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September 13, 2016 01:18 PM UTC

Get More Smarter on Tuesday (September 13)

  • 1 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols

Get More SmarterThe Denver Broncos unveiled a new all-orange jersey scheme; come on, that’s exciting! It’s time to Get More Smarter with Colorado Pols. If you think we missed something important, please include the link in the comments below (here’s a good example). If you are more of a visual learner, check out The Get More Smarter Show.

TOP OF MIND TODAY…

► Good news for those of you who use money: The U.S. economy is doing very well. As the New York Times reports:

Household incomes for American families rose strongly in 2015, breaking a yearslong pattern of income stagnation. The median household’s income in 2015 was $56,516, an increase of 5.2 percent over the previous year — the largest one-year rise since at least 1967, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday.

The income gains mark an important turning point in the recovery from the 2008 recession, showing that recent economic gains are being distributed more broadly.

The economic recovery, however, remains incomplete. The median is still 1.6 percent lower than in 2007, before the recession. It also remains 2.4 percent lower than the peak reached during the boom of the late 1990s. The number of people living in poverty also remains elevated, although it shrank last year by 3.5 million, or roughly 8 percent.

Still, most economists saw the report as remarkably positive. In an exuberant tweet, Jason Furman, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, called it “unambiguously the best” such census data “ever.” Household incomes in 2015 were higher than when President Obama entered office, and it is likely that the gains are continuing during his final year in office.

Economic data shows strong gains across several metrics, particularly among the middle class. Middle class incomes grew in 2015 at the fastest rate in modern history.

 

► The good news keeps coming. Uninsurance rates have reached a record low, as the Washington Post explains:

About 4 million Americans gained health insurance last year, decreasing the nation’s uninsured rate to 9.1 percent, the lowest level since before the Great Recession, according to new federal figures.

The figures, released Tuesday from a large annual Census Bureau survey, show that the gains were driven primarily by an expansion of coverage among people buying individual policies, rather than getting health benefits through a job. This includes, but is not limited to, the kind of coverage sold on the insurance exchanges that began in 2014 under the Affordable Care Act.

The decrease in the share of people who were uninsured slowed from the year before. Between 2013 and 2014, some 9 million people gained coverage — more than twice the increase as from 2014 to last year.

Sorry, Republicans. It looks like you may need to make some changes to those anti-Obamacare talking points.

 

► There’s big news from the Colorado Independent in one of the most competitive house districts in the state. Republican Katy Brown, who is running against Democrat Jeff Bridges in HD-3, has a deep history with the Fraternity Sorority Political Action Committee (FratPAC) that she would rather not discuss.

 

Get even more smarter after the jump…

IN CASE YOU ARE STANDING NEAR A WATER COOLER…

► Are those…9/11 conspiracy peaches?

 

► It is entirely possible that Republican Rep. Mike Coffman is literally unable to give a straightforward answer to a policy question.

 

► Republican Senate candidate Darryl Glenn is laying claim to the title of “Worst Statewide Candidate in Colorado History.” Next up for Glenn: Denial.

 

► Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton tried to ignore pneumonia. It didn’t work, as the Washington Post writes:

Hillary Clinton had a cough — a nasty, recurring cough that she could not kick after a week of trying. So on Friday morning she went to her doctor’s office, not far from her home in Chappaqua, N.Y., to find out what was wrong. Lisa R. Bardack’s diagnosis: pneumonia.

Bardack prescribed antibiotics and suggested that Clinton cut back her schedule and get five days of rest. But the Democratic presidential nominee refused. The election was just 60 days away, and Clinton wanted to grind it out — and that, to her, meant not telling many of her aides, let alone the public, about her illness.

Clinton’s decision set in motion perhaps the most damaging cascade of events for her in the general-election campaign — giving fresh ammunition to Republican nominee Donald Trump, who lags in the polls, and spoiling a two-week offensive she had plotted before the first debate.

Under mounting criticism over her lack of transparency, Clinton has agreed to release additional medical information in coming days, a move her aides said they hope will quiet lingering concerns about her health. Rumors about the 68-year-old candidate have swirled for weeks in the conservative media, stoked by Trump and his surrogates.

This is a much better response to Hillary’s health scare that dominated the news over the weekend. The Democratic Presidential nominee could still benefit from being a little less cryptic, however.

 

► Republican Vice Presidential nominee Mike Pence is trying to reassure someone that Donald Trump’s policies will line up well with the priorities of House Republicans. From Roll Call:

Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence said Tuesday that a Donald Trump presidency would sync up with House Republicans’ agenda, adding that Americans should expect the GOP to keep control of the House and Senate if the billionaire businessman wins the White House…

…Pence said Ryan’s rebukes of Trump for a few controversial statements would not complicate efforts to present a united GOP front. Pence said he believed Trump’s “Make America Great Again” mantra fell in line with the House’s agenda.

On Tuesday, Pence also tried to explain his earlier refusal to condemn former Ku Klux Klan member David Duke.

 

► Democracy for America (DFA) is backing Democrat Morgan Carroll in CD-6.

Elsewhere, as Joey Bunch writes for the Denver Post, the CD-6 campaigns have agreed on a debate schedule that kicks off on Oct. 4.

 

► The University of Colorado will host one of the most inane political debates in recent memory.

 

► The 2016 election cycle may not turn out well for Senate Republicans, but there’s always 2018!

 

OTHER LINKS YOU SHOULD CLICK

 

► Supporters of a $15 minimum wage held a rally at the State Capitol on Monday. A measure on the ballot this fall asks voters to approve a $12 minimum wage.

 

► Imagine how many TV ads you’d have to watch if two fracking measures had actually qualified for the 2016 ballot. 

ICYMI

► Republican Presidential nominee Donald Trump is causing serious political damage among Mormon voters in the United States.

 

Don’t forget to check out the Get More Smarter Show. You can also Get More Smarter by liking Colorado Pols on Facebook

Comments

One thought on “Get More Smarter on Tuesday (September 13)

  1. Embracing the Ku Klux Klan.

    It's true the Klan's home was in the Democratic Party thru the 20's. But that changed as racial and economic issues forced the parties to adjust thru the 20th century. The Voting Rights Act and Nixon's Southern Strategy resulted in most Klansmen (and women) becoming Republicans.This is undeniable.

    And Donald Trump and Mike Pence have been winking and nodding thru the entire campaign to their most deplorable constituents:

    We have not seen a candidate inspire the Klan the way Trump inspires them in many a year. Indeed, he's inspiring white supremacist groups of all kinds and is actually creating new ones. There is ample documentation to support this starting with the fact that white supremacist groups ran robo-calls for Trump throughout the GOP primaries and the Trump campaign certified a number of white supremacists as official delegates to the Republican convention.

    Former Imperial Wizard of the KKK, David Duke, endorsed him enthusiastically and is so inspired he's running for office again himself.  And as everyone knows Trump named Steve Bannon, a card carrying member of the white nationalist alt-right as his campaign CEO.

    These are the people Hillary Clinton said were in a"basket of deplorables." And yes, she said that half of Trump's voters fit the description although she later clarified that "half" was an exaggeration. But if what we're talking about are people with deplorable racist views it really wasn't.

    Let's not allow the daily news cycle to erase the fact that these deplorable remarks made by Trump were all affirmed by bloodthirsty screams of his supporters:

    As was Trump's bashing of the Gold Star family that criticized him during a speech to the Democratic National Convention.

    As was Trump's spastic imitation of a disabled reporter with whom he had differences.

    As was Trump's declaration that American-born U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel couldn't be fair when presiding over a lawsuit against Trump University because he "is of Mexican heritage" — a remark that Republican U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan called "textbook" racism.

    As was Trump's denial that he knew anything about famed white supremacist David Duke.

    As was Trump's cavalier dismissal of the service record of Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain, who was a prisoner of war in North Vietnam for five years: "He's a war hero because he was captured," Trump said. "I like people who weren't captured."

    As was Trump's preposterous assertion that he knows more about how to combat the Islamic State than U.S. military generals.

    As was Trump's invitation to his pals in Russia to do additional computer hacking into Democratic party servers.

    As was … well, you get the idea. Trump has cornered the market on preposterous, offensive, ill-advised and utterly false utterances.

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