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Showing posts with label AMBASSADOR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AMBASSADOR. Show all posts

Thursday, September 23, 2021

RSN: Jeff Cohen | Why Lindsey Graham Is Trying to Rescue Rahm Emanuel

 


 

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Sen. Linden Graham. (photo: Getty)
RSN: Jeff Cohen | Why Lindsey Graham Is Trying to Rescue Rahm Emanuel
Jeff Cohen, Reader Supported News
Cohen writes: "Rahm Emanuel is appealing for support from a set of politicians he has repeatedly relied on in his career: Republicans."

With civil rights groups and progressive members of Congress staunchly opposed to disgraced former Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel becoming a prestigious ambassador, Emanuel is appealing for support from a set of politicians he has repeatedly relied on in his career: Republicans.

Worried that certain Democratic senators will refuse to back him because of his administration’s infamous cover-up of a horrendous police murder of a black teenager – and other injustices against people of color in Chicago – Emanuel is now busy lining up GOP senators who will confirm him as the next U.S. ambassador to Japan. On Saturday, The Washington Post described Emanuel’s campaign for Republican help as “an aggressive behind-the-scenes effort”; the article’s headline: “Rahm Emanuel, a target of the left, may be rescued by Republicans.”

Three GOP senators told the Post that they will proudly vote to confirm Emanuel, including that pillar of integrity, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

One of Donald Trump’s most sycophantic allies in the Senate, Graham ran cover for Trump during both impeachment trials. That didn’t stop Graham from repeatedly calling last month for Biden’s impeachment over Afghanistan. I’m not kidding.

Graham was also a crucial and dishonest ally of Mitch McConnell in the right-wing takeover of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Now, Graham is an important ally in Emanuel’s campaign for ambassador to Japan.

This is not the first time Rahm Emanuel has turned to Republicans for rescue. The GOP rescued him in 1993, when he was a key White House aide, as the Clinton administration rammed the NAFTA trade pact though Congress. Most Democrats in Congress – responding to the base of the party, including union and environmental activists – voted no on NAFTA. Years later, Emanuel was still bragging about his role in NAFTA’s passage.

In 1996, when Republicans in Congress passed a punitive “welfare reform” bill that ended the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program, Emanuel was one of the loudest voices in a divided White House urging Clinton not to veto the bill. The president signed it, provoking anger among progressives and high-level resignations from the administration.

Having entered national politics in 1992 as the top fundraiser from corporate types for Bill Clinton’s first presidential run, Emanuel became known inside the White House for proposing conservative approaches to what were then called “wedge issues” – now known as “dog-whistle racism.” Emanuel urged Clinton to get “tough” on crime and on immigration through more deportations.

After leaving the Clinton White House, Emanuel worked for a Wall Street firm out of Chicago, making $18 million in 30 months. He then served three terms in Congress before becoming the White House chief of staff under Barack Obama, where he was a strident foe of progressives. At a 2010 meeting with liberal leaders who were planning to pressure conservative Democrats toward supporting healthcare reform, Emanuel – ever the diplomat – referred to them as “fucking retarded.”

Perhaps it’s no surprise that Emanuel is gaining support from the likes of Lindsey Graham.

What is surprising is that the Biden White House, with lagging popularity in the polls, is willing to shove its most loyal base – voters and activists of color – under the bus in order to fight for Emanuel’s confirmation. Team Biden finds itself allied with Republicans on behalf of a former scandal-plagued mayor notorious for closing 50 public schools, as well as mental health clinics, in predominantly black and brown neighborhoods in Chicago.

And then there’s the issue of unaccountable police misconduct under Emanuel and the suppressed dashcam video showing the police murder of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, shot 16 times by a police officer as he walked away from the officer. The video was conveniently suppressed for 13 months, through the duration of Emanuel’s 2015 reelection campaign. After a judge’s order finally forced the city of Chicago to release the video, a local poll showed that most Chicagoans wanted Mayor Emanuel to resign and few believed that he hadn’t seen the video prior to the court’s order.

The kind of police video suppression that occurred under Rahm Emanuel would have been outlawed under the “George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020” that was co-sponsored by more than 30 Democratic senators.

Either Joe Biden and those Democratic senators actually stand for the principle that “black lives matter” or they stand for Rahm Emanuel. They can’t stand for both.

While several Republican senators have publicly declared their support for Emanuel as ambassador, not one Democrat in the Senate has declared opposition. So far, the silence is deafening, and will be disgraceful if it continues despite all the anti-Rahm outrage coming from black and brown Democrats in the House – from Jamaal Bowman to Cori Bush to Mondaire Jones to AOC.

When he worked in Washington D.C., the bullying and exceedingly undiplomatic Emanuel earned the nickname “Rahmbo.” He’s the wrong person to be sent to Japan and a region brimming with tensions. If he’s given a pass and allowed to fail upward into this ambassadorship, it will speak horribly of our country. And of Democrats in the Senate who let it happen.



Jeff Cohen is co-founder of RootsAction.org, a retired journalism professor at Ithaca College, and author of Cable News Confidential: My Misadventures in Corporate Media. In 1986, he founded the media watch group FAIR

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Tuesday, August 24, 2021

RSN: Norman Solomon | Will Senate Democrats Stoop to Confirming Rahm Emanuel as Ambassador?

 

 

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23 August 21

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Rahm Emanuel. (photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images)
RSN: Norman Solomon | Will Senate Democrats Stoop to Confirming Rahm Emanuel as Ambassador?
Norman Solomon, Reader Supported News
Solomon writes: "The White House described Emanuel as having 'a distinguished career in public service,' but several progressive Democrats in Congress quickly went on the attack."

hen President Biden announced late Friday afternoon that he will nominate Rahm Emanuel to be the U.S. ambassador to Japan, the timing just before the weekend was clearly intended to minimize attention to the swift rebukes that were sure to come.

The White House described Emanuel as having “a distinguished career in public service,” but several progressive Democrats in Congress quickly went on the attack. “This is a travesty,” Rep. Mondaire Jones tweeted. “Senators of good conscience must not vote to confirm him.” Another African-American representative, Cori Bush, said that Emanuel “must be disqualified from ever holding an appointed position in any administration. Call your Senator and urge them to vote NO.”

The response from Rep. Rashida Tlaib was pointed: “If you believe Black lives indeed matter, then the Senate must reject his appointment immediately.” Tlaib accompanied her tweet with a link to an article that The Nation magazine published in the fall of 2018, when Emanuel was nearing the end of his eight years as Chicago’s mayor, with this sum-up: “The outgoing mayor's legacy will be defined by austerity, privatization, displacement, gun violence, and police brutality.”

All three congressmembers mentioned Emanuel’s responsibility for the notorious cover-up of the Chicago police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. For 13 months, during his campaign for re-election in 2015, Mayor Emanuel’s administration suppressed a ghastly dashboard-camera video showing the death of McDonald, an African American who was shot 16 times by a police officer as he walked away.

After Emanuel emerged as Biden’s likely choice for the ambassador job a few months ago, longtime Chicago journalist and activist Delmarie Cobb wrote a scathing assessment of his mayoral record. While mentioning that Emanuel “closed 50 public schools in predominantly Black and brown neighborhoods,” Cobb also pointed out that “he closed six of 12 mental health clinics in these communities.” She added: “Now, who needs access to mental health care more than Chicago’s Black and brown residents who are underserved, underemployed and under constant threat of violence?”

Emanuel’s dreadful record as mayor of Chicago was in keeping with his entire career, spanning several Machiavellian decades that included stints as a member of Congress, a high-level aide for Presidents Clinton and Obama, and an investment bank director using his connections to make $18 million in two and a half years. Emanuel cemented his reputation as a combative and powerful player in the Clinton White House, pushing through policies that harmed the working class and people of color, including the NAFTA trade deal, the infamous 1994 crime bill and punitive “welfare reform.”

That Biden has now chosen Rahm Emanuel to be the U.S. envoy to Japan – the world’s third-largest economy – is, among other things, a distinct presidential middle finger to the constituency that gave him the highest proportion of support among all demographic groups in last year’s general election: Black voters.

High-profile corporate Democrats were quick to lavish praise on the Emanuel nomination. Both of the Democratic senators from Illinois helped lead the testimonials. Dick Durbin said in a statement that Emanuel “has a lifetime of public service preparing him to speak for America.” Tammy Duckworth chimed in, saying that his “years of experience make him well suited to represent the United States of America in this important role.”

Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blew hazy blue smoke to an absurd degree, declaring: “In the House and, indeed, across the nation, Rahm Emanuel is known and respected by all for his relentlessness and track record of success. His great experience, from the U.S. House to the White House, will serve our nation well, as he works to deepen one of our nation’s most important alliances, champion American interests abroad and advance regional security and prosperity.”

After the nomination announcement, the Chicago Sun-Times reported that “the Biden administration is apparently willing to spend some domestic political capital with an Emanuel nomination,” and the newspaper noted that “progressives mounted a drive to block the nomination of Emanuel.” That drive, being coordinated by my colleagues at RootsAction.org, has already generated several thousand individual constituent emails to senators urging them to oppose the nomination. As RootsAction co-founder Jeff Cohen told the Sun-Times, “the #RejectRahm/‘NoToRahm’ campaign has virtually organized itself.”

A coalition of 20 organizations, mostly national while including several Chicago-based groups, has launched a grassroots campaign so that every senator will hear from constituents urging a “no” vote on Emanuel. In June, 28 victims and relatives of victims of police violence in Chicago released a joint statement, along with a poignant video, denouncing Emanuel and decrying the prospect that he’ll be rewarded with an ambassador post.

Despite the pressure for party-line conformity, Democratic support for the nomination could fracture in the Senate. Replying to letters from constituents urging him to oppose Emanuel for ambassador, Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley – who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee – seemed responsive.

“I have heard from Oregonians who are concerned about certain aspects of Mr. Emanuel’s record during his tenure as Chicago’s mayor, in particular his administration’s response to the tragic shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, a Black teenager who was killed by Chicago police in 2014,” Sen. Merkley wrote. He added that “at a time of a national conversation about police accountability and combatting systemic racism, there is so much more that we can and must do to address racism and discrimination in our law enforcement practices.… Please be assured that I will keep your views in mind should Mr. Emanuel’s nomination come before the Senate for consideration.”

Merkley is one of 11 Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which will convene a public hearing with Rahm Emanuel before voting on his nomination. Whether Merkley and other senators will be open to preventing an Ambassador Emanuel from going to Tokyo is unclear at best. But it’s possible.



Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and the author of many books including War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. He was a Bernie Sanders delegate from California to the 2016 and 2020 Democratic National Conventions. Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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