Sunday, July 26, 2015

Two United States Senators: Re-enter The Donald and The Sunday Times

John McCain, left, and Sen. Chuck Schumer

This week, two US senators, John McCain and Chuck Shumer, have hit the news. Both are well known and respected members of Congress. McCain is a four term Republican senator for Arizona and Shumer is a two term Democratic senator for New York State and has indicated he will retire in 2016.
John McCain must have thought his involvement in Presidential politics was over. He was defeated by George W Bush in the 2000 Republican nomination race. Then there was his unsuccessful campaign in 2008, when, as the Republican nominee who chose Sarah Palin as his running mate, he was trounced by Barack Obama.

True, McCain has been an influential legislator. He made a valiant attempt to rein in campaign spending. The McCain Feingold Act of 2002 was passed by Congress, regulating hard money contributions and seeking to outlaw soft money. The Supreme Court tore the Bill to shreds.
McCain was again the target last week. Donald Trump questioned McCain’s hero status as a Vietnam War veteran on the ridiculous grounds that McCain had been a POW for five years. On any view, Trump’s comments, from a man who has not served one day in the American armed forces, were beyond despicable and crossed the line of American politics. Is The Donald immune from the laws of political gravity or has he now delivered his own torpedo? Will he be isolated and regarded as an object of scorn or curiosity, rather than of Presidential seriousness? Will that please moderate Republicans?

Trump has dominated coverage of the Republican Presidential race with nonstop interviews and over-the-top comments. It has to be admitted he is a skilled showman who is able to command attention with his combative verbal style. But there is so much more to becoming President than Trump’s displays. The unwarranted attack on McCain ought to mark a turning point for Trump the politician.
Few Republicans have gone on the record to criticise Trump. Perhaps there is no desire to put themselves into direct conflict with him. Maybe Trump’s current poll ratings offer him an ill-deserved protection. According to The Washington Post, one source described Trump’s attack as “lethal” and another said he expects “a complete cratering” of Trump’s support. A third predicted that Trump would become “a niche candidate” and a sideshow to the main event.

Those who have gone on the record include Rick Perry, the former Texas Governor, who said: "His comments have reached a new low in American politics. His attack on veterans make him unfit to be Commander-in-Chief of the US Armed Forces, and he should immediately withdraw from the race for President.” Marco Rubio, another leading Republican presidential hopeful, called Mr. Trump's comments "absurd, offensive and ridiculous".

Trump’s candidacy for the GOP nomination is a knot of contradictions. He disparages the Affordable Care Act but has called for a universal national health-care program. He calls himself pro-life after earlier saying he was pro-choice. He wants to expand Social Security benefits. He has repeatedly mocked his opponents in the most personal ways. How can someone like that unite the Republican Party, as well as the country? Yet The Donald has a sufficient lead in the polls to get him a seat at the 5th August Republican nominee debate.

Eventually, every candidate who seeks to become a serious contender for the Presidency has to cross a threshold of acceptability with the voters. That is measured by not only where candidates stand on issues or how authentic they seem, but whether voters conclude they have the temperament, character and judgment to sit in the Oval Office. Perhaps the debate will be The Donald’s final political act.
In this week’s The Sunday Times, an article headlined, “Iran deal in hands of US senator,” suggested that Chuck Shumer might decide the fate of the Iran nuclear treaty. The story reported how Shumer was likely to support Israel’s position on the Treaty. Why? Because so many New York voters were Jewish. How simplistic can you get? Shumer will be an influential voice in the Iran nuclear treaty debate but can just one Senator possibly be so influential?

What the newspaper article neither investigated nor explained was Constitutional and Congressional math. Let us assume the Treaty is rejected by the Senate and that the President exercises his veto. Congress can override the veto if there is a two thirds majority vote in both the Senate and the House of Representatives. There are 100 votes in the Senate. 67 are needed to override a veto. The Republicans hold 54 Senate seats and there are two independents. So if no Republican and independent votes against the override motion, there will still have to be 11 Democratic Senators voting to defeat the Treaty’s ratification. The article makes no mention of where these 11 Senate votes will come from.

Furthermore, the article is silent about the House of Representatives. 290 votes in the House are needed to override but there are only 246 Republican congressmen, so 44 Democrats would have to defect. To make things clear and beyond dispute, if the House votes against an override motion, the Treaty survives, regardless of what happens in the Senate.


A quality broadsheet like The Sunday Times should offer better reporting. By dumbing down and trivialising the Treaty ratification by over-emphasising the importance of an individual Senator brings serious politics into the gutter. News International and the Murdoch era should have a lot to answer for.

Monday, July 20, 2015

Iran: The Nuclear Deal.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Barack Obama

Ponsonby Rule Rules.

Last week, a deal was struck between Iran and six world powers in relation to the use and control of nuclear energy. Although the negotiations have lasted years, the response from some areas was fast and typical knee-jerk. Officials in Israel and Saudi Arabia were out of the gate to tell the world that the deal was a catastrophic mistake, almost before the signatories ink was dry. These countries are, of course, entitled to their opinions and their leaders probably felt the need to service home consumption. However, the proof of a treaty of this kind, good or bad, usually needs years to establish, not days or months.

It is not for me to evaluate the pros and cons of the Iran Treaty. I would observe merely that anything that has the possibility of furthering the cause of peace must be worth pursuing. In addition, those of us who have met and know ordinary Iranians will know that sanctions have hurt and that the lifting of those sanctions will probably help these people improve their lives and fortunes, making them much less likely to want conflict. Whether this percolates upwards is another issue.

My main concern, however, is the newspaper slant that the Iran Treaty is a done deal, so long as the American Senate ratifies it. The front page article in The Times of London on 15th July, was devoted to the importance of ratification by the Senate with no mention being made of similar requirements by the governments of the United Kingdom, France, China, Russia, Germany and the EU. The New York Times was more tempered in its reporting but nevertheless posed the deal as one where President Obama’s legacy was at stake, impliedly because a failure to get Congress approval marked the death of the Iran Treaty with damaging fallout for the President.

Matt Spence, The Times Washington correspondent, reported that “Congress is able to block the implementation of the nuclear deal with Iran by passing a resolution of disapproval.”  By implication, Spence suggests that if Congressional disapproval holds, the treaty is dead. 

Let me deal first with Congressional approval. Article I, Section 2 of the American Constitution grants power to the President to make treaties with the advice and consent of the Senate. In this case, the Senate has 60 days to approve the treaty. If it decides not to do so, Mr. Obama has said he will exercise a veto, in which event it is for both Houses of Congress to decide whether to override the veto. To do this a two thirds majority in both Houses is required.

Let us assume the Senate rejects the Iran Treaty and Congressional disapproval holds. Is it dead? The answer is an emphatic NO. For example, the armistice at the end of World War I was codified into the Treaty of Versailles. The United States was a party to that treaty but it was rejected by the Senate. The cause of the rejection related to the creation of the League of Nations. Nevertheless, the Treaty of Versailles was not invalidated. Indeed, it became a cause of World War II.

In the United Kingdom, the executive, in the form of the Foreign Office negotiating team and the Cabinet, is subject to what used to be called the Ponsonby Rule, which now has the force of statute. There are two steps. The first is signing a treaty and the second is ratifying it. Signed treaties are laid before Parliament for 21 days before ratification, to see whether any MP wants to ask questions or propose a debate. If the latter, a government majority in that debate can be expected but at least there is a democratic process available to approve or reject. I suspect a similar process applies in the parliaments of other signatories.


The Iran Treaty will go ahead, even if the Americans reject it, unless the Treaty’s terms include a clause that rejection by one party will be treated as a rejection by all. I have not heard of any such clause. I accept that I am being “legal” and that the practical support of America will be needed, especially in financing inspections and overseeing the various checks. Nevertheless to report the Treaty as being entirely dependent on American approval is just plain wrong.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

The Fox News Factor


I enjoy much of the American presidential election process, especially some of the traditions. At midnight on Election Day, the voters of Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, all fourteen of them in 2012, go to the polls, hoping to be the first to declare a result. By tradition, the presidential campaign formally opens when a candidate is officially nominated at the Party’s national convention, notwithstanding months of electioneering beforehand. The gatekeeping role traditionally played by three states, Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, all with few Electoral College votes, plays an important part in the process because these states are bellwethers of potential. For example, in 1992, Bill Clinton was beaten by Paul Tsongas in the Democratic New Hampshire primary but the media declared him the winner because he had been so far behind Tsongas.

This year, Fox News has stepped into the election. Its influence may diminish the power of the early states in the presidential nominating process. In August in Cleveland, Ohio, a swing state, the cable news channel will host the first of several Republican debates, moderated by Chris Wallace and others. So far there are fourteen Republican hopefuls who have put their hats in the ring. However, not all fourteen, nor others who declare before 6th August, will be permitted to take part in the debate. Instead, Fox News has decided that the debate will be limited to ten contenders, all of whom had to declare their entry before 6th July and who will have to file a public disclosure of their personal finances in time to participate.

The latter condition is fair enough. A 1978 federal ethics law requires all presidential candidates to file details of their financial interests with the Federal Election Commission within 30 days of declaration, although the FEC will usually grant time extensions. Fox News has said it will not be willing to agree any extensions.

It is the former condition which does not bear close scrutiny. Fox has said it will use an unspecified mix of national polls to decide which ten Republican hopefuls will appear in the first debate. Apart from the diminution of power held by the states who hold early primaries, not to mention the romance of it all, what chance will there be for underfunded longshots, like Jimmy Carter in 1976 or Rick Santorum in 2012, to emerge by impressing the grassroots activists? The value of early primary contests is that the states concerned vet and test presidential contenders in an exercise in retail politics. These primaries are not a test of policy, they are a test of character. The Fox News debates may well change the game and minimise this valuable adjunct to the election process.

Limiting the field based on unknown national polls will turn the first debate into nothing but a popularity contest based on name identification. What if those 9th and 10th on the list are separated from 11th to 14th by a minimal percentage? Fortunately, some Republican candidates are raising objections. Lindsay Graham of South Carolina has set up an online petition calling for debate equality. He said, “If the cable news channels or political elite have their way, the media will have a louder voice in our nominating contest than actual Republican voters.” South Carolina’s Lt. Governor, Henry McMaster, supported Graham. “Excluding candidates [from the debates] based on national polling rewards name recognition for celebrity candidates and those who have lots of money to purchase national advertising.”

The concerns expressed are all the more pertinent as it seems likely that Donald Trump will make the cut for the first debate while sitting Republican governors like Chris Christie (NJ), John Kasich (OH), and Bobby Jindal (LA) might be excluded.

A debate when ten people speak will likely not be a proper debate, as people will either speak over each other or merely state fixed positions. It strikes me that adding another four contenders to the debate will make little difference to the process but will, at least, introduce fairness. Fox News might well be advised to change its entry rules. Indeed, I shall not be surprised if before 6th August, Fox News faces a legal challenge by both those contenders who do not make the cut and the Republican National Committee, on grounds that the debate rules are unfair.

Fox News is the most watched news channel in America. However, it does not adhere at all to journalist standards of fair and balanced reporting. It has a right wing bias. In 2010, Elena Kagan was nominated by President Obama to a seat on the Supreme Court. Kagan had a superb academic record and had served as Solicitor General. Within hours of the nomination, Fox News put a panel together to discuss the nomination. One of the female panellists said: “I don’t know anything about her [Kagan] but she looks like a dyke. Therefore, she is bound to be pro-choice, support women’s issues and the like.”


One wonders how such a biased media outlet should even be allowed to produce a television debate. Is it fit for purpose? Perhaps the debate should be: “Will the democratic process of a presidential election be advanced by an exclusive debate where candidates are chosen by a News Channel?” Now that would be worth watching, especially if those candidates excluded from the debate muscle their way in.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

The Donald: The Democrat’s Secret Weapon.



American politics is littered with the most wonderful first names: Grover (as in Cleveland), John Quincey (as in Adams), Ulysses (as in Grant) and so on but there has not been one Donald in the White House. In recent years, the only political Donald of memory is Rumsfeld, the man who famously said, “stuff happens,” when commenting on the War on Terrorism. I venture to suggest that the best known “Donald” in American culture is Disney’s beloved cartoon character, Donald Duck.
In recent weeks, a Donald has burst onto the American political scene. Donald Trump, or ‘The Donald’, as he is called by his close advisers, is seeking the presidential nomination of the Republican Party in the 2016 election. I assume that The Donald’s polling stats have told him there is no point in his cosying up to the Latino community. His pollsters may have told him to solidify his redneck vote by attacking the Latinos. This is odd because the Republican Party has been on a charm offensive to woo Latino voters.

But look at what Trump has been saying. In his campaign announcement speech, Trump said of the Mexican immigrants: “They’re bringing in drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists.” Trump has repeated these comments, although he has since said, “I like Mexico. I love the Mexican people. I do business with the Mexican people.” But like many who don’t know how to make a proper apology, he continued his attack: “But you have people coming over the border and they’re bad.” CNN’s State of the Union television programme also recorded Trump saying, “You have people coming in…that are killers and rapists and they’re coming into this country.” The Donald subscribes to the theory that there is no such thing as bad publicity.

True, Trump is not alone on this immigrant-hatred platform. Ted Cruz, the US Senator from Texas, praised Trump as “terrific, a man who speaks the truth.” Congressman Steve King of Iowa said he applauded Trump’s “scrappiness.”

However, many Republicans have sought to distance themselves and the Party from Trump. RNC Chairman, Reince Priebus, told reporters that Trump’s comments were “not helpful” but that the RNC did not pick and choose who ran. Governor Chris Christie, another Republican contender, did not mince his words. He condemned Trump’s Mexican-bashing comments as “wholly inappropriate.”
Democratic strategists see benefit in Trump’s tirade. Whilst anti-immigrant remarks may play well in limited areas of America, most American families are of immigrant stock and will not be impressed. Nor will anyone of more moderate views. Furthermore, Trump has shown himself to believe that he is always right until he is not and then he was never wrong. You were. Hence those corporations who have severed their business relationships with Trump in the past two weeks have been told by The Donald that he rejected them first.

I don’t live in America, so it is difficult to understand how Trump has got traction so quickly. Perhaps it is because there is no clear front runner among the Republicans. In Iowa, Trump is tied second behind Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker. In Florida, he is polling second behind Jeb Bush. In a poll last week by CNN-ORC, Trump was placed second behind Bush.

So, what should the Democratic strategy be? Democratic contenders feel it irresistible to pan The Donald and his disgraceful remarks. Hillary Clinton does not mention him by name but she said: “Recently a Republican candidate for president described immigrants as drug dealers, rapists and criminals. Maybe he’s never met them. Maybe he’s never stopped to ask the millions of people who love this country, work hard and want nothing more than a chance to build a better life for themselves and their children what their lives are like.”

However, if the Democrats want to reinforce the worst voter perceptions of the Republican Party’s agenda, they should keep quiet and let Trump supercharge his racist message. It will be like Mitt Romney in 2012 when audience members in one of the debates booed a gay soldier and when Romney himself insulted the 47%. The longer The Donald stays in the race, the more the Democratic win will be assured.


The Donald is a buffoon. He has no realistic political platform, no proper policies for the country and no idea how to lead the American people. How does a person so poorly qualified get to this position? As the boxing promoter, Don King, would say: “only in America.”