while not automatically rejected, are frowned upon.

Send your entry -- and rationale -- via e-mail to intheloop@washpost.com or mail to In the Loop, The Washington Post, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20071. Deadline is midnight Jan. 18. Top 10 winners get a still-rare, highly coveted In the Loop T-shirt. (Shown here for those who doubted their existence.) Entries on background are welcome, but everyone must include telephone numbers to be eligible.

Don't delay.


WASHINGTON (AP) — In President Bush's first 10 months, GOP fundraiser Jack Abramoff and his lobbying team logged nearly 200 contacts with the new administration as they pressed for friendly hires at federal agencies and sought to keep the Northern Mariana Islands exempt from the minimum wage and other laws, records show.

The meetings between Abramoff's lobbying team and the administration ranged from Attorney General John Ashcroft to policy advisers in Vice President Dick Cheney's office, according to his lobbying firm billing records.

Abramoff, a $100,000-plus fundraiser for Bush, is now under criminal investigation for some of his lobbying work. His firm boasted its lobbying team helped revise a section of the Republican Party's 2000 platform to make it favorable to its island client.

In addition, two of Abramoff's lobbying colleagues on the Marianas won political appointments inside federal agencies.

Read more here...

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Congressional Hearings: The Drama is About to Begin



Congressional Hearings: The Drama is About to Begin
Tomorrow's Christian Science Monitor has an excellent article on the battles that will erupt during Congressional hearingsthis year. The Democrats finally are about to make some noise. Alito is the only a small part of it.

Even better, with GOP moderates joining Dems on key issues, and bucking the White House over secret prisons and eavesdropping, the fights could help the Democrats re-take Congress in 2006.
Here's some of what we're in for: Read the rest at TalkLeft

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Town Hall Meeting about the impact of the War in Iraq


Tony Trupiano, Democratic candidate for Michigan's 11th congressional district will be a speaker at the Community Town Hall about the War in Iraq.

On Saturday, January 7th, the Northville and Livonia Democratic Clubs are co-sponsoring a community Town Hall Meeting aimed at raising levels of consciousness about the impact of the War in Iraq and the effect the war is having on specific local issues impacting the communities of southeast Michigan along the I-275 corridor.

The Town Hall Meeting will be held at the Livonia Senior Citizen Center, located at: Five Mile and Farmington. The Town Hall meeting is scheduled to start at 10:00 am and will adjourn at noon. Light refreshments will be provided.

Co-chairing the meeting are two local residents, Scott Craig, a Northville resident who teaches in Oakland County, and Bill Joyner, a Livonia resident and former member of the Wayne County Board of Commissioners.

Town Hall meetings are scheduled throughout the nation on January 7th and are sponsored in part by a number of organizations including Progressive Democrats of America, Cities for Peace and Gold Star Families for Peace.

"With the war taking away from our domestic needs such as education we must become increasingly vigilant as America depletes our resources on a war half the world away. How are we going to educate our children, create jobs for our grandchildren and provide economic stability for our families?"stated Joyner in making the announcement.

For more information contact Scott Craig at scraig27@comcast.net. Scott, 248 465-1995

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Democrats Poised to Take Back Congress


Democrats Poised to Take Back Congress
Starting in Michigan’s 11th District

Tony Trupiano believes that the citizens of this district deserve representation in Congress they can trust to find solutions to the problems that plague this community and this nation including jobs, healthcare and the Iraq War.

In 2006 we can change the course of America.

When: This Saturday, January 7th at 3pm

Where: VFW Post 3323
1055 S. Wayne Road, Westland
(between Cherry Hill and Michigan)

What: Canvass the surrounding neighborhood from 3:30-5pm
Then share a hot meal back at the VFW Post

Why: Because we must talk to every voter in the 11th to win this race

RSVP: By email to NanMelke@Tony4Congress2006.com
By phone to 734 674-7327 Nan

How you can help on Saturday: Join Tony in going door-to-door meeting the voters of the 11th. We’ll be pairing experienced and inexperienced volunteers (including a group of students fresh from activist training). Or bring a crockpot with a hot soup, stew or chili or a dessert to feed the returning walkers. Or help with setup or cleanup. Or help to address thank you letters to people who have made donations.

How you can help other days: We will be getting petitions signed, canvassing often, making phone calls to voters and volunteers every day, mailing thank yous to donors and position papers to people who have been canvassed (in person or by phone), staffing fundraisers, holding house parties, planning events, writing letters to the editor, blogging, and so much more. Become a precinct captain today! Email or call to volunteer. Sign up on the website: http://www.tony4congress2006.com/.

Join us as we reclaim the 11th District.



http://www.tony4congress2006.com/index.htm

Friday, December 30, 2005

Cindy Sheehan appearing on Ed Schultz Today

Cindy Sheehan will be appearing on the Ed Schultz show today with guest Host Tony Trupiano,Congressional candidate for the 11th district of Michigan.
It should be interesting to hear what Cindy has planned for the coming year.
In the past year Cindy has shown great courage and dedication to the antiwar movement, and has served as a beacon for other antiwar protesters.

The show is on from 3pm to 6pm EST.

You can find your local station that hosts the Ed Schultz show here or you can stream the show live on your computer