Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Breaking News – Michelle Obama, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Matthew Mcconaughey to Appear on NBC’s "Roll Up Your Sleeves"…

MEDIA ALERT: ROLL UP YOUR SLEEVES

MICHELLE OBAMA, DR. ANTHONY FAUCI, LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA AND MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEY TO APPEAR ON NBC'S "ROLL UP YOUR SLEEVES" VACCINATION SPECIAL-- PRODUCED BY ATTN: -- AIRING ON SUNDAY, APRIL 18

NBC will televise "Roll Up Your Sleeves" on Sunday, April 18 at 7 p.m. ET/PT. Presented by Walgreens and created by ATTN:, the hour long special aims to raise awareness and encourage the American public to get vaccinated to put an end to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Former First Lady Michelle Obama, alongside Lin-Manuel Miranda and a few additional friends, will appear to educate and empower audiences to make this important decision to help put the pandemic behind us.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and Chief Medical Adviser to the President, will be interviewed by Matthew McConaughey. Viewers will hear from Dr. Fauci on separating fact from fiction about the vaccines and urging all Americans to do their part in getting the vaccine when eligible.

Audiences will be treated to comedy acts, informative packages, captivating real-life stories and heartwarming surprises.

"We are honored to present an hour of television devoted to increasing vaccinations in America and help end a cataclysmic pandemic," said Jen Neal, Executive Vice President, Live Events, Specials and E! News. "The entertainment, comedic and music communities, along with First Lady Michelle Obama, have come together for the special, which will be inspirational, poignant and, at times, humorous. The overriding message: get vaccinated, end the pandemic and get your life and the life of the country back on track."

"The ability to get people back to work and kids back in school, getting us reunited with family and friends and attending concerts, sporting events and many other activities we hold dear is contingent upon people getting vaccinated," said Matthew Segal, the Co-Founder of ATTN:. "At ATTN: we believe in the power of entertainment to inform audiences, and we're thrilled to partner with NBC, Civic Nation, Walgreens and many great public figures and performers to get out this critical message."

"Walgreens is proud to be the presenting sponsor of Roll Up Your Sleeves, as we continue our critical role helping our customers, patients and communities during the pandemic and beyond," said Roz Brewer, CEO of Walgreens Boots Alliance. "Bringing together trusted voices, including celebrities, community leaders and our pharmacists, we can help answer questions and dispel myths surrounding vaccinations and ensure that the U.S. emerges from this very challenging time as quickly as possible."

Developed in partnership with Civic Nation and leading health care professionals, "Roll Up Your Sleeves" is produced by ATTN:, Civic Nation and Deviants Media. It is executive produced by Tom Werner, Valerie Jarrett, Matthew Segal, Jarrett Moreno, Taye Shuayb, Jessie Surovell, Mike Vainisi, Audrey Morrissey, Ivan Dudynsky and Chad Hines.

Read more here:
Breaking News - Michelle Obama, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Matthew Mcconaughey to Appear on NBC's "Roll Up Your Sleeves"...

Biden Wants 5 Times The Climate Spending Obama Won. Thats Still 5 Times Too Small. – HuffPost

By any measure, the $2 trillion infrastructure package President Joe Biden unveiled Wednesday marks the most significant federal climate investment to date.

The American Jobs Plan, outlined in a nearly 12,000-word fact sheet, earmarks $500 billion for clean energy investments and research, including $174 billion for electric vehicles and charging networks, $165 billion for public transit and trains, and $100 billion for renewable electricity and new transmission lines. There are billions more for repairing water systems, relocating whole communities threatened by climate disaster and plugging abandoned oil wells and mines.

In all, the plan represents more than five times the climate spendingthe Obama administration secured in the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

Yet its still about five times too small to bring the U.S. economys planet-heating emissions down to zero, the level scientists say we need to keep warming in a relatively safe range.

On a private call with activist groups Tuesday evening that HuffPost listened to, White House climate policy czar Gina McCarthy acknowledged that the spending package may disappoint climate advocates hoping to see a more ambitious budget, but said it marked only one area of the administrations decarbonization plans.

I dont know if were going to meet your expectations on size, but its certainly going to be transformational to our economy, she said.

The proposal would stretch funding over eight years and amount to spending roughly 1% of the countrys gross domestic product per year. Most estimates say it would take more like 4-5% of GDP, or nearly $1 trillion per year over 10 years, to fully decarbonize the U.S. economy.

Proponents of setting a much higher funding level span the ideological spectrum. The left-leaning Roosevelt Institutes 80-page plan to eliminate climate-changing pollution from the U.S. economy used 5% of GDP as its north star. Thats roughly the same figure in the 2016 Risky Business Project report co-chaired by billionaire Michael Bloomberg and Henry Paulson, the George W. Bush-era treasury secretary. British clean energy consultant Michael Liebreich called for roughly $980 billion per year over 10 years in 2019.

Even University of Massachusetts Amherst economist Robert Pollins more conservative estimate of 2% of GDP per year a figure he came with in part by stretching out the investments over a longer period of time was double what Biden has proposed.

Progressives led by Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) and Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) announced a $10 trillion counterproposal to the White House plan on Monday called the THRIVE Act, which would pump $1 trillion per year into green infrastructure and care-economy work.

Absent large tax increases and steep cuts to the militarys budget, the Biden administration would need to borrow money to fund that kind of package, just as it increased the federal deficit to pay for its $1.9 trillion pandemic relief bill.

Instead, the White House plan aims to offset its infrastructure spending with relatively modest new taxes in what appears to be a bid to win support from moderate Democrats for whom fiscal discipline is a key political theme.

Deficit politics are getting in the way of building a more sustainable and resilient economy that works for all, said Mark Paul, an economist who co-authored the Roosevelt Institutes paper on U.S. climate spending. This is not a New Deal for America. This is not Johnsons Great Society. I wish it were.

Joe Raedle via Getty ImagesElectric power lines run through a neighborhood in Austin, Texas, where blackouts caused by a freak cold snap underpinned the need for new infrastructure.

Once a powerful cudgel Republicans used to paint Democrats as wasteful profligates, public understanding of how the federal deficit works has shifted in recent years. Because the federal government unlike a state government, a business, or a household issues the currency it spends, Congress can authorize as much spending as is needed, particularly when interest rates are low, according to newer macroeconomic research that helped undergird both the Trump and Biden administrations relief spending packages.

That research shows that the biggest risk of putting too much money into the system is inflation. Taxes, far from providing the cash the federal government needs to justify its spending, instead help control inflation by taking money out of circulation and keeping buyers bidding up prices.

Yet the old way of thinking about the deficit still holds sway with Biden. During transition talks, according to one source familiar with the presidents approach, Biden repeatedly indicated he supported deficit spending for emergency relief, but not for proactive federal investment.

A White House spokesperson did not respond to HuffPosts email requesting comment.

The worst mistake we could make right now would be to let concerns about the state of the economy overheating, inflation, the deficit convince people to do less than what Biden is proposing, said J.W. Mason, an associate professor economics at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute. That would be a disaster, a terrible mistake.

Earlier this month, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), the key swing vote in a Senate split 50-50 along partisan lines, told reporters he wanted an enormous infrastructure bill, but said Congress should do everything we possibly can to pay for it, including making tax adjustments.

The wealth tax Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) proposed this month would tax households and trusts worth between $50 million and $1 billion at 2%, and add another 1% surtax on those exceeding $1 billion. The tax would affect just 100,000 U.S. households and raise $3 trillion over the course of a decade, according to analysis by University of California, Berkeley, economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman.

The White House infrastructure proposal does not include a wealth tax. But it does call for reversing some of the 2017 tax cut law Republicans passed and raising taxes on corporations from 21% to 28%. It also takes steps to discourage companies from listing tax havens as their addresses and writing off expenses to offshore entities. Zucman called it an ambitious first step.

This is an inflection point and hopefully the beginning of a longer-term cycle of government investment and increases in tax progressivity, he said in an email.

Wall Street analysts saw the package less as a climate bill than an infrastructure overhaul that included some green provisions.

This is really rebuilding aging infrastructure, though he has also said that advancing environmental policy and getting to a net-zero power sector by 2035 is also a priority, said Scott Levine, a senior energy and industrial analyst at the investment research firm Bloomberg Intelligence. But those are different objectives.

The proposed spending on housing offered one of the starkest examples of where advocates say the package falls short of whats needed.

While U.S. Energy Information Administration data showthat one-third of Americans cant afford their utility bills, the plan pledges toproduce, preserve, and retrofit more than a million affordable, resilient, accessible, energy efficient, and electrified housing units less than 1% of the housing stock. The proposal also offers $20 billion worth of tax credits over the next five years to build or rehabilitate about 500,000 homes, a line item thats significantly smaller than the over $30 billion per year the federal government spends subsidizing mortgages.

Bidens housing plan has nice rhetoric but its lack of ambition is catastrophicsquandering a once-in-a-generation moment, Daniel Aldana Cohen, a sociologist and climate policy expert at the University of Pennsylvania, wrote in a series of tweets. This plan is a drop in the bucket.

On the Tuesday conference call, McCarthy urged advocates to hype the infrastructure package, warning that criticism may splinter support in Congress and pare down the ambition of what it does include. One advocate responded by stating: I dont feel hyped up.

Lets be really smart and lets just talk about how great it is to have a president that goes out as far as this, McCarthy said. Then well argue and fight and debate and push amongst ourselves. But all of us will see our ideas in this. You will see what you proposed.

McCarthys deputy Ali Zaidi also said the package was just the beginning of the race.

Among the more far-reaching provisions in the presidents proposal was a call for Congress to pass a clean energy standard mandating the country produce all its electricity from carbon-free sources by 2035. It also calls for targeting 40% of the benefits of clean energy and climate investments toward some of the poorest and worst-polluted parts of the country, in communities disproportionately populated by Black, Latino, and other nonwhite Americans.

Evergreen Action, the climate policy group formed by former staffers on Washington Gov. Jay Inslees climate-focused presidential bid, said it was thrilled to see the clean energy standard and environmental justice provisions.

Today in Pittsburgh, President Biden will tell America its time to go big and bold on building a new economy run on 100% clean energy, Jamal Raad, the executive director of Evergreen Action, said in a statement. This is just the tip-off, and now the ball is in Congress court.

Calling all HuffPost superfans!

Sign up for membership to become a founding member and help shape HuffPost's next chapter

Read more here:
Biden Wants 5 Times The Climate Spending Obama Won. Thats Still 5 Times Too Small. - HuffPost

I, An Adult, Watched Michelle Obama’s New Kids Show On Netflix, And Here Were All Of My Thoughts – BuzzFeed

53. Post musical break, W + M wander the streets of an unfamiliar city at night. Luckily, they discover a classy pizzeria to hang out in.

54. There, we meet Katie, who both speaks and signs all of her dialogue.

55. The pizza place is called Mozzeria, and we learn from our new pal Katie that everyone who works here is deaf.

56. Wow, this is absolutely amazing. I love that this restaurant exists, and that the show is highlighting it.

57. OK, every time Mochi ~sort of speaks~, it sounds like hes saying Mamma Mia! Is this intentional or am I projecting?

58. So far, this show has been very low-key about its themes of healthy eating. Of course, theyve highlighted the importance (and deliciousness) of fresh produce, but choosing to emphasize a food like pizza really shows that their first priority is pitching food and cooking as a joyful, communal experience.

59. A bunch of adorable kids guess in different languages if a tomato is a vegetable or a fruit. About 50% of them are wrong, but thats fine. They hadnt gotten the chance to watch this episode before they were asked.

More:
I, An Adult, Watched Michelle Obama's New Kids Show On Netflix, And Here Were All Of My Thoughts - BuzzFeed

Opinion: The debate has changed on the Obama health law – Atlanta Journal Constitution

The South Georgia Republican estimated there are about 150,000 Georgians who could get a health insurance plan right now through the Obamacare exchange, where they would pay zero, or single-digit premiums.

Dont get me wrong Carter wasnt offering an endorsement of the Affordable Care Act.

But the tenor of his comments unintentionally showcased a notably different situation for GOP lawmakers. Four years ago with Donald Trump in the White House they were doing everything they could to get rid of the Obama health law. Now thats almost a political relic.

The complaints from Republicans at the state and federal level about the current system arent much different, as GOP officials still argue the plan isnt fixing the problem of people going without health insurance coverage.

Insurance is still far too costly, Carter said. But he made no mention of the Republican calls to repeal the law, which began as soon as it was signed in 2010.

The 11th birthday of the Obama health law was also a reminder that Republicans have never been able to rally around a single legislative plan to replace the system, as Democrats used the new COVID relief law to expand insurance subsidies for the next two years.

With new help for families in the American Rescue Plan, its a great time to sign up for health insurance at healthcare.gov, tweeted U.S. Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, D-Suwanee.

That same law also offers new incentives to Georgia and other states which have resisted expanding Medicaid under Obamacare to finally take that money from Uncle Sam.

We must expand Medicaid in our state to insure more Georgians, U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock said this week.

The Obama health law has been under attack since its inception. Somehow, it has survived, and now seems to be prospering.

Jamie Dupree has covered national politics and the Congress from Washington, D.C. since the Reagan administration. His column will appear weekly in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. For more, check out his Capitol Hill newsletter at http://jamiedupree.substack.com

Read more here:
Opinion: The debate has changed on the Obama health law - Atlanta Journal Constitution

Press: What Biden could have taught Obama | TheHill – The Hill

In the first volume of his memoir, The Promised Land, former President Obama says the smartest decision he ever made was choosing Joe Biden as his vice presidential running mate. And hes right. Too bad he didnt listen to Biden more, once he got to the White House.

Its no secret that Obama and those around him never took Biden seriously. They praised him publicly, but privately they clucked, raised their eyebrows, and made him the butt of jokes. To this day, Obamas treatment of Biden is nothing short of embarrassing.

Obama wanted Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonPresident Biden, on special interest money are you more an 'Obama' or a 'Hillary?' Kamala Harris, Bill Clinton to hold talk on pandemic's impact on women Drawing a line from minority discrimination to electoral outcomes MORE, not Biden to succeed him and pressured Biden not to challenge Clinton in the 2016 primary. He tried to talk Biden out of running in 2020 and didnt endorse him until every other Democratic challenger had dropped out. As Amie Parnes and Jonathan Allen reveal in their new book, Lucky, after Biden won the presidency on Tuesday, Nov. 3, Obama didnt call to congratulate him until Saturday, Nov. 7.

And, as Biden himself confessed to CNN, not once in eight years not once! did Barack and Michelle ObamaMichelle LeVaughn Robinson ObamaMichelle Obama jokes living in the White House prepared her for quarantine Michelle Obama slams 'leaders who won't take a stand to save lives' following Boulder shooting Press: What Biden could have taught Obama MORE invite Joe and Jill BidenJill BidenMegan Rapinoe visits White House to mark Equal Pay Day The Hill's 12:30 Report - Presented by Facebook - COVID vaccine developments Biden's dogs return to White House MORE to their private quarters in the White House. Ouch!

Too bad. If only Obama had paid more attention to Biden, he might have proven a more consequential president. In only 63 days, Bidens already shown more skill in dealing with Congress than Obama did in eight years. Like Obama, he reached out to Republicans on his first big legislative priority. He held his first Oval Office meeting with Senate Republicans. He offered to work with them in responding to the coronavirus pandemic with a robust stimulus package.

But, unlike Obama, he didnt waste two years, waiting for Republicans to come around. Once it was clear that Sens. Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsDemocrats divided on gun control strategy Overnight Health Care: Senate confirms Levine for HHS, first openly transgender official | Progressives up pressure on Biden to back COVID vaccine patent waiver | Former Operation Warp Speed chief fired over sexual harassment allegations Senate confirms first openly transgender official, approving Levine for HHS MORE (R-Maine), Mitt RomneyWillard (Mitt) Mitt RomneyDemocrats divided on gun control strategy Remembering Ted Kennedy highlights decline of the Senate Vivek Murthy confirmed as surgeon general MORE (R-Utah), and others werent serious about compromise offering only a $618 billion alternative to his proposed $1.9 trillion stimulus plan Biden decided to charge ahead with Democratic votes only. On March 11, he signed the American Rescue Plan, for which Biden is already being compared to FDR and LBJ (a comparison which Biden himself would admit is premature, at best).

What Biden gets, which Obama never did, is that once you arrive in the Oval Office, you cant waste any time. As president, you have to strike first and fast. Your best opportunity to get big things done is in your first two years, when you still have the wind at your back, popular support, and, most importantly, all the votes you need.

Despite a 256-vote majority in the House and Senate majority that was filibuster-proof for part of his first two years, Obama failed to take advantage of it.

Even though he didnt need them, he tried to win Republican votes by agreeing to a paltry $800 billion stimulus package, yet not one House Republican and only three Republican senators voted for it. He wasted a year trying unsuccessfully to convince Sen. Chuck GrassleyChuck GrassleyBiden takes sales blitz to swing-state Ohio Cruz accuses Democrats of playing 'ridiculous theater' in proposals following mass shootings Senate Judiciary chairman says he 'can't keep up' with number of mass shootings MORE (R-Iowa) to support the Affordable Care Act.

Even with only a razor-thin advantage in both houses of Congress, Bidens not going to make that same mistake. He knows that when youve got the power, youve got to use it before you lose it. Having secured the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package, Biden now plans to move on infrastructure, voting rights, climate change, and other priorities. If Republicans want to come onboard, fine, but Biden has determined to plough ahead with or without them.

Americans want action more than they want bipartisanship.

Press is host of The Bill Press Pod. He is author of From the Left: A Life in the Crossfire.

See the original post:
Press: What Biden could have taught Obama | TheHill - The Hill