Monday, January 11, 2010

They're not ready

Today's opening of the 2nd Session of the 49th Arizona Legislature was marked by many things that we have seen before -

...House Speaker Kirk Adams promising to listen to Democratic proposals...before standing idly by, watching the Governor snub Democratic Attorney General Terry Goddard after her speech...

...Governor Jan Brewer, in her stump speech in the State of the State address, to the resounding cheers of the members of her caucus of the lege, promising to balance the budget on the backs of Arizona's poorest citizens...

...The Governor using her State of the State speech to move to the right, positioning herself as the anti-government (and anti-immigrant, anti-poor people, and anti-fiscal reality) Governor...

...The Governor sounding Presidential...if you consider George W. Bush a good example to follow. She touched upon privatizing government, deregulating industry and funnelling resources to "faith-based" charities. Bush started spouting that stuff in early 2001, and enhanced corporate bottom lines at the expense of effective government and a healthy society for the next eight years...

...The Governor challenging listeners with "if you have a better plan, produce it" while blithely ignoring the fact that the Democrats did "produce" one, nearly a year ago...

...State Senator John Huppenthal using a point of personal privilege to hijack the Senate floor for a speech supporting his run for State Superintendent of Public Instruction (when every other senator was introducing friends and family, he introduced Don Covey, the Maricopa County Superintendent of Schools, and raved about they work that they had done together)...

...State Treasurer Dean Martin, perhaps in preparation for the announcement of his own run for Governor, using the exterior of the old Capitol building as the backdrop for an "unplanned, candid" run-in with Rep. Frank Antenori (R-Don't say I represent Tucson, even though I do"). The reason for the quotes around "unplanned, candid"? The TV cameraman and the photographer that he kept waiting outside until the crowds passing through the doors thinned out enough for their purposes...


- It may come to pass later this year that the Republicans in the legislature and the Governor will finally take the state's budget issues seriously.

- It may come to pass later this year that the Republicans in the legislature and the Governor will finally engage with their Democratic colleagues to discuss solutions for the state's problems.

- It may come to pass later this year that the Republicans in the legislature and the Governor will finally step away from their ideological talking points and knuckle down to doing some real work to address the state's fiscal crisis.

But it hasn't come to pass yet, and it may never - they're not ready.

They're not ready to be professional government officials and anti-government panderers second.

They're not ready to be public servants first and partisan ideologues second.

They're not ready to be Arizonans first and Republicans second.


They're just not ready.


AZRepublic coverage here and here.

EV Tribune coverage, courtesy Howard Fischer of Capitol Media Services, here.

Arizona Capitol Times and Arizona Guardian have coverage behind subscriber firewalls.

The Governor's State of the State address, 2010 version

The full text of her speech, as prepared for delivery, is here.

Go ahead and read it, but here's my summary -

Her campaign for election is in full flight and she has a stump speech down pat; today she just called it "The State of the State."

Her main campaign plank:

Arizona's mess is not her fault - it's Janet Napolitano's, Terry Goddard's, the federal government's, and the voters' (for approving social spending by referenda).

All can be fixed with corporate tax cuts, fewer regulations, and cuts to social services and education. Oh, and get rid of all of those gosh darn immigrants.

I'll go into more details later, but I'm heading home - turns out that the budget presentation that is scheduled to take place in a committee hearing is the same one that is on the governor's website, and has been for approximately three weeks.


Later...

The Dawn Of A New Era

OK, not really - just the start of a new session of the Arizona State Legislature...

Not much going on right now.

I'm sitting on the third floor of the Senate building. It's a lot like a class reunion...of a class that last met last month, which most of these folks did.

There are current and former legislators, family members, friends, and, of course, lobbyists.

Currently, sitting across from me are three lobbyists working the phones and the crowd, trying to get legislators to drop ("drop" is lege-speak for "offer for consideration") their favored bills as soon as possible.

Anyway, waiting for the open of the Senate session. After that, the plan is to attend the Governor's State of the State speech, a Dem press conference immediately after that, and depending on the length of that, attend a committee hearing. The committee meeting includes a presentation on the state's budget situation. Things are pretty dire, even after last month's "fix."

Anyway, time to do some of my own "meeting and greeting" and maybe snap a few pics...

Later

Saturday, January 09, 2010

Word of the day: Irony

A quick hit, because this was just too good to pass up on...

From AZCentral.com's AZ/DC blog -

Sen. John McCain this week launched his first re-election radio ads of the 2010 race, declaring that he is "Arizona's last line of defense" in the battle against President Barack Obama's liberal agenda.

{snip}

Not lost on any observers is the fact that McCain's paid political announcements inject his point of view onto the airwaves of conservative Phoenix radio station KFYI
(550 AM), where former Rep. J.D. Hayworth, R-Ariz., attacks him on a seemingly constant basis. Hayworth, who hosts an afternoon drive-time program, repeatedly has said he is considering a challenge to McCain in the Aug. 24 Republican primary.
So who wins the irony war here? McCain because he is using his putative challenger's own soapbox to get out his message? Or Hayworth because his potential target is providing revenue to his radio show and by doing so, creating even more buzz about the possible race than there had be previously?

This stuff won't help either one in the general election - few Independents and fewer Democrats listen to Hayworth's gabbing, and fewer still are actually influenced by it. Of course, at this point both are focused on just winning the R primary.

Rodney Glassman for Senate. He'll work for the entire state, not just the teabaggers.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

The word today: Focus

Judging from the "output" of Russell Pearce's mind, during the coming session of the lege, he and his caucus won't be putting forth any more real effort to address the state's fiscal crisis than they did during the last session.

From Pearce's SB1028, cosponsored by his fellow travelers Sen. Chuck Gray and Rep. Judy Burges:
Notwithstanding any other law, beginning on the effective date of this act, a city, town, county, school district or special taxing district in this state shall not spend public monies to increase the salary of any of its elected public officials during fiscal year 2009-2010 and fiscal year 2010-2011 until after this state has enacted a balanced budget for those fiscal years.

Umm...perhaps one of Sen. Pearce's friends should remind him that the is chair of the Appropriations Committee of the Arizona State Senate, and that under his leadership of that committee (and House Approps before he started his current gig), Arizona has turned into the fiscal laughingstock of the country.

As is the case with the legislature, the salaries of local and other elected officials are set by the voters. When they think that their elected officials deserve a raise, they can grant one; when they think that their elected officials don't deserve one, they can deny a raise.

It isn't Sen. Pearce's place to usurp local control of local organs of government.

His focus should be and needs to be on state-level issues. Local voters don't need his help, and in fact, his history of contempt for the constituents even in his own west Mesa district proves that no one should expect his help.

However, he should show enough courtesy to at least stay out of the way.

Tuesday, January 05, 2010

Priceless...

Non-political spleen vent ahead...continue reading at your own risk... :)

...Ride to the airport via Supershuttle: $20 (Good price because I live close to Sky Harbor)

...Flight to New York for father's funeral service: $450 (Decent price. Doesn't make up for the reason for the trip, but you find the silver linings where you can...)

...Departing Phoenix one hour late because a flight attendant missed the van ride from the hotel (bad), arriving in Philly just after my connection to Albany had taken off (really bad), getting booked on the next flight to Albany without any hassles (actually getting better), and then arriving in Albany only to find out that my luggage had never left Philly:

Freakin' priceless.


I'm never flying on U.S. Airways again. Let me be clear - all of the rank-and-file airline personnel that I dealt with today were uniformly polite and friendly (though that tardy flight attendant is *not* on my Christmas card list :) ), but US Air has a bad reputation for things like lateness and lost luggage and it lived right down to that reputation. I ignored it this time because the flight worked for me (not a red-eye, but the original itinerary had me getting into Albany at a decent hour), but I won't repeat that mistake.

They have systemic issues that are rooted in a management culture that sacrifices customers and employees on the altar of higher profits and executive bonuses.

So to sum up -

Arrgghhh!

Ahhhh...I feel better now. Time to go over to US Air's lost luggage website to give them the address to deliver the bag to later today...otherwise, I am going to be woefully underdressed at the service.

Later...

Edit on 1/6: A number of typos have been corrected without notation to maintain readability. I should know better than to write while I'm both utterly ticked off and exhausted. :(

...End edit...

Monday, January 04, 2010

State Lege sweeps bequest to State Parks system

...But so long as Pinnacle West, the homebuilder associations and the other corporations that hire Republican lobbyists get their tax gifts cuts, who cares about the dying wishes of a generous woman?

From AZCentral.com -
In their latest effort to solve Arizona's budget crisis with cuts, lawmakers turned to a woman who couldn't make a fuss. After all, she has been dead for eight years.

Asta Forrest, a Danish immigrant who fell in love with Arizona after moving to Fountain Hills with her husband, left nearly $250,000 to the Arizona State Parks Board when she died of cancer at age 82.

{snip}

While parks officials considered what to do with the money, Arizona's budget deficit ballooned into the billions. Last month, when the Republican-led Legislature met in special session to cut $140 million from the budget, it swept up half the money in the parks system's donations fund, which included most of Forrest's donation.

"It was like they had kicked me in the stomach," [Former State Parks Director Ken] Travous said. "Surely, I thought, they have some shame. But they're shameless."

"Shameless."

Mr. Travous is far kinder and more tactful than I am when it comes to describing the leaders of the lege.

The new session of the lege is schedule to start in a week, and according to Mary Reinhart of The Arizona Guardian (subscription required to read the story), they have looked at the gaping maw of a deficit remaining in this year's budget and the absolute fiscal abyss projected for next year's budget and are working on a package of tax cuts to further reduce the state's revenues.

Welcome to Arizona, where the Republicans have never seen a hole that they didn't want to make deeper...

Sunday, January 03, 2010

The coming week...

...Due to some sad and sudden family issues, there won't be much blogging this week.

As far as this weekly calendar post goes, there isn't much to write about anyway - it seems that Congress is still not in session, the Arizona lege has only a couple of intersession makework committees meeting (the new session of the lege starts next week), the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors has a special meeting on Thursday and the City Councils of Scottsdale and Tempe have meetings this week.

Other than that, most political bodies/agencies seem to be quiet this week.

Talk to you next week!

State Sen. Russell Pearce opposed to financial oversight of elected officials

...or at least, financial oversight of elected officials who he is close personal friends with (or related to)...

From AZCentral.com (the money quote is italicized) -
There's bound to be a sense of deja vu when legislators reconvene next week and some familiar bills pop up again at the statehouse, thanks to the budget crisis that dominated last year's session.

Mesa Sen. Russell Pearce's proposal to "codify the constitution" when it comes to the powers of elected county officials could be near the top of the list of familiar bills that failed to go anywhere.

{snip}

The goal of the bill is simple, according to Pearce:

Once a county board of supervisors allocates a budget to an elected official's agency, that's where the board's financial oversight will end.

"The board of supervisors' responsibility is the budget, not to micromanage an elected official," Pearce said.

Pearce's bill is SB1017. It would require the county supervisors to allocate the budgets for the other county elected officials by lump sum only. The other county elected officials would then have complete discretion in how those budgets are expended. It would also sever the county officials' from responsibility to adhere to any employment, contract, or acquisition standards other than their own.

Perhaps Pearce's bill should be named the "Joe Arpaio/Andrew Thomas Immunity From Responsibility To Society" Act, or perhaps the "Joe Arpaio/Andrew Thomas 'Just Hand Over Your Money And Shut Up' " Act...

And in a "he ain't heavy, he's my brother" moment, as written, Pearce's bill would add a county's justices of the peace to the list of county officers covered by this bill.

Sen. Pearce's brother Lester is a justice of the peace. Hmmm...

Anyway, Pearce proposed the same bill last year, minus the lump sum budget allocations and the JP stuff, as SB1467. Last June, the bill died for lack of a hearing in committee.

Based on this, one could surmise that Pearce's personal motto is "if at first you don't succeed, try, try, again."

Saturday, January 02, 2010

Just remember...

...there's only 356 shopping days until Christmas - 357 if you consider Circle K and the like to be viable shopping venues... :))

Friday, January 01, 2010

Top stories in Arizona politics in 2009

...To Tedski and the writers at Blog for Arizona - because of proximity (I *live* in Maricopa County), this one is going to be Maricopa-centric. Folks looking for insights into political developments in southern AZ should visit those sites; they do a far better job of covering that part of the state than I do.

On to the stories, in no particular order of importance. Other than the last one listed, which is the biggest, imho, one of the year.


...Radio gabber and former Congressman JD Hayworth sidling toward a challenge of fellow Republican, Senator John McCain. Some believe that Hayworth, a darling of the teabagger crowd, is using the possible challenge to raise funds to pay down the legal bills incurred during his scandal-marred terms in Congress. Others believe he is serious about challenging McCain.

I think it is both - he wants to pay off the legal fees associated with his relationship with imprisoned Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff *and* he wants back in elected office. "Radio talk show host" doesn't have quite the same cachet on the ol' resume as does "United States Senator."

Nor does it have the same perks - the current incarnations of Abramoff, whoever they might be, don't have much use for, or reason to bribe "contribute to," people who aren't in office.


...Joe Arpaio and Andrew Thomas waging what amounts to a war (for the most part, a bullet-less one thus far, but a war nonetheless) against most of the County's other elected officials and the County judiciary. And the lawyers in the County. And anybody in the County who fails to kiss the rear ends of Arpaio and Thomas. And anybody with brown skin. And...

With the state AG's office effectively defunded by Arpaio's cohorts in the legislature, it has fallen to the federal government to rein in the Nativist Twins' excesses. The investigation is ongoing.


...On its surface, not a political story per se, but the continuing decline of newspapers, both in circulation and quality of reporting. The Tucson Citizen closed in 2009, and the East Valley Tribune is on life support. Neither one had a presence at the State Capitol any longer, but will be missed for their abilities to cover local political developments and to push larger outlets to cover the Capitol. Now, most print MSM outlets utilize the services and writings of Howard Fischer of Capitol Media Services. Fischer is good, really good in fact, but he is only one man with one man's perspective. There are a couple of other outlets covering the Capitol, but their reach is limited.

The Arizona Capitol Times is written for Capitol insiders. While it is available in some locations outside of downtown Phoenix, its core market is concentrated in and around the Capitol and other government complexes located between Central Ave. and 19th Ave. in Phoenix.

The Arizona Guardian is on "online-only" outlet started and staffed by journalists who were laid-off by the EV Trib. While they do some great work there, the facts that they are limited in their exposure to the web and then only behind a subscription firewall limits their influence.

Other than those outlets, the Arizona Republic will assign a couple of young reporters to the Capitol beat, keeping them there until they become too experienced/expensive, then they will be laid-off in favor of folks who are cheaper.

In short, Arizona's eyes on the lege have gotten fewer as the atmosphere at the Capitol has worsened.

That's not a coincidence. As long as they think no one is paying attention to what they are really doing to AZ, the denizens of the Capitol will continue to do their worst.


...The growing rift in the state GOP between the anti-government/taxes/Mexicans (and other minorities)/science teabaggers (ascendant), the Chamber of Commerce types (declining) and the actual public servants (heading for the hills, or becoming Democrats). 2010 could, and probably will be, a tough year for Democrats nationally, but much like AZ bucked the pro-D trend in 2008, it is set up to buck any anti-D trend in 2010.

If only because the Rs have so totally made a mess of things at all levels in Arizona.


...The never-ending quest of certain legislators to protect, for reasons of personal ideology and financial gain, tax credits that siphon money from the state's general fund to "school tuition organizations." The STOs then direct those funds to private schools and preferred charter schools. While some of the STOs are legitimate and trying to do good work, too many play fast and loose with federal laws. In this era of massive cuts to public services, including public education, the funnelling of public revenue away from public uses only exacerbates the problems.

These tax credits are so important to Republicans, they held a special session of the legislature to ensure that they could continue without oversight or significant restriction.

MSM investigations of STOs and their use of the tax credits spawned not one, but *two* committees to investigate and evaluate the entire program. One was a bipartisan task force, one was a rubber stamp formed to approve whatever was presented to them by the Republican leadership in the lege.

Guess which one will see its recommendations take the form of proposed legislation in 2010?


...The one part of AZ's public education system that was in decent shape came under attack from the board members elected to protect and guide it. The Maricopa County Community College District, the nation's largest, saw its accreditation endangered because of the games played by the ideologues elected to its governing board. Things like micromanaging, misuse of resources by board members, intimidation of District employees and students, personality conflicts and more have led to a district known more for the antics of the board than for the quality of the education that it provides.


...Of course, the 600-pound gorilla of Arizona politics in 2009 was the state's budget meltdown.

The budget deficit dominated activity at the Capitol this year. We saw...

- A special session to implement cuts and accounting gimmicks to fix the deficit in the FY2009 budget.

- Bob Burns, the Republican President of the Arizona State Senate, vowing that no legislation would be considered until they had a balanced budget. This led to months of legislators sitting around, doing nothing other than during special sessions. Or when the NRA convention came to town (apparently getting guns in the hands of drunks was more important than even balancing the budget).

Followed by a mad rush in June when Burns lifted his self-imposed moratorium on legislation. Committees literally considered hundreds of bills in a matter of a few weeks.

- In March, the Governor strolling over to the lege to give a speech on her "plan" to address the state's revenue issues. One of her ideas was a referendum on a temporary sales tax increase. Sen. Ron Gould (R-No) walked out of his own governor's speech.

That was the most cooperation with his own caucus that Gould showed all year - he thinks that government should be shut down completely, and that his fellow Rs are slackers.

- The lege passing a budget in early June but the leadership refusing to forward it to the Governor in a game of high-stakes fiscal "chicken." They hoped that by waiting until the last possible moment to send her the budget, she would be forced to sign it.

- A crazy overnight session that extended from June 30 (the end of the fiscal year) into July 1 (the beginning of the new FY). They shut off the clocks on the Senate floor to maintain the pretense that they hadn't violated the state constitution by failing to craft a budget by the start of the fiscal year. Then they locked the doors of the lege so that in the event that Jan Brewer vetoed all or part of the budget that they did pass, she couldn't return it to them before they adjourned sine die.

- An August special session on the budget.

- A November special session on the budget.

- A December special session on the budget.

- None of which worked, because AZ still faces a still-unbalanced budget at the start of the calendar year, with less than half of the fiscal year left to fix it.


Expect more to the same in 2010, because until the voters of Arizona hold their elected officials accountable for their unwillingness/inability to do their jobs properly, those officials will continue to do them poorly.

Later...

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Arizona-itis, aka "Republicans governing badly", spreading across the country

Turns out that the tendency of Republicans in power to fiscally mismanage things isn't limited to the federal government or even to Arizona, among the states.

From a NY Times editorial, published yesterday:

Failed State

New Yorkers should be appalled at their failed state government, particularly their corrupt and clueless Legislature. Scandal and irresponsibility have been Albany’s creed for decades. This year, the gang added another outrage to the list: complete fiscal incompetence.

The only solace is this: The entire Legislature is up for re-election in 2010. And unless there is a sudden turnaround — and, so far, we see few signs of it — New Yorkers have no choice but to vote out all the lawmakers and start over.

If there is any doubt left, here are just a few reminders of this year’s worst of the worst:

WHAT, US WORRY? New York has been on the brink of economic collapse, but the Legislature blithely ignored the problem for months. When the deficit reached a truly alarming $3.2 billion, the lawmakers grudgingly agreed to last-minute fixes while carefully protecting their political buddies and donors. That meant rich school districts on Long Island kept their money (until Gov. David Paterson imposed a temporary, across-the-board reduction), but 500,000 schoolchildren in New York City — many of whom can’t afford it — will now have to pay to ride the subway to class.

Even after draining state savings accounts and using federal stimulus dollars that were supposed to be spent next year, they still fell $500 million short. Next year is now a few hours away. The state is already in the red, and it could be facing a $9 billion deficit by March. Yet there is no sign that legislative leaders have spent much time thinking about how to address this disaster.

That's just the beginning of the piece, and it was written by a New York paper about a New York problem, but it could easily have been written by an Arizona paper about an Arizona problem...if the MSM in Arizona actually dared to seriously criticize the powers-that-be.

Try this on for size, with changes set off by [brackets] -
Failed State

[Arizonans] should be appalled at their failed state government, particularly their corrupt and clueless Legislature. Scandal and irresponsibility have been [Phoenix's] creed for decades. This year, the gang added another outrage to the list: complete fiscal incompetence.

The only solace is this: The entire Legislature is up for re-election in 2010. And
unless there is a sudden turnaround — and, so far, we see few signs of it — [Arizonans] have no choice but to vote out all the lawmakers and start over.

If there is any doubt left, here are just a few reminders of this year’s worst of the worst:

WHAT, US WORRY? [Arizona] has been on the brink of economic collapse, but the Legislature [and Governor] blithely ignored the problem for months. When the deficit reached a truly alarming $3.2 billion, the lawmakers grudgingly agreed to last-minute fixes while carefully protecting their political buddies and donors. That meant [school tuition organizations, including those operated by a legislator writing the laws regarding STOs] kept their money [deleted], but [thousands of ]schoolchildren [in Arizona's public schools will lose their teachers.]

Even after draining state savings accounts and using federal stimulus dollars that were supposed to be spent next year, they still fell $500 million short. Next year is now a few hours away. The state is already in the red, and it could be facing a [$3] billion deficit by March. Yet there is no sign that legislative leaders have spent much time thinking about how to address this disaster.

Scary how easily that editorial could have been written about AZ.

And to those of you who respond by saying "But New York is a Democratic state, so its problems were caused by Democrats!", remember this -

For all but approximately 6 months out of the last four decades, the Rs have controlled the NY state senate and have used it as a private money machine, as delineated later in the editorial.

In regard to the editorial's applicability to Arizona's situation, I do disagree with one point - we don't need to turn out *all* of the incumbent legislators. Most of the Democrats in the AZ lege are pretty good.

That's not just a partisan observation, either. One of the few good points, perhaps the only good point, of being the minority party in the lege for so long is that the Dems attracted to the lege are ones who take public service seriously.

Unlike most of the Rs, who either view it as an ideological playpen or a tool to enhance their private businesses (STOs, anyone?).

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Interesting search terms

Just checking my site stats, and came across this entry:
207.156.23.30
Country United States
Region Florida
City Tallahassee
ISP Florida Department Of State
Given that this is a political blog, hits from offices of state governments aren't unheard of, though normally most of those come from AZ government offices.

What was really eye-catching were the search terms that they used when they hit this blog -
"SECRETELY RECORDING A CHURCH MEETING LAW"

Ignoring the poor spelling for the moment (it's "secretly" folks), why would the Florida Secretary of State's office want to record a church meeting, secretly or otherwise?

It turns out that the current Florida Secretary of State, Kurt S. Browning, has been known for playing a little fast and loose with the law, particularly in regard to election law, but this seems to be over the top, even for him.

On the other hand, Mr. Browning is known as a religious man, so perhaps the issue isn't what he wants to record secretly in a church, but what was secretly recorded in his church. If he said something in a church meeting that he doesn't want out there as public information, he could be looking for a way to block the release of the info.

Either way (and I'm not sure which it is), the situation doesn't cast a complimentary light on this particular GOPer.

Something tells me that in the new year, I'll be checking news from Florida between screaming matches in the AZ lege...

OK - anybody want to trade an Archie for a Calvin and Hobbes?

I am not a stamp guy, but I may just get me some of these...

The Postal Service has announced its 2010 Stamp Program, and among the usual "dreck" (Mother Teresa, monarch butterfly, Kate Smith, etc.) is one outright gem - Sunday Funnies.

And the Gem of the gems? Calvin and Hobbes. It ran for a little more than 10 years while the others in the set (Archie, Dennis the Menace, Beetle Bailey, and Garfield) ran (or still run) for 30 years or more. Still, it was the most brilliantly written non-political strip ever, entertaining and inspiring kids and adults alike, even a decade-and-a-half after Bill Watterson stopped penning new entries in the series.

After the set goes on sale in July, anything I have to mail is going to have a comic strip stamp on it.

For months. :)

BTW - In case you couldn't tell, the word "dreck", used earlier in this post, is nothing more than sarcasm used to express my sheer joy over the C&H stamp. Mother Teresa, Kate Smith, Tom Mix, and the rest of the honorees on next year's stamp issues are not "dreck-y" in any way, shape or form. In fact, most of them are extremely worthy of respect and honor for their life's accomplishments.

They just aren't Calvin and Hobbes.

Later...

GOP Senator sacrifices America's safety (and GOP credibility) on the altar of his anti-worker ideology

Lost in the cacophony of the Republican echo chamber's clamor for Janet Napolitano's resignation (over something she didn't have any control of) is their total silence regarding one of their own (over something he has absolute control of - his own actions).

From the Washington Post -
Republican senator DeMint holds up nomination for TSA chief

An alleged attempt to blow up a transatlantic flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas would be all-consuming for the administrator of the Transportation Security Administration -- if there were one.

Instead, the post remains vacant because Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) has held up President Obama's nominee in an effort to prevent TSA workers from joining a labor union.

DeMint, in a statement, said Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab's alleged attempted attack in Detroit "is a perfect example of why the Obama administration should not unionize the TSA."

So...it's OK to criticize the Secretary of Homeland Security for failures that took place outside of her control in a system that was set up by Republicans, all because she is a Democrat and a woman, but a "good ol' boy" Republican gets a free pass on something that he specifically chose to do that creates a disruption in the aforementioned system and endangers Americans?

It's obvious that even though they are in the minority, the principle of IOKIYAR remains one of the GOP's guiding lights.

I wonder if any conservative pundits have checked with the people of South Carolina to find out if they sent DeMint to D.C. to make sure America isn't safe from foreign terrorists but is safe from unionized American workers?

If the GOP wants to show that they have America's safety at heart, they'll call for Jim DeMint's resignation as loudly as they call for Secretary Napolitano's.

They won't though - DeMint is hardly the only good ol' boy in the GOP.