Thursday, January 31, 2019

Trump's Shutdown Paused, Investigation Not

The government shutdown that lasted 35 days, victimized at least 800,000 federal workers and cost $11 billion (according to a supposedly non-partisan budgetary agency) with three billion of it never coming back, is currently on hold.

Thanks to the deal made between President Donald Trump and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the shutdown has been lifted for three weeks until February 15.  Congress has until then to work out a new plan to fund security at the United States-Mexico border, with or without the wall Trump still covets.

No doubt the announcement was intended to deflect from news of the arrest on January 25 of former Trump political adviser Roger Stone, as part of the ongoing investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller into alleged Russian influence of the 2016 presidential election.  Stone has pled not guilty on seven counts against him, ranging from witness tampering to obstruction of justice.

Meanwhile, Trump's prison-bound former attorney Michael Cohen is finally going to tell his side of the story to separate congressional intelligence committees about why he lied to them in testifying of his involvement in the Russian affair.  It won't be as public as Cohen once wanted, having revealed that threats have been made against his family if he testified, and that certain questions relating to the Mueller investigation are off limits.

Most folks thought Trump caved in to Pelosi in agreeing to open the government without his wall.  Not so fast.  Congress has a knack for deciding not to decide, despite the Democrats' promises of a more activist government.  So it seems likely that they'll try to drag things out before the deadline, if at all.  Trump will likely get his wall no matter what, because he is going to declare a phony national emergency for the purpose of freeing up funds and ordering military personnel to build it.

Oh, and the State of the Union address has been rescheduled for February 5.  Plan your schedule accordingly.

For those who had been affected by the government shutdown, they should be using this break in the action to pay their bills and reassess their future.  Because now that your job has become subject to the political whims of the day, it might be a good time to update your resumes.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

American Standoff

We are now more than one month into the "partial" shutdown of the United States government.  It has affected around 800,000 employees, who once thought that being in civil service was the most stable form of employment you could get.

President Donald Trump and Democratic congressional leaders remain at a standstill over funding of a security wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, and are using the shutdown as leverage.  Trump has campaigned for one since 2016 and still wants it, even if he has to sacrifice government services to do it.  Democrats do not, and are so far sticking to their guns.

As the shutdown continues into its second month, those federal employees are going broke for lack of a paycheck and/or are forced to work for free, which doesn't do much for morale.  Other unintended consequences of the shutdown include:
  • The possibility that there will be no State of the Union address, at least not in Nancy Pelosi's House.  The Speaker from California flexed her political muscle to disinvite the President from delivering his address in the House chamber, unless the shutdown gets settled.  Trump has said he still plans to address Congress, but there is nothing in the Constitution that says he must do it at the U.S. Capitol.  He can do this anywhere he wants,  He can even use Twitter if he cares to.  But it would be awkward if he did.
  • The national college football champion Clemson Tigers, one of the few sports teams who chose to visit the White House since Trump became President, were honored with a buffet of Big Macs, Whoppers and pizza that the President said he paid for.  Meanwhile, federal employees are having a hard time paying for gas to get to work, much less being able to afford a Happy Meal.
  • The shutdown has created long security lines at the airport, criminal investigations curtailed, delayed tax refunds, attractions closed and so on.  That's because the FBI, CIA, TSA, IRS and other agencies have employees who are not getting paid, and funding is being suspended.  Thank goodness there has been no major catastrophe.
No one knows how long this is going to go on.  In spite of polls blaming him for the shutdown, it's becoming clear that President Donald Trump doesn't need the wall to benefit from it.  As long as there is no money for investigating him and his cronies just as the facts are about to come out, he doesn't need to worry about ever being prosecuted and/or impeached.  When the standoff finally ends, Trump will be sitting pretty.  And the people, even those who voted for him, will suffer.

UPDATE (1/24/19):  Trump has agreed to postpone the State of the Union address before Congress until after the shutdown ends.  The Senate rejected both parties' proposals to fund border security, with or without a wall. The President is reconsidering his plan to declare a national emergency so he could get the money to build his wall.  And the shutdown continues.

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Up Against (Paying For) The Wall

After 19 days (as of 1/9/2019), the government of the United States is still in shutdown mode.  Landmarks are closed and thousands of people are either working without pay, calling in sick or staying home because President Donald Trump and the new Democratic Congressional leadership can't (or won't) find a way to fund the government.  Not without also paying for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, which no one else seems to want and Mexico refuses to pay for.

But the President doesn't seem to care what you, I or the Democrats (who now control the House of Representatives) want.  He told his loyal base back in the 2016 campaign that he wants that wall built and, by God, he's going to get it.  Even if it takes a national emergency to pay for it and let the military do the work.

In his oft-ridiculed Oval Office speech Tuesday night, Trump described what's happening these days at the border as a "humanitarian crisis", citing "caravans" of drug smugglers, violent gangs and terrorists coming from all over Central America to do us harm.  He didn't mention the tear-gassing of civilians frantically trying to cross the border, nor did he mention all those reports of children locked in cages.  If that's not a "humanitarian crisis", what is?

Only a big, huge wall can shield us from those thugs, Trump and other Republicans have been telling us.  That sounds reassuring, until you think of the many ways walls can be circumvented.  As the bad guys and other desperate people have already figured out, you can get around, fly over or crawl underneath walls.  The Great Wall of China, the Maginot Line, the Berlin Wall and other structures designed to keep invaders out and their own citizens in all failed for that reason.

There are other benefits for the President to keep holding his breath until his face turns blue.  It's to take media attention away from the incoming Democratic majority in the House, including the return of Nancy Pelosi of California as Speaker, and newcomers such as Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez of New York aka The Dancing Congresswoman.  Also, there's Trump's ongoing legal troubles as more and more of his cronies are indicted for colluding with the Russians during the 2016 election.  And the shutdown also mutes all talk of impeachment, at least for now.

Notice we haven't said a word since the first paragraph about all those federal employees who suddenly face an uncertain future with the shutdown.  Neither did Trump in his speech, though he has said the dispute could be settled in one day or one year.  On Wednesday, he stormed out of a meeting with Democrats Pelosi and Senator Chuck Schumer of New York with nothing being settled.

This whole mess can be resolved by agreeing to spend more money on better border security.  If President Trump wants a wall so badly, he can go build one to guard Mar-a-Lago.  Stop acting like a child and get those people back to work.

Thursday, January 3, 2019

Local Media 2018: Comings and Goings

Mark Rosen is calling it quits after spending nearly half a century in the sports department of WCCO-TV, CBS' Minneapolis-St. Paul station.  He's covered nearly every major event that's come through the Twin Cities, interviewing the greats and putting his own spin on things.  Rosen's wife's health problems forced him to leave sooner than planned, but he'll still talk sports on KFAN (100.3).

It has now become a trend for TV people like Rosen to find a second career on radio.  Angela Davis, longtime weekend and substitute news anchor at KSTP-TV and WCCO, now hosts a daily morning program on Minnesota Public Radio's news network.  KARE-TV reporter and anchor Cory Hepola will soon become a morning talk show host at WCCO-AM (830) radio, taking over for John Hines as he recently concluded his long broadcasting career.  Hepola's wife Camille had left KARE earlier.

So who's replaced Patrick Reusse, Joe Soucheray and others on KSTP-AM (1500)?  A couple of shows from ESPN Radio (Dan LeBatard and Stephen A. Smith), followed by local holdovers Mackey and Judd during afternoon drive.  1500ESPN needs all the help they can get, being a distant second to KFAN in sports talk.  Something needs to change.

KQRS (92.5) recently celebrated its 50th year as a rock station.  Currently best known as the home of Tom Barnard and a playlist that hasn't changed much since 1975, it might surprise you to learn that KQ had an awkward transition in the late 1960s from playing middle of the road music to progressive rock.  If you want examples of this, please go to radiotapes.com or to recordings of DJ Don Duchene's 1960s-era airchecks on YouTube. (Duchene worked at KDWB, KSTP-AM and KQ during that decade)

KMNB (102.9), after much speculation that they would return to the soft adult contemporary sound they had for many years as WLTE, has decided to keep it country.  They dropped Buzn @ 102.9, then renamed it 102.9 The Wolf with a broader playlist.  Whether that will put a dent in country leader K102's (102.1) ratings any more than Buzn did remains to be seen.

Love 105 has returned after a few years as the new home for light rock, replacing classic hip hop as Vibe 105.  The three small signals that make up this station (WGVX/105.1, WLUP/105.3 and WWWM/105.7) have had problems in the past with choosing a format and finding anyone to listen to it.  Light rock (also known as soft adult contemporary) has been making a comeback nationwide, but it's hard to see doctors' offices and other waiting rooms giving up streaming services or satellite radio for this.

KLBB (1220) in Stillwater shut down at the end of March after broadcasting for well over 60 years.  They filled a void for anybody who still wanted to hear vocalists like Frank Sinatra or Andy Williams, musicians like Henry Mancini or Percy Faith, and hits from The Four Preps and The Carpenters.  The owner decided to sell the land where the station's AM towers were located, because it had become too valuable not to be turned into housing developments or condominiums--a situation facing too many radio stations these days.  There is talk that KLBB might return as either a downsized radio station or an FM translator, but who really knows?

Gene Okerlund was a popular pro wrestling interviewer who went from "All Star Wrestling" in the Twin Cities to nationwide fame when he joined what is now World Wrestling Entertainment.  Okerlund's interviews with the outrageous characters that made up pro wrestling were sometimes more entertaining than the matches themselves.  And he seemed to be in on the joke, even if the viewers didn't always catch on.  Okerlund died at 76 just as the new year began.

The 96th Oscars: "Oppenheimer" Wins, And Other Things.

 As the doomsday clock approaches midnight and wars are going in Gaza, Ukraine and elsewhere, a film about "the father of the atomic bo...