Archive for the 'Elaine Chao' Category

Quick Hits: Risk Exposure A-OK and Lunsford Has a Plan

Terri Whitehouse July 24th, 2008

Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao is pushing to loosen occupational health and safety regulations. Quoth Adam Finkel, a former health standards director OSHA:

It’s an insult to America’s workers for the Department of Labor to be spending its time in the last year of this administration allegedly fine-tuning the details of how to do these regulations when, other than the one ordered by a court, they have issued no major worker-health regulations…there’s a great need to light a fire under this moribund agency to do something — anything — to protect workers.

U.S. Senate candidate Bruce Lunsford has unveiled a plan, and it involves more than beating on his chest and saying, “DRILL!”

Fancy Dress Mitch and Elegant Elaine, Kentucky’s glamorous couple

Joe Sonka June 30th, 2008

When one thinks of glamor, Kentucky’s first couple, Mitch McConnell and Elaine Chao, immediately come to mind.

Mitch, of course, is known for his dapper tux and tails that he shows off at big money fundraisers. And Elaine never goes to a big event without her extravagant $450 French (Freedom?) manicure, flanked by two SUV’s and a 6 person security team.

So let us just endulge ourselves for a moment and soak in their elegance and glamor.



George W. Bush gave up golfing for the troops, can’t Elaine Chao give up dainty $450 French manicures?

Matt Gunterman June 30th, 2008

Hey, Pres. George W. Bush (R) gave up golfing as his “sacrifice” for the troops and the war effort.

A man and woman of \"the people\": the million-dollar people, that is.

You’d think that, with the economy tanking like it hasn’t since the days of Pres. Richard M. Nixon (R) and tens of thousands more Americans joining the unemployment lines each week, Sec. of Labor Elaine Chao would be willing to sacrifice a little, too.

Maybe she is. Who knows. I hear she’s fond of adult beverages. Perhaps she’s giving up some of those. I hear she’s fond of shoes. Lots and lots of shoes. Perhaps she’s not buying as many new pairs.

One thing Elaine Chao isn’t giving up is her dainty $450 French manicures. In fact, Chao took her entire entourage of six security personnel and two super-size, gas-guzzling SUVs this weekend to get all gussied up for the $2-million love fest between Chao’s husband Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Sen. John McCain (R-AZ).

Sec. of Labor Elaine Chao gets her nails done while American economy burns

Matt Gunterman June 29th, 2008

Kudos to Jim for his excellent coverage of the protests outside the 2008 GOP Glorified White Trash Convention in Louisville last night that was attended by some 650 of the ever-shrinking number of people in the United States who are still drinking the GOP Kool-Aid. The event raised some $2-million.

Ready for her close-up?

So, by my rough calculation, it probably cost on the order $450 to get Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao’s nails done (see Jim’s video).

Workers in Kentucky struggle to fill up their gas tanks because gas is $4/gallon and inflation is rising.

Workers in Kentucky worry that they won’t have a job tomorrow because the second Bush recession promised to be even worse than the first.

Workers in Kentucky wonder if they’ll meet next month’s mortgage, while Wall Street fat cats get bailed out by Washington.

But does any of this worry Elaine Chao, wife of Sen. Mitch McConnell (R) and George W. Bush’s Secretary of Labor?

We all know a girl’s gotta look pretty when she’s busy wrecking the American economy!

Senator Mitch McConnell And John McCain Hold Fund Raiser In Louisville, Ky. And The Protesters Were There!

Jim Pence June 29th, 2008

Some of Kentucky’s most influential Republicans attended the $1,000 per plate event at the Kentucky International Convention Center. Organizers said the total raised was $2 million.
The $2 million will be divided among the Republican National Committee, John McCain’s campaign fund and the Kentucky Republican Party.
Who would have thought these two with their history would ever get together for a fund raiser, but times are tough for Republicans and it appears they are willing to sacrifice their values for self preservation.
What won’t make the news is the protesters at the event and Elaine Chao, Senator Mitch McConnell ’s wife and The Secretary of Labor getting her nails done, before the event, a few blocks from her house with a entourage of 2 SUV’s and as many as 6 security people. We have a short video clip, shot at a distance, of that incorporated in the video below.
Getting back to the protesters at the event. The protesters set up with the approval of the Kentucky State Police on the North West corner of 3rd and Jefferson Street, but were later ask to move across the street to the South West corner of 3rd and Jefferson, by the Kentucky State Police and then the protesters were asked to move to the corner of 3rd and Market Street by the Louisville Metro Police. It was obvious the secret service didn’t want us to view John McCain And Senator Mitch McConnell pulling into the Kentucky International Convention Center and it seems they didn’t want John McCain and Senator Mitch McConnell to see the protesters and their signs.
One of the protesters had his back pack searched by the Secret Service.
The Kentucky State Police and the Louisville Metro Police seemed to understand what we were doing and were very professional, but it seemed to me they were being jacked around by by the Secret Service, I feel at the request of Senator Mitch McConnell. Take a look at the video and judge for yourself.
Senator Mitch McConnell has a history of avoiding regular folks. I know this because I’ve tried to get video of him in the following places: Buckner, Ky ., Berea, Ky ., Louisville, Ky. at the Olmsted BOO-LA-LA Fete D’Halloween gala and even at his own home but the chickenshit Senator from Kentucky sneaks in and out of these venues avoiding his constituents.
I must say, I didn’t feel very free today!!!!!!!!!!
Click here to view photos of the event.

ELAINE CHAO SHOWS SKILLS GAP AND REFUSES 25,000 LETTERS.

Jim Pence March 27th, 2008

(Cross posted at Hillbilly Report)

Posted at Shame on Elaine.
We have some big news following yesterday’s attempted delivery of 25,000 letters to Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao. After holding our photo-op on the front steps of the Department of Labor, we gave the box full of signatures to Elaine’s employees to bring into the Department of Labor.
But they were met by the head of DOL security, who said he monitored our website and would not allow the letters to be delivered to Elaine Chao. From the employees’ union press release:
Attorney Alex Bastani, the President of Local 12, tried to bring the petition signed by 25,000 Americans into the Department of Labor main building. Mr. Bastani was about to place the petition through the x-ray machine at the Department entrance when he was stopped by the Head of Department of Labor Security, Mr. J. Thomas Holman II. The petition, a stack of paper, was approximately the size of a phone book. Mr. Holman stated he had been monitoring the Shame on Elaine website, and that he would not allow the letters to be delivered to Secretary Chao. Read More.

Quick Hit: Coal Miner Reprimanded for Whistleblowing

Terri Whitehouse March 21st, 2008

Page One reports on a Herald-Leader story about a coal miner who was disciplined after documenting mine safety problems and bringing the problems to the attention of the Mine Safety & Health Administration:

On April 27 last year, Howard, a veteran miner, took video footage of seven mine seals at Cumberland River’s Band Mill No. 2 mine. The seals, constructed to close off abandoned sections of underground coal mines, are supposed to be impenetrable so that explosive methane gas can’t seep into working areas.

These seals were so cracked that water gushed through them, the lawsuit says.

Before videotaping the cracked and leaking seals, Howard had documented the problems in writing in a Cumberland River preshift examination book and had told company officials, including the mine superintendent, two mine foremen, and two section foremen, about the unsafe conditions, the lawsuit says.

After nothing was done, Howard testified at a public hearing held by the Mine Safety and Health Administration in July 2007 and showed those in attendance the video he had taken of the mine seals.

MSHA later cited Cumberland River for multiple seal violations.

After the company was cited, Cumberland River officials gave Howard “a written warning of disciplinary action” for “taking a non-permissible video camera underground.”

Regardless of whether Cumberland River had a company policy about videotaping underground, Oppegard said Thursday, Howard had the right under state law to document and report to MSHA unsafe conditions at the mine.

What is particularly disappointing, Oppegard said, is that MSHA reviewed Howard’s case and found that the company did nothing wrong in reprimanding him.

This should come as no real surprise, as we’ve noted time and again that mine safety oversight is severely lacking under Labor Secretary Elaine Chao’s watch and receives no help from Sen. Mitch McConnell. Of course, why should he care if hard-working Kentuckians are injured or killed on the job, just so long as those campaign dollars keep on rolling in?

OPINION: MCCONNELLISM AT WORK. WHAT IS CONGRESSMAN ED WHITFIELD SMOKING?

Jim Pence February 7th, 2008

 

When I read the comment below by Congressman dubya Ed Whitfield, I realized this guy is out of touch with reality here in Kentucky. The fact is Kentucky has lost 2.3 percent of its manufacturing jobs, or almost 7,600, from September 2006 to September 2007 and 26,381 manufacturing jobs, in the previous 5 years, according to Manufacturers’ News. That amounts to 33, 981 manufacturing lost in Kentucky, in just six years.
When Ed Whitfield says “We have enjoyed a strong and robust economy, with impressive job growth over the past decade” I have to wonder what he is smoking!
Is it really a surprise to anyone other than Senator Mitch McConnell, Elaine Chao and Ed Whitfield, that when good jobs disappear and folks can’t afford to buy as much, the economy suffers? Yes Ed its the economy stupid and a stimulus package to give folks a little money to buy products made in China will not cure the mess you have helped put us in. You sir, along with your pal Senator Mitch McConnell, have helped put the United States of America in jeopardy with your never ending quest for cheap labor and your support of Corporate America moving the manufacturing base, with all of the good paying jobs, out of the United States of America to the lands of cheap and sometimes child labor. Mr. Ed sir, with all due respect, it seems you’re more concerned about horses than the stability of the United States of America!

Ed Whitfield:
“Over the years, the American economy has had its ups and downs. We have enjoyed a strong and robust economy, with impressive job growth over the past decade. Today, we are still creating jobs and our economy continues to grow but at a much smaller pace. The steps that are being taken by the government are designed to provide the necessary stimulus to give our economy a strong boost and prevent a recession.”
U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield
First District
Kentucky

MCCONNELLISM AT WORK, MANUFACTURING JOBS CONTINUE TO DROP.

Jim Pence January 21st, 2008

Senator Mitch McConnell and his wife Elaine Chao, The Secretary Of Labor, continue to put on the Ritz, while our manufacturing base is being decimated, “McConnellized” and Chaoed Down”. Elaine Chao complains about the habits of American workers and their skills gap but does nothing to protect American workers from unfair trade policies and when it comes to safety for American workers Elaine Chao is nowhere to be seen.
I suggest “The Godfather Of Green” has done more for Communist China than Chairman Mao Tse-tung and is a Benedict Arnold when it comes to his constituents!

KENTUCKY LOSES 2.3% OF MANUFACTURING JOBS OVER YEAR
2006-2007
Manufacturers’ News Inc. said the state, Kentucky, has lost 2.3 percent of its manufacturing jobs, or almost 7,600, from September 2006 to September 2007. Kentucky has been losing manufacturing jobs since 2001, the company said in a news release.
Louisville is home to the most industrial jobs in Kentucky, accounting for 19 percent of the state’s manufacturing employment, or 60,966 jobs. That figure is down 4.9 percent, or 3,173 jobs, since September 2006.
MANUFACTURERS’ GUIDE REPORTS KENTUCKY INDUSTRIAL JOBS DOWN 11,942.
2005-2006
Kentucky lost 11,942 manufacturing jobs and 6 plants over the past 12 months according to the 2006 Kentucky Manufacturers Register, a manufacturers’ guide published annually by Manufacturers’ News, Inc., Evanston, IL.
The Blue Grass State is now home to 6,195 manufacturers employing 330,272 workers compared to the 6,201 plants and 342,214 workers reported a year earlier.
Kentucky enjoyed a net gain of 273 plants over the past 5 years but in the same time period lost 26,381 manufacturing jobs, according to Manufacturers’ News, which has been conducting the yearly census since 1983.

MITCH MCCONNELL’S WIFE ELAINE CHAO MISSES DEADLINE FOR MINE RESCUE RULES.

Jim Pence January 6th, 2008

Elaine Chao is quick to give American workers advice, but slow when it comes to doing her own job. I suggest we have a skills gap here.

Ken Ward Jr.
Staff writer
The Bush administration missed a legal deadline to finalize rules to require more and better-trained mine rescue teams across the nation’s coalfields.
Under a 2006 law signed by President Bush, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao was required to issue final rules by Dec. 15, 2007.
The rules are still not finalized, and are sitting at the White House, under review by the Office of Management and Budget.
OMB review of new government rules is required as part of an effort to balance the costs and benefits of federal regulations.
At issue is the first rewrite of federal mine rescue team regulations since 1982.
Last year, lawmakers mandated changes in the rules after questions about the nation’s mine rescue capabilities following the deaths of 19 miners in the Sago and Darby disasters and the Aracoma Mine fire, all in 2006. The changes were required as part of the Mine Improvement and New Emergency Response Act, signed by President Bush on June 15, 2006.
The MINER Act gave MSHA 18 months to finalize the new rules.
MSHA took nearly all of that time — 15 months of it — to write its proposed changes. The proposed rules were published in the Federal Register on Sept. 6, 2007.
A public comment period, also required by law, lasted until Nov. 16. MSHA submitted its final version for OMB review on Dec. 13, two days before the MINER Act deadline to issue the rules.
Sean Kevelighan, press secretary for OMB, said he could not provide a timeline for his agency completing its review of the mine rescue team rules.
Read more.

ELAINE CHAO AND THE SKILLS GAP. YOUTUBE VIDEO.

Jim Pence December 27th, 2007

Americans are working harder and making less, unless, of course, they work in the Bush administration. Senator Mitch McConnell’s wife Elaine Chao has the gall to tell us there is a skills gap. I suggest the skills gap is the George W. Bush Administration and Elaine Chao is a big part of the gap!!!!!

Heckuva Job, ‘Lainie!

Terri Whitehouse November 19th, 2007

An article in the Washington Post paints a stark picture of mine safety oversight:

U.S. mine safety regulators failed to conduct inspections required by federal law at more than one in seven of the country’s 731 underground coal mines last year, a year in which the number of worker deaths in mining accidents more than doubled to 47, a government report says.

Budget constraints and a lack of management emphasis on worker safety by the Bush administration are responsible for the lapses, the Labor Department inspector general said in a report released yesterday. The report details the department’s failure to meet inspection mandates of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977.

Of course, we already knew that, now, didn’t we?

Mitch mining for dollars, not worker safety

Joe Sonka November 3rd, 2007

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots)

Mike Hall at the AFL-CIO blog has the lowdown:

Many U.S. senators and representatives are taking the lead in the fight to toughen up the nation’s mine safety laws. There is a desperate need for stronger mine safety rules, as tragically demonstrated by this summer’s Crandall Canyon Mine collapse and last year’s Sago, Darby and Aracoma mine disasters.

Sen. Robert Byrd (D) and Rep. Nick Rahall (D), West Virginia lawmakers who represent thousands of Mountain State coal miners, are pushing hard for improved safety legislation, as are longtime champions of job safety like Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), who would be hard pressed to find a coal mine in their states.

But Louisville Courier-Journal columnist David Hawpe writes there is one senator whom you might expect to be concerned about mine safety who is glaringly absent from the debate—Kentucky’s Mitch McConnell. Hawpe writes in an Oct. 31 column:

“Sunday night there was another death at a coal mine where the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration [MSHA], overseen by Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, is behind schedule in conducting required annual safety checks.

MSHA has been cramped by Bush administration cuts in budget and staffing, but you haven’t heard the senior senator from the state with the most coal mines, Mitch McConnell, Chao’s husband, raising the Capitol roof about that.

“Ineffective enforcement, outdated technology and inadequate safety standards are the heart of the problem,” Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., told a mine safety hearing earlier this month. He was able to figure that out, despite representing a state that’s short on coal mines.

Unlike McConnell, he also has noted the miserable record of workplace safety enforcement posted by the Bush administration in other industries.”

Hawpe goes on to note that Peg Seminario, AFL-CIO health and safety director, told a Senate committee that under the Bush administration, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration “has abandoned it’s leadership role in health and safety” and snuggled up to employers. Yet:

“You didn’t hear McConnell…call for action.”

McConnell has never been known as a job safety advocate. Take a look at this October 2006 article by Lexington Herald-Leader staff writer John Cheves, in which he explores how McConnell and Chao have operated as a “tag team” when it comes to sacrificing worker safety in favor of employers’ interests.

“When it comes to workplace-related issues such as mine safety, the McConnell-Chao marriage presents an intriguing target for industry donors. At the Labor Department, Chao has taken what some reports say is a relaxed attitude toward the regulation of coal mines and an approach that labor unions perceive as hostile.

Sometimes Chao achieves what her husband cannot in the Senate, such as a wage freeze her department instituted on certain farm workers.

Chao attends her husband’s fund-raisers, chats with his donors and seeds her agency with his former aides. Chief among them is Deputy Labor Secretary Steven Law, whose last job was helping McConnell tap donors—Bob Murray included—at the National Republican Senatorial Committee. They collected an impressive $187 million in four years there.”

For more on McConnell, his close relationship with Big Business, his fund-raising and other issues, click here to check out Cheves’ series of articles.

Labor will enjoy Fletcher’s coming massacre as much as anybody, and they deserve it, considering al of the hard work that they have put in during the campaign.

SATIRE: SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL, ELAINE CHAO, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS, LEAD PAINT, COMMUNIST CHINA AND ABORTION CLINICS!!! YOUTUBE VIDEO.

Moser: Kentucky at War

Matt Gunterman September 13th, 2007

The Nation Cover “Kentucky at War”

Bob Moser’s excellent analysis of the development of the movement to support the troops, end the war, and ditch Senator Mitch McConnell (R) has hit the stands.

The piece is too long to block quote here, but I’ll include excerpts particularly relevant to the Kentucky progressive blogosphere. You can read the entire article here.

Kentucky at War
Bob Moser

[...]

As summer–and McConnell’s recess vacation–approached, two new sets of nontraditional allies materialized to help LPAC bird-dog the senator, who makes his home in Louisville with his wife, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao. Matt Gunterman, a 30-year-old rural Kentucky native and Yale University graduate student, launched the DitchMitch blog earlier in the year, bringing together a varied band of bloggers from around the state on a composite site with a common goal. And in June, two young native Kentuckians and a Navy veteran opened an Iraq Summer headquarters in Louisville, part of a national campaign by Americans Against Escalation in Iraq (AAEI) to target key members of Congress with a homegrown antiwar message before they returned to Washington to resume the war debate.

By mid-August McConnell was sending out fundraising letters complaining about being harassed by “the ’60s antiwar movement on steroids.” But as the Republican kingmaker well knew, the reality was something altogether different from that old stereotype–and considerably more formidable.

Jim Pence is a 68-year-old, Salem-smoking, pickup-driving, self-proclaimed hillbilly from economically devastated Hardin County, retired after thirty-five years in the factory at the American Synthetic Rubber Corporation. Politically inactive until 2004, when Bush’s re-election and the war in Iraq spurred him to “vow to fight with every ounce of my strength from then on,” Pence now makes some of the freshest, funniest antiwar and political videos anywhere–and as a result, he’s become the unlikely heart and soul of Kentucky’s DitchMitch campaign.

Linking from his own Hillbilly Report website to DitchMitch and YouTube, Pence puts up snappy vignettes on subjects ranging from Kentucky’s annual bipartisan political hoedown at Fancy Farm–where McConnell made a hasty exit this year after being jeered by protesters carrying signs showing him as Bush’s hand puppet–to a fanciful take on Bush and Condoleezza Rice’s relationship, set to the tune of Frank Sinatra’s “The Way You Look Tonight,” to a hard-hitting series of exposés of liquor-industry fundraising by Ron Lewis, the holy-rolling Congressman from Pence’s district. “I don’t know, I just disappear into them,” Pence says on a dog-day August morning, navigating Louisville traffic en route to the Iraq Summer office. “I stay up some nights till 4 and 5, editing these things.”

DitchMitch creator Gunterman, whose postgraduate goal is to fire up an Internet-based “Ruralution,” connecting grassroots progressives from rural America to spur political action, sees Pence as a prime example of the passion and wit that generally go untapped by Democrats and urban progressives. “There’s no one like Jim in the entire United States,” says Gunterman. “Not with his age and his ornery attitude. He is very much a hillbilly, and he’s reinvigorated the term.”

In his three years of crisscrossing Kentucky to publicize its antiwar and progressive insurgencies, Pence has also stirred up the state’s traditionally timid left-wingers. “When I first went out with my camcorder, I’d go up to people at peace rallies and ask them, ‘Would you like to say something to Mitch?’ and they’d just go, ‘Uhhh…’ Or even if they would say anything, they’d say, ‘But I don’t want my picture taken.’ I just kept saying, ‘The newspaper’s not even going to cover this, and if TV does, it’ll be for ten seconds. Whereas this video’s going up on YouTube tomorrow.’” As Pence kept filming and posting his increasingly popular videos, the activists opened up and embraced this new mechanism for showing that, yes, the military stronghold of Kentucky has a vigorous antiwar effort. “People are stepping out more than they would a few years ago,” Pence says. “Now I can’t get them to stop talking when they see that camera. People know me now, and for the most part they trust me–whether or not they should!”

While Pence and DitchMitch have inspirited Kentucky activists, they’ve also pushed the state’s more established media to take notice of the progressive groundswell. “DitchMitch gives us the power to hold the media accountable in Kentucky for the first time,” says 24-year-old Shawn Dixon, a native of rural western Kentucky who’s just started his first year at NYU law school. In 2004, when Dixon was working as deputy policy and communications director for Democrat Daniel Mongiardo’s uphill Senate challenge to Republican Jim Bunning, he spent much of the campaign in a state of frustration over Kentucky newspapers’ assumption that the incumbent would cruise to victory. “There was no recognition that this would be a competitive election and that this guy was beatable until about a month before the election, when it became impossible to ignore.” Bunning wobbled back to Washington with a slender 23,000-vote victory, but this time around, with LPAC continually raising eyebrows and DitchMitch helping to popularize the anti-McConnell movement, “the media don’t have a choice,” Dixon says. On the same day in late July that Louisville’s Courier-Journal ran a column about McConnell’s dip in popularity (below 50 percent approval), the Herald-Leader in Lexington ran a story, sixteen months before the election, titled “McConnell Vulnerable.”

That’s music to Pence’s ears. “It’s not just what he’s done to perpetuate this war,” says the high-tech hillbilly. “It’s what he hasn’t done for Kentuckians, with all his power, on healthcare and so many other issues that really matter to folks at their kitchen tables. We’re trying to cut through the kind of moral-values crap that McConnell’s been using for twenty-five years to get himself elected. We’re doing what we can to show the emperors without their clothes. And show that the folks who don’t like Mitch, and can’t stand this war, are just regular people like me who finally woke up and spoke up.”

[...]

Safety? Schmafety!

Terri Whitehouse August 22nd, 2007

Dave Meyer of OpenKY.com has a timely post about Mine and Health Safety Administrator, Richard Stickler. As has been reported in the media, Stickler is a former mining executive whose safety track record was less than satisfactory. And, as Meyer points out in his post, Sen. Mitch McConnell played a big role in Stickler’s recess appointment:

I know there has been a hold on the MSHA Director nomination on the other side of the aisle. I have been told that there will be an objection yet again today. But I want to plead with those from the other side who may believe that this is not the perfect nominee— he is the nominee, nominated by the President, reported out of the HELP Committee. If he were to be drawn down and this whole process were to be started all over again, we wouldn’t have an MSHA Director for months and months into the future. We need a permanent Director of the Mine Safety and Health Administration.

The McConnell/Chao/mining connection has been previously documented on DM-KY. Meyer’s post on the topic is definitely worth the read.

Kentucky in 2007 is the national GOP’s canary in a coalmine

Matt Gunterman August 19th, 2007

With all the tragedy as of late in our nation’s coalmines and with Kentucky’s Senator Mitch McConnell and his wife Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao at the center of a web of money-grubbing and influence-mongering in Washington that has left these many coalmines the deathtraps that they are for the sake of the almighty campaign contribution and a few ticks on the profit margin, I think the analogy of Kentucky’s gubernatorial election this year being the GOP’s canary in a coalmine is a fitting one.

Watch this latest video from Jim Pence of DitchMitchKY and the HillbillyReport. What’s going on in the video with security personnel at the Kentucky State Fair trying to end an anti-war protest (until they’re set straight by the State Police) is fascinating enough, but what’s even more fascinating is what’s going on in the background: all those cars honking in support of the protest.

Recall that thirteen years ago in 1994, on the cusp of the so-called Republican Revolution, Kentucky served the Democrats in a similar capacity. Then the death in March of that year of Democratic Congressman William H. Natcher (KY-02)—who had represented the district since 1953 and who continues to hold the all-time record for consecutive votes in Congress at 18,401—set up a special election for the seat.

I was only 17 years old at the time, but I had been politically aware since the 1988 presidential campaign, when a longtime Democratic activist in my church started hauling me to rallies, the biggest of those being Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen’s appearance at the Big Tobacco warehouse in Owensboro, today the largest city in the Second District. I don’t remember anything about the substance of what was said there, but I remember the energy, the pomp, and the confidence among the Democrats gathered.

Yet, a mere six years later the entire region of the Second District was seething against the political establishment and its status quo, its distance, and indifference. That establishment was Democratic.

Perhaps that environment is best encapsulated in a scene that has now been immortalized in Michael Moore’s latest film SiCKO. On August 29, 1994, at a rally in Owensboro, “Tobacco Rights Activists” burned an effigy of then First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in protest of President Bill Clinton’s health care plan. With a bluegrass band playing the back ground, Stan Arachikavitz, president of the Kentucky Association of Tobacco Supporters, chanted “burn, baby, burn,” as the effigy was doused in gasoline and two women set it ablaze. When asked for comment by a reporter, Arachikavitz replied, “Hillary didn’t last as long as my Marlboro.” The nation was outraged, but there was a quiet satisfaction among many across western Kentucky.

At that rally was Ron Lewis, the Second District’s newly elected Republican congressman. In what had been a shock to Kentucky’s political establishment—if no-one else—Lewis had defeated longtime Kentucky State Senator Joe Prather in the May special election to succeed Natcher. Lewis had won with 55 percent of the vote on a turnout of less than 20 percent. A fundamentalist Christian, Baptist minister, and religious bookstore owner, Lewis had been recruited to the race by Senator Mitch McConnell, who had been narrowly elected to his own seat ten years earlier in 1984 on the coattails of Ronald Reagan.

You may recalled that Lewis’s campaign commercials in the special election had famously morphed Prather’s head into that of Bill Clinton, who was then near the height of his unpopularity. The national GOP considered the technique a success and went on to use it widely in the general election that year. Meanwhile, rumors had circulated in the district that Joe Prather was in Washington to look for a house. Perhaps it was just a rumor spread by the McConnell machine, but it might as well have been true, such was the arrogance and sense of entitlement of Kentucky Democrats of the day.

McConnell went on to recruit Republican Ed Whitfield—who had just as much personal dynamism as Lewis—to run in the First Congressional District in the fall. Both Lewis and Whitfield won; Whitfield became the first Republican ever elected to the First District.

My point with all this is that the political establishment in Kentucky at that time—conservative Southern Democrats—was a bloated and opaque bubble. Its bloated-ness allowed the good old boys to make room for more of their own inside and its opaqueness kept their less-than-altruistic dealings hidden from the masses, but those very same qualities kept the good old boys from witnessing the trouble that was brewing for them on the outside–in the real world.

Mitch McConnell burst their bubble.

Unfortunately, the Kentucky Republican Party that Mitch McConnell replaced the good old boy Democrats with was a political machine that set about inflaming the ugliest elements of Kentucky’s own culture: its racism, its bigotry, its sexism, its churlishness, its phobias, and its anti-intellectualism.

The thing to remember about Mitch McConnell (and this is something that his fellow Republicans in the U.S. Senate are discovering now about him in his capacity as Minority Leader) is that McConnell always has McConnell’s interests first. He’s not at all concerned about the long-term consequences of his tactics and actions on the people of Kentucky. What he’s counting on is that Kentuckians and the state’s chattering class will never fully digest the disaster that was McConnell’s Senate career so long as there’s plenty of pork named after him spread around the state.

Mitch McConnell took Kentucky, a state already at the bottom of the cultural and economic barrel of the nation, and he exacerbated the very social qualities of the place that had kept true progress (making gains on its peers, rather than playing catch up) out of reach for so long. McConnell’s strategy was to spear his political legacy with a wicked trident of slash-and-burn partisan politics, redneck populism, and moneyed corporate interests.

McConnell’s Kentucky GOP is today the political establishment in the state, and you can see what sort of establishment it is by the criminal behavior and incompetence of the administration of Governor Ernie Fletcher (R).

As I write, that Republican establishment is bunkering itself deep beneath the political reality on the ground in Kentucky. While Ernie Fletcher and his minions ratchet up their language of fear on expanded gaming and hate against sexual minorities and while Mitch McConnell continues to cultivate the corrupt environment of campaign finance in Washington that he fathered and stands steadfast behind the reckless presidency of George W. Bush, neither Fletcher or McConnell is making headway among Kentuckians.

Both are indeed consolidating support among their conservative base, but that base is shrinking. Kentuckians are waking up to the reality of what Fletcher, McConnell, and conservatives truly are.

The people of Kentucky are once again seething against their political establishment, but this time there is an energized and organized progressive Democratic party waiting in the wings. Whereas last time when Kentuckians cleaned political house they replaced bad with worse, this time the alternative to entrenched Republican corruption is a Democratic party that offers the hope of change and a better future for us all.

WHEN WILL SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL. HIS WIFE ELAINE CHAO AND MY CONGRESSMAN RON LEWIS R2 KENTUCKY ADOPT THE MORAL VALUES OF SENATOR SHERROD BROWN OF OHIO?

Jim Pence July 26th, 2007

When Senator Sherrod Brown was running for a seat in the House of Representatives over 10 years ago, he saw something wrong with this. He pledged not to accept his free government health care until everyone in the United States had the same luxury. (He’s still waiting.)

Brown reasoned that politicians should have the same privileges as those they represent. I know a lot of the Democrats running for President understand this principle. Monday night during their YouTube debate, Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Mike Gravel, Dennis Kucinich, Barack Obama, and Bill Richardson all pledged to work for the minimum wage should they be elected president — to show that they’re in touch with the plight of everyday Americans, and to make sure they are personally invested in making sure the minimum wage in this country is a livable one. Good for them.

Now, candidates, how about giving up your health care too? If elected president, you and your family will be entitled to free government health care, courtesy of the fine doctors at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. But nearly 50 million of your constituents will go without any medical care at all — and 18,000 of them will die during your first year in office simply because they lack health insurance. As the head of the government, how can you take advantage of its health care services, but deny it to so many citizens?

Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao says American workers are unkempt, impudent, and slothful

Matt Gunterman July 5th, 2007

Hey, Elaine, all’s I’m saying is if you think your job’s impossible, or the people whose interests you’re supposed to be looking out for just aren’t worth the trouble, you can always go elsewhere.

I mean, haven’t you spent pretty much your entire adult life on the public teat, just suckin’ away all the rich taxpayer goodness? Why not try the private sector, where the free market will judge you on your mental agility and actual managerial skills.

Yeah, Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao, you’re all for competition until it’s your ass that has to compete.

Here’s what Chao told PARADE Magazine:

[...]

“American employees must be punctual, dress appropriately and have good personal hygiene,” says Chao. “They need anger-management and conflict-resolution skills, and they have to be able to accept direction. Too many young people bristle when a supervisor asks them to do something.”

[...]

You call this kempt, Elaine?Do you call this kempt?

DC Dandy Mitch McConnell worth $5 Million

Shawn Dixon June 15th, 2007

Technically his wife, Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao, is the breadwinner in the family, but either way the couple owns a house in Washington, D.C. that is worth an estimated $5 million dollars.

From the AP story

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, said he held property in the District of Columbia worth $1 million-$5 million. But a large portion of the family assets is held by his wife, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao.

Hmm….the cushy Secretary of Labor job, which is a postion appointed by the President, is keeping the McConnell/Chao lights on in their posh D.C. house. No wonder Mitch McConnell supports President Bush 96% of the time and even called him “one of the greatest presidents in history.”

Perhaps a lavish $5 million dollar home in Washington, D.C. has caused Mitch McConnell to forget who he is representing. While Mitch McConnell has been living it up in D.C. and voting with the President to give tax cuts to the richest Americans (himself included), Kentuckians are having a hard time finding jobs. In many cases Kentuckians are living paycheck to paycheck. The unemployment rate is perfect indicator of the growing financial squeeze on Kentucky families. In February of this year the national unemployment rate was 4.6%, while Kentucky had an unemployment rate of 5.7%, one of the highest in the country.

But don’t you worry Mitch McConnell, we won’t let you forget your roots that easy. After voters bring you home from Washington, D.C. next November you’ll have plenty of time to get re-acquinted with Kentucky.

Energy Baron Says, “McConnell Sleeps With Your Boss.” Constituent says, “Eww! TMI!”

Terri Whitehouse April 10th, 2007

In a Media Matters story, Kathleen Henehan reports that Murray Energy Corp. CEO Robert Murray openly mocked Al Gore on CNN’s The Situation Room. CNN correspondent Carol Costello says of Murray and his stance on Gore’s climate change agenda:

If all of these emissions controls are being put into place all at one time, he fears that’ll be too expensive for companies to absorb. And what happens when that happens? They lay off workers.

Indubitably! Because everyone knows that the well-being of their employees is always the number one priority of coal companies. Am I right, ya’ll? No? Well how the hell was I supposed to know that? It is CNN after all, it’s not like they have the resources and qualified journalists to research topics and guests prior to filming or anything. If I wanted to do homework I wouldn’t watch TV.

Henehan rebuts:

Despite Murray’s purported sympathy for miners, the Pittsburgh office of the National Labor Relations Board issued a formal complaint against Murray and an associate in 2001 because they “[t]hreatened Union officers and its employees with reprisals for publicizing the labor dispute between the parties” and “[t]hreatened its employees with the loss of jobs, and the loss of wages and benefits if they failed to select new Union officers and because of their support for the Union,” according to a 2002 United Mine Workers Journal article.

But wait, it gets even grosser, says Henehan:

An October 20, 2006, article in Kentucky’s Lexington Herald-Leader described Murray as “a huge donor to Republican senators” and reported on a meeting at a Mine Safety and Health Administration [MSHA] office in which “inspectors confronted him [Murray] about safety problems at his mines.” During the meeting, Murray reportedly made reference to his connections to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and McConnell’s wife, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao: “Shouting at a table full of MSHA officials … Murray said: ‘Mitch McConnell calls me one of the five finest men in America, and the last I checked, he was sleeping with your boss,‘ according to notes of the meeting.” The article added: “Murray, in a recent interview, denied that he referred to McConnell ’sleeping with’ Chao.”

I think I need to take a shower now. Full text of the Media Matters report can be found here.

Mitch McConnell wins award: GOP Hypocrite of the Week

Matt Gunterman April 9th, 2007

Sen. Mitch McConnell wins the Buzzfalsh GOP Hypocrite of the Week award

Buzzflash awarded our very own Senator Mitch McConnell with its GOP Hypocrite of the Week award.

Wife and Secretary of Labor Elaine L. Chao, won the award on May 7, 2005. Buzzflash reports that McConnell and Chao are now the third married couple to have each won a HOTW award.

Is Secretary Elaine Chao’s corrupt Department of Labor next?

Matt Gunterman March 13th, 2007

After the new Democratic majority finishes shining some light on rampant corruption in Attorney General Alberto Gonzales’s Department of Justice, you have to wonder if the next target for cleanup won’t be Secretary Elaine Chao’s Department of Labor.

Senator Mitch McConnell and Secretary Elaine Chao

Ann Imse and Laura Frank reporting in the Rocky Mountain News, after all, find a high level of outrage on Capitol Hill (on both sides of the isle) over attempts in the Labor Department to complicate the process sick nuclear facility employees get treatment by. The plans were to draw things out long enough that the workers simply died first, and it was all to be done in the name of being a good “fiscal conservative.”

Rep. Mark Udall (D-CO) said of it, “Clearly, the administration put dollars above honoring the nation’s promise to the Cold War veterans,” and went on to compare the fiasco to the recent Walter Reed Army Medical Center scandal.

Plus, for Democrats, targeting a corrupt or incompetent Sec. Elaine Chao has the added bonus of complicating the life of obstinate Senator Mitch McConnell.

Sec. Elaine “SOL” Chao & Sen. Mitch McConnell Enjoy Derby Day

Mrs. McConnell (AKA: Elaine Chao) Oblivious or Complicit?

Matt Gunterman March 11th, 2007

The Rocky Mountain News lede says it all.

Federal officials secretly schemed to limit payouts for sick and dying nuclear weapons workers, including thousands from the Rocky Flats plant outside Denver, newly released documents show.

Elaine Chao: SOL?

Those “federal officials” just happen to be from Elaine Chao’s Department of Labor, and Secretary Chao is the woman in the dynamic duo that President George W. Bush called the “ultimate power couple” on March 2 at his $2.1 million fundraiser for McConnell. Imagine the pillow talk.

Read the article. It’ll boil your blood and make you wonder if we shouldn’t add a new category to the whole motif of DINO (Democrat in Name Only) and RINO (Republican in Name Only): AIMO, or American in Name Only.

What a spectacular cost-saving measure: draw the process out so long that the former employees simply die before they get treatment and care. The lengths these people will go to to save a buck for a tax cut, huh? Here’s what Assistant Secretary of Labor Victoria Lipnic had to say about the expanding costs of treating sick workers, “There is not a fiscal conservative left anywhere.” You are so right, Vicky. It’s such a waste of money. Everybody’s gotta die sometime, right? And billionaires only live once.

Many in Congress aren’t terribly happy about this. How much did Secretary Chao know? Whatever the answer, I don’t think it reflects kindly on her. She might be SOL in more ways than one.