Showing posts with label Dr. Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Jackson. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

After Super Tuesday - Updated

It was a great night for Joe Biden and a terrible night for Michael Bloomberg, who has now dropped out and endorsed Biden. I never really warmed to the thought of Mr. Bloomberg as president, although he would be better than Donald. What you may have forgotten is that one year ago tomorrow Bloomberg said he wouldn't run:



He changed his mind in November, apparently believing that if he threw as
much money as humanly possible into the race he could buy himself the job.
Truthfully I'm glad that didn't work; I'm also glad he's still committed to
defeating Donald Trump and will hopefully put more of his money towards
that goal:  

 


In other news, Josh Marshall at Talking Points Memo ponders Bernie Sanders' place in all this:

I’ve written a few times that my greatest fear of a Sanders general election campaign is that it would be one half against Donald Trump and one half against the Democratic party itself. The results last night help us understand some of these liabilities and dynamics. Insurgent candidacies and movements have certain enduring, inherent qualities. The simplest is the belief that there’s something wrong, outdated or corrupt about the organizational leadership you’re trying to overthrow. That’s obvious. Otherwise, why are you an insurgent?

Sanders is a twofold political figure. He’s been a federal legislator for a quarter century operating within the conventional political system. He’s also been a left activist for almost 60 years. That oppositionist mentality is deep in his political DNA and that of his campaign. It’s one of its core strengths. It’s magnified among his most vocal supporters.

We’ve had debates here about what Sanders means by the ‘party establishment’ or ‘party elites’ or the ‘donor class’. But there’s a conflation of party power structures and elite leadership and much of the party itself. And by this I mean the mass of voters and activists who constitute the party itself outside the faction that he leads. A key part of Sanders’ message (and again, greatly amplified by his most vocal backers) is that that those other people, who collectively make up much of the party are either wrong on the key issues, hypocritical on policy or even corrupt. Calling them “the establishment” makes that easier to say. But 60% or 70% of Democratic primary voters by definition can’t be the establishment.

If you’re bidding to take over management of a political party and your politics, campaign or supporters have defined that party as in real ways the enemy or the problem that’s going to be a tough sell. I mean, this is obvious.

Here’s where we get into that question I discussed with that longtime reader about what really constitutes “the establishment.” The Sanders campaign often talks as though it’s only talking about an establishment of insiders and power brokers. But that just leaves millions of activists and voters erased from the picture entirely. The last 72 hours is a case in point. To hear many Sanders surrogates describe it, the establishment and power brokers closed ranks and pushed Biden into the lead. But again, this just pretends like millions of voters don’t exist, or function as pawns of party elites. So you have one theory of political agency for Sanders supporters and another for everyone else. This stands no kind of political scrutiny.

Did key endorsements, especially from Jim Clyburn but also from Klobuchar, Buttigieg and O’Rourke, have an effect? Of course. But focusing only on those ignores what was a parallel reaction among numerous ordinary Democratic voters to the events of the last ten days. The interplay between these two developments is key.

Here we get to a critical, distinct dynamic of this race. Sanders was dominating the primary race with about 25% support. If you won’t or can’t expand your coalition beyond that number you’re in a highly vulnerable position, particularly if you’ve created a confrontational or antipathetic relationship with other factions within the party.

This is not to say the Sanders faction of the party is the only one that faces coalitional problems. Far from it. It will be critical for whoever wins the nomination to craft a story to let the supporters of the losing candidates come on board. That is work every Democrat and really everyone who wants to unseat Donald Trump has in front of them.
(This is the article in its entirety.)

Two other interesting Super Tuesday tidbits, both from Texas: Pierce Bush, a grandson of George H.W. Bush, was running for a House seat representing a section of Houston and lost in the primary. It's the first time someone named Bush has lost in Texas in 40 years. And Dr. Ronny Jackson, Donald's former official physician ("he could live for 200 years...") also running for a House seat, will advance to a run-off:

A former White House physician whose nomination by President Donald Trump to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs was derailed by allegations of drinking on the job and over-prescribing drugs has advanced to a Republican runoff for a rural Texas congressional seat.

Former Rear Adm. Ronny Jackson emerged Tuesday from a crowded GOP primary as one of the top candidates in a comfortably Republican district that covers much of North Texas and the Panhandle. Jackson will face agriculture advocate Josh Winegarner in the May runoff.
(From the Washington Post; read more here.)

I've updated my lists:

I'm Running Declared Democratic candidates, in order of their announcement:
  1. Tulsi Gabbard (1/11/19)
  2. Bernie Sanders (2/19/19)
  3. Joe Biden (4/25/19)

I'm Not Running Anymore Declared candidates who have dropped out:
  1. Richard Ojeda (1/25/19)
  2. Eric Swalwell (7/8/19)
  3. John Hickenlooper (8/15/19)
  4. Jay Inslee  (8/21/19)
  5. Seth Moulton (8/23/19)
  6. Kirsten Gillibrand (8/28/19)
  7. Howard Schultz (9/6/19) * Ran as an Independent   
  8. Bill de Blasio (9/20/19)
  9. Tim Ryan (10/24/19)
  10. Beto O'Rourke (11/1/19)
  11. Wayne Messam (11/20/19)
  12. Joe Sestak (12/1/19)
  13. Steve Bullock (12/2/19)
  14. Kamala Harris (12/3/19)
  15. Julián Castro (1/2/20)
  16. Marianne Williamson (1/10/20)
  17. Cory Booker (1/13/20)
  18. John Delaney (1/31/20) 
  19. Andrew Yang (2/11/20) 
  20. Michael Bennet (2/11/20)
  21. Deval Patrick (2/12/20)
  22. Tom Steyer (3/1/20)
  23. Pete Buttigieg (3/1/20)
  24. Amy Klobuchar (3/2/20)
  25. Michael Bloomberg (3/4/20) 
  26. Elizabeth Warren (3/5/20)

    Days until the election: 243

    Update on Friday morning: Elizabeth Warren has dropped out too, leaving Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders to duke it out. Yes, Tulsi Gabbard is still technically a declared candidate, but she doesn't appear to be doing any of the things candidates generally do and she's obviously not going to be the nominee. I've updated the lists above.

    And mark your calendar, here are the dates for the conventions and the general election debates:
     
    July 13-16 Democratic Convention, in Milwaukee

    August 24-27 Republican Convention, in Charlotte

    September 29 First Presidential Debate, in South Bend

    October 7 Vice Presidential Debate, in Salt Lake City

    October 15 Second Presidential Debate, in Ann Arbor

    October 22 Final Presidential Debate, in Nashville

    November 3 Election Day

    Concerning the debates, I'm wondering if Donald will agree to debate at all. Given his observable deterioration, in particular his growing inability to speak clearly, it wouldn't surprise me if he announces that he just doesn't feel like debating Joe or Bernie.

    And one more thing. The Week has published the first article I've seen this time around with the word "veepstakes" in its title. In their "if Biden's the nominee" scenario they ponder five names I've seen on other such lists, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Kamala Harris, Cory Booker and Stacey Abrams. Then they mention a "true dark horse," Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham of New Mexico. (She was in 10th place on a VP list the Washington Post published in December. Read more here.) Why Governor Lujan Grisham? This is why:

    That leaves the person who might be the best choice of all — and a true dark horse in the competition to become second in line to the most powerful job on the planet: Sixty-year-old Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham of New Mexico. A lawyer and former member of the House of Representatives, where she served as chairwoman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, Lujan Grisham became the first Democratic Latina governor in the country in 2018. Along the way, she's also served as New Mexico's secretary of health. On the personal side, she shares with Biden a family history marked by tragedy: Her sister was diagnosed with a brain tumor as a child and died at age 21, while her husband (with whom she had two children) died of a brain aneurysm in 2004.

    Solid experience as a legislator and chief executive, the potential to woo Hispanic voters to the polls, a compelling and relatable biography — in all of these ways, Lujan Grisham could well prove to be the perfect choice to serve as Joe Biden's running mate and potential VP. (Read the entire article here.)

    Wednesday, November 27, 2019

    What Was He Thinking? - Updated


    This is an actual tweet from the current President of the United States:




    You tell me. Has he lost his mind? For the record, I think he has.

    Twitter, naturally, lost its mind:

























    My guess is that White House staffers and possibly Trump family members are frantically trying to get Donald to delete this tweet. Stay tuned.

    And one more thing. That's not really a picture of Donald's body (no kidding.) It's Sylvester Stallone:

    President Trump tweeted a doctored photo Wednesday that showed his head superimposed on the body of the actor Sylvester Stallone, who was shirtless and wearing boxing attire. The image appeared to have been taken from promotional materials for “Rocky III,” one in a series of movies focused on the boxing career of the fictional Rocky Balboa, which debuted in 1982.

    It was not clear what inspired Trump’s tweet. A White House spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
    (From the Washington Post. Kyle Griffin's tweet, above, links to the article.) 

    Update: My Congressman weighs in: 



    And I can't resist posting this:




    ... which brings us back to: What was he thinking? W.T.F. was he thinking? What did he think this was going to accomplish? It's very, very strange.

    Update #2 on Thanksgiving morning. I was wrong above. The tweet was never deleted and in fact, the official White House account retweeted it. The twitterverse spent the day digging up pictures of Donald proving that he doesn't have a body like Rocky:


    Update #3 on Friday morning. The official Twitter account of the Trump campaign wants us to believe that Donald's picture wasn't photoshopped:




    Twitter fought back:



    Monday, April 30, 2018

    The Guessing Game - Updated

    What will be on the cover of People this week? My guesses:

    His Royal Highness Prince Louis: Will People go with two royal baby covers in a row? It's possible, especially if a "family of five" picture comes out before the magazine closes tonight. Other possibilities include William and Kate's 7th wedding anniversary, which was yesterday, and Princess Charlotte's third birthday, which is Wednesday
    Meghan and Harry: Less than three weeks until their big day
    Bill Cosby: Convicted on three counts, faces 10 years or more in jail
    Dr. Ronny Jackson: The doctor withdrew his nomination to be the VA secretary and apparently is no longer the personal physician to the president. Will his promotion to two-star admiral go through? My guess? No. Based on everything that's been said about Dr. Jackson, I expect to hear at some point that he's checked himself into rehab for alcoholism
    Melania: The French state dinner was a big success, she turned 48 last Thursday
    Stormy: I've had her on the list before, today she filed a lawsuit against the president, for defamation
    Adam Rippon: Or one of the other athletes who will be Dancing With The Stars. The new season starts tonight
    Alison Mack: Actress charged with sex trafficking
    Tom Brokaw: Accused of, and strongly denying, sexual misconduct
    Matt Lauer: Speaking out about what got him fired from The Today Show
    Lea Michele: Engaged
    Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom: A nice picture of them meeting the Pope
    Joy Reid: Under fire for gay-bashing tweets and blog posts, she initially claimed she'd been hacked, now she's backed away from that somewhat. She also apologized on-air during her show Saturday morning
    Joanna Gaines: Publishes a cookbook
    Ronnie Ortiz-Magro: A star from the old Jersey Shore reality show, he and his (maybe) girlfriend are feuding publicly on social media
    Michelle Wolf: Controversy after she served as MC at the White House Correspondents Dinner

    Tuesday morning update: Jane Fonda, Diane Keaton, Candice Bergen and/or Mary Steenburgen. The ladies are the stars of Book Club, a movie coming out May 18. The hook? It's about what happens when four women of a certain age start reading Fifty Shades of Grey. How can People not put that on the cover?

    Image result for "Book Club" movie poster

    Tuesday afternoon, update #2: Miranda Lambert. Controversy about her new boyfriend

    One more thing. Update #3 on Tuesday night: Will Kanye West be on the cover of People tomorrow? Maybe. As I'm writing, at about 9.45 Tuesday night, he's the lead story at People.com, with a headline reading "Kanye West Reveals He Was Addicted to Opioids After Undergoing Liposuction." That's pretty big news, although it may have come out too late for this week's new issue. Stay tuned, we'll know tomorrow morning.

    Wednesday morning update: See the new cover here.

    Saturday, April 28, 2018

    Dr. Jackson Is An Honorable Man? - Updated

    Is he? It certainly appeared so in the lead-up to Trump's physical. Even Obama people, including David Axelrod, were praising Dr. Ronny Jackson. Then came that weird, gushing press conference and ever since, even before all the stuff that came out this week, I've been wondering what could have turned Dr. Jackson, a medical doctor and admiral in the Navy, into a gushing Trump sycophant. Now, of course, there's the possibility that Dr. Jackson had a secret life, one that was effectively concealed from almost everyone above him at the White House. (I read a quote that said he "kissed up and kicked down.") Whether or not any of the accusations are true is still to be determined, but that didn't stop Joe Scarborough from sending out some epic shade last night:

    Friends, Republicans, countrymen, lend me your ears. I come to praise President Trump, not to place him in an elder-care home. Any concerns regarding my old friend’s mental health are as distant a memory as the Mooch’s reign as communications director. That’s because earlier this year, Americans received blessed assurance — from no less an authority than the White House physician — that their president is of sound mind and herculean body.

    Dr. Ronny L. Jackson is an honorable man, and just more than three months ago, he declared to a watchful world that the Manhattan billionaire’s ability to draw boxes, tell time and identify giraffes in pictures was all the proof he needed that our commander in chief’s mental health was strong. For good measure, Jackson deduced that Trump is so genetically superior to mere mortals, the Queens native could live 200 years if he just stopped supersizing his Big Mac value meals.

    And why should we doubt his word? Dr. Ronny L. Jackson is an honorable man.

    … It goes without saying, but still bears repeating, that any chief executive who surrendered so many statements against interest [during his unhinged call into Fox News] would immediately be removed. And any man who used a television interview to make such damaging legal admissions would be fired by his lawyers and put to bed by anxious family members. But Jackson has told us Trump is in peak mental health — and the good doctor is an honorable man.

    … And let us not forget that, a few days later, the genetically superior former reality star also confessed to Russia’s foreign minister and ambassador that he had fired Comey to end the Russian investigation and relieve “pressure” that had been building from the inquiry. These self-destructive admissions by Trump helped to launch the special counsel’s exploration of possible obstruction of justice.

    But despite a multitude of mental lapses, I am no longer concerned by the president’s troublesome behavior, or his Olympian ability to self-incriminate whenever he talks on live TV. Jackson has assured me that Trump is a mentally fit specimen, and Dr. Ronny is an honorable man.

    This is from Joe's Opinion piece at the Washington Post and his main target is, of course, the president, but wow, he gets in a few shots at the doctor too. Read the article here. See my previous post about Dr. Jackson, written before the January press conference, here.

    Saturday afternoon update: In an article titled "Isolation of White House Medical Unit Hid Ronny Jackson From Scrutiny," the New York Times provides some details about how Dr. Jackson may have been able to fool some of the people most of the time about who he really is:

    To senior White House aides serving the last three presidents, Dr. Ronny L. Jackson was the war-tested doctor who served in Iraq, helped them cope with their high-pressure jobs and ran his medical staff with the rigor befitting his rank of rear admiral in the Navy.

    But inside the White House medical unit, a military-run office with a few dozen doctors and nurses, Dr. Jackson was viewed as a bully and someone who kept sloppy medical records, drank too much and loosely dispensed strong drugs to curry favor with the powerful politicians and political aides he admired. Three current and former colleagues said that Dr. Jackson was sometimes intoxicated during overseas trips and that staff members were often ordered to leave a bottle of run and a Diet Coke in his hotel room.

    But in a White House where everybody appears to be in everyone else’s business, a picture has emerged of a medical unit oddly disconnected from the larger executive offices of the president, where a small team of military medical professionals reports up a narrow chain of command out of view from the political realm. Witnesses to Dr. Jackson’s behavior spoke on the condition of anonymity because they continue to serve in the military.

    Dr. Jackson’s medical unit operates inside the White House, not far from the West Wing, where the president and his aides work. But an isolated managerial bubble allowed Dr. Jackson to serve three presidents for a decade while escaping scrutiny of alleged abuses of power and position. Dr. Jackson’s employees were not subordinates of the White House chief of staff or the president’s lawyer. Instead, the medical unit reported through a military chain of command to the little known White House Military Office.

    In interviews with more than 24 people — including some of Dr. Jackson’s former subordinates and a dozen White House political aides in the Trump and Obama administrations — officials said members of the medical and political staffs hardly came into contact with one another outside of routine medical treatment. They operated under different rules of behavior and rarely socialized together, even on long trips to foreign countries.

    The entire article is fascinating; read it here

    Monday morning, update #2: Politico is reporting that Dr. Jackson will no longer be the president's personal physician, although apparently he will continue to work as part of the White House medical unit. It'll be interesting to see if his promotion to two-star admiral goes through. Read the Politico story here

    Monday afternoon, update #3: The Jackson story isn't over. CNN is now reporting the following:

    Vice President Mike Pence's physician privately raised alarms within the White House last fall that President Donald Trump's doctor may have violated federal privacy protections for a key patient -- Pence's wife, Karen -- and intimidated the vice president's doctor during angry confrontations over the episode.

    The previously unreported incident is the first sign that serious concerns about Ronny Jackson's conduct had reached the highest levels of the White House as far back as September -- months before White House aides furiously defended Jackson's professionalism, insisted he had been thoroughly vetted and argued allegations of misconduct amounted to unsubstantiated rumors.

    The episode -- detailed in three memos by Pence's physician -- is also the first documentation that has surfaced involving a specific allegation of medical misconduct by Jackson. It adds to a series of significant allegations leveled by unidentified current and former colleagues, including that he casually dispensed prescription drugs.

    According to copies of internal documents obtained by CNN, Pence's doctor accused Jackson of overstepping his authority and inappropriately intervening in a medical situation involving the second lady as well as potentially violating federal privacy rights by briefing White House staff and disclosing details to other medical providers -- but not appropriately consulting with the vice president's physician.

    The vice president's physician later wrote in a memo of feeling intimidated by an irate Jackson during a confrontation over the physician's concerns. The physician informed White House officials of being treated unprofessionally, describing a pattern of behavior from Jackson that made the physician "uncomfortable" and even consider resigning from the position.

    After Mrs. Pence's physician briefed her about the episode, she "also expressed concerns over the potential breach of privacy of her medical condition," the memo said. Karen Pence asked her physician to direct the vice president's top aide, Nick Ayers, to inform White House chief of staff John Kelly about the matter. Subsequent memos from Pence's doctor suggested Kelly was aware of the episode. Read the entire story here

    Saturday, January 13, 2018

    Excellent Health?



    I like this tweet from David Axelrod. I also agree with the skeptics who think it's unlikely Dr. Jackson actually wrote and signed off on the statement released in his name by the White House last night: 

     

    Why the skepticism?

    First, the typically over-the-top Trumponian tone. Second, several medical professionals have pointed out that when they issue this kind of statement, they don't sign themselves "Dr. John Smith." It's much more common to sign as "John Smith, M.D." (Putting Doctor or Dr. in front of your name could mean that you're anything from a psychiatrist to a dentist to a professor of obscure 17th century English poetry. "M.D." clarifies that you're a "medical" doctor.) Finally, Dr. Jackson appears to be a pretty accomplished guy. (Read about him here.) Would he really misspell his own name? (It's "Ronny.")

    Due to privacy laws, Trump has the final say over how much of his medical information will be released publicly. My guess is that whatever comes out Tuesday will be bland and generic, with little to no useful information about the real state of the obese 71-year-old president's health.