Friday, February 27, 2009

Mean Gene Ripping Obama Machine

Congressman Gene Taylor (Maverick-Coast) continues his appraisal of the President Obama's fiscal policies. Unlike other so-called Blue Dog Democrats in Mississippi, Taylor always puts his mouth where our money ought not be.

He says of President Obama's budget:
“I don’t like it…change is not running up even bigger deficits that George Bush did.”

“That’s what George Bush did very well. Apparently that’s what President Obama is doing.”

As a member of the Armed Service Committee, Taylor noted the budget only gives the Defense Department a “small increase,” which he said would barely cover the cost of living adjustments for the military.

Taylor pointed to President Obama’s inaugural address that called for Americans to make sacrifices, saying “It’s certainly not reflected in his budget.”
Thanks to Mississippi Congress Blog for this response.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Change we can spend

Congress's Porky Pols Pig Out on Fine $Wine: Big Bucks to Canoes & Tattoos
Congress went on a pork-a-palooza yesterday, approving a massive spending bill with big bucks for Hawaiian canoe trips, research into pig smells, and tattoo removal - all while the nation faces an economic crisis.

Among the recipients of federal largesse is the Polynesian Voyaging Society of Honolulu, which got a $238,000 "earmark" in the bill. The group organizes sea voyages in ancient-style sailing canoes like the ones that first brought settlers to Hawaii.
Top 10 Obama Blunders in Just One Month
Geithner, Daschle, Killefer, Solis. Can’t Obama find people who paid all their taxes?
Reality Check for Joe Biden
Wednesday morning on the CBS Early Show, Vice President Joe Biden asked, "But what I don't understand from Governor Jindal is what would he do? In Louisiana, there's 400 people a day losing their jobs. What's he doing?"

But that claim is wrong if you look at the numbers from the Louisiana Workforce Commission. "In December, Louisiana was the only state in the nation besides the District of Columbia, according to the national press release, that added employment over the month," said Patty Granier with the Louisiana Workforce Commission. "The state gained 3,700 jobs for the seasonally adjusted employment," Granier said of the most recent figures.

Those numbers are available on Louisiana's employment website, laworks.net. Also available on the site are the state's latest unemployment statistics, statistics that appear to directly contradict what the vice president said Wednesday morning.

It's unclear where the vice president got his unemployment figures from.

A call to the White House on the source of Mr. Biden's information has not been returned.
Joe Biden is making Sarah Palin look smarter and smarter every day.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Biden's Stanford Financial Connection not his first to questionable finances

Y'all Politics has this interesting item regarding Stanford Financial Group and a related hedge fund owned by Hunter Biden (son of Joe) and Jim Biden (brother of Joe).

This gives us pause to make a gratuitous response once again regarding Biden's connection to the Mississippi Scruggs shenanigans. Y'all Politics has been good at keeping us posted on this subject over the years, now.

The Mess in Mississippi, Redux: The Joe Biden Connection

While Biden divested himself of Dickie and Zach Scruggs contributions, there may have been some Scruggs, Patterson, Balducci money he missed divesting.

Y'all also has an invitation to a Joe Biden Fundraiser in 2007 hosted by Dickie Scruggs, Tim Balducci & Steve Patterson.

And who can forget the wiretaps of Patterson and Balducci discussing their work with Jim Biden. Or the AP story highlighting the wit and Mississippi connection of Joe Biden.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Florida looks to restrict litigation privateering, will Mississippi follow?

This letter to the editor in Sunday's Clarion Ledger nails it.
The Clarion Ledger's recent editorial ("Secrecy: Senate backslides on openness," Feb. 13)) made a great point: Secrecy is comfortable for some officials, but it is bad for taxpayers. Efforts have been made in the Mississippi House and the Senate to remove the comfortable secrecy surrounding the office of attorney general when it comes to secret contingency fee lawsuits. Not only is it the public's right to know to whom the attorney general is giving contracts, but we also ought to know who he is empowering to litigate against our businesses with the power of the state.

Currently, trial lawyers can get the blessing of Attorney General Jim Hood, fly the flag of Mississippi and use the power of the government to sue a business, and then after taking their share, give a piece of the booty to the government. If we can't end the days of privateering, we should at least know who is sailing the seas on our behalf.
Indeed.

Florida, it seems, is seeking to put that end the trial bar racket by putting sunshine on lawyers, according to this piece in the Wall Street Journal.
The relationship between trial lawyers and state Attorneys General has been one of the more lucrative rackets of the past decade. In the latest sign the tide may be turning, the Florida legislature is now considering a law, supported by Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, that would limit the amount plaintiffs lawyers could take home when they piggyback on lawsuits brought by state prosecutors.

This unholy alliance was employed most famously in tobacco cases and copied in shakedowns from pharmaceuticals to insurance. AGs send jackpot cases to the trial attorneys, who turn around and kick some of their contingency-fee winnings back to the AGs in campaign contributions. By outsourcing the work, Attorneys General can file more cases, raising their political profile. The lawyers, meanwhile, wield the power of the state and its publicity machine to force companies to settle.
The Florida bill would cap attorneys fees, require competitive bidding, and make contracts transparent by posting them online.
Legislation similar to the Florida bill has been on the march in other states where contingency fees have been a source of legal abuse. Colorado, Connecticut, Kansas and Minnesota, North Dakota, Texas and Virginia have all passed reforms governing the attorney general or the state's ability to retain personal injury lawyers. Among the laws are requirements for competitive bidding, limits on contingency fee contracts and increased transparency.

As former Virginia Attorney General Jerry Kilgore, who oversaw similar reforms in his state in 2002 puts it, "You need to make sure that the outside counsel works for the state, not the other way around."
Will Mississippi be one of those states, or will Jim Hood continue handing out no-bid contracts to his campaign contributors?

Friday, February 20, 2009

Hood Can't Prosecute Langston, But He Can Defend His $14 million

Let me get this straight.

Attorney General Jim Hood can not prosecute (now disbarred and convicted judge briber and Hood's former Special Assistant Attorney General...and Hood's former top campaign contributor) Joey Langston for his role in corrupting our state's judicial system because in Hood's words, "I'm too close to them. It would be like prosecuting my relatives."

And Hood would not represent the state of Mississippi on behalf of Governor Haley Barbour because it would conflict with his duties to his other clients the legislature and the judiciary, even though they were not parties to the lawsuit.

But NOW, Jim Hood wants to protect the $14 million contingency fee contract he gave to Joey Langston and use his office to defend that fee against the State Auditor who seeks to recover the money for the state of Mississippi.

So Jim Hood can't prosecute Joey Langston because he is like family. But he sure can defend his $14 million payout. I guess his conflict is only there when he has to do something he doesn't want to do.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Larry Buffington: Admissions Caught On Tape

It ain't getting better for Judge Larry Buffington. Now a complaint has been filed against him with the Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance. And the evidence, as shown on WLBT, is pretty strong.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Oxford Trial Lawyer Fundraiser for Jim Kitchens

If you've got a few thousand to spare for a Supreme Court Justice, and you happen to be in Oxford, stop by the Tollison Law Firm on Thursday. Some trial lawyers are still raising money for Jim Kitchens.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Scruggs? Patterson? Balducci? Uh, pay no attention. Hey - look at Entergy!

Tuesday Dickie Scruggs plead guilty in another judicial bribery case. Friday, Steve Patterson and Timothy Balducci will be sentenced for their role in the first judicial bribery case. A couple of guys who received tens of thousands of dollars from these now felons don't want you thinking about that. Instead, they're attacking someone who hasn't been shown to have done anything wrong, and in fact, has newly realeased evidence that they're doing things right.

Brandon Presley and Jim Hood don't want you thinking about corrupt trial lawyers. They want you thiking about Entergy Mississippi.

Last year, the Mississippi Public Service Commission hired Walter Drabinski of Vantage Consulting to conduct a performance audit of Entergy Mississippi to review "activities related to providing energy, capacity, and ancillary services for all customer classes of EMI." The report said because "almost all procurement of fuels, energy and related planning is performed by Entergy Services Inc. (ESI), much of the work, including interviews and data gathering were done through ESI." Basically, Drabinski had the run of all the records of Entergy Mississippi and Entergy Services.

The report is generally good for Entergy as explained over at Y'all Politics. Naturally, like any company would, they announced the good news in a release saying:
Overall, we’re encouraged by the findings. The way we project fuel costs and true up fuel cost recoveries, provide the commission with sufficient fuel filing data and plan for Mississippi’s future energy needs were all noted as practices that serve our customers well. We’ll pay careful attention to the report’s critique of our method for recovering fuel costs. Matters like these are under consideration at the commission and we’ll continue to fully support their review. This report shows the importance of review and analysis of the business practices of Mississippi utilities, as is conducted by the independent experts on the Mississippi Public Utilities Staff, as well as the commissioners.
That is a rational, measured, reasonable response.

Cue the demoagogues.

Jim Hood says:
Entergy is at it again, issuing press releases that are not true. The report itself states that Vantage Consulting did not review any procurement decisions and did not make any judgment as to the prudence of any purchase. In fact, the audit recommended additional audits because they found Entergy’s accounting was “likely to be innaccurate”. The PSC will likely be issuing documents tomorrow which will totally expose Entergy’s mis-representations. We will have a true court ordered audit one day. We will find exactly the same thing as the audit in Louisiana; that Entergy overcharged customers.
What? Are we talking about the same thing? Its like an economics professor made a point and for rebuttal someone brought in a dancing monkey. If only he had something to throw.
"With respect to the touting of these findings, I think Entergy needs to put down the pom-poms and pick up some reading glasses." - Brandon Presley's statement
Yep, like RoM said, Jim Hood said to jump and Brandon Presley asked how high.

Well, we put on our reading glasses and picked up the report and this is what we found.

Drabinski's executive summary says, "This audit looks primarily at current policies, procedures, processes, systems, organizations and strategies to determine if they are appropriate. Historical data is used to provide a baseline of results and to test proposed changes in policy...Our objective was to provide clear and independent information that can be used by all stakeholders in guidance on issues related to fuel procurement such as the Fuel Adjustment Clause (FAC) and long-term energy planning...Vantage received unfettered access to all appropriate people and data."

Some special interest groups in the state would profit by forcing Entergy to buy unregulated independently produced electricity. But Drabinski warns that such dependence on unstable producers is ill advised and notes it is unnecessary as there "is no evidence that EMI mismanages its power plants."

The report suggests Entergy Mississippi should continue to use projected fuel costs for fuel adjustment charge. Brandon Presley had argued they should go to actual fuel costs in recovery instead. No wonder Presley doesn't care for this audit.

The report suggests Entergy Mississippi move from quarterly rate adjustments to monthly rate adjustments. And it recommends Entergy Mississippi increase the number and scope of internal audits. If you want to read the report yourself, here it is courtesy of Y'all Politics.

Finally, everytime you turn around, Hood and Presley want another audit. But according to Drabinski, "The information provided by [Entergy] each quarter allows the Mississippi Public Utility Staff to conduct an adequate review needed to confirm the accuracy of the data in calculation." So what else do they want? Oh yeah, pay no attention to the Scruggs/Patterson/Balducci behind the curtain!

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Judge Larry Buffington Self Destructs

What is going on with Judge Larry Buffington? First he made a public order to the Simpson County Board of Supervisors to hire his friend Oliver Diaz to be a youth court public defender (when other public defenders were doing the job) so he could get his state retirement. Then he demanded to know who leaked this public information to the press! So he subpoenaed the two Republican supervisors (because Judge Buffington is so nonpartisan) to appear before him.

Now, the supervisors have moved to quash his order because - get this - he didn't do it properly and had no authority to do it. Somebody talk this guy down from the ledge, he is embarrassing himself. Read their motion here courtesy of Y'all Politics.

Oh yeah, did we mention that PERS rejected Diaz for retirement benefits anyway?

If Jim Hood has nothing to hide...

If Jim Hood has nothing to hide, then why doesn't he let the sunshine in? So asks this editorial from the Madison County Journal.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Bennie's Vacation: Shameful

This Gannett newspaper from New York gets it right. Its editorial yesterday call's Bennie Thompson's activity as Chairman of Vacation Security "shameful."
'Shameful'
Big shots on Wall Street, in Congress still don't get it

Bad habits are hard to break, but some people in America's corporate and political worlds don't even seem to be trying in the midst of the worst economic calamity since the Great Depression.

Citigroup, recipient of some $45 billion of taxpayer funds, was blithely going about the purchase a $50 million private jet until the deal became public. Even then, the widespread public outrage didn't phase the high-fliers - but an apparent call from Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner did. Citi meekly cancelled the purchase.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs characterized the gap between Wall Street compensation and Main Street hardship as "outrageous." President Obama topped him with "shameful" and "the height of irresponsibility."

The president said, "Part of what we're going to need is for folks on Wall Street who are asking for help to show some restraint and show some discipline and show some responsibility."

The same prescription can be written for Congress, where bad habits also abound.

New York's Charles Rangel and five other Democratic members of the House enjoyed a trip to the Caribbean sponsored in part by Citigroup (see above) in November - after Congress had approved the $700 bailout for financial firms (including Citigroup).

The members no doubt will object to the terms "junket," but that shoe fits. The National Legal and Policy Center, a watchdog group, has asked Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) to investigate the Nov. 6-9 excursion to the island of St. Maarten.

It was called the Caribbean Multi-Cultural Business Conference, but "the primary purpose ... for most participants appeared to be to take a vacation," said the NLPC. And not only was the timing lousy, but "corporate sponsorship of such an event was banned by House rules adopted on March 1, 2007, in response to the (lobbyist Jack) Abramoff scandal," the group pointed out.

Joining Rangel on that trip were Donald Payne of New Jersey, Sheila Jackson-Lee of Texas, Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick of Michigan, Bennie Thompson of Mississippi and Donna Christenson, delegate from the U.S. Virgin Islands.

If they haven't already, they should reimburse the taxpayers for all expenses related to that trip - and from their own funds, not from another taxpayer pocket.

Gannett on Thompson's Vacations

The Clarion Ledger Washington Bureau made an attempt to report on Thompson's lobbyist funded travel that we discussed here and here. The Chairman of Vacation Security
took nine privately sponsored trips last year, based on a review of records by Gannett News Service. He visited the Caribbean island of St. Maarten with his wife and traveled to London; Daytona Beach, Fla.; Orlando, Fla.; Las Vegas; Albany, N.Y., and other destinations.

"The congressman sees it as part of his responsibilities as a member of Congress and as chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee to learn as much as he can through firsthand experience," said Lanier Avant, Thompson's chief of staff.
[insert laughs here]
In 2007, the new Democratic Congress moved to tighten restrictions on the hundreds of privately funded trips lawmakers were taking each year.

The rules, which took effect in mid-2007, barred lobbyists from traveling with lawmakers, a favorite way to get the attention of a congressman or senator.

The new rules also specified that travel funded by companies employing lobbyists was limited to one-day stays, and they required that every trip be pre-approved by House and Senate ethics panels. The rules were relaxed for nonprofit groups, which are allowed to pay for trips that are several days long.

Thompson's trip to Daytona Beach was sponsored by the Law Enforcement Executive Development Association. The visit to Las Vegas was sponsored by the United Steelworkers union. A trip to St. Louis was paid for by the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, and another to Albany was funded by Williams College.

Thompson also allowed his staffers to accept privately funded trips. Three who work for him on the House Homeland Security Committee traveled to Turkey last year...to promote interfaith and intercultural dialogue.
[more laughs]