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Posts archived in Executive - incoming

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6:44 PM

Invoice # 4 (attn: BP)

A little while back the talk of the town was a little thing called the liability cap, a legally enshrined maximum amount an (oil) company could forced to pay to the government in the event of a catastrophic oil spill or other environmental disaster. Every news outlet buzzed about what Congress should do; Congress boiled with debate. All over the issue of whether or not it was conscionable to augment the arbitrary decision to limit liability for environmental catastrophes to 75 million dollars.

Today however, the news is that the White House is officially collecting the 4th of many payments from BP, sending a bill for $99.7 million to BP, Transocean, Anadarko and MOEX.

Remember, wary traveler, BP voluntarily acquiesced in deciding to pay any and all costs of the spill. Our government had no legal framework upon which they could compel BP to do so. BP chose to own up.

Powers of coercion have quite the heavy burden when they are trusted to an entity larger than ourselves, but then again, the weight of the crude pressing upon the surface of our shores and floating in stasis in our waters bears its own unique burden. Why does that burden become coupled with political theater the second it reaches the Congress?

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11:04 AM

The Spill Reaches Chicago

[graffiti in Chicago shows the Northern Gannet, enshrined as the first oiled bird recovered by BP]

The Deepwater Horizon oil rig that exploded and sank on April 20, 2010 and has since spilled millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico is an absolute enigma. Even after following this story for the 4+ weeks since it surfaced, I have yet to find anyone who can speak with certainty about this spill, or its fallout.

How much oil is actually leaking? What are the real costs of this disaster, and what are the real costs of the fossil fuels we consume? What does it mean for the future of the US’s energy policy? What are the policy implications of elected officials in Florida and Louisiana saying they no longer support off-shore drilling? Will there be a calcified “drill, baby, drill” cult, unmoved by this catastrophe?

Most importantly though – how will we ever wean ourselves off oil if our politicians, leaders of industry, government, and citizenry stomach this spill?

Yet, there remains good (?) news on the horizon.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is keeping the pressure on BP to clean up their mess, saying in response to BP’s elated statements that an attempt to stem the flow of oil out of the gushing well is (finally) working, that the technique is “not a solution to the problem and it is not yet clear how successful it may be…we will not rest until BP permanently seals the well head, the spill is cleaned up, and the communities and natural resources of the Gulf Coast are restored and made whole.”

That is it for the (somewhat) good news. Here is yet the bad news:

Researchers from the National Institute for Undersea Science and Technology said they had detected the slicks lurking just beneath the surface of the sea and at depths of 4,000ft (1,200m).

Samantha Joye, a marine science professor at the University of Georgia, said: “It could take years, possibly decades, for the system to recover from an infusion of this quantity of oil and gas.

“We’ve never seen anything like this before. It’s impossible to fathom the impact.”

Chemical dispersants BP has been dumping underwater may be preventing the oil from rising to the top of the ocean, the scientists said.

The find suggests the scale of the potential environmental disaster is much worse than previously feared…Some scientists cast doubt on BP’s estimate of the oil flow rate, saying the widely repeated figure of 5,000 barrels per day dramatically understates the real amount.

…Mississippi has become the third US state to have traces of oil wash up on its coast, along with Louisiana and Alabama.The spill is threatening to eclipse the 1989 Exxon Valdez leak off Alaska as America’s worst environmental disaster. (BBC 5/17/10) [emphasis added]

Welcome to the 21st century, I suppose.

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7:43 PM

Restructuring the MMS

For more info about the Obama Administration’s proposal to break up the Mineral Management Service into two separate agencies and some additional background info, check out this article by ProPublica.

Condensed version follows:

Splitting the agency has the potential to help, but it doesn’t go far enough to address the agency’s main conflict of interest, said Mandy Smithberger, an investigator at the Project on Government Oversight, a nonprofit watchdog group.

“The conflict of mission at MMS is bigger than that issue,” Smithberger told me. The conflict also looms between the leasing and royalties sides, which “seems not to be addressed at all” by the proposed restructuring. To the extent that a desire to collect royalties influenced how stringent inspections were, the new separation will help, she said. But a desire to collect more royalties could also influence the decision to move along lease sales in order to boost production.

Smithberger and others, including MMS-critic Rep. Darrell Issa [6], R-Calif., have called the move a good “first step.”

This past week, it has become a looming reality that the oil rig which exploded and sank into the Gulf of Mexico, spilling thousands of gallons of oil a day, is not under control and poses vast environmental risks for the area.

Similarly becoming clear is that this newly acknowledged national disaster will re-shape the national discourse on energy policy concerning domestic and off-shore drilling specifically. As the world watched the oil slick grow to the now epic expanse of 130 miles long, an off-shore wind farm was approved in Cape Cod, Massachusetts after 9 years of mucking around in the legal system. Leaving the almost ironic contrast of these two pieces of energy news aside, a more fundamental question resounds in my brain: Is the Government ultimately responsible for the direction of and oversight of our national energy pursuits, and is this reality only tacitly acknowledged in situations where massive catastrophes occur and the private sector that profits from our energy pursuits proves to be incapable of dealing with the consequences?

Wordy, yes, but goddamn important to raise. As in the case of the oil rig, whose consequences in terms of area and volume effected have tripled in just the last day, it is overwhelmingly clear that the Federal Government (DoHS, DoD, Coast Guard) needed to act to control the spill. I say this because even Louisiana’s Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal has asserted that oil giant BP, whose rig it was that initiated this disaster, cannot handle the clean up and mitigation efforts: “I do have concerns that BP’s resources are not adequate,” (BBC 5/1/10).

Despite these mounting concerns that big oil cannot handle the consequences of their endeavors, the company has repeatedly downplayed any suggestions of such, with their COO Doug Suttles saying “[it had mounted] the largest response effort ever done in the world,” (BBC 5/1/10)

Continuing along that vein though, the COO’s admissions as to the stark reality of tampering with such dangerous, uncertain oil exploration leaves much to be wanting in terms of clean energy in this country:

Officials from BP and the federal government have repeatedly said they had prepared for the worst, even though a plan filed last year with the government said it was highly unlikely that a spill or leak would ever result from the Deep Horizon rig.

“There are not much additional available resources in the world to fight this thing offshore,” said Doug Suttles, BP’s chief operating officer for exploration and production, in an interview. “We’ve basically thrown everything we have at it.”

Mr. Suttles said BP’s efforts did not change after it was disclosed Wednesday night that the leak was estimated at 5,000 barrels a day, five times larger than initial estimates had suggested. He said BP, which is spending roughly $6 million a day and will likely spend far more when oil reaches land, had already been mobilizing for a far larger spill. However, he did not deny that BP initially thought the slick could be stopped before it reached the coastline.

“In the early days, the belief was that we probably could have contained it offshore,” Mr. Suttles said. “Unfortunately, since the event began we haven’t had that much good weather.” (NYTimes 5/1/10)

Veiled in the sympathized PR magic that any oil company must possess is the inability to ignore the fact that even when risk is assumed to be minimal, that risk is relative to the forces at play. BP, for all their planning, resources, and expertise in these deep-ocean drilling operations, now owns the fallout from this spill. 6$ million a day is a lot to spend on attempting to clean an ocean of oil, but this shit is just now reaching land and that land happens to be protected wildlife reserves. On top of that, there have been nearly 24 hr relief efforts underway for the last 9 days, with the Coast Guard at the helm, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano issuing statements and dedicating time to the relief efforts by setting up a second command station in Mobile, Alabama, the Department of Defense now dedicating resources and time, and fianlly President Obama will be heading to Louisiana tomorrow to see the fallout firsthand and issue another public response.

Whoever bears the final costs seems negligible at this point, even though it is likely that BP’s shareholders will suffer more than BP’s executives, because the damage caused by BP’s work will be irreversible. Burning layers of oil off the surface of the ocean, an unfettered well 5,000 feet below the surface of the ocean gushing 210,000 gallons of oil a day, and now thousands more gallons of sub-surface dispersant (whose environmental effects are unknown) are being deployed to attempt to prevent oil from reaching the surface of the ocean.

Of course, the question politicians of all stripes are rushing to answer is: what does this spill, this imminent environmental disaster, imply for future off-shore oil exploration?

At the heart of that question, and ultimately the un-spoken truth revolving around this issue, is that the Federal Government must own their energy policy and its consequences.

If Sarah Palin is to get her way and we “drill here, drill now”, the risks of future catastrophes such as this one becomes multiplied by some unknown factor (even if rigs are determined safe, anything can happen because the forces at play are larger than BP’s pursuit of drilling permits). The proponents of this approach seem, however, to label epic environmental catastrophe as a consequence they are willing to accept in pursuit of a Federal energy policy that favors any and all available forms of resource extraction. I find this distasteful at the least and reckless at the most. Sarah Palin’s habitat will not be the ones covered in rusty, sweet crude oil because of that decision, nor will it be our energy future that is secured by such a move – it is merely a stop-gap, a band-aid that gives the appearance of proactive government intervention while disguising its inherent risks as weighing less than the benefits.

But what should not get lost in this conversation is our nationally accepted perceptions that the Federal Government needs to direct our nation’s and our economy’s use of natural resources.

So my question becomes, why drive a train down dead end tracks? Why should we invest our country in a short-term, low-benefit, high-cost solution?

Is it for the wind-fall profit taxes that we can use to reduce our debt? Or is it for the sake of garnering the good graces of extremely moneyed, well-connected special interests for the next 2 decades or so – to provide in campaign donations and non-adversarial policy campaigns?

And if either of these are the case, no one has yet to prove that any humble citizen’s life will improve because BP gets access to formerly protected areas. To be sure, there are negative consequences inherent in any energy policy decision made at this point, but what has been fundamentally ignored in many’s consideration of expanding domestic drilling is how marginally, if at all, the positives outweigh the negatives.

As such, I will be following the ensuing debate over how to realign our energy policy in recognition of these consequences, and whether anyone will be so bold as to offer viable alternatives that don’t amount to appeasement of special interests.

And damnit, our country doesn’t need any more stock photos of little helpless animals or shorelines coated in oil. What are we going to do about that?

Why is it that the White House is the only source bold enough to categorically disprove the muck coming from Republicans?

Hah! Gibbs just accused Fox’s Major Garrett of not reading the memo authored by Secretary Gates and thus mis-characterizing it as a result of ignorance. Very well played Gibbs, just call them out as being shorthanded with their objective research, then continue that dig by challenging them to show you the classified memo of which the article speaks and from which their criticism is drawn.

This comes not but 10 minutes after the press pool continued to air their grievances with the administration, wondering if their access will be restricted. Gibbs rebutted with the fact that this is the most transparent administration in history, citing the example of Obama’s willingness to publish unedited visitor logs to the WH. Somehow I don’t think that calmed the self-preservationist concerns of the press pool.

It may come as a surprise for some, but these press briefings typically are comprised of reporters who ask the most tangential of questions. One about a Pennsylvania Democratic candidate’s ad, some about trying to get every single little bit of information about potential SC justice candidates (specifically she seems incredibly concerned about how many people are on Obama’s list of potential justices), some about the volcanic ash and specifically whether the US will do like Britain and try to load up stranded Americans on US Naval ships and sail them back to the states (the answer was no), and more and more and more. The kicker is that most of these questions don’t seek to answer any real pressing concerns, especially not concerns or answers that only Robert Gibbs can provide.

On top of all of that, when asked to answer to or respond to the bigoted pandering of Tea-baggers like Tom Tancredo, Gibbs simply declines to respond, saying he could waste an entire press briefing trying to comment on ridiculous claims such as that of Tancredo. Again, well done Gibbs – Tancredo has gotten enough press for making a comment that you’d expect to hear on an elementary school playground, so why give him any more credence or credibility by answering his bigoted remarks?

My favorite part of watching a press briefing though? When Gibbs wraps up an answer loaded with oft-heard administration talking points and simply says “Okay, thanks guys”, waves, and walks off.

Gibbs has his moments, but ultimately he waffles too much. Says too many words where few should suffice, and isn’t that good at deflected despite how often he does so.

So the question becomes, when will Obama pick Gibbs’s replacement?

While President Obama’s recent announcements about NASA have stirred up controversy (namely between Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong), one big detail that moves beyond squabbling astronauts has caught my eye.

We’re going to land on an ASTEROID!

Fuck the moon, NASA. That’s right, fuck the moon – it hasn’t done anything new in quite some time, hasn’t even been anywhere interesting. But an asteroid? Who know where those things have been?

It seems to be a goal that has great potential for new discoveries, and none with the dubious intent of moon colonies (for those of us who absolutely love artificial ozone and hate that pesky blue sky and those menacing white, fluffy clouds).

But more to the point: With approaching realities such as landing humans on Mars and exploring an asteroid, we are living in the future.

Don’t believe me? Don’t take my word for it, just listen to my man Barry:

“Now, the challenges facing our space program are different, and our imperatives for this program are different than in decades past,” the president said. “But while the measure of our achievements has changed a great deal over the past fifty years, what we do — or fail to do — in seeking new frontiers is no less consequential for our future in space and here on Earth…

…Fifty years after the creation of NASA, our goal is no longer just a destination to reach,” Obama said. “Our goal is the capacity for people to work and learn, and operate and live safely beyond the Earth for extended periods of time, ultimately in ways that are more sustainable and even indefinite. And in fulfilling this task, we will not only extend humanity’s reach in space — we will strengthen America’s leadership here on Earth.”

When the First Lady is trumpeting the tackling of childhood obesity as her cause celebre, it is hard to ignore the subtle wisdom of the Onion:

EVANSVILLE, IN—In an effort to keep pace with the rapid growth of American mouthfuls, flatware manufacturer KitchenMaster announced yesterday the addition of a fifth tine to its line of dinner forks. “These days, a traditional four-tined fork is just not enough to handle the quantities of food people shove down their throats,” said company spokesman Ken Krimstein, holding up a fork supporting six separate tortellini, two turkey sausages, and some mashed potatoes. “To stay relevant to our customer base and bring back some of those who have given up on using utensils entirely, this was an adjustment we just had to make.” Krimstein added that the augmented forks would soon be followed by 25 percent deeper spoons and 3-gallon gravy boats.(2/17/10).

Likewise, 7/11 will debut the Super Big Gulp this spring – the cup doubles as shelter for homeless children!

Today Organizing for America (the folks who brought you the epic campaign that elected America’s first black president) announced their final push to pass Health Care Reform. Check out the Final March for Reform here.

If you happen to have access to a copier and a printer, and know of store fronts and blank walls that could be more persuasive, print up those fliers and paste them up. Its a Presidentially sponsored mass printing, distributing, and posting campaign!

Now is the time – not only for health reform, but with this latest action by Obama’s organizing arm I think it is prime time to push for decriminalizing public art. Vandalism is its codename, but underneath those messy scrawlings of co-opted identities lies an opportunity for vibrant renewal of drab urban and suburban environments, and Obama’s tentative endorsement of graffiti-based public information campaign vindicates the notion that the acres of prime real estate that are street walls and blank building edges can serve a larger purpose than the owner’s wish for a spotless gray concrete block wall.

Tags will succumb to aesthetically appealing, publicly accepted art in only a matter of time. Those just dipping their toes in the water, tagging this, tagging that, will drop it quickly as the novel thrill of breaking a law fades away. For the few whom this becomes an outlet for self-expression and creative exploration, they will no longer be forced to live an underground life and will be able to practice their art in the open and in the daylight.

It is this suppressing of self-expression that defined the last century. Moving forward we as a nation should encourage self-expression and halt the criminalization of these acts (graffiti, censorship of broadcast networks, gay marriage, etc.). Obama seems like a pretty liberal guy; is he liberal enough though, to tackle the stigmas that have made graffiti synonymous with gangs and urban decay?

..Start-up MTPV, which was spun out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is seeking to commercialize a technology for converting heat into electricity. The idea is to use waste heat from industrial processes, such as making glass or steel, to make electricity, according to company executives.  Pictured here is a prototype thermophotovoltaic system that uses a chip sandwiched with a traditional solar cell. Heat makes one layer “glow” electromagnetic energy that is then converted into electricity using a photovoltaic cell, according to the company. (CNET Mar. 4, 2010)

This is just one of the many new technologies that are being used to try and obtain some of the 400$ million in grant funding from the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (min. 500,000$, max 20,000,000$ awards) that was created by Congress in 2007 and finally funded in 2009.

Much of the logic for such an investment is that based upon past periods of gross, radical technological advance, there is reason to think it could happen again with energy technologies. I buy it. And the logic for our government to prod our country in that direction is basically that we want to be the ones who capitalize off this technology the most. It sounds kinda rough when I put it like that, but that is definitely the common wisdom in political circles. Environmentalists will tell you about larger issues of ecosystems, habitat destruction, climate change, and pollution. But the point where something actually starts to happen with clean energy that benefits us and our neighbor’s lives is the point where it becomes a better business decision to develop clean, renewable, carbon-free energy technologies than it is to continue to develop dirty, finite, pure carbon energy. The promise of refillable coffers of investment, start-up, development, manufacturing, and implementation funds for new clean energy technologies starts to make it a good decision.

ARPA-E this week announced its grant solicitations for grid storage to complement wind and solar power, for energy-efficient air conditioning, and for efficient power electronics for wind turbines or LED lighting. The agency has already awarded $151 million to researchers developing methods for storing carbon dioxide underground and improving electric vehicle energy storage…[and is evaluating] everything from a Velkess flywheel energy storage system to an Algaeventure Systems plan for extracting algae from water. Entrepreneurs are also pursuing nuclear fusion and the conversion of carbon dioxide and methane gas into a low-carbon liquid fuel. (CNET)

A leading conservative voice for education reform during Bush sr.’s tenure and into the 90s has had a revelation. Diane Ravitch, who served in Bush’s Department of Education, is currently a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institute and has become a leading figure in the movement against applying market-based logic to education reform and to re-vitalize our public schools. This movement is characterized primarily by a push-back against the absurd logic that propelled No Child Left Behind into “21st century education reform” status under George W. Bush. This logic was supported by a bipartisan Congress in 2001 and dominated the mindset of the previous administrations though it hadn’t resulted in major congressional action until 2002. On the topic of recent attempts to reform our education system, she asserts:

“Accountability, as written into federal law, was not raising standards but dumbing down the schools,” [Ravitch] writes. “The effort to upend American public education and replace it with something that was market-based began to feel too radical for me.”

“Nations like Finland and Japan seek out the best college graduates for teaching positions, prepare them well, pay them well and treat them with respect,” she said. “They make sure that all their students study the arts, history, literature, geography, civics, foreign languages, the sciences and other subjects. They do this because this is the way to ensure good education. We’re on the wrong track.”

Her input may continue to bear an increasing influence in Washington as the Obama administration continues its efforts to rectify our ailing public school system and as NCLB faces re-authorization in the coming year. On the issue of NCLB, Ravitch wrote in 2007 that:

Under the law, the states devise their own standards and their own tests. Based on the test results, every school is expected to make “adequate yearly progress” in grades three to eight so as to be on track to meet that goal of universal proficiency by 2014. Schools that do not meet their annual target for every group of students — as defined by race, poverty, language and disability status — are subject to increasingly onerous sanctions written into the federal law.

Schools that fail to meet their target for two consecutive years must offer their students the choice to go to a more successful public school; if they fail the following year, they must provide tutoring to their students. If the students continue to miss their target, the entire teaching and administration staff may be replaced, or the school may be turned over to state control, or it may be converted into a charter school.

Yet these tough sanctions thus far have been ineffective. Federal agencies report that only about 1 percent of eligible students take advantage of switching schools and fewer than 20 percent of eligibles receive extra tutoring.

In inner cities, where academic performance is weakest, only a handful of students move to successful schools because there are very few seats available to them. In rural America, choice is limited by the small number of other schools in the geographic area. Furthermore, neither research nor experience validates any of the “remedies” written into law. There is little evidence that failing schools improve if they are turned over to state control or converted to charter status.

No Child Left Behind can, however, be salvaged if policymakers recognize that they need to reverse the roles of the federal government and the states. In our federal system, each level of government should do what it does best. The federal government is good at collecting and disseminating information. The states and school districts, being closer to the schools, teachers and parents than the federal government, are more likely to be flexible and pragmatic about designing reforms to meet the needs of particular schools.

Her policy recommendations seem to have fallen upon attentive ears, as Education Secretary Arne Duncan seems to have echoed many of Ravitch’s concerns in a recent speech on the re-authorization of ESEA/NCLB:

NCLB helped expand the standards and accountability movement. Today, we expect districts, principals and teachers to take responsibility for the academic performance of their schools and students. We can never let up on holding everyone accountable for student success. That is what we are all striving for.

Until states develop better assessments—which we will support and fund through Race to the Top—we must rely on standardized tests to monitor progress—but this is an important area for reform and an important conversation to have.

I also agree with some NCLB critics: it unfairly labeled many schools as failures even when they were making real progress—it places too much emphasis on absolute test scores rather than student growth—and it is overly prescriptive in some ways while it is too blunt an instrument of reform in others.

But the biggest problem with NCLB is that it doesn’t encourage high learning standards. In fact, it inadvertently encourages states to lower them. The net effect is that we are lying to children and parents by telling kids they are succeeding when, in fact, they are not…

Yet to divulge working details of the policy transformation, Duncan and Obama have definitely latched onto the concerns emanating from the growing gap between American students and students in many other developed nations. Among the key tenets of the Obama administration’s re-framing of the education debate are the fair, respectable compensation of educators; increased control over reforms for state and local government; metering curriculum to include a wide range of focus areas as opposed to the narrowing to reading and math as supported by NCLB; and a system that ultimately focuses upon long-term success in high school graduation and college graduation:

So today I am calling on all of you to join with us to build a transformative education law that offers every child the education they want and need—a law that recognizes and reinforces the proper role of the federal government to support and drive reform at the state and local level.

Let’s build a law that respects the honored, noble status of educators—who should be valued as skilled professionals rather than mere practitioners and compensated accordingly.

Let us end the culture of blame, self-interest and disrespect that has demeaned the field of education. Instead, let’s encourage, recognize, and reward excellence in teaching and be honest with each other when it is absent.

Let us build a law that demands real accountability tied to growth and gain both in the individual classroom and in the entire school—rather than utopian goals—a law that encourages educators to work with children at every level, the gifted and the struggling—and not just the tiny percent near the middle who can be lifted over mediocre bar of proficiency with minimal effort. That’s not education. That’s game-playing tied to bad tests with the wrong goals.

Let us build a law that discourages a narrowing of curriculum and promotes a well-rounded education that draws children into sciences and history, languages and the arts in order to build a society distinguished by both intellectual and economic prowess. Our children must be allowed to develop their unique skills, interests, and talents. Let’s give them that opportunity.

Let us build a law that brings equity and opportunity to those who are economically disadvantaged, or challenged by disabilities or background—a law that finally responds to King’s inspiring call for equality and justice from the Birmingham jail and the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

Let us build an education law that is worthy of a great nation—a law that our children and their children will point to as a decisive moment in America’s history—a law that inspires a new generation of young people to go into teaching—and inspires all America to shoulder responsibility for building a new foundation of growth and possibility.

This about-face is encouraging, to say the least but when coupled with the Obama administration’s strides in moving the debate about America’s public schools towards students and away from politicians, the about-face seems inordinately logical. It seems strange to consider such well-timed initiatives as inordinately logical, but when compared to the top-down imposition of rules, standards and sanctions created under NCLB, it is heartening for politicians and executive officials to be speaking to the concerns of parents and students rather than to the ideologies of isolated think-tankers. Maybe Ravitch isn’t so isolated in that think-tank after all.

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9:12 AM

Reconciling Healthy Differences

Well, reconciling something – hopefully this time it will be the reconciling of Washington with what the majority of the electorate wants : comprehensive health care reform with at least a national public plan. I for one have had enough of the emphasis placed upon bipartisanship to pass this legislation (Tom Schaller on 538.com basically ruins the argument that bipartisanship means anything tangible here). That is why I was delighted to read this morning in the NYTimes that the health bill the Obama administration is preparing ahead of the bipartisan summit is being crafted expressly for the purpose of attaching to a budget bill that won’t be subject to minority hijacking (filibuster).

Numerous Democratic leaders in the Senate have expressed their willingness to use the budget reconciliation process in recent days and weeks, but hold outs still exist – those who think that using Senate rules to pass legislation with a simple majority constitutes some sort of disregard for “the will of the Senate” (to borrow a phrase Orrin Hatch used to try and cast Obama as a tyrant over the move to use recess appointments to break the Repub’s stranglehold on his nominees).

On top of all this, it shows that there is still a damn good chance that this bill will be revitalized and removed of certain detrimental give-aways that weren’t meant to improve the bill but rather to gain conservative votes (of which zero were gained).

Monday should be the day that we see exactly what sort of health care bill Obama thinks should act as a jumping off point to pass with a simple majority. I’ve seen many articles on this reconciled bill that seem to cast doubt upon whether or not Democrats have enough votes to pass a comprehensive bill through reconciliation…but I think these folks are forgetting that the Senate bill passed with exactly 60 votes in December, and the House passed a much more progressive piece of legislation in the fall with 220 votes (including 1 republican).