Weekend Briefing – Saturday, October 10, 2009
Filed under: Afghanistan, Economy, Health Care, International Affairs, Politics, War on Terror
I’m going to be tied up with family all weekend but here’s a collection of must read links:
- CBO: Budget deficit hit record $1.4T in 2009 – Associated Press
- Proposals to create jobs add up to second stimulus – Associated Press
- A Nobel for Obama – New York Sun
- Barack Obama’s peace prize starts a fight – Times Online
- McCain Vs. Palin For The GOP’s Soul – Investors Business Daily
- What I Heard in Honduras – Rep. Jim DeMint, Wall Street Journal
- California Budget Is Already in the Red 10 Weeks After Passage – Bloomberg
- Report: Reining in lawsuits would cut deficit – Washington Times
- CBO’s Analysis of the Effects of Proposals to Limit Costs Related to Medical Malpractice (“Tort Reform”) – CBO Director’s Blog
- Save the Greenback, Mr. President – Larry Kudlow, CNBC
- Paying the Health Tax in Massachusetts – Wendy Williams, Wall Street Journal
- CBO Stands for Cooked Books Office – Rep. John Shadegg, Red State
- What happened to global warming? – BBC News
- As Republicans Predict a 2010 Surge, Democrats Dig In – New York Times
- Taliban growth weighs on Obama strategy review – Reuters
Feel free to add your links in comments.
A Military Coup in Honduras? Not Quite.
As is all to often the case our pop culture obsessed, sound bite focused media is either ignoring or deliberately misreporting the facts of what’s happening in Honduras.
If you haven’t Mary Anastasia O’Grady’s column on Honduras in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal you should. In short what happening in Honduras is not a military coup d’état but rather a restoration constitutional rule:
Hugo Chávez’s coalition-building efforts suffered a setback yesterday when the Honduran military sent its president packing for abusing the nation’s constitution.
It seems that President Mel Zelaya miscalculated when he tried to emulate the success of his good friend Hugo in reshaping the Honduran Constitution to his liking.
But Honduras is not out of the Venezuelan woods yet. Yesterday the Central American country was being pressured to restore the authoritarian Mr. Zelaya by the likes of Fidel Castro, Daniel Ortega, Hillary Clinton and, of course, Hugo himself. The Organization of American States, having ignored Mr. Zelaya’s abuses, also wants him back in power. It will be a miracle if Honduran patriots can hold their ground.
That Mr. Zelaya acted as if he were above the law, there is no doubt. While Honduran law allows for a constitutional rewrite, the power to open that door does not lie with the president. A constituent assembly can only be called through a national referendum approved by its Congress.
But Mr. Zelaya declared the vote on his own and had Mr. Chávez ship him the necessary ballots from Venezuela. The Supreme Court ruled his referendum unconstitutional, and it instructed the military not to carry out the logistics of the vote as it normally would do.
The top military commander, Gen. Romeo Vásquez Velásquez, told the president that he would have to comply. Mr. Zelaya promptly fired him. The Supreme Court ordered him reinstated. Mr. Zelaya refused.
Calculating that some critical mass of Hondurans would take his side, the president decided he would run the referendum himself. So on Thursday he led a mob that broke into the military installation where the ballots from Venezuela were being stored and then had his supporters distribute them in defiance of the Supreme Court’s order.
The attorney general had already made clear that the referendum was illegal, and he further announced that he would prosecute anyone involved in carrying it out. Yesterday, Mr. Zelaya was arrested by the military and is now in exile in Costa Rica. Read the rest…
The Obama Administration’s siding with Hugo Chávez in support Pres. Zelaya is quite telling… Given the choice between standing up for freedom and the rule of law or supporting a tinpot dictator they opted for the tinpot dictator.
Shame, shame!
