[blind-democracy] The Paradox of Paul Ryan: Why the Tea Party Is Right to Be Wary

  • From: Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 29 Oct 2015 09:56:17 -0400


Excerpt: "Despite his ideological kinship with the anti-government crowd,
Paul Ryan is the embodiment of the troika of money, power, and politics that
corrupts and controls the capital, the very thing the tea partiers detest."

Representative Paul Ryan at the 2012 Republican National Convention. (photo:
Harry E. Walker/MCT/Zumapress.com )


The Paradox of Paul Ryan: Why the Tea Party Is Right to Be Wary
By Bill Moyers and Michael Winship, Moyers & Company
28 October 15

Only in a world where Cosmopolitan magazine can declare the Kardashians
"America's First Family" and the multi-billionaire loose cannon Donald Trump
is perceived by millions as the potential steward of our nuclear arsenal
could about-to-be Speaker of the House Paul Ryan be savaged as
insufficiently right-wing.
This is after all a man who made his bones in Congress and the Republican
Party as an Ayn Rand-spouting, body building budget-buster slashing away at
the body politic like a mad vivisectionist, as well as an anti-choice,
pro-gun zealot who never met a government program he liked (except the
military, whose swollen budget he would increase until we are all left naked
living in a national security state).
But the former vice presidential candidate is widely cited among many of his
colleagues as a likable enough chap who is polite to his elders in the
hierarchy of Congress, and this makes the more rabid bomb throwers seethe.
To them, that chummy, self-enlightened pragmatism as well as his past
embrace of immigration reform qualify him as a so-called RINO, a Republican
in Name Only, a "squish." Time makes ancient good uncouth, as the poem goes,
and in the words of Ed Kilgore at Washington Monthly's "Political Animal"
blog, "Nowadays if you are guilty of having ever supported 'amnesty' your
other heresies will be uncovered, however old they are. The other way to
look at it, of course, is that the GOP continues to drift to the Right,
making yesterday's ideological heroes suspect."
The House Freedom Caucus, the fractious faction of radical right-wingers
gerrymandered into a permanent demolition squad, successfully conspired to
bring down House Speaker John Boehner and his designated successor Kevin
McCarthy. They have for the moment agreed to support Paul Ryan's
speakership, but not with the unanimity that would constitute an official
endorsement. Further, it seems that for their support to continue once he
takes the job Ryan must pledge to curtail some of his powers and enable the
insurgents to continue to wreak havoc on the day-to-day business of the
House without fear of punishment by the grown-ups.
There's a paradox to all this. Despite his ideological kinship with the
anti-government crowd, Paul Ryan is the embodiment of the troika of money,
power and politics that corrupts and controls the capital, the very thing
the tea partiers detest. Ryan is "a creature of Washington," Red State's
Erick Erickson wrote. "He worked on Capitol Hill, worked in a think tank,
then went back as a congressman. He speaks Washingtonese with the best of
them."
He's a master at the insider cronyism that defines Washington today. Just
look at Ryan's choice as his new chief of staff: David Hoppe, the
personification of the supreme K-Street lobbyist, his footprints stamped all
over the tar pit of Washington patronage, his hands chapped from rubbing at
the prospect of the big bucks corporations pay for government favors. A
29-year veteran staffer on Capitol Hill, he's a poster child for the
revolving door through which members of Congress and their staffs rotate in
the endless cycling between public service and private lucre.
In Hoppe's case, the rush of air from the revolving door would jumpstart the
windmill in a Dutch landscape painting. The indefatigable journalistic
sleuth David Sirota went digging into federal records this week and reports
that, "Hoppe has lobbied for such major financial industry interests as
insurance giant MetLife, the National Venture Capital Association and Zurich
Financial Services."
Hoppe also has scurried along the inner corridors and back rooms of
government for the investment firm BlackRock. Imagine: this man will now be
sitting right there beside the Speaker of the House after working for a
company which, Sirota writes, "could be affected by efforts to change
federal financial regulations and which could benefit from a recent proposal
to shift military pension money into a federal savings plan managed in part
by the Wall Street giant."
What's more, Hoppe has lobbied for Cayman Finance, "whose business
'promot[ing] the development of the Cayman Islands financial services
industry' could be affected by legislation to crack down on offshore tax
havens." The big tax avoiders must be licking their corporate chops.
Hoppe's other clients have included the "free-trade" promoting and
job-busting US Chamber of Commerce, recently outed as perhaps the tobacco
industry's most influential champion not only in Washington but the entire
world. And then there are Sony, AT&T, Amazon, Delta Airlines and the candy
and food behemoth Mars, as well as the Lebanese al-Mawarid Bank. Eric Lipton
at The New York Times adds that Hoppe has worked for Sheldon Adelson's
Coalition to Stop Internet Gambling and as a registered foreign agent,
"representing the governments of Kosovo and the Philippines."
There's even more. Hoppe's listicle of paymasters continues, as reported by
Lipton: "The more than 100 companies and trade associations he has
represented over the last decade have paid $95 million in lobbying fees,
according to records filed with the United States Senate clerk, for work
that Mr. Hoppe and his colleagues have provided, to his firm [Hoppe
Strategies], to Squire Patton Boggs, or to Quinn Gillespie & Associates,
where he once served as president."
And it turns out that Hoppe is just one of the network of Ryan pals who have
turned their Capitol Hill experience into pay dirt. Catherine Ho at The
Washington Post notes, among others, Ryan friend and former Senate staffer
Tim McGivern, "a longtime AT&T lobbyist who last month joined the lobby firm
Ogilvy Government Relations." Others in the Ryan orbit include two former
aides of then-Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA), the House majority leader who was
found to be so deeply embedded in the money machinery of Washington's crony
capitalism that he was embarrassingly trounced by an obscure tea partier
running against him in their Republican primary. (Now that successful
challenger, David Brat, has endorsed Ryan. Oh, the temptations, the
temptations ready for plucking!)
You get the picture. Paul Ryan, waiting to be crowned speaker of what was
once called "The People's House," prepares for business-as-usual. Committed
to the sad and sordid Washington game that has so angered Americans on every
point of the political spectrum, he is about to be named one of its Most
Valuable Players. And if anyone tells you otherwise, just recall for them
the testimony of one of Ryan's own Republican colleagues, Rep. Walter B.
Jones of North Carolina, who says he can't support Ryan because, "If you've
got problems with a man today, and the man tells you, 'Tomorrow, I'll be a
different person' - it doesn't happen."
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Representative Paul Ryan at the 2012 Republican National Convention. (photo:
Harry E. Walker/MCT/Zumapress.com )
http://billmoyers.com/2015/10/27/the-paradox-of-paul-ryan-why-tea-party-righ
t-to-be-wary/http://billmoyers.com/2015/10/27/the-paradox-of-paul-ryan-why-t
ea-party-right-to-be-wary/
The Paradox of Paul Ryan: Why the Tea Party Is Right to Be Wary
By Bill Moyers and Michael Winship, Moyers & Company
28 October 15
nly in a world where Cosmopolitan magazine can declare the Kardashians
"America's First Family" and the multi-billionaire loose cannon Donald Trump
is perceived by millions as the potential steward of our nuclear arsenal
could about-to-be Speaker of the House Paul Ryan be savaged as
insufficiently right-wing.
This is after all a man who made his bones in Congress and the Republican
Party as an Ayn Rand-spouting, body building budget-buster slashing away at
the body politic like a mad vivisectionist, as well as an anti-choice,
pro-gun zealot who never met a government program he liked (except the
military, whose swollen budget he would increase until we are all left naked
living in a national security state).
But the former vice presidential candidate is widely cited among many of his
colleagues as a likable enough chap who is polite to his elders in the
hierarchy of Congress, and this makes the more rabid bomb throwers seethe.
To them, that chummy, self-enlightened pragmatism as well as his past
embrace of immigration reform qualify him as a so-called RINO, a Republican
in Name Only, a "squish." Time makes ancient good uncouth, as the poem goes,
and in the words of Ed Kilgore at Washington Monthly's "Political Animal"
blog, "Nowadays if you are guilty of having ever supported 'amnesty' your
other heresies will be uncovered, however old they are. The other way to
look at it, of course, is that the GOP continues to drift to the Right,
making yesterday's ideological heroes suspect."
The House Freedom Caucus, the fractious faction of radical right-wingers
gerrymandered into a permanent demolition squad, successfully conspired to
bring down House Speaker John Boehner and his designated successor Kevin
McCarthy. They have for the moment agreed to support Paul Ryan's
speakership, but not with the unanimity that would constitute an official
endorsement. Further, it seems that for their support to continue once he
takes the job Ryan must pledge to curtail some of his powers and enable the
insurgents to continue to wreak havoc on the day-to-day business of the
House without fear of punishment by the grown-ups.
There's a paradox to all this. Despite his ideological kinship with the
anti-government crowd, Paul Ryan is the embodiment of the troika of money,
power and politics that corrupts and controls the capital, the very thing
the tea partiers detest. Ryan is "a creature of Washington," Red State's
Erick Erickson wrote. "He worked on Capitol Hill, worked in a think tank,
then went back as a congressman. He speaks Washingtonese with the best of
them."
He's a master at the insider cronyism that defines Washington today. Just
look at Ryan's choice as his new chief of staff: David Hoppe, the
personification of the supreme K-Street lobbyist, his footprints stamped all
over the tar pit of Washington patronage, his hands chapped from rubbing at
the prospect of the big bucks corporations pay for government favors. A
29-year veteran staffer on Capitol Hill, he's a poster child for the
revolving door through which members of Congress and their staffs rotate in
the endless cycling between public service and private lucre.
In Hoppe's case, the rush of air from the revolving door would jumpstart the
windmill in a Dutch landscape painting. The indefatigable journalistic
sleuth David Sirota went digging into federal records this week and reports
that, "Hoppe has lobbied for such major financial industry interests as
insurance giant MetLife, the National Venture Capital Association and Zurich
Financial Services."
Hoppe also has scurried along the inner corridors and back rooms of
government for the investment firm BlackRock. Imagine: this man will now be
sitting right there beside the Speaker of the House after working for a
company which, Sirota writes, "could be affected by efforts to change
federal financial regulations and which could benefit from a recent proposal
to shift military pension money into a federal savings plan managed in part
by the Wall Street giant."
What's more, Hoppe has lobbied for Cayman Finance, "whose business
'promot[ing] the development of the Cayman Islands financial services
industry' could be affected by legislation to crack down on offshore tax
havens." The big tax avoiders must be licking their corporate chops.
Hoppe's other clients have included the "free-trade" promoting and
job-busting US Chamber of Commerce, recently outed as perhaps the tobacco
industry's most influential champion not only in Washington but the entire
world. And then there are Sony, AT&T, Amazon, Delta Airlines and the candy
and food behemoth Mars, as well as the Lebanese al-Mawarid Bank. Eric Lipton
at The New York Times adds that Hoppe has worked for Sheldon Adelson's
Coalition to Stop Internet Gambling and as a registered foreign agent,
"representing the governments of Kosovo and the Philippines."
There's even more. Hoppe's listicle of paymasters continues, as reported by
Lipton: "The more than 100 companies and trade associations he has
represented over the last decade have paid $95 million in lobbying fees,
according to records filed with the United States Senate clerk, for work
that Mr. Hoppe and his colleagues have provided, to his firm [Hoppe
Strategies], to Squire Patton Boggs, or to Quinn Gillespie & Associates,
where he once served as president."
And it turns out that Hoppe is just one of the network of Ryan pals who have
turned their Capitol Hill experience into pay dirt. Catherine Ho at The
Washington Post notes, among others, Ryan friend and former Senate staffer
Tim McGivern, "a longtime AT&T lobbyist who last month joined the lobby firm
Ogilvy Government Relations." Others in the Ryan orbit include two former
aides of then-Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA), the House majority leader who was
found to be so deeply embedded in the money machinery of Washington's crony
capitalism that he was embarrassingly trounced by an obscure tea partier
running against him in their Republican primary. (Now that successful
challenger, David Brat, has endorsed Ryan. Oh, the temptations, the
temptations ready for plucking!)
You get the picture. Paul Ryan, waiting to be crowned speaker of what was
once called "The People's House," prepares for business-as-usual. Committed
to the sad and sordid Washington game that has so angered Americans on every
point of the political spectrum, he is about to be named one of its Most
Valuable Players. And if anyone tells you otherwise, just recall for them
the testimony of one of Ryan's own Republican colleagues, Rep. Walter B.
Jones of North Carolina, who says he can't support Ryan because, "If you've
got problems with a man today, and the man tells you, 'Tomorrow, I'll be a
different person' - it doesn't happen."
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http://e-max.it/posizionamento-siti-web/socialize


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  • » [blind-democracy] The Paradox of Paul Ryan: Why the Tea Party Is Right to Be Wary - Miriam Vieni